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When All Else Fails, Relocate: Garfield Deserves Much More
Tolu Olorunda | Posted April 18, 2009 2:00 PM"When a
man stupid becomes a man inspired, when one and the same man passes out of the
torpid into the perceiving state, leaves the din of trifles, the stupor of the
senses, to enter into the quasi-omniscience of high thought--up and down,
around, all limits disappear. No horizon shuts down. He sees things in their
causes, all facts in their connection... It is ominous, a presumption of crime,
that this word Education has so cold, so hopeless a sound. A treatise on
education, a convention for education, a lecture, a system, affects us with
slight paralysis and a certain yawning of the jaws... Education should be as
broad as man."
--Ralph
Waldo Emerson (1803-1882).
As I
poured over The Star Press yesterday, I was disturbed by the
report printed on its front page. The headline, "Garfield among worst
schools in state," wasn't the shocker. It wasn't alarming to read that it is
considered, by state data, one of Indiana's "20 worst-performing schools." What
did startle me, was the strategy Muncie Community school board members had
constructed, to improve Garfield's performance.
Facing
this grim reality, the board decided that relocation, for Garfield, from South
Madison to East Washington Street, could effectively steer its education wheel
in the right direction.
So, that's
it. Yeah. Relocation should do it. And while we're at it, why don't we light a
few candles, and blow them out, and wish upon a star, and close our eyes, and
visualize the problem dissolving, and use our imagination to channel positive
thoughts about Garfield's future.
I hate to
come across cynically, but if after all these months and years, the message
hasn't been received, it's hard to foresee what future lays ahead for one of
Muncie's historic education landmarks. In actuality, however, it isn't that
difficult to predict the probable outcome. If the board members see relocation
as the most demanding action at this critical junction, the journey ahead only
promises doom and gloom for Garfield's students, parents, teachers, and
administrators.
The new
building is "newer, larger and in better condition than the existing Garfield
building," says The Star Press. Yes, it's flashier and more appealing, but if
the same bankrupt ideas are implemented in the classrooms, a year from now, the
problem would remain unsolved.
Alongside
the push for relocation, "sanctions" can be counted on. Garfield's parents must
"prepare" themselves for an incoming "plan for alternative governance of the
school the following year if improvement does not occur." This is meant to send
a clear message: Underperformance doesn't come without steep repercussions.
The
measurement of educational competency in schools is principally conducted
through their English and math performances on the ISTEP+ test. School
attendance and graduation rates are also considered. To be exempt from the
danger-list, 72.6 percent of students need to pass the English portion of the
ISTEP+, and 71.5 percent, the mathematics'.
What we
have here, is adherence to an insolvent and defunct system of education.
Emerson, nearly two centuries ago, warned against the "cold" and "hopeless"
values the school system had begun expressing, with its devotion to
traditionalistic philosophies that excluded the need for diversity and novelty.
His words couldn't be any timelier.
Any
obsession with standardized testing is an irreproachable assurance of failure.
Failure can take two forms, in the school system. It is true that failure is
most explicitly and expressively defined in the underperformance of students,
on a test or examination. No disputes are rendered, to that effect.
Nonetheless, if a school fails in its fiduciary responsibility to "draw out"
degrees of creativity, innovation, and confidence from a student, my friends,
no other word can justly explain that conundrum--but failure.
Schools
across the country are failing students and parents--woefully--in this regard.
This reality fully validates my distrust of the AYP as a progressive source of
student-assessment. The day administrators began accepting the myth that all
kids think alike, a crime was committed. All kids are born into the world with
individual senses of self, success and society. The school system is required
to harness this potential, and expand their horizon into seeing the world more
broadly and conceptually. What we have, instead, is a one-dimensional
pedagogical approach, through arcane curriculum and military dill-like
assignments, that cheapen a student's worth. Students are over-burdened with
assignments, ostensibly to ingrain "discipline" into them, but all that is
accomplished is the creation of lifeless zombies, trained to do the bidding of
others--the "others" representing a repressed minority of authority that cares
less about a student's self-esteem, and more, their scores on tests.
When
students are trained--not taught--to pass tests because some organization is
threatening "alternative governance," what future can we boastfully assure is
worth anticipating? When they see education as a means to an end--an end
undefined--how can we truly claim to value them as "tomorrow's leaders." When
the aim of educational excellence is to escape "sanctions" from school board
members, we reveal ourselves as nothing but opportunists--ethereal-minded
opportunists, without the vision necessary to rehabilitate a dilapidated school
system.
Another
relatively unexplored angle is the cultural enigma that could piece together
the puzzle of Garfield's underperformance.
Garfield's
students are being contrasted to Mitchell's, but such comparison is the epitome
of foolishness. The students at Garfield have grown up in an environment those
at Mitchell can only see on TV, or be taught in class about, to grasp the
content of its reality. The emotions, cultural expressions, and emotional
vibrations of Garfield's students cannot be disregarded, in our rush to fix
Muncie's broken-down education system.
But
Garfield isn't the only underperforming school in Muncie. The following also
failed to meet the federally-constructed Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP)
standards: Central High School, Southside High School, Northside Middle School,
Wilson Middle School, Garfield Elementary, Grissom Elementary, South View
Elementary, Longfellow, Elementary, North View Elementary, Sutton Elementary,
Washington-Carver Elementary.
If
anything is learnable from the AYP report, it must be that Muncie has got some
difficult days ahead, if we truly intend to make things right, and ensure
education excellence for ALL students.
2008 School Adequate Yearly Progress
Report:
http://www.thestarpress.com/article/99999999/DATAPLACE/90415024
[SOURCE]
Tolu Olorunda is a columnist for BlackCommentator.com, and a contributor at TheDailyVoice.com.
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