Annie
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- Nov 22, 2003
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Times must be better, I found a moment to read something ed related!
http://www.edweek.org/tm/articles/2005/09/01/01railroad.h17.html
http://www.edweek.org/tm/articles/2005/09/01/01railroad.h17.html
One-Track Minds
By Wesley F. Sander
Its a bright spring day at tiny Rail Road Flat Elementary School, but teacher Randall Youngbloods mood hasnt yet lightened. The trouble had flared up the previous week when hed left his class of 4th, 5th, and 6th graders in the hands of a substitute. Or, to hear him tell it, the other way around.
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They savaged him, the teacher sighs, leaning on his desk at the back of his small portable classroom. It was brutal. From accounts hes been able to piece together, half the class started the day being generally nasty to one another, and tensions built steadily from there, culminating in a fistfight between two 5th graders and a loud curse that got a student sent home for the day. This is a very dysfunctional group when they get any leeway whatsoever, he says.
It doesnt sound like the same group of kids who have helped make the 100-student public school, tucked into an almost invisibly small town in northern Californias Sierra Nevada foothills, one of the highest-achieving schools in the state.
Mr. Youngblood? Sierra Crum, a blond 5th grade girl, springs up to his desk, apparently with a question about the current class assignment to list similes for several words on the board.
Teacher Randall Youngblood.
Teacher Randall Youngblood believes that unrelenting discipline and unapologetically standardized-test-oriented curricula mitigate the instability in his students lives60 percent qualify for free or reduced-price lunches.
Max Whitaker
Yes?
Can I use your name for irritated ?
Youngblood makes a little snort of amusement and assent, chuckling and shaking his head to himself as the girl spins back to her desk, a mischievous grin playing on her lips. This is what he loves about his studentstheir energy and spirit. Its what has helped make Rail Road Flat Elementary, despite its size, poverty, and social isolation, a state nominee last year for national model of excellence status, based on the schools recent history of high standardized test scores.
But as becomes apparent in a lapse like the previous weeks, its only strong discipline that keeps that energy channeled. Discipline and the kind of teach-to-the-test learning thats become endemic in the era of No Child Left Behind. Such rote learning often gets frowned upon in the schools of better-educated, more affluent communities. Here, though, in a 549-person town named for a type of mule-drawn rail-and-mining-cart arrangement thats been obsolete for a hundred years, whatever works is clearly working.
Hunched over her desk in Youngbloods half of a portable trailer, a girl is steadily filling a page with penciled printing. Letter after letter, line after line, she writes the same sentence over and over again: I will keep my hands to myself.
Nearby, a boy is doing the same thing, though with wobblier handwriting: It is in my best interest to obey school rules.
Making sure they do, their teacher is forever on the move, prodding here, scolding there. Patrolling the room while explaining assignments to his 6th graders, he shoots a preemptive look at the 5th graders in the opposite corner who look like they might be getting ready to misbehave. After 21 years here, he knows how to keep his kids continuously on task.
Brad, you do not need to verbalize every thought! Youngblood reprimands a student.
No, he says flatly to another childs request that the in-class assignment be modified.
Samantha, save it! he barks to a little girl.
I think a lot of these kids are coming in without the discipline that kids with stable, two-parent households have, he says by way of explaining his firm hand in the classroom. Not that hes unsympathetic. The 47-year-old teacher has known nearly all the kids since they were in kindergartenincluding what kind of challenges they face at homebut hes found that coddling isnt an option. There is a need for structure, Youngblood explains. If I was teaching in another socioeconomic group, it might be different.
Rail Road Flat was a thriving town a century and a half ago, but when gold stopped coming out of the ground in bulk, most moved on. Its current residents live among idyllic surroundingssecluded hillsides splotched with open meadows and forests of evergreen and broadleafbut life is still hard here. The unemployment level is above 40 percent, and what work there is, mostly retail and service- sector jobs, tends to be nearly an hours drive from town. About 19 percent of the towns residents live below the poverty line. Only 6 percent hold postsecondary degrees, making economic mobility difficult.
Against such a backdrop, the childrens standout academic performance is that much harder to figure. Kimberly Edwards, a consultant and NCLB liaison at the California Department of Education, couldnt quite believe the standardized-test numbers the school was racking up.
What impresses me is the fact that ... 60 percent [of students qualify for] free and reduced-price lunches, she says. David Day, also a CDE consultant, agrees. Theyre very good, he notes. [But] Im not sure that what you can learn from this school, you can learn from the numbers.
The secret, if there is one, is only to be found at the school itself.
MapQuest has never heard of Rail Road Flat, so it pays to ask for directions. To reach the little village, it takes an hour of uphill driving from the vast Central Valley, starting on the state highways but quickly shunting off onto a succession of progressively thinner secondary roads until you find yourself on a shaded, winding country route. The center of town springs into view over a small rise as the road slows, then threads a tight cluster of demure buildings: first the now-defunct Eureka School (established 1896) and Rail Road Flat Community Hall, two drab wooden buildings together on the right. On the left is the Rail Road Flat Café, the Rail Road Flat General Store (established 1920), and the post office. Behind these, a modest herd of buffalo roams among the trees, sometimes venturing down near the road. The biggest structure in sightis Rail Road Flat Elementarys gym; that building, a small office, and three temporary trailers constitute the school.
By the time the 8 a.m. bell rings, all of Youngbloods students have filed into his middle-trailer classroomthe one with a homemade plastic label on the door admonishing THINK THINK THINK. Inside, theyre already hard at work checking their algebra homework answers. Then its on to in-class problems, which Youngblood runs through with the drive of a drill instructor, and tonights homework: percentages, rates of speed, calculating the surface area of a cube, and the algebraic order of operations. After that, its language hour, with assignments in spelling and vocabulary. Next come exercises on compound sentences and similes, followed hard by a spelling test.
Even at recess, students can occasionally be seen sitting cross-legged by themselves, hitting the books in a quiet corner of the blacktop. From the beginning of the school year until the end, its a relentless, hard-hitting rhythm that doesnt perceptibly slacken, even after the California Standards Tests are over. Dont look here, in other words, for strategies to engage studentsthe students had better be engaged, or there are consequences ready and waiting. Theres nothing entertaining about it, Youngblood says. Its a grind, really. We come in, and we work all day. His modus operandi and his theory of teaching are identical: Just plow ahead.
A grind is what one expects the students will think of such an unvarying routine of work, but the social isolation of this townlet doesnt allow for much comparison of whos got more homework. Every kid here and every kid they know goes through the same drill, and for most of them, this is the way its always been: Steady funding declines and heavy testing are just the natural state of things.
Thats not to say they never get in trouble, even when theres no substitute to take advantage of. On any given day in Youngbloods class, theres a healthy chance that 5th grader Brad Carlson will have his name on the board for misbehaving. He often becomes moody and sullen in class and is prone to outburstsit was Brad who hurled a swear word while fighting in class last week.
But the 11-year-old is also known for topping his classmates math scoressomething Youngblood likes to remind him of, calling him our biggest hope only half-jokingly. Claiming to relish homework problems, Brad says he wants to be a math teacher, and maybe thats why he doesnt seem to mind the classs heavy emphasis on drill-and-kill learning. In his mind, school and standardized testing are inseparable.
I enjoy it, he says.
So does fellow 5th grader Zach Glorioso. He sees the potential applicability of the algebraic formulas and scientific concepts Youngblood teaches to the adventure-quest video game hes designing, which features Mooch, a half-man, half-monkey superhero of Zachs own creation. But he wishes there were a little more flexibility in class for such creative projects.
His eyes drop and his tone softens as he talks about his work in progress. Im getting this all down now, on the computer, because I know that when I get older, I wont think the same, he says, chipping away at some unfinished homework during recess. As it is, he often spends more time at home with video games than schoolwork and sometimes shows up without it. As punishment, he has to trudge next door to teacher Kathy Rissos 1st and 2nd grade room, where he sets to work in the corner, scowling at himself all the while.
There also have been more-tangible sacrifices for the students. As greater and greater academic expectations have been heaped upon this tiny school, it has had to meet those standards with declining resources. Ironically, says principal Ed Collett, Rail Road Flat Elementarys success over the past four years has actually shrunk the amount of state discretionary money it getsfrom $98,000 in 2000-01 to $47,000 last yearsince the funds are earmarked for school improvement. And with per-capita income averaging $18,454, the community isnt exactly flush enough to funnel extra local tax money into the schools or to set up a foundation to offset state aid reduction...