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DeKalb Schools improvement slower than other systems on CRCT

The DeKalb County School System is one of the lowest performing systems in metro Atlanta in several subjects and other school systems are improving faster than DeKalb’s according to 2011 CRCT results.

When compared with other systems such as Atlanta Public Schools, Clayton County Public Schools and Fulton County Schools, DeKalb, although making slight improvements, is still improving more slowly than the systems surrounding it.

“I understand, believe it or not, those that have good feelings and those that have bad feelings about the low academic achievement as the result of some testing scores that have come out in the school district but you cannot give up on us yet. Our children need all of us to pull together. Change is necessary, and change will happen,” Interim Superintendent Ramona Tyson said of the recent test scores.

According to the 2011 scores, DeKalb had the lowest Language Arts score in every grade and the lowest reading scores in all grades except grade four, which was higher than Atlanta and Clayton at 82.9 percent but lower than Fulton County.

When asked why DeKalb Schools have been slower to show improvement Morcease Beasley, the interim deputy superintendent of teaching and learning for DeKalb Schools, said that students and employees thrive in positive environments and are deflated in negative and hostile environments. Beasley said that a healthy balance of vocal and visible community support and criticism will go a long way toward moving the system forward.

“Our goal is to ensure that all students are reading on grade level no later than the third grade. [A] of priority will be the expectation to provide and document the impact of reading interventions when the data reflects the student is in need of intervention,” Beasley said.

Beasley also said that the division of teaching and learning has developed a plan that will allow it to monitor district-wide reading data to provide campuses support and hold them accountable for outcomes well before the administration of standardized test such as the CRCT. He said that the 2011-2012 school year is expected to be a year of increased reading achievement in DeKalb.

The DeKalb School System, like many of its metro-Atlanta counterparts, also has a low success rate in the subject of social studies, with barely half of grades five through eight passing in 2011. However, the social studies scores do show improvement, in some cases gaining close to 8 percent. Beasley said that there is a correlation between reading and social studies.

“As we continue to address reading in our district, we are confident that increases in social studies learning outcomes will occur as we have already begun to see increases in social studies as reflected in the 2011 CRCT results,” Beasley said.

Beasley also said that aligned K-12 expectations have been conveyed that social studies should be taught daily and teachers are encouraged to integrate social studies content into other content areas as well.

The CRCT is used each year to determine whether each school in the system will make Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP) under federal guidelines and is then used to determine the amount of funding a system can receive under the No Child Left Behind Act.

The official AYP results will be released by the Georgia Department of Education in mid-July. Beasley said that, although he hopes more schools make AYP this year compared to last year, “we know that we are doing the right work for our students and time will validate this.”

 


Comments (13)

Carl Waller
Said this on 7/14/12 At 10:56 am
Yes culture change. In my weekly faculty meeting in dcss we were often told " if you want to keep your job ...." it was silly. The peope talking were more afraid then those they were speaking to. Proof is in the pudding, we need to do better. Teachers need a clearer voice as well, union cant do it
Carl Waller
Said this on 7/14/12 At 10:45 am
Great point, so what if you are better than aps. I teach in Dekalb and we have are hands full with students and administration. Dekalb leadership is in denial. They are forced to spend their time defended want has not been done
georgetta morton
Said this on 1/20/12 At 08:35 pm
I agree, i had to pull my son out of public school. When he was in elementary, he was in special ed. And I noticed when he got ot middle school the problem with special ed was bigger. My son is now in a home school program that is free and they only deal with children in special ed. The program is great.
georgetta morton
Said this on 1/20/12 At 06:01 pm
I agree with you, our kids are failing. I am a parent volunteer advocate for children in special education. We try to help kids in the program, where i volunteer (the program is free for children that have a learning disability) When my son was in the 5th grade, parents did not even bother to show up for IEP meetings. Where I volunteer at my sons homeschool program (which is free for children who have a learning disability), we always find ways to get parents involved and when parents do show up, there is always a major difference in the childs performance.
Long time resident
Said this on 7/27/11 At 06:45 am
Such a shame; the authors take the time to prepare a report and then they screw the whole thing up by comparing DCSS with APS. Would the authors have DCSS issue erasers to the CRCT proctors?
Said this on 7/26/11 At 09:52 pm
you are so right parents should be involved with their child education not just sending them to school what is it going to take for the parents to wake up and see the picutre we just cant set by any more and think the teachers can do it all if the the parent need to get help for them self to help their child the help is there what is going on in these home that parent cant sit down with their children and check to see how well the child is reading are solving math problem. no more just pass a child to the next grade that happen in the 70s.it is sad because there is so much help out here no more expert we cant look for someone else to save our childrens it stare at home Education is the key to open up the sky parent get up and do what is right for you child attend PTA meeting get involved. and if there is a learning disabilities be there for your child you no your child better than anyone else get incolved in there IEP fine out you right as a parent with a child with a learning disabilities made sure that your child is getting all the help their need parents need to be parents
JJ
Said this on 7/24/11 At 10:38 pm
There are many reasons for the failure of Dekalb County School System. The primary reason lies with the parents. They are the key to all the spokes in the wheel, which starts with their children. The parents are not as engaged in doing those things that are necessary from cradle to college to prepare their children. Too much focus is on sports and cheerleading. It's a disgrace to see the parents and children spending several hours out on the streets to beg people for "help" with their sports related activities. There are up to 200 people at busy intersections darting in an out of traffic with cups begging. They even set up a tent and was begging in the rain. How many are those same parents are involved in the academics? What is the begging saying to our children? It's ok to beg and have others pay for what are the parents' responsibilities? Just a few years ago, parents would take care of their own responsibilities or they would have fund raisers with the children involved. Now they just want to turn children into street beggars with the notion of entitlement. Don't get me wrong. I believe in helping children if they were asking for books or raising money to go to the Quiz Bowl and wanted to have a fund raiser. I would be the first in line to donate. But it's sports at the expense of education. How are these children doing academically? Children excel in what they are expected to excel in. If the focus is on sports then that's where they will excel. This is setting the children up for limited options. How many of the parents attend PTA meetings? How many of the parents vote on school board members? How many attend school board meetings (except to protest the wearing of uniforms)? How many parents take their children to the library? How many of them buy books for their children to read during the summer? The parents should be the protector and advocate for the children to make sure they get the best education throughout the entire educational support chain and they have failed at every step.
Said this on 7/22/11 At 07:55 am
Interesting: Dekalb Schools make a miserable CRCT showing the 1st year they know they are being closely scrutinized. TRIAGE by Morcease B is DOA. Dept of Ed needs to investigate: This is what happens when a school system SYSTEMATICALLY migrates all Special Ed students into a co-teaching model to the extent that they eliminate Resource & Self-Contained classes for those with intellectual disabilities. Co-teaching in General Ed may NOT be the Least Restrictive Environment for students with disabilities. They will NOT automatically learn more because they are sitting next to a general ed student. Some students need a small class setting with less distractions and more individual attention. DCSS should be ashamed of how they mistreat and manipulate students with disabilities.
JerryMyer Jackson Jr
Said this on 7/21/11 At 09:20 pm
How Many Times Must I Say It :

DeKalb County = A County in Crisis from The School House To The Court House To The Government House !

Bloated and Dumbed Down = And It's Citizens Re-Elect The SAME OLE LOSERS !!!
Teacher
Said this on 7/21/11 At 04:02 pm
DCSS needs a major culture change. The leadership is reactive rather than proactive and forward-thinking. Every school year, there is a scramble to implement a new plan or program to improve test scores and add 'rigor' (popular buzz word) to the curriculum. Interestingly, pressure is ALWAYS put on Special Education to bear responsibility for the entire school to make AYP. Special Ed teachers are frequently told if Special Education doesn't make AYP, then neither will the school. DCSS is not as callous and outrageous as APS, but the intimidation and threats, though more subtle, have always been the same. Surely, there are some very nervous people in DCSS now. DCSS employs lots of instructional coaches, but based on a drop in the system's ranking this year, the coaches are highly ineffective. Now Morcease is trying to come up with a new scheme to justify their existence. Learning cannot be enhanced by mere classroom observation and a legion of coaches and administrators. Good teachers are going to leave the system. WHAT VALUE HAS MORCEASE BEASELY BROUGHT TO DCSS?
poofbegone
Said this on 7/21/11 At 03:44 pm
What does weight have to do with intellect & ability? Are all obese people in that condition due to lifestyle? Does a 'healthy' lifestyle make one superior? Maybe there is a school district somewhere that only hires people with a 'healthy' lifestyle who are 'good role models' who attended colleges that pass your inspection and meet your criteria. Sounds like 'master race' type logic. The world needs more great, wonderful and perfect people like you.
Tombigbee
Said this on 7/21/11 At 08:44 am
That's what happens when you have a bunch of obese teachers with bachelor's degrees in Education from jokes of a college who can barely read or write either. Meanwhile, teachers with master's degrees in substantive subjects who have healthy lifestyles and would be good role models can't get hired.
Ed
Said this on 7/20/11 At 04:58 pm
So according to Morcease the fault lies with anyone who would criticize DCSS, not with DCSS itself. What a self-serving, arrogant, incompetent . . .

BTW, I'm not sure comparing DCSS, or anybody, to APS is really all that valid, given the, um, "measures" APS has been using to improve their scores.

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