Schools prepare to meet set standards

 
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Jul 09, 2008 - 04:06:07 CDT
Changes to the federal No Child Left Behind Law could help some North Dakota Schools measure up.

For North Dakota, the measurement was unattainable by 169 school districts, including the Bismarck and Mandan school districts. This was up from 41 districts the previous year. The reason for the increase was a change in how many students it took to be proficient in reading and math.

"It presents some challenges," Bismarck Superintendent Paul Johnson said. "You're making progress, then all of a sudden, the requirements go up, and it tends to be disappointing."

The Bismarck district missed adequate yearly progress, along with 13 of its schools.

The yardstick to measure schools is adequate yearly progress, which looks at how many students know basic knowledge in reading and math, the percentage of graduates and percentage of students attending school. Every couple years, the percentages to meet or exceed in each category increases. The goal is to get all students meeting the requirements.

How that is calculated could change, depending on Congress and the next president. Educators hope for a model that follows a class and gives greater accommodations to students with disabilities.

"Right now, I hope there will be change," Mandan Superintendent Wilfred Volesky said.

He presented the district's adequate yearly progress results to the school board Monday. Only two of the district's schools, Roosevelt and Lewis and Clark elementary schools, met the requirements. The other three elementary schools, the junior high and the high school did not meet the requirements.

The district met the requirements last year, as well as the schools. For now, they have three years to get the scores up to the new percentage requirements until the requirements change again.

But Volesky said he would like to see the testing proficiency start to be based on a growth model. This would follow a class, instead of using a three-year average for a class, as it does now. Johnson doesn't foresee a change to that law that would affect the Bismarck district, because the growth model, might only apply to disadvantaged schools, he said.

Regardless, it could take time for changes to come out of Washington with the presidential election.

In the meantime, the districts will focus on what they need to do to reach the goals before it raises again in three years. For Bismarck, this means working on raising individual student scores.

The law has made some improvements in public education.

"Accountability has forced us to examine our practice," Johnson said.

The focus on reading and math comes from what is measured through tests, he said. Schools need to be conscientious to keep curriculums balanced, he said.

(Reach reporter Sara Kincaid at 250-8251 or sara.kincaid@;bismarcktribune.com.)
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Schools prepare to meet set standards
Comments

nice day wrote on Jul 9, 2008 2:15 PM:

" MJ: I feel for your situation. Where in the world did your kid go to school? I have worked with lots of kids over the years and there are some things that will never change. 1 middle school kids will care much more about other kids and what they are doing than school 2 high school kids aren't really thinking about the future and when they are they are either scared to death or so excited that they forget to live in the present 3 parents/adults that kids respect are the greatest determining factor in the sucess of a child.

If you want to change the world be a BIG or get involved with activities for kids it is a great investment in your time. "

MJ wrote on Jul 9, 2008 11:12 AM:

" The no child left behind rule should be worked on because half of our teachers do not care. My oldest son quit school because the teachers do not care if you pass or fail your told to do the work and that is it with no instruction. I talked to my school about getting help for him and the basically refused. needless to say he will be getting his GED in about 1 month and he is joining the gaurds but according to the school he was just to lazy or too stupid. "

My Opinion wrote on Jul 9, 2008 8:29 AM:

" I believe that if the students are correctly talk reading, writing, and arithmetic, then this "No Child Left Behind" set of rules is mute. It seems to me that it would be better to teach children well than to have rules governing school performance changed to "follow a group" from a school that is below the standards. This just seems foolish to have students who are not proficient in math and reading to be the rule on how a school is performing. "

Jeff wrote on Jul 9, 2008 8:09 AM:

" Good idea - since Bismarck schools cannot meet the requirements, just lower them so they can. Some system our high property tax supports "

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