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schooled - > Schooled -> Grading California
Grading California
Two big reports came out today about education in California. One is the Children Now Report Card for the state of California. The other is Quality Counts 2007 in Education Week, which ranks all 50 states based on which provide the best opportunities for young people to succeed in life.

Drum roll please.

Here are the results:

The Children Now Report card gives California the following grades:

Health Insurance: B-
Dental Health: C-
Obesity: D+
Infant and Young Children's Health: B-
Adolescent Children's Health: B-
Early Care and Education: C-
K-12 Education: C-
After School: B+
Family well-being: D+

Based on chance for success, Quality Counts ranked each of the 50 states.

-- California ranked 34th.

-- The top five states in order are Virginia, Connecticut, Minnesota, New Jersey and Maryland, Massachusetts and New Hampshire (those last three tied for fifth).

-- The bottom five states in order are Alabama, Mississippi, and Tennessee (which tied for 45th), then Texas, Arizona, Louisiana and lastly, New Mexico (Arizona and Louisiana tied for 49th).

The rankings are based on family income, parent employment, parent education, linguistic integration, preschool enrollment, kindergarten enrollment, elementary reading, middle school mathematics, high school graduation, postsecondary participation, adult educational attainment, annual income and steady employment.

AND there are a lot more statistics where those came from. Check out the links to see the full reports.

publications.childrennow.org/publications/invest/ reportcard_2007.cfm

www.edweek.org/ew/toc/2007/01/04/index.html

Here's what State Superintendent of Public Instruction Jack O'Connell had to say about the two reports today:

 "Taken together, these reports provide a sobering look at the current state of education and other services for California's children. While both reports recognize that there are factors outside of the public education system that are important, Education Week's report does note that California has made public policy decisions that have put on us on the right track in public education. However, I am still not satisfied. If we are to fulfill our promise as a state and as a nation, we can't start addressing the needs of children the day they enter kindergarten, and stop addressing them once they graduate high school.

 "It is clearly time for the public and policymakers to understand that preparing the next generation to succeed in a demanding global economy will require closing the achievement gap. Our schools must deliver rigorous academic content to all students, no matter what challenges they bring into the classroom, and be held accountable for increasing lifting student achievement. However, we must also recognize that fulfilling the potential of our students and our state requires a multifaceted approach involving partners not just from all segments of education but from businesses, government and communities." 
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posted by schooled on Wednesday, January 3, 2007 at 10:25 AM
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posted by robbwillis on Jan 3, 2007 at 11:33 AM
The proximity to the Mexican border is probably just a coincidence...
posted by samheath on Jan 3, 2007 at 12:35 PM
More likely a "cause."
posted by randomfactor on Jan 3, 2007 at 12:40 PM
As is the redness of the electoral map for those states at the bottom and the blueness of those at the top...Virginia excepted, of course.  (Edited for clarity)
posted by libbuster on Jan 3, 2007 at 02:29 PM
Yeah, and who runs the public education monopoly top to bottom?.......why the NEA, an organization that's 95% Democrat.......their report is simply an indictment of the crappy, inefficient system they support and refuse to reform in any way, except of course, pouring more money into it (and their union).........and these are the people who decry any monopoly in the private sector and call for it's immediate breakup......they fight against school vouchers and privatization, because it would mean the end of their stranglehold on the public brainwashing system...........who would have thought that dropping math, science and reading and replacing them with homosexual propaganda, condoms on cucumbers and Marxist theory would lead to a deterioration in the quality of education?........why, everyone except the left wing Democrat totalitarians who run the terrible education system, which is the most expensive in the world, and also one of the worst, as described above........
posted by libbuster on Jan 3, 2007 at 02:32 PM
Note that the bottom states are those where millions of illegal immigrants have flocked to receive handouts from liberals......free education (which sucks), and also free healthcare (which liberals have lambasted as sucking also).........80% of illegals do not have a high school education, and 20% of them have criminal records (similar to the breakdown for liberals).........isn't it funny listening to liberals complaining about problems they themselves have caused with their insane social policies?........it truly is entertaining.....
posted by randomfactor on Jan 3, 2007 at 02:43 PM

Note that the study shows it's those "handouts" that are lacking in those states.

.

You've entertained us many a time, Mucus, glad we can return the favor.  Hope you were sufficiently entertained by the November election.

.

I'm with you on opposing "condoms on cucumbers" education, though.  It really sets the girls up for a lifetime of disappointment.  They really should use more lifelike models.

posted by anonymous on Jan 4, 2007 at 02:05 PM

Unfortunately, the NEA does not run an education "monopoly" Libbuster.  If anything, the NEA has been effectively shutout of important policy decisions at the federal level and many unions are shut out in red areas. 

Libbuster, why do you seem to think it is better for education decisions to be made by people who may never have stepped into a classroom after graduation instead of by people who are in the classroom on a daily basis?  Teachers are given directives by the state and federal government and held accountable for meeting standards, but are given very little say in the actual decision-making process.   Even at the school level, teachers are often ignored by administration. 

The Powerless Teacher

posted by ProgressivePete2 on Jan 4, 2007 at 02:16 PM
OK the first thing we need to do is to figure out who to blame. After that, well, hopefully someone will change the subject.
posted by GordonDelano on Jan 4, 2007 at 08:02 PM

I have been reading with much interest the posts concerning poor achievement in our schools. Jack O'Connell laments California education failures. California at 34th. position in the USA. However, the ranking of the USA Education system World Wide paints a picture of our education system that leaves much to be desired. Check out the rankings of a survey of math and science scores of 38 countries. The report shows that the, DUMBING DOWN, of curriculum, has produced results that any educator should have been able to predict. Where to look for solutions? How about the top ranked nations instead of wringing hands and wondering, what do we do....Link below.

http://4brevard.com/choice/...

posted by anonymous on Jan 5, 2007 at 08:33 AM

GordonDelano... Wow, big surprise that our kids are sinking in science...not really.  With the NCLB related testing focusing on math and language arts, more and more elementary school administrators are demanding the teachers at their schools abandon the teaching of art, science, social studies, and music so they can spend more time teaching the tested subjects.

ProgressivePete...figuring out what's to blame may be the first step toward correcting the wrongs inflicted upon our young. So, where do we start?

       1)  Proximity to Mexico?  Partly to blame.  We are doing an amazing job helping the children of immigrants assimilate, but the testing, with its reports based on school level results and not individual student results, will never show that.

      2)  Teachers?  Again, partly to blame.  Instead of standing up to lawmakers and administrators who pick the textbooks, set the mile-wide standards, and put big groups of low ability students in the same classes as the highest ability students instead of leveling, we tuck our tails between our legs to save our jobs.

     3)  Students?  Partly to blame.  The work ethic is disappearing, though I suppose that is not surprising in a place where the highest paid individuals include star athletes and entertainers.

     4)  Parents?  Definitely part of the problem.  I think many parents see how Human Services is called upon to interefere in what used to be normal parental discipline and have become too afraid to spank or punish their child when they need to be.  As a teacher, I am no longer amazed when I'm sitting face to face with a couple of parents who say they feel powerless.    Then there are the other parents, the ones who have split up and are working against each other, much to the delight of manipulative kids who have learned to play parent vs parent vs teacher.  What ever happened to parents working together as a couple and with the teacher (at least in front of the kids)?

     5)  Lawmakers?  Probably a big part of the problem.  How many of them do you think talk to actual teachers (not just union leaders) before making decisions?  How many do you think make decisions that sound good to the public but are a nightmare to the schools?  How many of them really understand the statistical approach used right now?  What is so hard to see about this basic error in statistical interpretation?  Reports are generated at the class and school level.  The only individuals who see individual student results are parents.   Even trying to account for that by using the "similar schools" mod is not creating a reliable indicator of student achievement.

     6)  Life?  Definitely.  Kids have a lot on their minds now.  Yes, more than we did growing up.  I never wondered if the bully at the school would bring a weapon.  I never saw a peer make a death list.  I didn't worry about what would happen if my parents split up.  I didn't see the blood and gore of a video game, and my parents sheltered me from the news until I was old enough to handle it.  In fifth grade, my school gave "girl lessons", so I wasn't surprised by natural events and parents actually talked about sex (even if it was just to say premarital sex is a sin).  There wasn't a televised sex show on my favorite channel (MTV and Real World); I was shown Little House on the Prairie. 

 

 

posted by ProgressivePete2 on Jan 5, 2007 at 08:56 AM
anon, I was being sarcastic. Finding blame does nothing to solve our problems. It just points fingers which in turn makes those who are being pointed at defensive. When everyone is on the defensive, nobody is working together to solve the problems. Of course I wasn't suprised that the first blame was laid on foreigners. They're such an easy target these days. Hey, at least you didn't blame gay marriage.
posted by randomfactor on Jan 5, 2007 at 09:07 AM
Well, *I* blame gay marriage.  Or the lack of it.  If Gov. Rick "Goodhair" Perry were free to follow his true heart's desire, maybe Texas wouldn't be so screwed up...
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