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Igel

(35,300 posts)
3. The local NPR station in Houston had a segment talking to kids about school.
Wed May 27, 2015, 10:22 PM
May 2015

Mostly they echoed the standard talking points.

Within a school district, the example they gave were AP classes. History or government, IIRC. One school, minority-majority, had hundreds of kids take the AP test and a handful pass. The other had a large number score 5s and 4s.

"More money" was the explanation. "Outdated textbooks."

Except that the teachers make the same at both schools. Per student spending may be different, but very often it's very, very close. With a large different in educational outcomes, nonetheless. Not sure about the "outdated textbooks," either: AP teachers at a school often choose their textbooks by campus (at least in this neck of the woods), but the district-level funding is usually there and equitable.

It's what the students have been taught to say. And it conveniently blames others.

Better explanation: Motivation and background. The AP test has a lot of writing. As a school declines, AP enrollment numbers change. And the administration pressures the AP teachers to make sure that enrollment in the courses stays up. Timed essays, like on the AP test? No--it sets kids up for failure in class and lowers their GPAs, discouraging enrollment. Retesting? Absolutely, even if it does tell students that the first test is for practice. "Advanced academics" enrollment makes the school look good; it's a box to be checked off for students. The goal isn't learning; the goal is transcript enhancement, with the course itself an obstacle.

As the two students said, in discussing their AP test prep. The kid from the poor-performing school said that the night before the test she crammed the night and days before the test, read the textbooks, looked through notes, etc. The kid from the high-performing school said he didn't really prepare for the test--he already knew the stuff and so he had nothing to really focus on. That tells me that one kid had done only what was required during the school year, and when the big hurdle came along tried to catch up; the other kid did what was expected during the school year, and so was prepared. (One was probably a frustration for her teacher; the other probably wasn't. This isn't something that the kids learned during that year of school; it's something they learned in the previous 16 years of their lives.)

Yet they agreed it was all about money.

And, buried in the context, it's all about denying some equal opportunity. As though "equal outcomes" and "equal opportunity" were the same.

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