« Feed Our Children! Don't Weigh Them! | Main | Yearbooks Dedicated to Inclusion »

8th Grade Algebra: Back to the Future

by Stuart Singer, The Teacher Leader

The problem with driving around in circles is that while you put a great deal of mileage on the odometer, you end up right back where you started.  For many of the math students in Montgomery County, MD, that now seems to be the case.  After years of striving to increase the percentage of students taking Algebra 1 prior to high school, the educational leaders in that district are having some serious second thoughts. This rethinking was on full display in an article by Michael Birnbaum in the Washington Post:

“Montgomery County long has pushed its students to take ever-more-challenging math at ever-younger ages. Now educators will back off in the hope that more time and depth with the basics will yield payoffs in high school and beyond, school officials said Thursday.”

Frieda Lacey, Deputy Superintendent was even more specific. “Some students were placed in classes, and perhaps they weren't as prepared as they should have been.”  Ms. Lacey added that the push by the county for math acceleration had been an “overreaction”.

Most of these changes are the result of the work by a panel of parents, educators and researchers who studied the math program in the county.  Birnbaum writes, “The report said that efforts to increase access to high-level classes ‘effectively removed sorting and selecting practices based on assumptions about ability,’ meaning that too many students were being accelerated routinely.”

If only they had listened

Teachers and parents initiated this new perspective--opposing rushing students into Algebra 1.  According to Birnbaum, “The change comes as high school teachers were increasingly saying that even their advanced students were arriving in class unprepared. Parents wondered why their children needed to take advanced classes that often required outside tutoring. School officials said more than half of fifth-graders are taking sixth-grade math or higher.”

There is actually a simple explanation as to why schools find themselves with this dilemma.  The main advocates for accelerating math were district educational leaders with scant if any input from teachers.  In 2005, I sat in a district K-12 math department chair meeting and sighed as I heard the system’s math coordinator proudly tout in a power point “The District’s goal is to have 100% of our students take Algebra 1 by the eighth grade.” Based on my lunch conversations with my colleagues that day I can report that the teachers sitting in that room did not share this enthusiasm for the plan.  Of course no one had ever asked for their thoughts on the proposal.

If someone had solicited that advice they would have heard exactly the same comments that are now being spoken five years later in Montgomery County.  For years school districts throughout the country have had an overly simplistic solution for lagging math performance—place younger and younger students into courses entitled Algebra 1.   The advantage of this approach when compared with the revised path now being considered by MCPS, which includes putting more rigor into elementary and middle school math and more careful recommendations, is that it is far less complicated and nuanced. 

It is much easier to implement an “every student in our district will be enrolled in Algebra 1 before high school” policy and makes for a much catchier sound bite. It is important to note that the concept of advancing students in math is not the flaw in this plan.  There are, of course, a significant number of students who should be taking more difficult classes earlier.  Preventing them from accelerating their math studies would be wrong.  But for those who are not appropriately prepared either in terms of background or maturity, the primary outcome of this “sink or swim” approach is academic drowning.  Unfortunately, this experience leaves most of these individuals with a negative attitude toward math and in some cases school in general which will limit their success in future courses. 

In addition classes with many students who are not academically prepared results in an inferior course for everyone.  For many years our feeder middle school placed the top 50% of the eighth grade into “honors” Algebra 1.  The bottom half would take the class in the ninth grade.   Despite what was a huge disparity in mathematical talent, the scores of the two groups on identical Algebra 1 Standards of Learning (SOL) exams were statistically the same (472 vs. 469).  Not surprisingly just as was found in Montgomery County, many of these “honors” students struggled in subsequent honors-level math classes. 

Some things cannot be undone

As a mathematician I use data to reinforce many of my educational arguments.  While these statistics can be accurate, powerful and informative they do come with one very large caveat.  Those data points are not just test scores or grades.  Each one represents a student whose future can be predicated on the quality of the education they receive.  The tragedy is that every time one of those bits of information is utilized to demonstrate a tactical mistake in instruction, a child’s future is in peril. While bad policies can be studied, reevaluated over time and eventually revoked, for those whose education has been compromised by such misguided beliefs there is no do-over available. 

School leaders who design their programs to enhance their power point presentations have their priorities terribly misaligned.  Policy makers must remember that, in education, faster is not always better; fancier is rarely more effective; and any policy that demands the inclusion of everyone is almost certainly doomed to failure.  Breathing and eating are required for 100% of students.  After those two, the “must do” list is very limited.  

I applaud the changes that are being made in Montgomery County.  I wish more school districts would put their math programs under such scrutiny.  Unfortunately much of the pain that is being felt there and other places could have been lessened if teachers had been brought into the conversation earlier.  While the information that is received from the front lines may not always be what the people in charge want to hear, it is often the most accurate.  Too many poor educational decisions have been made without the direct participation and influence of teachers.  The victims of such missteps are the students. They deserve better.

 

 

 

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://nasspblogs.org/blog-mt/mt-tb.fcgi/310


Hosting by Yahoo!

Comments

This article doesn't expose the major reason that schools in many states feel the need to accelerate students in mathematics. State mandated graduation requirements often force school to try to get eighth graders through the Algebra I in order to free schedule slots for any electives in high school or to allow some flexibility for credit recovery during the school day in high school.

The direction of Stuart H.S. (and seemingly of the entire county) is having every teacher teach the same things on the same days and give the same tests. This is supposedly in the name of fairness. ("It is not fair for one student to learn something - and get a grade - from one teacher while another student in the same subject learns something else - and gets a different grade - from another teacher.") While this sounds reasonable, it doesn't work in the real world.

In the real world, life is not fair. It is not fair that some students have parents, and tutors, that help them and some do not. It is not fair that some students have to work after school jobs to support their family and some do not. It is not fair that some students understand subjects quickly and some do not.

Now, there are two ways of alleviating this situation. The first is to try to fit everyone into the same mold. All teachers should be the same. All students should be the same. Everyone should learn the same things at the same time at the same pace. Basically this would turn education into a "Harrison Bergeron" society. This seems to be the way of the school and county.

The second way is to realize that students are different, that teachers are different, that people are different. Instead of molding students (and teachers) to fit a system, change the system to fit the students. Since there are many students (even in small schools like Stuart, there are now 1700 students) in each school, this is the harder way of the two ways. This is the beauty of what Stuart H.S. used to be. We, at least in the math department, took each student and figured out what was best for that individual. If that person had problems with language, then perhaps it was better to go from Algebra 1 to Algebra 2 before taking Geometry. If the person couldn't (or wouldn't) do work outside of class (including studying) then perhaps it would be better to take a double block Algebra 2 class. At the same time, we (again the math department) realized that different teachers had different strengths. Some teachers were great at teaching the average students. Some were good at teaching advanced students. Some were good at teaching struggling students. If at all possible, teachers were given classes in which they would do the best teaching. By doing this, we (as a department and school) gave every students every opportunity to succeed (success being defined differently for different students). We didn't reach every student, but we sure did come close. It is not a great example, but one year we had 15 total students not pass the SOL tests in all math subjects combined (3 were from summer school).

In general, there are two ways of adapting. You can make students (and teachers) adapt to a system or you can make the system adapt to the students. The first way is easier, the second more successful. Unfortunately, the first is the way things are going now.

This is my (somewhat) short view of the direction of education. It doesn't exactly address collaboration. In general, used correctly, collaboration is a great idea. At Stuart, the teachers would get together on an at least weekly, and often daily basis to talk about their subjects. This was not to make sure everyone was doing the exact same thing, but to discuss ideas and problems (and hopefully solutions). I can give you examples, but I realize this has probably run too long already.

Post a comment

(If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by the site owner before your comment will appear. Until then, it won't appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting.)

Subscribe to Principal Difference by e-mail
(enter your address):