Tuesday, March 29, 2005

Walt Blomberg - Woodburn Superintendent

IN MY OPINION ~ Walt Blomberg
Tuesday, March 22, 2005

In the eye of the storm of school reform

Silence. Can you hear it? It is the eerie silence you hear before the
storm.

President Bush's No Child Left Behind law is resting in that silence
now. But don't let it be confused with peace -- although resting in
peace six feet under is where I would prefer it be -- or acceptance. No,
the storm is just on the horizon now as districts across the state are
beginning to be singled out by the federal government for not meeting
adequate yearly progress.

If you look closely, there are a few dark clouds already forming. They
are hanging over the heads of about 15 districts throughout Oregon.
Haven't heard the rumblings yet? Well, listen carefully, for these are
the "quiet" districts, the districts of diversity with large numbers of
poor, minority and limited English-proficient students.

Visit my district, the Woodburn School District, where the dark cloud
of sanctions hangs like a shroud over us. We may not be shouting from
the rooftops yet, but I definitely feel a storm inside my gut every time
I think about the injustices of No Child Left Behind.

I have no trouble being accountable for our students' learning, but
student learning is not what No Child Left Behind measures. The biggest
failing of the law is that it relies on a state testing system that does
not measure student progress. It does not care what prior knowledge or
skills a child brings to school, but only whether he or she meets a set
standard.

Secondly, the law does not care whether a student can speak English.
Every student, regardless of English proficiency, must take the test. To
make matters worse, these students are then judged to be failures if
they do not meet the same grade-level standard as the average
English-only student within one year of entering our country.

Do you think it is surprising that the Woodburn School District is
struggling to demonstrate competence on such narrow-sighted measures? We
have the largest percentage of poor students (87 percent), the largest
percentage of minority students (82 percent) and the largest percentage
of students with limited English proficiency (65 percent) of any other
district in Oregon.

Instead of being judged on the quality of our instruction or the
quality of our programs -- or, for heaven's sake, the amount our
students learn while in our schools -- we are labeled "unsatisfactory"
and cast into the "needs improvement" pile like so much dirty laundry.

No Child Left Behind cannot imagine for a moment a 9-year-old from
Mexico who has never attended school and speaks absolutely no English
and very little Spanish. His primary language is trique , a Spanish
dialect spoken in Southern Mexico. The federal law cannot imagine this
student, but I can. He is one of hundreds who enter our district each
and every year. They are not all without education or without a strong
native language, but most often they come without English. Guess how
they score on the English reading and writing tests?

Ah, but the tempest will not begin and end in Woodburn or the other 15
districts at the front of the line. No Child Left Behind will soon
capture the attention of other districts as it ratchets up the standards
and unleashes a maelstrom of sanctions that include firing staff,
tossing the administration, dissolving the board or eliminating all
local control.

Will you let those happen to your district or will you be part of the
storm that's brewing out there on the horizon?

In Woodburn, we can already feel the wind picking up.

Walt Blomberg is superintendent of the Woodburn School District.

Drew's Links about Blogging

Here are some links in regard to law with blogging and web pages from NCCE presentation last week.

Canby News Driven Blog: Canby's news driven web pages were created by a student (Andy Summers) as a part of a senior seminar open source project called Colophon
Portland Schools Blog
Teacher Hosting: Teacher Hosting where you can pay monthly for a Blog Service if you prefer Movable type or extra templates
Education Weblog
WriteSite: Collaborative writing project utilizing online communication as a vehicle to improve student's writing skills -

The Law and the Blog!

L2005 Aspiring School Leaders
Here are some links in regard to law with blogging and web pages from NCCE presentation last week.

NCCE Conference Workshop
SJBrooks first
SJBrooks Again

Dan's New Blog!!

Dan's Own Blog Link!

Monday, March 28, 2005

Rate our Professors

Go online and rate our folks here.

www.ratepsu.com

Monkey on your back Links

“Who's Got the Monkey” approach to solving organizational problems. This concept comes from an old Harvard School of Business article. If you substitute the word "problem" everywhere you see the word "monkey", the presentation makes sense. Next month we will publish an article that will describe how to write a powerful on-page executive level recommendation with justification and next steps that empowers your employees even more to take action supporting any employer's strategic directions.

Another reference to the Monkey: One Minute Manager

Not a great reference... But again with the name: Go down to Teir 2 Session 5

Thirteen Timely Tips...

Nebraska Cooperative Extension

Thirteen Timely Tips for More Effective Personal Time Management

"Repacking Your Bags"

A book worth getting is Repacking Your Bag
Author: Richard J. Leider & David Shapiro
Publisher: Berrett-Koehler Publishers 2001
A good book as you reshift your focus from your current position and an administrator position.

Three quotes from the book:
  • You don't pick your calling, it picks you
  • People are more sure on what they don't love than what they do love
  • Life worth repacking is an absolute life skill today

Suggested Curriculum Books

Glenn and Ruth's Advisory Groups met with John Weeks and talked about the Salem Keizer Curriculum Department.

John recommended the following books:
Best Practices (the one we already have)
Yellow Brick Roads: Shared and Guided Paths to Independent Reading 4-12
Raising Reading Achievement in Middle and High Schools
Principals and Standards for School Mathematics (This is a site and not a book... There is a document you can access... There is a book listed on this page which John recommended)