Good teachers for minority students
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This week we asked our parent panelists: Last week a report showed
that a poor or minority student in the Newport-Mesa Unified School
District is more likely to get taught by a highly trained and
credentialed teacher than students in other districts. What do you
attribute that finding to?
It’s not surprising that we have many teachers with higher degrees
and experience who work with the district’s minority students. There
has been an effort by the board over the last 10 years to use many
remedies to teach the neediest students. Our community expects
improvement in the low-performing schools.
That the teachers stay to teach there says a lot about their
character. It is well known that many teachers spend their entire
teaching careers in the district because of the support teachers
receive here. Little by little, the test scores from these schools
are improving.
However, the downside of this is that all our other students may
not be getting the best education because of the costly focus on
minority students. Is this a fair way to solve the learning gap
problem? I don’t think so. It’s a kind of a reverse discrimination.
Education Trust-West published the report. The trust works to
promote high performance among low-income and minority students at
all levels. After years of efforts, learning gaps still exist in many
schools. How could that be?
One reason is that there is a reluctance among some educators to
accept that the gaps are created by the effects of illegal
immigration. Closing our borders would allow relief to teachers who
could teach to the same group without new students who don’t speak
English coming and going all year.
It is disappointing that Newport-Mesa schools are not on the
trust’s list of schools that have achieved success. What are these
schools doing? It’s time the board had a plan. A fundamental school?
An English-only center for non-English speaking newcomers? Why not
use the Open Court and Saxon materials, which have a proven record of
success for teaching minority students? How about a magnet school?
We’re sending our best teachers to these needy students. We are
using tax-supported programs together with programs involving
volunteers from the private sector to reach out and tutor minority
students, but it is taking too long.
* WENDY LEECE is a Costa Mesa parent, former school board member
and member of the city’s parks and recreation commission.
I attribute that statistic to a number of factors. Standards have
been raised and more well-trained teachers are coming into the
system. The Newport-Mesa area is a desirable place to live and work,
so even though teacher pay may not be the highest, it’s high enough
for many teachers to make a career of a job here. In Newport-Mesa the
gap between “poor and minority” students and the general population
isn’t as wide as it is in many other places in the state. It’s also
slowly getting narrower due to both conscious efforts and social
evolution.
This is a nice and encouraging statistic, but that’s all that it
is. Under the current system, teacher pay improves with higher-level
degrees and credentials, so teachers naturally want to improve both
their skills and bottom line by getting more training. That’s good a
thing, but lots of training does not necessarily make for great
teachers. Over the years, my kids have been taught by some truly
awful teachers with great credentials and by some great teachers with
lesser credentials. In fact, I’d submit that truly great teachers
have skills that may not be able to be taught. They have a passion
for the job and an ability to connect with kids.
I’d still like to see some form of teacher merit pay so that we
can focus not on these types of statistics, but on the actual results
that teachers deliver. There are multiple paths to teaching
excellence, and we’d better serve our students by encouraging
excellence in as many ways as possible.
If this statistic is reflected in real improvements in reading
levels and test scores, I’ll take it more seriously. As I have said
in this space before, things are improving in our public schools. The
pace of change is still too slow for my taste, but things are moving
in the right direction.
* MARK GLEASON is a Costa Mesa resident and parent.
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