One of the only education plans outlined thus far by Gov.-elect Nathan Deal has been an elementary and middle school “Move On Ready” program that allows younger children to advance if they perform well on the CRCT, which Deal says advanced students should be allowed to take whenever ready.
We have discussed grade advancement here before and most folks seem to favor it, but I don’t see it happening much and typically only with parental push. (Thinking it over now, I realize that several of the students I know who skipped ahead had parents in the education field.)
One of the challenges seems to be that there are students who could be in a higher level math or reading, but may not be ready for more advanced science or foreign language. Or they may not be socially agile enough to jump ahead without emotional strife. It would seem a cafeteria-style approach would work better where a talented fourth grader could opt for a fifth grade math or a bright seventh grader could choose an eighth grade language arts class.
Here is a piece on the issue of advancing students by Ryan McCarl, a North Carolina high school history teacher and education blogger. I ran McCarl’s piece on the Monday print education page and wanted to share it here:
This fall Bachar Sbeiti, a gifted 10-year-old who has finished the Ontario, Canada, curriculum through the eighth grade, was refused admission to high school because of his age.
The district apparently did not consider any factors besides how many years had passed since Bachar’s birth in its decision.
No school official argued that he was not academically prepared to take ninth-grade courses. No one disputed that he had finished eighth grade and thus had earned the right to tackle ninth grade.
“Our belief is that we do not accelerate students,” district official Sharon Pyke told the Windsor Star.
We lump children together on the basis of their dates of birth and then put them on a conveyor belt that moves at an identical pace for the majority of students, virtually all of whom are required to spend 13 or more years meandering through an often repetitive and incoherent k-12 curriculum.
This makes sense for school athletics and social traditions; a 10- year-old has no business playing high school football or attending a high school dance.
But it makes little sense for academic education — which is, after all, the core purpose of compulsory schooling.
We regularly speak as though the amorphous term “grade level” refers to progress through the curriculum, but in practice, “grade” is almost always synonymous with “age.”
Most students move from grade to grade simply by showing up. Students are rarely allowed to demonstrate mastery of curricular standards at a particular grade level and then move on to the next level whenever they are ready.
After early childhood, chronological age is almost useless as a predictor of academic ability or achievement.
Every year, some American middle school students labeled “gifted and talented” take college admissions tests and vastly outperform the average high school senior. Fourth-graders take standardized tests and are told that they read “at the 12th-grade level.”But rather than question the need for such students to trudge on from grade to grade, progressing through the system as they age rather than as they learn, many parents and educators are content to heap admiration on the students, but not present them with challenges that match their abilities and preparedness.
The Canadian district’s decision to deny Bachar access to high school provides a useful illustration of one way in which our education system is based on form rather than function.
The district’s “by the book” approach to Bachar’s case, complete with a blanket denial of his mother’s request for a ninth-grade placement and no apparent attempt to compromise or find an accommodation, is characteristic of a government institution that is not accountable to local parents.
Every day, distant and unaccountable bureaucrats make decisions of this sort that directly affect students’ futures — that open and close pathways of opportunity.
When parents hand over full responsibility for their children’s education to the government and allow their right to influence their child’s education to be eroded until it becomes meaningless, the drive toward centrally dictated uniformity causes parents’ preferences and individual students’ needs to seem irrelevant.
Assisting students such as Bachar will require replacing the stasis and inertia that pervade our education system with competition, innovation and entrepreneurship driven by choice.
58 comments Add your comment
KMHSmom
November 15th, 2010
10:48 am
As with any educational issue, acceleration should be a joint decision between the school officials and the child’s parents. My son skipped 6th grade, primarily due to his giftedness in math. But we had to have him tested in all subject areas for it to be approved. One year younger than his peers, he is still a math whiz, but only slightly above average in all other subjects. As parents, we may have chosen a path for him that results in a lower GPA on the high school transcript (he’s made a few B’s so far in high school) but we balance that with the goal of teaching him how to challenge himself. He would have been bored and mischievous in middle school without acceleration. My point, however, is that parental involvement is crucial. We monitor both his academic and social lives to help him deal with life – same as any parent of a teenager should do.
Toto
November 15th, 2010
10:51 am
If you have gifted and/or special ed children, home school is the only way to go. It is the best way to solve all of the issues mentioned in other posts. In fact, most of these artificial problems go away because they are brought on by a public school environment. Students progress at their own pace and specialize in their natural talents. They are not shut out of courses because of artificial reasons. There is a steadily growing population of these children in home school because it offers the best solution to their unique needs in a very positive environment. Home school children socialize with different age groups and with those of varying academic ability. Charter schools specializing in certain abilities such as gifted-STEM can also be a great place for these students (GSMST comes to mind). By nature, public schools can only aim for the “middle”. Unless tracking is reinstated in Georgia publics, I see no hope for the gifted/special ed groups there.
catlady
November 15th, 2010
12:12 pm
high school teacher: What would we call that academy for students underachieving? LOL
just won’t fly: Except there are a lot of us in Georgia who have no access to private schools, and no access to duAL enrollment either, as there are no colleges nearby. Not everyone lives in a city.
oldtimer
November 15th, 2010
2:12 pm
I once had a 6th grader in my class who went to Algebra I in an 8Th grad class and geometry at the HS. Fortunately his mom could take him 1st period and he got back to school shortly after we started. He moved to Iowa in 8th grade. He told me he was more easily accommodated in middle school there as the HS was next door and many went for advanced classes. We talked about moving his to 8th grade, but he needed to gain social skills. He had lived overseas and had been homeschooled. He since has become a doctor.
just won't fly
November 15th, 2010
2:42 pm
@catlady,
expand Junior colleges or hire that JC instructor to come in; the other choice would be to move; the way “move on when rdy” is just not workable.
Cobb County Parent
November 15th, 2010
3:30 pm
All three of my children have skipped one grade. I say this not to “toot their horns”, but to draw attention to the fact that their chronologically determined grade would have not met their needs. If GA (or even Cobb) had not embraced differentiation, maybe things might have been different. However based upon their Iowa Acceleration Scale (IAS) scores, I highly doubt it.
My eldest son is profoundly gifted across all subjects. He is also exceedingly mature (and I’m not just saying that). My middle son is also gifted across the board, whereas my youngest is only listed as highly-capable. Their social skills are fine; they have many friends and tend to relate more with kids 1-3 years older than them. If they would have stayed in their previous grades, all three would have been bored to tears. I saw that happening early on in elementary school.
It has been several years since they were accelerated. All three continue to do well in their new grades, and in many instances, they are near, if not at, the top of their class for all subjects. Many studies support that children that are accelerated tend to perform well with their new cohorts. I reviewed this research and even provided the school with it as well, when it appeared all they wanted to do was believe the drivel about lack of social skills without every talking to one of my children. Obviously, parental involvement is key to ensuring your child’s needs are being met.
Another obvious point is Nathan Deal is an idiot. I wouldn’t even use the CRCT as TP. His idea to utilize CRCT scores to determine potential advancement is completely moronic. The IAS tests look at multiple facets (not just IQ) and have been used for many years. They work well and only require minimal investment from the school to purchase and administrate.
I am thankful that Cobb County finally allowed my three children to skip a grade. It is not acceptable that kids are not challenged every day. While social skills may be an issue for some kids, the vast majority will not have this issue. Check out the research.
Lee
November 15th, 2010
7:33 pm
My daughter’s private school routinely had “mixed” classes, where more advanced students from a lower grade would attend a higher grade level in a particular subject. It also helped that the Middle School and High School were next door to each other. In many respects, it was more like a college campus.
Nobody thought much about it. There was no social stigma about being in a lower class or having a “youngster” in a higher class. Probably due to the fact that it was a college prep private school and they didn’t have to deal with the 85IQ thug mentality.
AJinCobb
November 16th, 2010
10:11 pm
In the 1960s I skipped three grades and graduated from high school at the top of my class, just weeks after my 15th birthday. This extreme acceleration was in part due to some international moves. At the time, I would have told you I was happy and *fine*. In retrospect, I think my life would have been better with less pushing ahead in school.
Not surprisingly, I have a very bright child but I have never sought to have her pushed ahead. She’s been on the “gifted” track in Cobb County schools and stayed with her peers, age-wise.
Each parent has to make the decisions they think best for their child. Skipping one grade does seem to work well in some cases. From my perspective, though, I’d urge parents to be cautious, particularly if there is any doubt about the child’s maturity. What difference will skipping a grade have made in their life, when they look back as an adult?