Posted on 05/17/2015 1:58:28 PM PDT by PROCON
Caleb Stewart Rossiter, a college professor and policy analyst, decided to try teaching math in the D.C. schools. He was given a pre-calculus class with 38 seniors at H.D. Woodson High School. When he discovered that half of them could not handle even second-grade problems, he sought out the teachers who had awarded the passing grades of D in Algebra II, a course that they needed to take his high-level class.
There are many bewildering stories like this in Rossiters new book, Aint Nobody Be Learnin Nothin: The Fraud and the Fix for High-Poverty Schools, the best account of public education in the nations capital I have ever read. It will take me three columns to do justice to his revelations about what is being done to the Districts most distracted and least productive students.
Teachers will tell you it is a no-no to ask other teachers why they committed grading malpractice. Rossiter didnt care. Three of the five teachers he sought had left the high-turnover D.C. system, but the two he found were so candid I still cant get their words out of my mind.
(Excerpt) Read more at washingtonpost.com ...
Are you a teacher?
Just wondering.
Yes, I recall your having mentioned that.
If it is the law that a child must be educated, public schools are a Nation-wide crime. Common core makes everything worse.
Monday bump for an great post....
I was trying to be funny...
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