Published at the Tennessean:
After reading the Tennessean article “Large numbers of Tennessee students not ready for college, new state data show,”
I was scratching my head and wondering why alarm bells are going off
now about high numbers of high school graduates needing college
remediation. Especially so as we find out near the end of the article
that college remediation rates have actually improved by 20 percentage
points in the past five years.
Furthermore,
why would the executive director of the Tennessee Higher Education
Commission, Mike Krause, be bad-mouthing teachers and the education
colleges that prepare them, in light of these improvements in college
readiness? Why wouldn’t a 20-percent improvement at least warrant a nod
of approval for heading in the right direction?
I am not suggesting that we ignore the fact that some
schools across the state still have very high percentages of graduates
needing college remediation in both reading and math. And we know those
schools are in both rural and urban areas that are economically
distressed. Whether Hardeman County in West Tennessee or Austin-East
High School in Knoxville, we know that high remediation rates go hand in
hand with high poverty rates.
It is unfortunate
that Krause and his chief ally in the state Senate, Republican Jon
Lundberg, ignore the economic and educational disparities that are at
the source of the remediation problem. Instead, they continue to blame
the problem on educators and teacher educators whose life work is to
help those struggling students whose disenfranchisement remains a
principal predictor for their adult life outcomes.
Sadly, Krause’s former boss, former Gov. Bill Haslam,
spent the waning days of his governorship trying unsuccessfully to kill
the most recent manifestation of school funding lawsuits that have been
ongoing in one form or another since 1987. If Krause and members of the
General Assembly want to do something about high remediation rates and
other educational effects of child poverty, they could support full
funding of Tennessee’s Basic Education Program, BEP, which would put the
State in line with its constitutional responsibility to provide the
children of the state with a “free, adequate, and equitable education.”
With
teachers across the nation now finding public support for demanding the
resources required to do their jobs professionally and to raise their
families adequately, Krause’s blame game seems particularly out of step
with the times. We will have to see if Tennesseans are as easily
manipulated now as they have been in the past by efforts to deflect
attention from generations of inadequate and inequitable education
funding, while leaders seek to avoid political accountability for a
never-ending array of failed education reform efforts that benefit big
business interests over the needs of children.
In
the meantime, it would be a greater public service If the media were to
give credit where credit is due, rather than ignoring the larger story
in order to benefit the political motives of state officials. A more
appropriate headline on the Tennessean article might have read,
“Five-year college remediation rate down by 20 percent among state high
school grads.”
Jim Horn, Ph.D., is professor
of educational leadership at Cambridge College in Cambridge,
Massachusetts . . . . His most recent book is
"Work Hard, Be Hard: Journeys Through ‘No Excuses’ Teaching."
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