Badger Rock Charter: Where's the common sense?
By Stephen Perez
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The news is in -- our students can't read, figuratively speaking. In the October round of reading assessment, 37 out of 47 Badger Rock Middle School [2] students tested scored below the MMSD mean score of 219. A score of 219 puts the student in the 68th percentile, nationally.
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Having a mean score above the 50th percentile is considered to be positive. Scoring a 219 puts the student in the range of predictable scores for a 6th grade student. Those students are on track and right where they should be. My students at the Badger Rock charter school, however, are not on track. Only 10 Badger Rock student scored 219 or above. There are more students reading at or below the 10th percentile (13) than students reading above the 10th percentile, the district mean. Our school's performance is extremely worrisome, but not surprising.
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Considering the language proficiency of many of our language learners and the number of students that are identified as special education, the staff expected below district average performance, and now after having seen the data, the challenge is clearer.
Because Badger Rock is small, has more flexible scheduling than other middle schools, has teachers that know how to interpret and apply data, and leadership that trusts teachers, we drafted an intervention plan in hours--not days, weeks or months. It would start the next day. Our students were tested on Thursday, we had a data meeting on Monday, and interventions began on Tuesday. Not bad.
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From what I know about other schools, teachers are still arguing over the validity of the data, much less thinking about ways to help the kids. Our students are struggling readers. Let's help them learn to read, immediately.
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This is the common sense thing to do. Yet, there have been many times in my teaching career that common sense is ignored. When you attempt to educate all kids, as we do in American public education, there are going to be performance differences. Some kids will struggle. Common sense would dictate that teachers should serve those kids more. Confusingly, that does not always happen.