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Wednesday, May 26, 2010
Response to former Governor Bush's appeal for teacher accountability:
Let's start with the opening statement: "All children can learn. Poverty, broken families, disabilities,
language barriers all are challenges to learning. But all of these challenges can be overcome by effective teaching."
First of all, the statement is so grandiose, who would argue against it. We all want children to learn, our future depends
on it. But it is like saying that ‘all politicians can be altruistic.' It's a lofty goal born out of a desire to bring
everyone up to a better standard, but the hard truth is that it's an ideal at best. Mr. Bush needs to consult with a few more
statisticians who can advise him of the tenants of Normal Distribution. Basically, humans lie along a continuum where the
majority of us fall in the ‘average' range of ability (approximately 68%), then there are those that fall either ‘above
average' or those that fall ‘below average.' As in all walks of life, the expectations for these groups are different.
As an example, the ‘above average' athlete plays professional sports. The average athlete participates in intramurals,
little league or even High School athletics and the ‘below average' athlete takes up cards, drawing or video games.
We can certainly set goals for all of us to make the PGA tour or an NFL or NBA roster, but it's not reality. So why is educating
our children any different? Do the laws of probability cease to exist when you walk into a public school? Certainly, we MUST
have the highest of expectations for ALL of our children, but we must tender those with a dose of reality and understand that
our greatest efforts will ultimately result in a relatively predictable distribution. Some will go to Yale, Harvard, or the
University of Florida some will go to a State school and some a Technical, Trade or High school diploma; what's wrong with
that? Mr. Bush would have parents think that teachers, principals and support staff are solely responsible for what happens
within the school walls. Yet we continue to ask them to do more with less; less pay, fewer teaching days, less professional
development, less support staff, fewer supplies and resources and less support and preparation from parents. To their praise,
they have generally produced. Overall, our students are being taught very well. If teachers were free-agents in the NBA or
NFL, most would be holding out for the big 6 figure contract, where teams pay for results. Until we bring the conversation
to an honest starting point, as is the case for many of today's issues, there can be no advancement. Forget letting politicians
design education policy! Would you let Jeb Bush fix your car or perform open heart surgery? Then why let him design your child's
education? By the way Mr. Bush, children start reading to learn in 3rd grade not 4th...isn't that
why you pushed for mandatory retention in 3rd?
9:27 pm edt
Friday, May 14, 2010
Elephant in the room!
The Elephant in the room! Education! Parents,
what is happening to our education system? How can you let this go on? No PE, No Art, No Media, No Music! That's not education,
that's detention. Research has shown the ACADEMIC benefits of these programs: Art promotes expression and creativity, PE relieves
excess energy and improves focus; Music improves math skills. When are we going to let educators and science drive our education
policy and not politics? Keep putting people like Haridopolos, Thresher, Gardiner, and Cretul (there are plenty more) into
office and Public Education in Florida will cease to exist. You can't complain that school boards are asking for property
tax increases to cover basic costs when the State legislator mandates more testing (for "accountability"), yet requires
the district to pay for it out of current funds. You can't complain about "poor, ineffective"
teachers, when they are some of the worst paid in the country. You can't complain about wasted resources (e.g., lifetime
pensions, subsidized health benefits) for state employees (teachers), when they don't make enough to buy their own or contribute
to their own retirement. Maybe we should pay our teachers more, give them their raises and then we can ask them to be "more
accountable," and contribute to their own retirement, and benefits. Spend the money where it will have the biggest impact
and benefit to OUR children. Next week: My plan for teacher
accountability
12:42 am edt
Tuesday, May 11, 2010
School Psych Perspectives
Welcome! This is my first attempt at establishing a blog on the
WWW. My goal is to regularly submit topics of interest to parents, students, and educators in Florida. Among the upcoming
topics you may want to check back and read:
Response to Intervention (RTI); what's holding it back Teacher
Accountability vs politicians To Test or Not To Test
Check back in the next few days and see how it's going.
9:21 pm edt
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I operate a full-service practice, with a number of specialities.
Gifted and Talented Assessment
Test Preparation
Parent Support/Training
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Other Services Offered Include:
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School Readiness (ages 4-5) Gifted and Talented
Evaluations Specific Learning Disabilities Emotional/Behavioral
Disabilities University/College Testing Accomodations - Family Mediation
Sports Performance Enhancement Bilingual (English/Spanish) Language Assessment
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Mental Mastery, P. A. * Alberto Gamarra, Ph. D., NCSP * 1625 North Commerce Pkwy. * Suite 200 * Weston, Fl 33327 * 954-804-4719
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