In a message dated 9/23/2004 11:29:38 PM Central Daylight Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

<< We've seen Doug Mann make this claim repeatedly, but other than the story 
about his kid, I can't really recall anything else he's said in this forum, 
nor did I see anything on his campaign's web site to actually back up this 
theory of his that ability-grouping is occurring so rampantly throughout the MPS, 
though I remember other parents of MPS students disputing it.  >>

In this post I review some evidence of ability grouping in the Minneapolis 
Public Schools that Mark Snyder can't recall and can't see. I can't respond to 
the unspecified contentions and argumentation of unspecified parents that Mark 
says he remembers having disputed my "theory," but not well enough to recite. 

My theory is that the school system in Minneapolis has a big racial learning 
because it is designed to create a big racial learning gap. In my opinion, two 
of the major institutional factors that serve to widen the gap are 1) a high 
concentration and high turnover of inexperienced teachers in schools with a 
high concentration of low-income and minority (non-white) students due to the 
bidding process and excessive layoffs at the end of each year, and 2) 
ability-grouping practices. 

In my opinion, the most effective and efficient way to close the gap would be 
to create positions for probationary teachers and distribute them evenly 
through the district's schools, stop laying off excessive numbers of teachers 
(which increase turnover and burnout) and phase out "low-ability" classes and 
intra-classroom groupings, which reportedly has been done in some school districts 
without "teaching to the middle," i.e., watering down the curriculum for 
"high ability" classes (Ann Wheelock has written at least a couple of books on 
this subject, including "How untracking can save Americas schools").    

Dave Heistad and Carol Johnson have said that the MPS administration does not 
condone "ability-grouping," however, as the following quote will show, 
Heistad and Johnson do not dispute that what I call "ability-grouping" is standard 
practice in a large majority of schools.

[Quote from SW Journal] << David Heistad, the Executive Director of Testing 
Evaluation and Student Information for Minneapolis Public Schools, said they 
don't uniformly test student IQ levels but do separate students in the 
elementary grades into groups by reading abilities.

"Most teachers in the world, at least in the United States, do some sort of 
reading groups. We certainly wouldn't call that ability grouping, because those 
reading groups are based on whether students are sounding out the basic 
words... or whether they are really struggling with the basics and don't have the 
phonemic awareness down," Heistad said.

"Typically, the teacher in first grade will divide [students] into a couple 
groups so each student can work at their own pace. But those groups are very 
flexible and teachers assess them throughout the year. That's a big step from 
ability grouping," he said.>>
http://www.swjournal.com/articles/2002/10/22/export5473.txt

Ability-grouping as Heistad defines it has been illegal since the 1970s. 
Students may not be assigned to separate classrooms for the entire day based on a 
single test of academic or cognitive ability, but may be assigned to 
classrooms in various subject areas on the basis of assessed ability (what they can 
do, 
scores on achievement tests, etc.)  "Ability-grouping" is allowed if the 
groupings are "flexible," which means that students are periodically reassessed, 
and may be considered "flexible" even if there is absolutely no movement from 
group to group over the course of a year, even several years, and even if 
ability-grouping practices result in greater differences in education-related 
outcomes between racial groups. - (Source: Equal Educational Opportunity and 
Nondiscrimination for minority students: Federal Enforcement of Title VI in Ability 
Grouping Practices, Equal Educational Opportunity Project Series, Volume IV, A 
Report of the United States Commission on Civil Rights, September 1999, 
heading: OCR's enforcement activities, subheading: Title VI compliance standards, 
pages 60-61.)   

In the fall of 1997, first grade students at Audubon Elementary school (now 
Lake Harriet) were ability-grouped into separate classrooms for reading 
instruction within 2 weeks after school started, and students in the low and medium 
ability classrooms were further subdivided in instructional groups according to 
perceived ability. This part-time tracking was particularly objectionable 
because the rest of the curriculum is reading based. I went to the teachers, then 
up the chain of command to seek corrective action: to the principal, the 
superintendent, then the board of directors, which sets the policy. The result: No 
action. Why?

The first grade teachers at Aububon were following the district's policy, as 
set forth in the curriculum content standards for English Language Arts, 
reading and writing. I requested and received a copy of every (teachers edition) 
curriculum content standards booklet for grades K-12. The booklets for K-6 
Language Arts, reading and writing, dated July 1997 recommend assigning students to 
instructional groups according to ability. Carol Johnson was the head of 
curriculum development for a year prior to leaving the district for the 
superintendent gig in St. Louis Park.

Also in 1997 the district requested and received a matching grant from the 
state to do testing for gifted programs. The district also mandated gifted 
programming at any school where at least one parent requested that their child be 
placed in a gifted program, provided that child meets the criteria for 
placement in a gifted program. About half of MN school districts did not apply for the 
1997 matching grant for gifted testing, which was appropriation specifically 
earmarked for gifted education since the early 1980s. In the early 1980s about 
half of MN school districts did not have gifted and talented programs and did 
not condone "ability-grouping" as I have used the term.

When I was a MPS parent during the 1980s (in relation to the children of my 
companion of that era), I spent many hours in early elementary classrooms and 
saw no evidence of ability-grouping at Longfellow and Marcy Open. Students 
received reading instruction together, were engaged in tutorial activities 
together, and were not ability-grouped in any way. However, the district had a pre-IB 
program that some could get into (all students could apply for, but not all 
who wanted to get into the IB program could do so).

I wrote a research paper in the Spring of 1994 titled "K-12 education on the 
wrong track: gifted education and ability grouping in America's public 
schools" It's on my web site. It answers questions like: When and why was 
ability-grouping widely introduced in the US? How many Minnesota school districts did 
and 
did not ability-group at any grade-level in the mid-1980s? Do people become 
less intelligent as they get older?, etc. 
http://educationright.tripod.com/id39.htm

-Doug Mann, King Field
write in Mann for school board
www.educationright.com
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