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It should be noted that the majority of states don’t have powerful teachers unions. Right to work states rule the day. It’s not 1950. Utah doesn’t have any unions.
Giving credit where credit is due. This was a constructive post.Many schools are offering additional reading and writing programs over the summer. Some of it comes from left over Covid funds that weren’t included in last session’s tax cuts. We await the results of these programs.
There’s always chatter about changing secondary start times to be later. But that really clashes with extra curricular parents. No one wants sportsball practices to go late. And honestly, supervising late games in the spring when it’s still cold sucks. But seriously, if you want to see some gains in secondary? Get rid of the 2.5 month break over summer and start school 1 hr later. All the research I’ve seen supports this… the public probably won’t… but meh.
I also think we should boost the trade schools. Most secondary schools already have some programs. All your major districts along the Wasatch front have trade schools. I think we’ve gone overboard with college preparedness. One can make a great living being an electrician. Why go to 4 years of college and incur massive debt when you could knock out a bunch of your education at a trade school in high school?
Btw, if we really want to improve education, we need to stop giving handouts to private and charter schools. These schools for the most part, perform far worse than your median public school. I did some work early in the grading system in utah. Our top 20 schools? Majority public. Our bottom 20? Majority charter/private. There was one in particular that was a Mormon fundamentalist school in Davis County. *Shocked* that they sucked big time at science, math, and reading/writing
Yes, and how is the learning loss in Utah? Without strong teacher's unions, did the Utah kids fair better or worse on-average as compared to the nation as a whole?It should be noted that the majority of states don’t have powerful teachers unions. Right to work states rule the day. It’s not 1950. Utah doesn’t have any unions.
What’s learning loss? What does that mean? Can we look inside a student’s head and see what they know? What’s your metric here? NAEP, the test pro voucher folks are promoting right now is a test administered to a small group of students nationally (they know that the NAEP doesn’t break down enough to see how poorly voucher kids are doing in the same test). Are we going to use state tests, like RISE and ASPIRE as our metrics? But now we’re not comparing apples to apples. Should we just look at ACT scores? But those often skew towards demographics that are slated to be college bound and receive ACT training throughout their 11th and 12th grade years. Plus, not every state uses the ACT, some use the SAT.Yes, and how is the learning loss in Utah? Without strong teacher's unions, did the Utah kids fair better or worse on-average as compared to the nation as a whole?
Why blame the teachers? The students reading for fun every day dropped from 27% to 14%. I expect that's a much more serious problem.
View: https://twitter.com/NAEP_NCES/status/1671480646894755840
Reading for pleasure is not a learning habit, and now that kids are back in school, that effect would have been reversed anyhow. Try again.Teachers have an impact on students that extends beyond the classroom especially for students from poorer families where parents can't step in to fill any gaps. Making teachers into images on a screen, as the teacher's unions accomplished, is simply less effective and that includes diminished learning habits at home.
Clearly that is not true or NEAP wouldn't have been tracking it.Reading for pleasure is not a learning habit
I know that is what teacher's unions wanted to believe but the damage done has large and lasting impacts as evidenced in the NEAP report.now that kids are back in school, that effect would have been reversed anyhow.
Nice!My daughter gets the 0-4 grades (everything above 3)
No A-F grades. It is a little more helpful imo. She is really really smart so for her the learning curve is easy (I credit Upstart computer program for this). She is an amazing reader. They were having her leave her 1st grade classroom to go to a 4th grade classroom for reading.Nice!
Do they also give her A-F grades too? Or has it completely changed to the Standards-Based grades? Has it been helpful to you? What was the learning curve like?