December 01, 2006
Failure to pass WASL indicative of a much larger failure

I was appalled to see that Queen Christine has stepped in to decree a three-year delay in the requirement that students in our state be required to pass the math portion of the 10th-grade WASL as a requirement to graduate. The goal that every student pass all three portions of the WASL -- the "three 'R's" if you will -- reading, writing and math, was set in 1993. Here we are almost 14 years later, with almost 30,000 high school sophomores in danger of failing to graduate in 2008.

Superintendent Terry Bergeson has openly acknowledged that the expected spike in math scores had not materialized. Additionally, she admitted that nearly half of those sophomores were not even close to passing. While a summer retake would mean a few more students could pass, nearly half of all members of the class of 2008 will still most likely fail. Meanwhile, our questionably elected governor has said she will push for legislation in the next legislative session to postpone the math requirement for three years.

Gregoire's proposal is to allow students to graduate if they can pass the reading and writing portions of the WASL along with rigorous math classes through their senior years. "This thee-year period will give us time to overhaul our math instruction," she said.

In a phone interview, Bergeson told the Kitsap Sun, "We've already got some changes lined up." She also said she is confident a rejuvenated math program will pay off for the class of 2011.

What about the classes of 2008, 2009 and 2010?

I am no education expert, but it seems to me if they couldn't accomplish this in 14 years, another three isn't going to make much of a difference unless those changes include dumbing down the entire math curriculum to the lowest common denominator. I oppose that.

Bergeson, the former Central Kitsap Schools superintendent, was also quoted as saying, "It was disappointing for everyone. It wasn't due to a lack of effort among teachers or students. We were just not ready."

What does that mean exactly? And more to the point, after 14 years, WHY are we "just not ready?"

Bergeson added, "It showed us that it wasn't a matter of motivation. Those same students scored nearly 90 percent in the reading and writing portions, so they were clearly trying. It just became evident that we as a state had not properly prepared them for the math portion."

I am more than a little reluctant to accept that "we as a state" crap. You and I didn't have anything to do with this other than paying our taxes to fund this colossal failure. How about putting the blame where it belongs? And naturally, when we are talking about educational accountability, the Washington Education Association (WEA) -- which is always demanding more of our tax dollars and shaming liberal lawmakers to either hand them over or miss out on election campaign funds -- is conspicuously silent about its failure to educate our students properly.

More than HALF of the entire state budget is already devoted to education. The theme of just about every Democrat elected in November was that we need to support education even more. To me at least, it's painfully obvious that we aren't getting our money's worth now. So will someone explain to me how throwing even MORE money at the problem is going to solve it?

Bergeson went on to say that if the schools that had failed, it's not fair to punish students by not letting them graduate. Yeah, that makes sense -- let's send them off to college and/or out into the "real world" without a proper education and pat ourselves on the back for doing the right thing. Sorry, but that just doesn't fly with me. In my view, Bergeson, the legislature, and the WEA, all deserve a failing grade.

Posted by TheFirewalker at December 01, 2006 07:36 AM | Email This
Comments
1. Great post. Maybe if we stopped all this touchy feely diversity classroom study and actually got back to the basics perhaps we could not only save our children's education but money at the same time.

Posted by: TrueSoldier on December 1, 2006 11:01 AM
2. I've been writing the same thing around here for a while. The WASL is not the problem, it's what has uncovered the problem. Washington kids have a math deficiency. And until that is corrected, H1B visa demand will continue to outstrip supply.

Posted by: Palouse on December 1, 2006 12:47 PM
3. Wonder what Bill Gates would say about Gregoire's Decision to continue to dumb the kids down...

Posted by: GS on December 2, 2006 12:04 AM
4. The Bergeson/State Failure.... 13 years of "reform" have brought us no closer in attaining higher standards for Wash State Students in Math... The philosophy has been: let the local districts come up with what they teach and then measure them against an unknown state mandated test. Oh and make it a requirement to graduate. It is kind of like walking into a class expecting to take a test on the Civil War and getting most of the questions on Valley Forge in 1776. For many of these 13 years local districts kept trying to change their teaching without a good outline of what might be tested. One could not even complain about the concepts presented in the tests just keep trying was the mantra. This "shotgun" approach to teaching has not worked for 12 years...
Just in the last year the OSPI(Bergeson's office) came up with more specific "Grade Level Expectations" a more specific outline of what is expected
and tested at every grade level. This so the 294 districts in the state can create their own curriculum. Will this better the Math Scores?? Who knows after the last 13 years of failure I, for one, cannot trust the current education/government regime to do the job. We need a mind set change from top to bottom to face this massive failure.

Posted by: CEC on December 2, 2006 10:29 PM
5. Can we finally get this Bergeson woman OUT of education??

In one article here on Sound Politics, she states that "we are on the right path" then two paragraphs later said, "we need to correct course" ..

Why do the liberals keep re-electing this person? What has she accomplished other than making sure Wa. State hovers near the bottom of scale (42nd out of 50) of the US?

Third world countries produce better eduated kids than our stated does.

Bergeson needs to lose her job... NOW.

Posted by: Lauri on December 2, 2006 10:57 PM
6. Hard to disagree with that, Firewalker.

Posted by: stu on December 4, 2006 07:57 PM
7. One of the problems with the WASL is that it is treated as an end in itself, not a diagnostic tool. If it were used as a diagnostic tool, to find weak areas and actually address them, it might be useful. Used as a measure of success and left there it's not much good.

Personally, and as a homeschooler, I would far rather my kids have a working knowledge of basic math, and understand how to use it, and understand the why of theorems and so on, and learn to look at problems from different angles until they understand it.....and use math in the real world, than to be able to pass a test devised by somebody who says 'kids must know this on the test'.

I got through pre-calculus in college. I remember virtually nothing of anything more advanced than what your average 5th grader can do, nowadays, because you know what? In the 15 years since I got out of college, I've never needed it. But damn, I got good grades and passed all my tests at the time.

Posted by: Angela B. on December 6, 2006 10:43 PM
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