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A Teacher Grows Disillusioned After a "Fail" Becomes a "Pass"

Croynan

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The New York Times

August 1, 2007

On Education

A Teacher Grows Disillusioned After a ‘Fail’ Becomes a ‘Pass’

By SAMUEL G. FREEDMAN


Several weeks into his first year of teaching math at the High School of Arts and Technology in Manhattan, Austin Lampros received a copy of the school’s grading policy. He took particular note of the stipulation that a student who attended class even once during a semester, who did absolutely nothing else, was to be given 45 points on the 100-point scale, just 20 short of a passing mark.

Mr. Lampros’s introduction to the high school’s academic standards proved a fitting preamble to a disastrous year. It reached its low point in late June, when Arts and Technology’s principal, Anne Geiger, overruled Mr. Lampros and passed a senior whom he had failed in a required math course.

That student, Indira Fernandez, had missed dozens of class sessions and failed to turn in numerous homework assignments, according to Mr. Lampros’s meticulous records, which he provided to The New York Times. She had not even shown up to take the final exam. She did, however, attend the senior prom.

Through the intercession of Ms. Geiger, Miss Fernandez was permitted to retake the final after receiving two days of personal tutoring from another math teacher. Even though her score of 66 still left her with a failing grade for the course as a whole by Mr. Lampros’s calculations, Ms. Geiger gave the student a passing mark, which allowed her to graduate.

Ms. Geiger declined to be interviewed for this column and said that federal law forbade her to speak about a specific student’s performance. But in a written reply to questions, she characterized her actions as part of a “standard procedure” of “encouraging teachers to support students’ efforts to achieve academic success.”

The issue here is not a violation of rules or regulations. Ms. Geiger acted within the bounds of the teachers’ union’s contract with the city, by providing written notice to Mr. Lampros of her decision.

No, the issue is more what this episode may say about the Department of Education’s vaunted increase in graduation rates. It is possible, of course, that the confrontation over Miss Fernandez was an aberration. It is possible, too, that Mr. Lampros is the rare teacher willing to speak on the record about the pressures from administrators to pass marginal students, pressures that countless colleagues throughout the city privately grumble about but ultimately cave in to, fearful of losing their jobs if they object.

Mr. Lampros has resigned and returned to his home state, Michigan. The principal and officials in the Department of Education say that he missed 24 school days during the last year for illness and personal reasons. He missed two of the three sets of parent-teacher conferences. He also had conflicts with an assistant principal, Antonio Arocho, over teaching styles. Mr. Lampros said all of this was true.

Still, Mr. Lampros received a satisfactory rating five of the six times administrators formally observed him. He has master’s degrees in both statistics and math education and has won awards for his teaching at the college level.

“It’s almost as if you stick to your morals and your ethics, you’ll end up without a job,” Mr. Lampros said in an interview. “I don’t think every school is like that. But in my case, it was.”

The written record, in the form of the minutely detailed charts Mr. Lampros maintained to determine student grades, supports his account. Colleagues of his from the school — a counselor, a programmer, several fellow teachers — corroborated key elements of his version of events. They also describe a principal worried that the 2006 graduation rate of 72.5 percent would fall closer to 50 or 60 percent unless teachers came up with ways to pass more students.

After having failed to graduate with her class in June 2006, Miss Fernandez, who, through her mother, declined to be interviewed, returned to Arts and Technology last September for a fifth year. She was enrolled in Mr. Lampros’s class in intermediate algebra. Absent for more than two-thirds of the days, she failed, and that grade was left intact by administrators.

When second semester began, Miss Fernandez again took the intermediate algebra class, which fulfilled one of her graduation requirements. According to Mr. Lampros’s records, she missed one-third of the classes, arrived late for 20 sessions, turned in half the required homework assignments, failed 11 of 14 tests and quizzes, and never took the final exam.

Two days after the June 12 final, Miss Fernandez told Mr. Lampros that she had a doctor’s note excusing her from school on the day of the exam, he said. On June 18, she asked him if she had failed the class, and he told her she had. The next day, the principal summoned Mr. Lampros to a meeting with Miss Fernandez and her mother. He was ordered, he said, to let her retake the final.

Mr. Arocho, the assistant principal, wrote in a letter to Mr. Lampros that Miss Fernandez had a doctor’s note, issued March 15, permitting her to miss school whenever necessary in the spring. Mr. Arocho did not respond to telephone and e-mail messages seeking comment.

There is such a note, issued by Dr. Jason Faller, but it excused absences “over the last three months” — that is, the period between mid-December and mid-March. In a recent interview, Dr. Faller said he saw Miss Fernandez only once, in March, and confirmed that his excuse note covered absences only before March 15.

For whatever reason, school administrators misinterpreted the note and told Mr. Lampros that Miss Fernandez would be allowed to retake the final — and to retake it after having two days of one-on-one tutoring by another math teacher, an advantage none of Mr. Lampros’s other students had, he said.

Mr. Lampros, disgusted, did not come to school the next two days. Miss Fernandez meanwhile took the test and scored a 66, which still left her far short of a 65 average for the semester. Nonetheless, Mr. Arocho tried to enter a passing mark for her. When he had to relent after objections by the teachers’ union representative, Mr. Lampros was allowed to put in the failing grade. Ms. Geiger promptly reversed it.

Samantha Fernandez, Indira’s mother, spoke on her behalf. “My daughter earned everything she got,” she said. Of Mr. Lampros, she said, “He needs to grow up and be a man.”

From Michigan, Mr. Lampros recalled one comment that Mrs. Fernandez made during their meeting about why it was important for Indira to graduate. She couldn’t afford to pay for her to attend another senior prom in another senior year.


#-o#-o#-o#-o

eM.
 
This is the great American educational system. I can't wait to get done working my ass off in college so I can become a teacher just to pass losers like Ms. Fernandez!
 
wow, it is really sad that there are such rules and procedures like this. i know that teachers are pressured to raise graduation rates and stop as many people as possible from dropping out, but they sometimes don't try to find a way that benefits them and the children. sometimes they do stuff like that and end up not really trying.

that being said. i have never heard of a policy where you get 45 immediate points for just showing up. thats just sick.
 
Well, out here in Albuquerque, New Mexico (yes, we are part of the USA), the same thing happened this last May, BUT the teacher won, in a way. True, the dumb ass kid did get to walk with his class and has a diploma, but the ASS Superitendent who changed the grade of a 24 year English teacher, had her job reassigned. She is now somewhere else where she can fuck up something else.
There is presently a law suit against the whole mess.
 
That's just STUPID. I would've resigned too, that's an insult to the educational system and to that teacher's abilities and credentials.

I study my head off and put in the work, it's tough but I do it and I do it well.

as for the mother saying that her daughter earned everything she got. Fuck that, all she has earned is the chance for me to spit in her face. and her mother needs to grow up and take responsibility for that aberration of a daughter that she spawned.
 
I'm a teacher; this has never happened to me, but it has happened to colleagues and to others I've been told about. It's a shame that there are so many chickenshit administrators who will not support teachers and who fold under any pressure from parents. This is a sad commentary indeed.
 
That is bullshit. She failed the exam. Its the teacher decision to pass her or not. The principal doesn't know the student as much as the teacher does. She overstepped her authority here. The student skipped his class and doesn't deserve to graduate. :grrr:

I would have resigned as well. :mad:
You have said it all. Where does a principal get the knowledge of what grade a student should receive in a class?

Tis the teacher who sees the day to day progress and or lack there off.

Hopefully, this gentleman will not leave the classroom over what has happened here. But if he does leave, the school officials and the principal should bare the burden of responsibility.:spank:

even the local village idiot can figure this one out - they need a new principal and a new set of rules.](*,)
:grrr::grrr::grrr:

eM.:(
 
This are just two examples of this that span the country. It is happening everwhere. No wonder, we are behind so many other countries in many fields of study.

I don't even have to read to keep up. And pass a test, ha! A while back, there was the "jock" test floating around. One of the questions was, "If you shoot the basketball from the three point line, how many points will you get if you make the basket?"

What scares the pee out of me is that down the road, out country really will be in a mess (already happening).
 
In the school's rush to improve test scores more more funding and giving passing grades to kids who don't deserve them we are ultimately failing these students in the long run. Mommy and Daddy aren't going to be able to lecture these kids bosses the way they do with teachers.
 
I've been out of the school system for a number of decades now, but I'm curious to know why the students must be passed if they show up for even a single class. Is there a bonus paid to the school for the number of passed students?
 
Once I had this girl as a student who was clearly the apple of the administration's eye. Every project was delivered late or incomplete. The final project which represented 50% of the final grade was never turned in! She didn't even show up for the final exam. According to the rules, missing one class in a 2-credit course was an automatic one-grade drop. By the rules of the college, she had earned whatever came below an F.

Naturally she was the Valedictorian. I understand that there were several profs as frustrated as I was with similar situations.

The student who had earned the actual top spot was dismissed out of hand because his family background was a little trashy. So I hired him right out of school and promoted him to VP. I doubt that whimpering little Brittany-esque bitch has ever kept a job for more than 6 months. I lost track of her after the first year. The worst part of this parent-involved special treatment is that the kids get such a lopsided view of what it will be like in the real world. The get smacked in the face with reality and snap. :eek: They usually deserve it.
 
...Is there a bonus paid to the school for the number of passed students?

I'd be interested to know that, also.

In many European countries schools are run more and more like businesses nowadays. I believe the underlying reason is to cut costs and improve performance. By putting more pressure on the directors and headmasters by offering funding and strict performance assessments governments are hoping to improve standards... As a result we get stories like the one posted above.

Generally many governments appear to be making examinations easier in order to maintain or improve standards. Before the next election the respective political party or coalition can then proudly proclaim this as a victory. I don't quite grasp how education is not seen as a much bigger priority on national levels. How can we equip kids with the skills needed to become employed in the knowledge economy?

:(
 
I've been out of the school system for a number of decades now, but I'm curious to know why the students must be passed if they show up for even a single class. Is there a bonus paid to the school for the number of passed students?

This may answer part of your question, but here in California and many other states, schools receive their money from the state based on ADA - Average Daily Attendance. The more students who are in school on any given day, the more funds the school receives. So there is a great financial incentive for schools getting their attendance rates up as high as possible, especially into the 95 percent bracket if possible. (sorry about the two possibles in a row, tis part of my American education, along with my ending sentences with prepositions.](*,)](*,))

Hope this bit of information is helpful in answering your question. You posed a fine question, by the way.

eM.:(
 
Actually yes. A school (and school district) gets paid for each student that attends class. Why do you think teachers take attendance?

I'm not talking about that. That happened when I went to school way back in the 60s. I'm talking about bonuses for a 'quota'. "Pass this many students and we'll give you this much money."

I know there is often a competition for having the best school around, but passing students who should have failed results in nothing more than a school that pumps out kids who are going to fail in life.
 
I'm not talking about that. That happened when I went to school way back in the 60s. I'm talking about bonuses for a 'quota'. "Pass this many students and we'll give you this much money."

I know there is often a competition for having the best school around, but passing students who should have failed results in nothing more than a school that pumps out kids who are going to fail in life.
I believe that in some states, that the higher the ranking the school is, with their test scores, they may also receive additional funds via the state and or the school district.

Again, you have asked a fine question.​

eM.:(
 
I believe that in some states, that the higher the ranking the school is, with their test scores, they may also receive additional funds via the state and or the school district.

Again, you have asked a fine question.​

eM.:(

Thank you, both for the info and the compliment. (*8*)
 
It says a lot about targets, because as long as the targets are reached, that's what the school standing is, or so the principal thinks. My that's one stupid Principal.

Not only does passing a failing student who was lazy make her the butt of the joke, it makes the school's diploma for all the other students pretty much as worthless. Oh, you're a student from THAT school, hence phoney worthless diploma, because they passed the failures to make up the statistics.

Shame on the Principal, and the girl's parents. They've degraded the educational establishment and the value of the diploma that the hard working and worthy students have worked for. The girl and her worthless diploma can be construed as cheating, and we all hate cheats. That's what her parents have reduced their daughter's education to.

Good for the teacher who returned to Michigan. I wouldn't want to work under idiots like that.
 
I've heard about this sort of thing going on in a lot of states. It's really a shame when kids "graduate" from high school and are incapable of performing basic math and reading skills. A lot of the time, teachers are pressured to allow them to progress from grade to grade without actually showing that they've mastered the curriculum...just to keep up the federal funding level. #-o
 
There are reasons that failing students are allowed to graduate, and like most of the comments made here already, they are not vaild by any means.

New York State has lowered the passing grade on the state-created Regents Examinations in each subject area to 55%. Since when is 55 passing? In New York State it is!

And don't get me started on "No Child Left Behind"! All it has done is force teachers, urged by administrators, to teach to the test. One 4th grade teacher, in another building in our district, was applauded publicly at the March Superintendent's Conference Day for having 97% of her class score above the state reference point on the NYS Fourth Grade English Language Arts exam. How did she do it? I spoke with one of the teachers who co-teaches with her. Everything was presented as test prep. They had been test prepping from September, until the administration of the test at the end of January. And what about the 4th grade curriculum? She didn't follow it.

If I ever start doing that just to get higher test scores, then it's time for me to hang it up......#-o
 
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