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Cheating by staff found at school (Memphis City Schools)
Memphis Commercial Appeal ^ | 2/7/06 | Ruma Banerji Kumar

Posted on 02/16/2006 5:10:01 AM PST by Sybeck1

Memphis city school officials say they found widespread cheating at Riverview Middle School, where staff tampered with dozens of last year's tests and corrected wrong answers.

The district is still trying to figure out who was involved. Investigators with the school system are still questioning staff and the former principal of the school, Barbara Campbell, who now heads Shannon Elementary.

No one has been disciplined.

"Let me say we will not tolerate cheating," Memphis Supt. Carol Johnson said before Monday evening's school board meeting. "Perhaps, the most severe, egregious fact is that children were cheated. They were told they were doing fine, when they weren't."

Johnson called the cheating at Riverview on the eighth-graders' exams "an affront to all those who work so very hard to get scores up and improve learning."

The dramatic gains at Riverview Middle caught the district's attention last summer when state test scores on the TCAP and Gateway were released. Within weeks, the district grew suspicious of Riverview's success.

In one year, the school had gone from one of the lowest performing middle schools in eighth-grade math to the second-highest performer.

In one year, Riverview's eighth-graders had gone from being 54 percent proficient in math to 95 percent proficient -- the highest gains in that grade in the district.

Of the roughly 8,000 eighth-graders in the district, only 22 eighth-graders had made the unlikely leap from being below proficient in math one year to advanced in math the next, research director Bill White said. All 22 of those students were at Riverview.

"The more we kept digging, the more we found," White said.

On the TCAP math test, 37 eighth-graders had 10 or more erasures on their answer sheets changing wrong answers to right. One student had 21 erasures (on a test with 64 items) correcting all wrong answers.

On the TCAP reading test, 43 eighth-graders had 10 or more erasures on their answer sheets changing wrong answers to right. One of the students had 26 erasures (on a test with 64 items), all changing the wrong answers to right.

The cheating allowed the school to move into an "improving" category and keep itself off a list of schools facing state takeover.

Memphis Education Association president Charles New said the cheating was the fallout of a law and culture that pins school success to test scores alone.

"It's a byproduct of the mandated testing under NCLB (the federal No Child Left Behind law), which forces a one size fits all test to judge every school," he said. "(Riverview's cheating) will make everybody doubt any scores that come out now. It casts a bad light."

Copyright 2006, commercialappeal.com - Memphis, TN. All Rights Reserved.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events; US: Tennessee
KEYWORDS: memphis; teacherscheating
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This is a week old, but I felt it deserved national attention. Teachers trying to get around NCLB.
1 posted on 02/16/2006 5:10:02 AM PST by Sybeck1
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To: Sybeck1

NEA is silent? Local union?


2 posted on 02/16/2006 5:14:58 AM PST by ncountylee (Dead terrorists smell like victory)
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To: Sybeck1

"No one left behind" concept.


3 posted on 02/16/2006 5:21:33 AM PST by moasicwolf
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To: Sybeck1

The city of Memphis (operationally) is a complete laughing stock. Please browse the Tennessee forum for reference.


4 posted on 02/16/2006 5:22:43 AM PST by mcg2000 (New Orleans: The city that declared Jihad against The Red Cross.)
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To: Sybeck1
The product of mandated testing,BS it is the product of cheating to cover your short comings. Government in America today can not be trusted in any capacity.
Schools need to get back to the basics until children reach the seventh grade and then let them choose a curriculum that will fit where they are headed. At the risk of being called a racist I say that intergration of the school system killed education by putting restrictions that were never in place before and the thought of equalizing everything. Everyone has staked out their territory and rule it like a kingdom. It is Americas leadership that is dumb and it spills over into the kids. The children run the school more than the administrators.
5 posted on 02/16/2006 5:24:28 AM PST by gunnedah
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To: mcg2000
Personally, I would blame the cheating on dishonest school officials, but then with a crooked mayor what would one expect.
6 posted on 02/16/2006 5:26:16 AM PST by Coldwater Creek ("Over there, over there, We won't be back 'til it's over Over there.")
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To: Sybeck1

If the teachers had cheated "just a little" they might not have been caught, short of somebody blowing the whistle.

Instead they fabricated results that would have been virtually impossible.

Wonder what's going on in "other" schools.


7 posted on 02/16/2006 5:26:24 AM PST by HiTech RedNeck
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To: Sybeck1
I teach in a public middle school here in NJ.

They must not have the same security that we do on the state wide testing.

The booklets are locked up until the test date and then each section (four part test, language, reading, math & science) are separately sealed. The seal is broken the day of the test.

Directly after each test is taken they are collected and placed in a locked cabinet.

Teachers are not even permitted to read the test questions, even over the kids shoulders.

BTW our school has a very large portion of conservative teachers. 100% of the 7th grade staff and 75% of the 8th grade staff.

8 posted on 02/16/2006 5:33:25 AM PST by mware (The keeper of the I's once again.)
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To: mcg2000

The only problem I see with the story is that it's hard to believe the teachers in Memphis would even know the right answers in order to correct them in the first place. I also wouldn't be surprised to see the teachers get off the hook by saying they didn't know the anwers so, therefore, they couldn't have done it.


9 posted on 02/16/2006 5:54:06 AM PST by Emmett McCarthy
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To: Sybeck1
The cheating allowed the school to move into an "improving" category and keep itself off a list of schools facing state takeover.

Memphis Education Association president Charles New said the cheating was the fallout of a law and culture that pins school success to test scores alone.

"It's a byproduct of the mandated testing under NCLB (the federal No Child Left Behind law), which forces a one size fits all test to judge every school," he said. "(Riverview's cheating) will make everybody doubt any scores that come out now. It casts a bad light."


(We don't need no stinking accountability!)
10 posted on 02/16/2006 5:54:58 AM PST by stocksthatgoup (http://www.busateripens.com)
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To: gunnedah
"...a byproduct of the mandated testing under NCLB..."

What a crock of crap! This is a direct result of dishonest teachers who don't give a crap about the education they provide their students. Great teachers: cheaters and losers.

Lord, thank you for letting me be able to take my kids out of public school. Homeschooling is the answer!

11 posted on 02/16/2006 5:55:08 AM PST by DesertSapper (I love God, family, country . . . and dead Islamofacist terrorists !!!)
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To: Sybeck1

This isn't a problem unique to Memphis. There have been a number of stories of systemic cheating from public school systems across the country. Memphis has its share of problems, but this one is not unique.


12 posted on 02/16/2006 5:56:42 AM PST by MississippiMasterpiece
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To: gunnedah; mcg2000; HiTech RedNeck; mware

Even in "good" school districts, the quality of teaching is often poor. I live in one of the "best" school districts in the country. It is "good" despite the teachers and administrators, NOT because of them. The tutoring business flourishes here because of parents trying to make up for where the schools are failing. The district is rated so highly because it is has so many extremely bright kids whose parents care enough to teach them at home and/or send them to tutors. The good teachers are being driven out of the system, and those good teachers who stay are hamstrung by the bureaucracy and by the crappy textbooks that the superintendant got a HUGE kickback from the textbook publishers for choosing.


13 posted on 02/16/2006 6:10:17 AM PST by generally (Ask me about FReepers Folding@Home)
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To: gunnedah; mcg2000; HiTech RedNeck; mware

We need more teachers like mware and more schools like the one where mware teaches. Not because they are conservative, but because they are honest. (Now why is it that we seem to find those two attributes linked together?)


14 posted on 02/16/2006 6:11:08 AM PST by generally (Ask me about FReepers Folding@Home)
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To: gunnedah; mcg2000; HiTech RedNeck; mware

I have never liked NCLB. On the surface, it sounds like a good thing, but with just a little thought and understanding of human nature you would realize that:

1. Not every child has the same potential. Some kids, no matter what, are going to be left behind.

2. When you have a system of rewards and penalties, someone is going to try to get around the system.

----
Cheating can happen in many ways, some more serious that others. These include:

1. Teaching to the test.

2. Allowing extra time for students to finish the test.

3. Allowing the students to see the test in advance.

4. Giving students the answers to the test questions.

5. Changing or adding answers to students' test forms.

One of the really sad things to find out when a scandal like this comes to light is that the teachers often don't know the correct answers! Sometimes they change a right answer to a wrong one.


15 posted on 02/16/2006 6:13:21 AM PST by generally (Ask me about FReepers Folding@Home)
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To: Sybeck1

"The more we kept digging, the more we found"

From a person recently moving away from Memphis ... keep digging in Memphis and you'll find New Orleans/


16 posted on 02/16/2006 6:14:20 AM PST by DHC-2
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To: mware

Then what if the teacher-watchers are corrupt


17 posted on 02/16/2006 6:15:36 AM PST by HiTech RedNeck
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To: DesertSapper

Before I had children, I always used to vote for the school bond issues because I believe that education is very important. Since the time when my oldest child was in first grade, I have always voted against the school bond issues. My belief in the importance of education has not changed. If anything, it's stronger. The difference is that I have now seen how the schools squander my tax dollars.

I believe that the government should get out of the "education business." I'm still undecided on whether education should be required or paid for by the government, but it definitely should not be provided by the government.


18 posted on 02/16/2006 6:19:00 AM PST by generally (Ask me about FReepers Folding@Home)
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To: Sybeck1
No one has been disciplined.
"Let me say we will not tolerate cheating," Memphis Supt. Carol Johnson said before Monday evening's school board meeting.


64-bit code decryption of the above phrase: If the cheating is done by NEA members, it will be tolerated. If the NEA member is caught then I guess we'll have to redo the tests. Is this why teachers gripe about 'teaching to the test', because it takes so much time to change the original test answers?

On a side note - I bet (if I were a bettin' man) the students who received the NEA funded test-score enrichment were mostly members of the basketball team.
19 posted on 02/16/2006 6:19:18 AM PST by AD from SpringBay (We have the government we allow and deserve.)
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To: ncountylee

What would you expect the NEA to say about the matter?


20 posted on 02/16/2006 6:19:59 AM PST by em2vn
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