Thursday, September 27, 2012

Food For Thought

One of the attributes I try to instill in my students is that of critical thinking: the reflective and intellectually disciplined process of deconstructing, analyzing, synthesizing, and evaluating information and situations, avoiding the initial, obvious knee-jerk reaction. However, like most college professors, I am afflicted with "do as I say, not as I do" syndrome. Case in point:

SAT scores hit a four-decade low
Reading scores on the SAT for the high school class of 2012 reached a four-decade low, putting a punctuation mark on a gradual decline in the ability of college-bound teens to read passages and answer questions about sentence structure, vocabulary and meaning on the college entrance exam.


OMG!!! It's obviously all the fault of that ridiculous Department of Education and those damn teachers unions.

Well, upon further review it seems that there might be a few more contributory factors.
Many experts attribute the continued decline to record numbers of students taking the test, including about one-quarter from low-income backgrounds. There are many factors that can affect how well a student scores on the SAT, but few are as strongly correlated as family income.

There is a significant correlation between family income and test scores on the SAT, with average scores increasing with every $20,000 in additional family income.
Okay, that's a fair point. If more students from lower-income households are taking the exam, and if there is a correlation between household income and scores, then it is reasonable to conclude that more lower income students taking the exam will result in lower scores. But why?

Some argue that it's due to the 'privileged' students participating in activities that serve to better prepare them for the test, such as school organizations and clubs, summer camps, a better study environment, even tutors and prep classes. Another argument is that students from two-parent families are statistically more likely to do better, and that two-parent families generally have more household income, or at least one parent who's more involved with the kids while the other works.

But in any event, it is clear that the national trend is disturbing, and should serve as “a call to action,” College Board President Gaston Caperton said. “When less than half of kids who want to go to college are prepared to do so, that system is failing.”

Trust me, I've seen the end result of the public school pipeline. It is not encouraging.

Another thing to think about: what is the true purpose of the SAT exam? Most people's first response would be "to help decide which students should be admitted to college". But think a little deeper about that answer, and you'll soon realize that the underlying purpose of the exam is to predict which students are most likely to succeed in college. That's not quite the same thing as using it as some form of admittance criteria. So if the true purpose is to identify those students most likely to succeed, might not there be a better way?
Studies say the SAT and ACT do not predict first-year college success — the reason colleges give for requiring them — as well as high school grade point averages do. GPA also predicts college graduation rates better. The effort students put into learning during the school year, as assessed by their teachers, turns out to mean more than a four-hour test graded mostly by machines.
Other alternatives?
Why not replace the SAT and ACT with Advanced Placement, International Baccalaureate or Advanced International Certificate of Education tests? Those exams culminate college-level courses and encourage critical thinking. They require that students write many of their answers in detail.

Students who have taken those courses and exams will tell you they were good preparation for college. Unlike the SAT and ACT, they are modeled after college exams and graded by human beings.
Of course, this is like arguing how many angels can dance on the head of a pin. The real problem is not the demographic composition of SAT-takers, or whether the SAT is the best way to screen college applicants. The real problem is that our public school system is doing a dismal job of educating America's children.

And I put the blame for that squarely on that ridiculous Department of Education and those damn teachers unions...

For a truly insightful perspective on a major -- maybe even the major -- problem with our public school system, read this (there's an excerpt below, but trust me, you want to read the entire thing).
AMERICAN EDUCATION IS IN SERIOUS DISARRAY. Over the last 40 years, we've increased spending by the billions while results slide deeper into mediocrity.
 . . .

"What can be done...?" you say. There are a couple of starters: close all education departments on college campuses, eliminate tenure and have a school choice system.
The tragic thing is that the above referenced column was written thirteen years ago, and nothing has changed - not even the vast amounts of money we keep wasting by pouring it down that educational rathole.

6 comments:

Bag Blog said...

25 years ago when I was a new teacher in Mission, TX, the school tracked students according to standardized test scores along with parental wishes. We had honors, college prep, regular, and basic classes. I taught regular students where the test scores could be very high to very low - the big lump. I noticed on parent night that the college prep and honor's teachers had parents all night long, while maybe 5 parents might show up out of the 150 students I had. It showed me that parental involvement was very important. And yet, teachers often complained when parents got involved - go figure!

The government, teachers, and unions do not want parental involvement - they take kids at four years old and keep them until they are 18. They feed them breakfast, lunch, and snacks and have after-school programs - pouring in their socialist, politically correct views. They teach to standardized tests, which keeps kids at the 50th percentile or lower. Their political correctness has no place for competition. Competition is only on the sports field to which they pour money, have lots of parental involvement, and have success. Notice, they will fire a coach and his staff for a failing season. Okay, I could rant on this topic for a while. It was bad 25 years ago, but it has only gotten worse. And then there is the whole discipline issue. A fellow teacher once said, "We are toothless tigers in a zoo of wild animals."

JT said...

I can't buy the 'high school GPA' as a college success predictor argument, at least not in Texas. The top 10% rule and the ability to manipulate GPAs at the classroom, school and district level negates any predictive qualities.

Teachers, schools and districts being measured by student achievement also encourages grade inflation.

I don't think four-year colleges should have any remedial courses. If a kid can't write or do basic math at the level necessary for standard freshman courses, there is no reason for them to be admitted. Whatever happened to entrance exams?

Toejam said...

I'm not in the educational profession. I thought about teaching, but early on I knew I'd never have the patience to be an effective teacher.

I did however raise a daughter to the best of my ability and I think I instilled in her a positive attitude toward learning and the discipline of focusing on her studies. She's off to college next year for the BIG test and I don't think she'll disappoint me or my wife.

I've often told my daughter when things seemed "bleak" school wise, "Alas, life isn't fair nor ideal as we'd like, so all we can do is strive to do OUR best now and make positive plans for the future.

CenTexTim said...

Bag Blog - parental involvement is another variable that's correlated with academic success. But parental involvement is not haranguing the teacher because little Johnny didn't get an A. It's encouraging little Johnny to read/learn, helping him with his schoolwork, getting involved with the educational system in a meaningful way (being a room mother, for example, or being a chaperone on field trips) and so on. I think most teachers welcome that sort of involvement.

I agree with your comments on governmental control. They believe they know what's best for our kids. Wrong! And I'd love it if we held classroom teachers to the same standards of success or failure as we do football coaches.

Harper - I understand your point, but please allow me to slightly disagree. Even with grade inflation, GPA is still a significant indicator. One reason is that a grade in an AP course counts for more than the same grade in a non-AP course. An A in regular English is 4 points, while a grade in AP English can be 4.5 or even 5 points (yeah, I know - it confuses me too).

As for college entrance exams, that's a good idea, but who's gonna grade 'em? Not me. I abhor the thought of wading through the small number of papers and projects I assign during a semester. I cannot imagine reading through, much less grading, hundreds or even thousands of entrance exams. The SAT exam was designed to be a standardized surrogate for individual college exams.

Having said that, some colleges require an essay as part of the admission process. Again, you couldn't pay me enough to grade them.

Toejam - based on what I know of you via this interweb thingie, I think your daughter will do you proud.

Pascvaks said...

As with everyone else, I blame teachers too; but I blame politicians more; and I blame stupid parents (voters) most. I think that it's impossible to get around the Standard American Theory that if you got a problem, the answer is to throw money at it. Have kids gotten a short end to a dirty stick? You bet! And who handed it to them? Their stupid, short sighted, "throw money at it" parents. It's really hard for me to let teachers get off with just a wrist slap, I hate teacher unions, and I think school boards suck too. It nearly kills me to say that politicians aren't the be-all-end-all pond scum that they are, and that they're not the real problem. But guys, even thought I'm dyin' of pain to say this.. it's the @#%$#$%^ parents (voters) that are the real problem, and that's the bleeding, ugly truth!

CenTexTim said...

Pascvaks - you're right. Like so many other things, when it gets right down to it we the parents (voters) get the educational system (politicians) we deserve.