NOTICE


WARNING ! – Ongoing attempts to by-pass and change the administrative functions and content of this blog ( generic "HACKS") has resulted in Substantial Reduction of normal access. Expectations of restricted availability and access will occur as these intrusions persist.

WATER !! WATER ? "Water"

Are you concerned/interested in Atkinson's water issue?
Visit the new water discussion forum.
http://www.just-goaway.com/
NEW PETITION ON FORUM
New Information and Updates Daily

Tuesday, July 10

Timberlane is going down the tubes, when will the school board stop it?

Publius, please accept this as an article submission.

ARTICLE SUBMISSION

Timberlane is going down the tubes, when will the school board stop it?

In 1975 the Timberlane Junior High School opened to much fanfare. I was in the eighth grade at the time. We had been attending double sessions at the high school for three years, while construction was going on. It, like the high school when it opened, was a model school, in layout, curriculum, and achievement. In the 70's Timberlane, believe it or not, was one of the highest academically rateed school districts in NH. At a time when schools were something both much greater, and much less than they are today.

It was not a "middle school". There was no "Team Teaching". There was an english dept., a social studies dept., a science dept., a math dept., and so on. There wass no "peer mediation", "grade inflation", "manditory promotion", "SAC", "in-school suspension", or any of the other namby-pamby, wishy-washy, feel good, new age crap, that is currently choking this once fine institution.

I say it was one something more, because it was once a place where learning hapenned. Where Learning was EXPECTED to happen. Where Students were EXPECTED to do their work, maintain discipline, and accomplish a body of work in order to graduate on to the High School.

I say it was also much less than it is today because it was, at that time, more focused on the children learning than making the parents feel good about their childs performance, or lack thereof, as it is today. It didn't perfom social work, as it does today. It didnt make excuses about childrens laziness in failing to do homework as it does today. Contrary to the opinions of principal Hogan a child's natural laziness is not that child "doing their best" or "working at their pace" and the latter is never "ok"!

I am writing this because I recently had confirmation of something I had only heard about, and had not believed. I know of a child who graduated the eighth grade this year, and is going into the high school in the fall. A normal occurence, I know, except that this childs graduated with 3 "F"'s and 1 "D-" all in core subjects. Unfortunately, the one subject that this child passed, with a "C", was language arts, and this child has not the ability to coherently write a report. No sentence structure, grammar, punctuation, spelling skills comensurate with an eighth grade education.

When the parent spoke to Mr. Hogan about this atrocity, the parent was told that their child had not graduated but had merely gotten a "promotion certificate". When the parent asked if the child had to go to summer school, Mr. Hogan replied that the child should. The parent, picking up on the "should", asked if the child's "promotion" was contingent upon successfully completing summer school? Mr. Hogan then replied that summer school was not mandatory, but should be attended by this child. The parent then asked "if the child was not sent to summer school, would the child still go into the ninth grade in the fall? Mr. Hogan said YES! He went on that "studies have shown that it would hurt(the child) developmentally more for (the child) to stay back than to go on" He said "(the child) would catch up in high school"! THIS FROM A PRINCIPAL!!!

Mr. Hogan then explained that High school is a credit based institution and some kids will get their 20 credits in 3.5 years, some will get them in 4 years, and some will have to take that extra class, or semester to graduate, and that's ok. Well, I say, NO that is not ok! This is the attitude that has created the situation where 21% of high schoolers can not read or write well enough to fill out their own job application. This is why 74% of College freshman have to take remedial math ro english, their parents effectively paying college rates to teach their kids what should have been taught in high school. Education is the single greatest defining attitrbute of life. People are judged by how they speak and what they know. Professional door will open or close based upon a person's education, and we are leaving it in the hands of those who are mroe concerned with the children's self esteem than what they actually know.

Here are some facts for the parents reading this, that they may be unaware of. Students are allowed to take re-tests. If a student wishes to bring up their grade, irregardless of that grade they may take the same test again, and take the average fo the two grades. When they have to write a report, they are given a list of websites from which to gather their info., in most cases they merely cut and paste from those websites to form the report. They learn nothing! I know of four eighth grade girls who had to do reports on historical figures, Vincent Van Gogh, Harriet Tubman, Alexander Hamilton, Thomas Jefferson, and the reports they handed in were cut and pasted from websites. No original content! I thought they would learn a lesson from this and said nothing. They did learn a valuable lesosn, they got "B"'s!

There is so much more to learn than there was when we went to school, and the district, particularly the middle school is doing a horrible job of teaching it., The curriculum is weak. Adn even that is not taught to full effectiveness. There seems to be little if any oversight.

Now here is my question to the school board;

What are you going to do to bring this school district back to its glory days?

We, as parents pay Timberlane $11,702/student per year! Timberlane has a $55Million budget and roughly 4700 kids district wide.

The Timberlane district currently boasts a 58% Proficiency level in grade 10 math.
The Timberlane district currently boasts a 76% Proficiency level in grade 10 reading.

This is what we consider acceptable? In 25 years this district which was 1st in the county, and 6th in the state, now places 15th in the COUNTY in reading, and 18th in the COUNTY in math!

We only have 8 more slots to fall before WE HIT ROCK BOTTOM!!! AND NO ONE IS DOING ANYTHING ABOUT IT!!!

I ask the school board these questions because they are not supposed to sit there and act as bobble-heads whenever superintendent McDonald says something. The school board is SUPPOSED to be running the district! They are the people we elected to look into these things, and see that we are getting the most for our money. We are not!

Does the school board look into, and question curriculum and practices? Do they discuss educational philosophy with Dr. McDonald, and inform him of the direction the district is to take in bringing up test scores and achievement?

This is the basic problem with public education, it is not responsive to the needs of its customers. It gets its money no matter what, whereas in the private sector, if a school had the deplorable standards of TRMS, it would go out of business, because its customers, the parents, would not pay $11,702/yr. for their kids to be shuffled along whether they did the work or not.

It doesn't work this way in the real world. When you have a job(in the private sector, this doesnt hold true for a government job) you have to perform to a certain level. You have to accomplish certain tasks, or you will be fired. Schools rarely make these demands anymore.

I want my school board to answer one question for me;

Why cant Timberlane have the academic achievement of Phillips Academy in Exeter, or even Boston Latin in Roxbury( a public school with significant minority enrollment), or even Central Catholic in Lawrence?

signed,

Mark R. Acciard

20 comments:

Anonymous said...

I know a family who has a sophomore son who failed two major subjects. He was told he doesn't have to go to summer school; he can double up next year, so he opted for that. He will be considered to be in the junior class in September.

This kid can't spell, and he can't write. If there is a way out of a written report, he'll take it. Teachers often provide alternatives -- posters, or some other imaginative project.

It's downright scary!

Moreover, I wonder about the "smart" kids as well. How prepared are they for college? Do we have any statistics on how many Timberlane kids drop out because they aren't prepared?

AND - how far has this filtered down....to elementary school perhaps? I knew a teacher who retired a few years ago rather than to continue passing third grade children on to the fourth grade when they were ready.

No wonder children in other countries are better education that here in America.

Anonymous said...

But Kindergarten will correct all just wait until september,

Anonymous said...

Better yet..... regarding those standardized tests that are required for specific grades. I had a 4th grader at the Academy (who told me to late in the year to do anything about it) who said the teacher sat down the next day and went over all the wrong answers and "helped" fill in the correct ones. Am sure it is a common practice to make sure that it looks like our kids are "right where they should be" and don't drag the district down with poor test results. I have no faith in that teachers intentions to this day regarding our children's education.

Anonymous said...

My childs graduated with a "B" average. 3.25 and he had to take remedial reading in college. I was very angry to have to pay for that.

Curt Springer said...

I posted a link to this article and comments on SpeakoutDanville.

People have read the Atkinson article and comments and have posted a few on our site.

Anonymous said...

The 70's were quite a different time: more often than not you had 2 parents in the home, 1 parent who stayed home with the child and parents were INVOLVED with their kids and actually raised them.

This sort of thing would never have happened then, because people cared and got involved; they simply would not stand for 2nd best for their children. Unfortunately we live in a different day and time and our priorities are not what they once were.

Teachers and administrators are not the only ones to blame, parents have to shoulder their share of responsibility. A sophmore child failing 2 major subjects, unable to spell or write doesn't just happen overnight. Our schools will fail our children only if WE allow them to do so! chools to fail our children,

Anonymous said...

The bottom line with any school system is that if you think you can just hand off your kids to the school and let them take care of your child's education, then don't be shocked to hear or see these stories.

Parent participation/involvement with your kids and making sure they do their homework and not be on the computer/TV is a significant part of the battle. I don't care what school system you are in or who the teacher is.

If you rely on the government or a school system 100%, then you will have horror stories to tell.

Anonymous said...

I know the child in question and the parents met with the teachers and guidance counselors, every tri-mester, and asked to be kept informed if their childs failed to do homework, or failed to perform on tests and quizes. The grades their child brought home on tests, and quizes were good, They had no idea until the report card came out. Schools are always blaming the parents saying they need to be more involved, well these parents were involved, and they got no cooperation or response from the school.

Anonymous said...

If the test grades on the tests and quizzes were good, then I cannot understand how it's possible to fail 2 major subjects? The grades are based on the test scores - fail the tests, fail the class; pass the tests, pass the class, it's just that simple. If the parents are involved, they wouldn't need to ask the teacher if their child is doing their homework.

Anonymous said...

I think the issue of the parents involvement is secondary to the schools willingness, even insistence on passing the child along.

At what point does the school stop and say, we need to educate this child, not just pass them along.

Anonymous said...

The teachers are awful because they administrators allow it. If we measured and compensated the superintendent based on the achievement of the students, our kids would be smarter.

Let's make the superintendent an elected position with a significant percentage of compensation based on performance. Let's abolish the ineffective school board. Lets hold administrators and teachers accountable for their performance -- accountable for the performance of our kids.

Let's cut the administrative staff 50% and use the money to hire student teachers, teacher aids, and tutors.

Anonymous said...

Mr. Acciard,

Have you presented the School Board with this info? Or are you just going to spend your time typing away on this blog. I agree with you that we should strive for the best school system we can muster.

Your description of the conversation of 8 grade student's Parent with the 3 F's and 1 D and the principal seems to indicate that the Parent was looking to have the student moved up to the next grade. If possible without summer school. I would hope that was not the case.

Which brings me to my last point. I am sure people spend a bit more than $11K per stundent at Phillips Exeter. But probably even more important is the level of involement the parents have with their children. If you expect to just send your child to school and hope they come out alright on the other side you get what you get. A student that is not motivated to learn will not do well. And that motivation starts at home.

I can rememeber when I went to school. The students that wanted to learn would always do very well. The students that were not motivated for what ever reason did not.

I hope you take the info you have and get the board to react.

Anonymous said...

I didn't read the article that way, I thought it sounded like the parent couldn't believe that their kid was being passed along with those grades, and thought summer school wouldn't teach the kid anything either.

I notice eveyone on here blaming the parents, but the article makes it sound as if the parents were involved in monitoring their kids progress. Isn't anyone pissed that the school is content to just shuffle the kids along? Isn't anyone pissed that feelings are more important than grades?

Anonymous said...

I know a little girl who gets great grades....mostly As; couple of Bs. But on the state tests, she does poorly. The teacher believes she gets nervous during testing and therefore does badly. That causes me to wonder a little.

I don't blame the teachers. They do what the administration tells them to do, and the administration, of course, is backed by the School Board.

Anonymous said...

I'll concede that the children of today have much more to learn than those of 100 years ago. However, check out this website:
http://mwhodges.home.att.net/1895-test.htm.

How good are your kids? How good are you?

Anonymous said...

anon posted:
I know a little girl who gets great grades....mostly As; couple of Bs. But on the state tests, she does poorly.


My child was getting A+ in math. I requested child be moved into higher math program. I was told by admin that my child did not have the skills to be moved into a more challenging program. Could not tell me why my unskilled child was getting A+'s and was totally bored.

Other child given a list of books to read that top readers in the middle school read. Child read them all in Elementary school.

Year end Accelerated Biology project was to create a model of an animal. Some kids made paper mache animals, some did sewing. How many college Biology classes require paper mache animals.

No wonder so few of our kids go on to 4 year schools.

Alfred Thompson said...

At Phillips Exeter (or Andover where I have more direct experience) the faculty in on the job 24 hours a day. parental involvement is no greater than any other school BUT a student can get 1 to 1 help from their teachers any day of the week and even well into the night. Teachers live in private apartments in the dorms where students live. You will never get that except in a boarding school. So comparing a day school to a boarding school is not fair or reasonable. BTW even day students at Exeter are there until well after dinner time.

Anonymous said...

I agree totally and have felt for a long time that the Education System of today has played a HUGE role in the "dumming" down of our kids...enough said...

Anonymous said...

dumbing down. LOL. Alfred makes a good point -- indirectly. The kids at a boarding school are immersed in intellect. They spend their days and nights with good teachers and good students. Kids in public schools do not. They spend their days with mediocre teachers and mediocre students and their evenings with 'regular' people and TV.

Their role models do not speak or write well. They rarely do math. When they do, they probably complain about it or brag about how bad they are at it. Children learn what they live.

There was a day when the gifted children were immersed in intellect. This immersion was the result of academic leveling. For six hours a day, the brighter children were with teachers and students that were smarter than their peers and parents.

Bringing leveling back will make our kids -- and their community -- smarter. Let's do it.

Can you imagine attending a concert where all the children had to participate? Where we mixed the talented children with the kids who did not want to play at all? Or a baseball league where every practice began with an explanation of the rules? No. We encourage and reward excellence in life -- except in academics. We don't worry about esteem when we cut a kid from the basketball team, why worry do we worry about esteem when we group students by ability?

Anonymous said...

At www.danvilledelivery.com, there is an very interesting video showing what goes on in our HS.


ATKINSON's Vietnam HONOR ROLL as VOTED and PASSED by 2005 Town Meeting and re-approved at Special Town Meeting Sept. 12

EDITORIAL-


A voice of compassion, an example of fairness and reasonable government.

One who believes in the strength and comfort you, your children and your family can draw from good government leadership.

A person who knows Atkinson is our home -- our most important possession that must be preserved and protected through fair taxes and sound community planning and where our children must be safe to grow to become a new generation of leaders.

One who knows that the citizens of Atkinson are all neighbors with her leadership to be dedicated and responsive to all.

One who believes that when those from Atkinson have served our nation and honors are deserved, those honors must be given.

In Valerie Tobin, we now have a leader we know we can entrust with these responsibilities because they are part of her character.

It is our honor to endorse Valerie for election to Atkinson’s Board of Selectmen.

Just a note for those who wish to count the deer.

In January 08 this blog had 16,000 hits and 1,500 unique visitors (for the month).

In 2007 this blog had over 100,000 hits and 5,750 unique visitors (for the year).

EDITORIAL-


"I offer nothing more than simple facts, plain arguments, and common sense . . ." [TP, 1776]

We take no small measure of umbrage at such a hostile official act against this BLOG’s patron. Therefore, a timely Editorial comment is both appropriate and necessary.

Discussion of Atkinson’s financial direction, from any viewpoint, is fundamental and encouraged and we will always attempt to limit and correct errors.

However, Righteous indignation towards purported error of such inconsequential nature is not appropriate.

The ENTIRE car deal is problematic. If it was caused by poor judgement, improper exercise of authority, neglect or mistake or even specious reasoning, this will never trump the facts that the entire questionable transaction started and ended within a very small circle of confidants.

We find the entire circumstances surrounding the disposition of the police Cruiser highly irregular at the least and the "explanations" somewhat trifling and exhaustive of our intellect.

Mr. Consentino: It’s time to go. Being Chief of Atkinson’s Police Department is NOT a birthright. That is a fabled legend of yesteryear.

Historically in Atkinson, police chief appointments were made "under the hand of the selectmen" for terms of one year at a time, as was also the case in the beginning of Mr. Consentino’s assorted and discontinuous stream of appointments to this position.

Your only remaining credential established on a claim of indispensability has faded.

So time is neigh. Plan a graceful exit, Clean out your desk, Accept the gratitude and tearful sentiments from some. We plan no editorial recriminations. It is time. Thank you for your service, We wish you a long and happy retirement. Bon Voyage.

LETTER


"To All Atkinson Residents,

I am writing to ask for your help. A member of the Atkinson Police Department needs our help. I am here to ask for your help in Corporal John Lapham's fight for his life. As you are aware, John has been diagnosed with Leukemia. He has been once again hospitalized with an infection that is threatening his life. He is one of the bravest people that I have ever met. He has never asked of anything from the residents of the town. Now is our chance to step up and help both him and his family out. As everyone is aware John has been out of work for a few months. His family has been busy helping John to get better. He needs our help, and I am hoping that this town can step up to the plate and help. From the moment that I met John, I have admired him. He does alot, but never asks for anything in return. He has helped so many people in this town. I for one am one of those people. Please help him.

There is a fund set-up in his name at TDBanknorth in Plaistow. Any amount will help John, while he is out of work. It would be great if this town could help ease a burden off his wife.

Thank You

Also if anyone would like to send a card, please address it to:

John Lapham
c/o Dana-Farber/Brigham and Women's Cancer Ctr.
Inpatient mail
75 Francis Street
Boston, MA 02115
United States

Please show Corporal John Lapham, that this community can stand up and show our support to those in need. I for one, miss John and can not wait until he can get better and return to work. Please show him that we support him. "