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Old 07-06-2011, 04:29 PM   #1
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Default America's biggest teacher and principal cheating scandal unfolds in Atlanta

America's biggest teacher and principal cheating scandal unfolds in Atlanta
At least 178 teachers and principals in Atlanta Public Schools cheated to raise student scores on high-stakes standardized tests, according to a report from the Georgia Bureau of Investigation.

Award-winning gains by Atlanta students were based on widespread cheating by 178 named teachers and principals, said Georgia Gov. Nathan Deal on Tuesday. His office released a report from the Georgia Bureau of Investigation that names 178 teachers and principals – 82 of whom confessed – in what's likely the biggest cheating scandal in US history.

This appears to be the largest of dozens of major cheating scandals, unearthed across the country. The allegations point an ongoing problem for US education, which has developed an ever-increasing dependence on standardized tests.

The report on the Atlanta Public Schools, released Tuesday, indicates a "widespread" conspiracy by teachers, principals and administrators to fix answers on the Criterion-Referenced Competency Test (CRCT), punish whistle-blowers, and hide improprieties.

It "confirms our worst fears," says Mayor Kasim Reed. "There is no doubt that systemic cheating occurred on a widespread basis in the school system." The news is “absolutely devastating," said Brenda Muhammad, chairwoman of the Atlanta school board. "It’s our children. You just don’t cheat children.”

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On its face, the investigation tarnishes the 12-year tenure of Superintendent Beverly Hall, who was named US Superintendent of the Year in 2009 largely because of the school system's reported gains – especially in inner-city schools. She has not been directly implicated, but investigators said she likely knew, or should have known, what was going on. In her farewell address to teachers in June, Hall for the first time acknowledged wrongdoing in the district, but blamed other administrators.

The Atlanta cheating scandal also offers the first most comprehensive view yet into a growing number of teacher-cheating allegations across the US, reports of which reached a rate of two to three a week in June, says Robert Schaeffer, a spokesman for the National Center for Fair & Open Testing, which advocates against high-stakes testing.

It's also a tacit indictment, critics say, of politicians putting all bets for improving education onto high-stakes tests that punish and reward students, teachers, and principals for test scores.

"When test scores are all that matter, some educators feel pressured to get the scores they need by hook or by crook," says Mr. Schaeffer. "The higher the stakes, the greater the incentive to manipulate, to cheat."
Cheating in Atlanta Public Schools

The 55,000-student Atlanta public school system rose in national prominence during the 2000s, as test scores steadily rose and the district received notice and funding from the Broad Foundation and the Gates Foundation. But behind that rise, the state found, were teachers and principals in 44 schools erasing and changing test answers.

One of the most troubling aspects of the Atlanta cheating scandal, says the report, is that the district repeatedly refused to properly investigate or take responsibility for the cheating. Moreover, the central office told some principals not to cooperate with investigators. In one case, an administrator instructed employees to tell investigators to "go to hell." When teachers tried to alert authorities, they were labeled "disgruntled." One principal opened an ethics investigation against a whistle-blower.

Investigations by the Atlanta Journal-Constitution (AJC) and state investigators found a pattern consistent with other cheating scandals: a spike in test scores in one critical grade would be followed by an equally dramatic drop the next year. A USA Today investigation in March found that erasure data in six states and the District of Columbia showed these "abnormal patterns," according to testing expert Thomas Haladyna at Arizona State University.

The Atlanta testing allegations led to the first major law enforcement investigation of teacher cheating. Scandals in other states have typically been investigated by state officials. In response to recent teacher cheating allegations in Baltimore, Michael Sarbanes, the district's community engagement director, told District Management Journal, an industry publication for school administrators, that manipulating a test is "inherent in human nature, [although] we think people who do that are outliers."
The high stakes for teachers

Ten states now use test scores as the main criterion in teacher evaluations. Other states reward high-scoring teachers with up to $25,000 bonuses – while low scores could result in principals losing their jobs or entire schools closing. Even as the number of scandals grows, experts say it remains fairly easy for teachers and principals to get away with ethical lapses.

"I think the broadest issue in the [Atlanta scandal] raises is why many school districts and states continue to have high-stakes testing without rigorous auditing or security procedures," says Brian Jacob, director of the Center on Local, State and Urban Policy at the University of Michigan. "In some sense, this is one of the least worrisome problems in public education, because it's fairly easy to fix. The more difficult and troubling behavior would be teaching to the test, which we think of as a lesser form of test manipulation, but which is much harder to detect, and could warp the education process in ways that we wouldn't like."

In response to cheating scandals, some states and school districts have instituted tougher test-auditing standards, employing software that analyzes erasure rates and patterns. Meanwhile, the Obama administration is reforming NCLB to reduce pressure on teachers and principals. Education Secretary Arne Duncan said in June that NCLB “is creating a slow-motion train wreck for children, parents, and teachers.” On the other hand, an Obama administration proposal – to pay bonuses to teachers who improve test scores in their classes – may shift the stakes without lowering them.

"The [Atlanta] teachers, principals and administrators wanted to prove that the faith of the Broad and Gates Foundations and the Chamber of Commerce in the district was not misplaced and that APS could rewrite the script of urban education in America and provide a happy, or at least a happier, ending for its students," writes the AJC's education columnist, Maureen Downey.

"And that’s what ought to alarm us," adds Ms. Downey, "that these professionals ultimately felt their students could not even pass basic competency tests, despite targeted school improvement plans, proven reforms, and state-of-the-art teacher training."

http://news.yahoo.com/americas-bigge...213734183.html
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Old 07-06-2011, 06:23 PM   #2
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As if we don't short-change kids enough on education...let's lie about what little we do provide....

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Old 07-06-2011, 06:46 PM   #3
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No Teacher's Salary Left Behind...
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Old 07-07-2011, 08:49 AM   #4
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Damn good thing those teachers are unionized to protect them from...wait....what?!
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Old 07-07-2011, 08:54 AM   #5
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Damn good thing those teachers are unionized to protect them from...wait....what?!
Apoc rides in on his teamsters horse with his 'unions rock' t-shirt in 3... 2... 1...
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Old 07-07-2011, 09:08 AM   #6
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Goddamn. This story is blowing my mind. I wonder how common this really is across America. I can tell you that my son's school is a fucking joke, that half his classmates can't even speak English much less read it, and that his school gets constant Exemplary ratings from the state education board.....
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Old 07-07-2011, 09:55 AM   #7
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Goddamn. This story is blowing my mind. I wonder how common this really is across America. I can tell you that my son's school is a fucking joke, that half his classmates can't even speak English much less read it, and that his school gets constant Exemplary ratings from the state education board.....
Public schools need to get nixed. Sick and tired of having about 30% of my income stolen every year to pay for some dickhead's slobbering bastard children's mediocre "education".
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Old 07-07-2011, 11:28 AM   #8
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Public schools need to get nixed. Sick and tired of having about 30% of my income stolen every year to pay for some dickhead's slobbering bastard children's mediocre "education".
Gotta look at the other side of the coin too: many look at our public schools as baby sitters instead of educators.

Kid getting into fights on the weekend? Must be the school's fault...

Kid buying/selling crack on the side? Must be the school's fault...
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Old 07-07-2011, 11:30 AM   #9
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Gotta look at the other side of the coin too: many look at our public schools as baby sitters instead of educators.

Kid getting into fights on the weekend? Must be the school's fault...

Kid buying/selling crack on the side? Must be the school's fault...
If these "educators" as you call them have possession of the children for the majority of daylight hours aren't they somewhat responsible for raising them as well?

You can't expect a decent school system to overcome shitty parenting....but can you expect good parenting to overcome a shitty school system?
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Old 07-07-2011, 11:37 AM   #10
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Originally Posted by Particle Man View Post
Gotta look at the other side of the coin too: many look at our public schools as baby sitters instead of educators.

Kid getting into fights on the weekend? Must be the school's fault...

Kid buying/selling crack on the side? Must be the school's fault...
I've known a few teachers and administrators... that's their biggest issue that they have to deal with... stupid parents.
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