According to the PA Secretary of Education, Gerald L. Zahorchak, roughly one in three high school graduates needed remediation in order to begin college-level english or math courses. According to Zahorchak, this costs Pennsylvania citizens 26 million dollars annually. The implication is that high schools need to be held accountable. This accountability will most likely arrive in the form of another high stakes assessment - a final graduation test. This is not the first time I've heard the suggestion that "college is the new high school" and I do not doubt the accuracy of the statistics mentioned.
What is missing from this news release is the fact that a large percentage of the students we enroll as new high school students are functioning at a third or fourth grade level in math and/or english performance. The idea that high schools are failing because they are incapable of making up eight years of education in four years is an absurd oversimplification of the problem. All of us need to be asking ourselves the following questions:
- In this era of billion dollar budget shortfalls, do we have the stomach for funding the end of social promotion as now practiced in many of our schools? Will legislators begin funding early childhood education in a way that evens the playing field for all of our children at the beginning of their school years? Will they fund smaller classrooms, extended school days/years for any student in need? If they're going to "talk the talk" they're going to have to start to "walk the walk."
- Are educators and administrators willing to shoulder some responsibility for the complacency that has allowed this practice to thrive at multiple levels for so many years? Will they make the tough choices necessary to end this unfair practice?
- Will parents accept holding back Susie or Johnny until they are reading or computating at grade level? Are they willing to forego civil lawsuits that support social promotion?
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