Wednesday, February 08, 2006

I burned QComp




What is Q-Comp, and why would I burn it?
Q-Comp is larger than a Q-Tip, but much smaller than any real educational reform.
Q-Comp stands for "Quality Compensation," one dreamchild of Governor Tim Pawlenty. Its supposed goal for schools and teachers is to provide funds for faculty development. But there are hidden costs.
Village School where I teach is a small charter school, around fifty students. Village School would have received $15,000 from the state if we had applied for and received Q-Comp funding. It sounded like a good idea to me. We can always use more money.
I worked for two weeks straight on the proposal. There was one stipulation that troubled me, but I thought I could work around it--a substantial proportion of the pay awarded for teachers' participation in the program depended on students' progress in academic areas as measured by standardized tests.
At Village School, we despise standardized tests--but that is a subject for another blog posting. It seemed as though a teacher's effectiveness with Q-Comp could be documented with a portfolio of the teacher's work with students. And so I kept at it.
After submitting the proposal, I received comments from the state reviewers. I had left significant sections of explanation out, in particular the section about the areas of academic growth that would be measured, and the norm-referenced standardized tests that would measure that growth. There was no way I could finesse it. As I filled in the charts that included grade level of students and areas of measurement, it became clearer and clearer that a single teacher would get a raise or not depending on, in our case, a small charter school, the test scores of a single student.
Let's call the teacher "Mr. Thompson" and the student "Mary." Mr. Thompson would get a raise if Mary did well on her math test.
There could be lots of reasons Mary might not do well on the test that had nothing to do with Mr. Thompson or his ability as a teacher. She could be absent. She could have a headache. Her boyfriend broke up with her right before the test. She may have known some math, but not the particular problems on the test. The dog ate her test. She developed sudden amnesia. She hated Mr. Thompson and hoped he'd never get another raise the rest of his life.
Too many teachers are already teaching for the tests out of fear that their school will be labeled a failing school--and ultimately taken over by somebody who thinks they can do a better job, a for-profit company, perhaps. How much harder will a teacher work to teach the test if it will mean getting a bigger raise?
Some have said that Pawlenty's Q-Comp plan is not about improving teaching and learning at all, but is a Trojan Horse whose sole purpose is to change teachers' compensation schedules and undermine teacher unions. It's merit pay disguised as a faculty development plan.
Whatever the real goals of Q-Comp are, it became clear to all of us at Village School that it wouldn't work for us.
On one of the first days of school, I and three other students hauled the boxes of paper that were once our Q-Comp proposal out to the woods. We built a small bonfire of twigs and leaves, and one by one dropped the pages into the fire.
As the smoke from the burning pages rose into the sky, we offered up a prayer to protect our children from the insatiable hunger of testing corporations, and the interminable machinations of politicians.
Oops! Just kidding! There were no prayers. It's a school, remember? But there was smoke. And where there's smoke, there's fire. And Pawlenty's hot new plan adding fuel to this fire.

19 Comments:

At 1:57 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Great first post Olivia! I'm going to add you to my blog aggregator post haste. P.S. Keep the flame alive!

 
At 3:29 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

A great first post Olivia!! I'll be announcing you in Northfield.org soon!!

 
At 12:19 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

I must admit that while I do not like standardized tests all that much, I like even less having tax money given to organizations without a way to measure how effectly it is used. And I agree with the authors of "The Bell Curve" that while there are many problems with standardized tests, they ARE predictors of future performance, and if we go to school in part to enhance our future performance, then those tests may be valid measures.

 
At 6:23 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

This is a sincere question, Olivia: Is it possible for a teacher - or a school - to fail? And if so, how would you know?

 
At 6:40 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

What did you teach those 3 children as you burned the Q-Comp application, page-by-page? That is the issue!

 
At 9:41 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

This is an inert blog. A one-post wonder?

 
At 5:35 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Good reading Olivia, I liked it all. To bad we can't bure ALL standardized test.

 
At 9:26 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

testing is about puking out the same information that got stuffed in. Some people can do it and some people can't. It really has nothing to do with intelligence. Those kids learned critical thinking, and that there are adults who will not be sold out by the system for the sake of a better salary. They also learned how to build a bonfire

 
At 8:14 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

How are schools and teachers to be evaluated, if not by some measurement of outcome?

Why does accountability apply in every other facet of society, except public education?

What do teachers fear about us knowing whether Johnny and Suzy can correctly add 2 + 2?

 
At 12:04 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Ms. Frey,
I'm a bit concerned about both the basic approach of your school and your post here. I was employed at a nearby business for over a year and viewed first hand your students in action. Do you believe that teaching the children to burn these pages was a lesson in being free or in usurping authority? I believe if your lesson was intended to teach them freedom, then you missed the mark. From what I viewed of the children at your school, they are learning no discipline, no respect for each other or the real world, and are being given a very narrow view of what is expected of the freedoms that they will enjoy as adults.

 
At 6:47 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Response to Anonymous at 8:14 a.m.:

All other facets of society are accountable? You've got to be kidding.

I could list hundreds of examples, no, millions of examples of ways that our society is not and has not been accountable.

But I'll just mention two big ones now--the oil companies and our present U.S. government.

Oil companies--Our planet is melting because of global warming, and are oil companies being called to account?

Our president thinks he's a king, and is degrading human and civil rights in every corner of the world, especially our own country. Are he and his various henchmen being called into account?

To all the comments regarding the need for accountability in schools:

I agree that schools must be accountable, though I admit that now, in the context of education, testing and NCLB, I hate that word "accountable," for a variety of reasons, including the hypocrasy mentioned above.

The "accountability" movement--with testing, standards, etc.--was invented by a coalition of governors and business executives about twenty years ago. Never mind their motives for now. I'll speak to that later.

The accountability movement originated in distrust--lack of trust of schools and teachers. They couldn't trust teachers to teach and decide if kids were learning. Too subjective (as though standards and tests aren't subjective). And so what was a very rich, deep, HUMAN endeavor became a mechanized, supposedly objective endeavor.

Kids learn best with other adults in real situations. Of all the things that tests test, none of them are critical to being a fulfilled human in a community of people.

But of course, the business execs weren't interested in being human, but being better machines.

Watch for my next blog "ChildMachine: A Modest Proposal."

I'm new to the Blog world, and so am slow. I post when I get to it.

Olivia

 
At 6:57 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Dear Steph:

I invite you to come and spend more time at Village School. People need to spend time here before passing judgement on the school, because what we do is human and very messy. We do not deal out "fast food discipline."
What we do with kids takes time, and we have seen real change.

Just curious--do kids from other schools--high school and middle school in Northfield ever misbehave? (That's a rhetorical question.) Why aren't those schools then judged as "failing"?

Comment to Lucas--At Village School, we aren't interested in standardized anything, or comparing kids to other kids. We take kids where they are and help them discover their unique gifts and ways of being in the world and in community, and help guide individual growth and development in community.
The standars movement is a powerful hangover from the industrial revolution of over a hundred years ago. The schools we have today are a PRODUCT of this movement, too.

There's some history there, too, that people today might be interested in if they have any interest in real educational reform.

 
At 11:16 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Of all the things that tests test, none of them are critical to being a fulfilled human in a community of people. But of course, the business execs weren't interested in being human, but being better machines.

Olivia's response is the perfect escape from accountability: Trust me, give me all the money I ask for, and I'll tell you if I succeded in educating your child. Who wouldn't want that deal?!

Her belief is that education's objective is "creating fulfilled human beings." Mine is kids who can read, write and perform math problems.

Thanks, but we parents will handle the fulfillment. You handle the three Rs.

 
At 8:24 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

To anonymous at 11:16 AM
Just looking at the juvenile courts systems, a lot of parents are NOT "handle the fulfillment"part of raising their children.

The standardized test are NOT working,two of my own children can prove it. Also the schools and teachers DO NOT get all the money they ask for, do you watch the new or read the newspapers? Just wondering cause if you did you would know this too be true.

 
At 1:48 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

How is a school to be measured if not by the (pre and post) achievement measurement of its students?

Why would be spend a penny more on a system that can't even tell us that?

It seems to me the onus is on educators to prove that students learn, not on taxpayers to pump resources into a system whose output isn't quantifiable.

 
At 9:21 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

in an ideal world kids would come to school well rested, well fed,and a nice clean and shiney face. That is not really the case. Sometimes just feeding, listening, or talking and spending time might have to happen before the child can even think about learning. Don't kid yourself these kids are learning all the time, it is what they are learning that is important. If we are trying to shove in facts that are out dated a day later where are we? The real teachers are the kids because they are faster at accessing information, but the elders have the wisdom and need to help them do something with the continued flow of information.
Discernment is what is important, and it needs to be done in the world, not behind a desk. Here is something that we could measure Happiness!

 
At 2:06 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Happiness is a great thing to measure. Let's measure smiley faces and rainbows, too.

What color is the sky in your world? Is this John Lennon's blog or a serious dialogue about education?

I'm outta here.

 
At 10:08 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Hi Olivia,
Great to see some of the work you are doing even though we are so far away.

I wish there were more village schools across the U.S. There are not many options out there for parents who want/need public education without the standardized testing that has now, unfortunately, become the norm.

Back when I was in school I never remember being tested so much. My step-children were both tested in Kindergarten. That’s crazy—and it’s only just begun. One child did well one didn’t. The one that didn’t they wanted to start on ADHD drugs. Again more craziness.

Reminds me of that poem by Wendell Berry.
“When despair for the world grows in me
and I wake in the night at the least sound
in fear of what my life and my children's lives may be,
I go and lie down where the wood drake
rests in his beauty on the water, and the great heron feeds.”

How to get back to the peace of wild things when there is a fire-breathing test-teaching philosophy taking over public education in America?

My son is in a day care three days a week that I only wish could continue on to be his school once he reaches age 5. In the backyard where he plays with his playmates and teachers he has goats and chickens and roosters and a garden and lots of space to run around and dig in the dirt and feel the earth in his hands. He has watched with great excitement as day in and day out a huge spider spun her web and caught her food. How terrible to think that he will leave this environment and go to a place where he is from day one, tested, rated, and placed into neat straight lined categories.

My heart says the simple though sad truth is that the government doesn't want the US populace to be critical thinkers. They would be more comfortable if we were all dumbed down so that when they roll the “lets wage war” propaganda, or the “poor corporations can’t afford raising the minimum wage” propaganda, or the very basic and constant “fear, fear, fear” propaganda we will all just listen and nod and agree and not do the one thing they really do fear—take action. That’s why our public education schools are being turned into standardized testing fortresses where naught but the correct and proper test answer be uttered.

 
At 4:10 PM, Blogger Irvin said...

Hello, Olivia
I'll have to admit, I haven't read your blogs--but I will. I am just wrapping up a book on critical teaching & I was commenting on your wonderful article, Stupid Clowns--and suspecting, and regretting that you are no longer helping us in rhetoric & composition. but clearly, you have found a venue that is obviously as important.

Irvin Peckham
ipeckham@cox.net
[writing program director at LSU]

 

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