LAMPHERE FEDERATION OF TEACHERS
MFT & SRP #1614
June 2004
Best Wishes: Congratulations to the retiring members of the LFT. They are Linda Cohen, Tom Gennette, Mary Ann Hunter, Chuck McLauglin, Louie Miller, Randy Moreau, Mary Malone, Linda Rubel, Shelia Shuler Pat Weidner and Pat Yakubison and Joan Zarro. Your commitment to education and your dedication to the students of Lamphere is commendable. A special thanks to Tom Gennette, Mary Ann Hunter and Louie Miller who served as officers.
Negotiations: Dates for contract negotiations with the Lamphere School Board have not been established as of this date. Check the LFT webpage this summer for any updates.
Track Changes: If you have taken enough coursework to move to a new salary track you must inform the Human Resources Office by August 1st.
SCHOOL IMPROVEMENT: IT TAKES A SOCIETY ...
AFT PLUS SAVINGS AT NATIONAL HOTEL CHAINS
With warmer weather on the way, AFT PLUS has the perfect member benefit! AFT members can
receive discounts of up to 30 percent at nine national hotel chains representing more than
5,000 locations across the country. To get special AFT rates, just make your reservations
using the telephone number for each hotel. Call in advance and mention your AFT member
benefit discount number: 20952. Visit http://www.aft.org/aftplus/hotel.html for
the complete lists of hotels and telephone numbers.
AFT Brief Challenges Notions of
"Proficiency" Under NCLB: A new AFT analysis of how states
measure proficiency in reading and math to meet performance goals under the federal No
Child Left Behind Act (NCLB) shows that there is no common understanding among policy
makers about what "proficient" means.
President Bush and the U.S. Department of Education officials say that proficiency means
students are on "grade level," but the AFT issue brief, "What's Proficient?
The No Child Left Behind Act and the Many Meanings of Proficiency," points out
that the proficiency goals of NCLB and how progress in meetng those goals is measured have
nothing to do with grade level.
States measure proficiency by administering different tests with different content
standards and different cut scores--all of it much more difficult than simply determining
if students are at grade level. In many states, the standard is high; in others it is less
rigorous.
A student who is proficient in California in reading may not be deemed proficient in
reading in Colorado, and being proficient in math is not the same as being proficient in
reading. Nor does proficient mean the same thing in different academic subjects. The
meaning of proficient even varies across the grades in the same subject in the same state.
"What is doesn't mean, however is so-called grade-level performance," says Bella
Rosenberg, assistant to the AFT president and author of the brief.
For states, "proficient" means hitting at
least a particular cut point on tests; it's standards-based, she says. Grade level, on the
other hand, reflects a big range and is based on actual student performance.
Yet, the stakes are high for the nation's schools if students
do not meet state performance standards for proficiency--regardless of whether or not they
are performing on grade level. The NCLB's "adequate yearly progress" (AYP)
formula--the law's chief accountability mechanism--requires states to calculate annual
achievement targets for schools and districts based on the ultimate goal of 100 percent
proficiency by the year 2014; missing those annual targets means failing AYP, which
carries increasingly stiff sanctions.
The report is especially timely given that President Bush
reiterated his administration's own misunderstanding of "proficiency" in an
education speech on May 11. "Some believe that the standards of No Child Left Behind
are too high," he told students at a junior high school in Van Buren, Ark. "They
say that if you raise expectations, all you're doing is setting up children to fail. Yet
this law requires students to perform at grade level, which doesn't seem like it's too
high a bar to cross. I mean, we're asking children to read at third-grade level if you're
in the third grade. Why is that raising expectations too high?"
It's precisely this reasonable-sounding suggestion that the
goals of NCLB and AYP are relatively easy to achieve that engenders support for it--but
"it's dead wrong," says Rosenberg. "If AYP was only based on grade
level, we wouldn't have the massive district and school failure that's already been seen
in the first year of the law."
In fact, the goals are very difficult, and even before the law
was signed, "experts warned that they went beyond challenging into the realm of the
supernatural," she says.
The news is likely to get worse when this year's results are
processed in the summer, warns Rosenberg, because most districts will be on the failing
list by then.
"The reason isn't our 'failed public education
system,'" she says. "It's because of the statistical and educational
deficiencies in the AYP formula itself."
For details, go to http://www.aft.org/privatization/reports/index.html.