Cheshire Cat has nothing to smile about...
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Cheshire Cat has nothing to smile about in this case
I feel like Alice in Wonderland and I have just fallen into an
abyss. The world of public education is getting “curiouser and
curiouser.”
I am a kindergarten teacher at Pomona School in my 41st and final
year of teaching. Last year, I had to individually assess 10,800
items with my kindergartners. It barely left me time to teach! This
year we were given a reading program developed by Houghton Mifflin
(pronounced Ho as in Santa’s laugh, but not as kid friendly).
The first day of school, the kids were given a black and white
worksheet with all the letters of the alphabet in small print and
expected to write the upper and lower case A in a small space, as
well as circle all the A’s scattered among other letters 1/4 inch
high. Each day, they are faced with a similar worksheet as we race
through the alphabet on our way to “Reading in Kindergarten.”
Some kindergartners don’t even know the difference between a
letter and a number, let alone have the small muscle development to
print those tiny letters. Who decided that formal reading instruction
was an appropriate kindergarten activity? Don’t they know that you
can spend a whole year teaching a 5-year-old to read or wait until
they’re ready and spend two months?
Someone living in “Wonderland” determined that since our state was
failing in its test scores, we needed to raise the bar and require
reading in kindergarten. But let’s give them some handicaps: We’ll
continue to allow 4-year-olds to enter kindergarten (other states
require children to be 5), and continue to have kindergarten
optional, so that parents can take them out of school whenever they
like.
Let’s not give them a full day like first grade has. We’ll give
them just three hours and 20 minutes. To make sure the playing field
is not level, we won’t fund a universal preschool so that
second-language learners have a chance to catch up with their
English-only counterparts. What a recipe for failure.
To complicate matters, the “No Child Left Behind Act” requires
that 100% of the students must be fully proficient in English and
math by the year 2013, which is a statistical impossibility even in
our highest scoring schools. Each school must make adequate yearly
progress toward their goal. If you miss your goal by one point or if
only 94% of your students are tested, your school can face sanctions.
This could mean that your entire staff could be replaced. No wonder
teachers only last five years, on average, in this profession. Who
wants to stick around just to get kicked around?
We need to set realistic goals for improvement, with realistic
time frames. It takes a second-language learner four to seven years
to become fully proficient in English. We need to have reasonable
assessments and assessment schedules. We need to give support to the
second language learners by providing universal pre-school and
tutoring for children who fall behind. We need to support teachers
and understand that it takes a whole village, working together, to
educate a child.
PEGGY ENGARD
Costa Mesa
No need to shoe-horn skate park into TeWinkle
After attending the Costa Mesa Planning Commission meeting Monday
night, my opinion changed about the skate park being built there.
What is the reason for squeezing it in there when Fairview Park has
an abundance of open space for it?
Obviously, Planning Commissioner Katrina Foley was the only member
of the Costa Mesa Planning Commission who listened. It’s only a
matter of common sense to build it at Fairview Park.
It was too bad that the group in favor of skate boarding at
TeWinkle was well represented and there were not as many speakers
present to explain why it wasn’t a wise choice, economically or
otherwise. Why jam a skateboard park into TeWinkle at great expense,
when it can be built for less money and fewer problems at another
place?
LOUISA T. ARNOLD
Costa Mesa
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