Krista Taylor |
That’s the question I hear often.
And there may finally be an answer. I am indebted to two friends, both
educators, from families of educators, who shared the link to an Open Letter by
educator Krista Taylor, the 2015 Dr. Lawrence C. Hawkins Educator of the Year.
[accessed February 17, 2017,
http://angelsandsuperheroes.com/2017/01/09/1112/] My friends Fiona
Hickey and Susan Tipton, shared a link to her letter, otherwise I would have
been unaware of her excellent argument for improving our nation’s schools.
But
I want to highlight a particular local factor to which Ms. Taylor’s letter led
me. Even within the Intermountain Area, the disparities in both the perceived
and measured effectiveness of our elementaries have been marked. Comparing many
statistics between the Burney Basin and the Fall River Valley, some of us have
struggled to determine what socio-economic factors contribute to such different
outcomes. Most of the statistics are close enough between the two communities
to suggest that there should be no appreciable difference between these
similarly-sized schools, the only two elementaries, in the same district,
drawing on the same pool of resources, and ostensibly led by the same
administrative philosophies and personnel.
But
Ms. Taylor's letter (well worth the long-ish read, in my opinion) addressed a
statistic I had not specifically investigated. She noted the correlation in measured
performance with the percentage of children living at or below the level of
poverty. Where there are more children living in poverty, the measurements of
the schools' effectiveness reflect poorly (pun intended) on the performance of
educators in those schools.
There
are, as Ms. Taylor points out, problems with the means by which
"effectiveness" is being measured, and I agree with her on this. But
there is another key point I believe merits consideration here, especially with
regard to our educators in the Intermountain Area.
Her
letter prompted me to reconsider my previous research. During my studies I have
looked repeatedly into the statistics regarding the two ends of our
district--specifically, the immediate Burney area and the Fall River Valley.
Not only does each comprise roughly 3500 in population, almost all other
statistics have been practically identical. But today, I realized that the
statistics I had relied on applied to the entire population. Ms. Taylor's
statistical focus, however, emphasized not the total number of people living in
poverty (which I had studied and dismissed previously as a potential for such
marked differences), but the percentage of children living in poverty.
So,
I looked it up. The stats are available at http://www.city-data.com/.
Why
is there such a difference in the perceived and measured effectiveness between
our two elementaries? If we follow Ms. Taylor's logic, and I do, this is a
major contributor to the disparity:
The
poverty rate of children living in Burney is 52.1% higher than the rate in Fall
River Mills.
Leave
that statistic to sit before your mind for just a little bit.
Then,
when you've let the faces and names and homes and jobs and other visions of the
impoverished families you see every day within our diverse communities wash
through you...come back for Part 2: What do we do about it?
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