Dear Carol, Bill, Ruth, Shwaw, Juan, Bill, Ray and Johnny:
My pro-TAG "please do not cut" statement this year is short and
sweet. It consists primarily of an invitation to visit the
website that Jeff and I have put together -- www.tagparents.org.
My hope is that by spending time at the website, you will come to
appreciate the necessity of protecting the TAG dollars from further
decrease.
That said, I'd like to draw your attention to something we've included
on the website -- the District's own dropout/nonattendance data for
1995 through 1999 (MMSD Research and Evaluation report, May,
2000). Here is the relevant section:
When the District analyzed dropout data for this five year period,
they identified four student profiles. One of these groups --
Group 1 -- it could be argued, might have benefited from more
appropriately challenging learning opportunities, opportunities that
might have kept them engaged in school and enabled them to
graduate. Note well the demographic characteristics of Group 1.
Group 1: High Achiever, Short Tenure, Behaved
This group comprises 27% of all dropouts during this five-year
period.
Characteristics of this group:
" Grade 5 math scores 84.2
percentile
" Male 55%
" Low income 53%
" Minority 42%
" African
American 31%
" Hispanic
6%
" Asian 5%
Put in words, more than one-quarter of the District's dropouts during
the second half of the 1990's had exhibited high academic achievement
early in their school careers. In addition, over half of this
group of early achieving dropouts were poor, more than two-fifths were
minority students, and almost one-third were African American.
Point: The only way to insure that poor and minority students
of high academic ability are not "lost" is to work at finding them in
the first place, and then to follow them throughout their school
careers -- i.e., to have in place a broad-based system of early and
ongoing identification (one that does not require parental
advocacy).
Point: The only way to insure that all students of high
academic potential have equal access to adequately challenging learning
opportunities is to have enough of these appropriately rigorous
learning opportunities, in all of the District's schools and at all
grade levels.
To the extent that you decrease the TAG budget, you are hurting all
academically talented students in the District. That goes without
saying. But these data suggest that as you cut the TAG budget and
the TAG program, you may be causing particular damage to those
academically talented students who come from less advantaged
backgrounds. These students are less likely to have parents who
can successfully advocate for them so that they, too, can benefit from
the ever shrinking pool of "next level challenge" learning
opportunities available in our schools. These students are also
less likely to have parents who can provide them with opportunities for
advanced learning outside of school, not to mention transfer them to
private school when their learning needs are not met in the public
system.
A case in point: West High School
Because of the curricular changes currently being discussed at West
High School -- changes which threaten the historically broad range of
challenging courses West has offered for its high end learners -- I'd
like to draw your attention to a further breakdown of these data, from
the same District report:
School Group I dropouts
(expressed as the % of total dropouts for that school)
East 25.9
LaFollette 23.8
Memorial 23.4
West 32.4
Put in words, between 1995 and 1999, West had a significantly higher
percentage of dropouts who exhibited high academic achievement early in
their school careers than any of the District's other three high
schools, each of which had about the same percentage of Group I
dropouts. There is no reason to assume that the demographic
characteristics of West's Group I dropouts are any different from those
of the District-wide group of Group 1 dropouts -- i.e., it is likely
that many of the West Group 1 dropouts were either minority students or
from low income families.
This suggests that as West contemplates getting rid of ever more "high
end" courses (the trend has already begun in the West math department
and is threatening to occur throughout the curriculum, arguably as a
result of the Small Learning Communities initiative), they may be
moving in the wrong direction (assuming their goal is to maximize
minority achievement, as opposed to simply minimizing minority
failure). As 10 of West's 18 math teachers put it in a recent
(April 2) letter to the Isthmus:
"It seems the administration and our school board have redefined
'success' as merely producing 'fewer failures.' Astonishingly,
excellence in student achievement is visited by some school district
administrators with apathy at best, and with contempt at worst.
But, while raising low achievers is a laudable goal, it is woefully
short-sighted and, ironically, racist in the most insidious way. Somehow,
limiting opportunities for excellence has become the definition of
providing equity! Could there be a greater insult to the
minority community?" (bold my own)
A recent example: Why did we parents have to put up a fight in order to
get West to continue offering even a single section (roughly 25
students) of accelerated ninth grade biology next year? If 103
students self-selected to take the required admissions test in the past
two weeks (even more did last year, I understand), doesn't that suggest
that another section or two are needed in order to meet the level of
need and interest? If over 100 students are interested in
having greater challenge in freshman biology, why restrict that
learning opportunity to the top 20-25 scorers on an admissions
test? Why not expand the availability of accelerated biology in
order to accommodate all who are interested?
In closing, the two most popular myths about "TAG" students is that
they are all rich, white kids and that no matter what they experience
in school, "they will do just fine." I hope that as you consider
the above data and peruse the tagparents website, you will come to
understand just how untrue those statements are. Students at
any point along the performance continuum disengage when they feel
misunderstood, unappreciated, and poorly taken care of by their
schools. In this regard, "high end" students are no different
from any others.
Sincerely,
Laurie Frost