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- <text id=89TT1645>
- <title>
- June 26, 1989: Help For At-Risk Kids
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- June 26, 1989 Kevin Costner:The New American Hero
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- EDUCATION, Page 51
- Help for At-Risk Kids
- </hdr><body>
- <p>An ambitious report calls for an overhaul of U.S. middle schools
- </p>
- <p> Television calls them the wonder years, but for millions of
- youths between the ages of ten and 15, the years of early
- adolescence are anything but wonderful. No longer children, not
- quite adults, they are bombarded by dizzying physical changes,
- reeling emotions and raging hormones. Today's youngsters, however,
- face problems far more formidable than acne or gangly limbs.
- Drinking, drug abuse, sexually transmitted diseases and teenage
- pregnancy, once the province of high schools, have drifted into the
- lower grades. Add to this the crippling effects of broken homes and
- ill-equipped parents, and it is easy to see why nearly 7 million
- children ages ten to 17 are considered "at risk" of becoming
- troubled, unproductive, even dangerous adults.
- </p>
- <p> The nation's middle and junior high schools -- encompassing
- Grades 6 through 9 -- play a potentially crucial role in shaping
- the future of young adolescents. Yet these institutions have
- largely been left out of a flurry of educational reforms that have
- focused on U.S. elementary and secondary schools over the past six
- years. That may soon change, however. This week the spotlight will
- be squarely on the middle grades, as more than 200 educators,
- lawmakers and health specialists gather in Washington to discuss
- an ambitious report sponsored by the Carnegie Corporation of New
- York. Titled "Turning Points: Preparing American Youth for the 21st
- Century," it calls for a sweeping middle school overhaul aimed
- especially at helping "those at risk of being left behind." Among
- other things, the report recommends:
- </p>
- <p> Creating smaller communities for learning. This would be done
- by restructuring schools into "houses," or "schools within
- schools," each consisting of 200 to 300 students; grouping teachers
- and students together in teams; and assigning an adviser to each
- student, so that every child is well known by at least one adult.
- </p>
- <p> Teaching an interdisciplinary core curriculum that would
- include English, fine arts, foreign languages, history, literature,
- math, science and social studies. The emphasis would be on critical
- thinking -- making connections between ideas -- rather than rote
- learning. To promote positive values and encourage good
- citizenship, the curriculum would include health instruction and
- community-service activities.
- </p>
- <p> Eliminating the practice of tracking students according to
- their achievement level. Instead, schools should promote
- "cooperative learning" in which small groups of students of varying
- abilities work in teams under the supervision of one or more
- teachers.
- </p>
- <p> Boosting academic performance through better health and
- fitness. Schools should ensure access to health-care and counseling
- programs, preferably through a "health coordinator" or on-site
- clinic. Specifically, the report calls on middle schools to provide
- family-planning information to young adolescents.
- </p>
- <p> The Carnegie recommendations add up to a middle school that is
- part classroom and part social-welfare agency, a combination that
- is bound to make some educators uneasy. "Middle school
- administrators have got their hands full just trying to educate
- kids, let alone creating warm, caring environments," says Samuel
- Sava, executive director of the National Association of Elementary
- School Principals.
- </p>
- <p> But in a world where a great number of children arrive at
- school undernourished, neglected and in poor health, many feel that
- schools have little choice but to try to fill the gap left by the
- collapse of families and other social supports. "Parents just
- aren't there today," says David Lawrence, principal of the Thomas
- J. Quirk Middle School in Hartford, Conn. "We still are. The kids
- can't be left to founder."
- </p>
- <p> Besides the recommendations on sex counseling, perhaps the
- report's most controversial proposal is the elimination of
- tracking. While it is true that minority and at-risk students are
- often warehoused in low-level classes, a blanket insistence on
- cooperative learning may motivate parents of gifted children to
- abandon the public schools. "We need to be careful," says Stanford
- education professor Michael Kirst. "We certainly don't want to slow
- down kids on the fast track."
- </p>
- <p> One problem with carrying out the Carnegie proposals is that
- they will require a corps of instructors specialized in teaching
- early adolescents. But only 23 states offer a credential for
- teaching in the middle grades. Those on the front lines "will need
- help and training," says Chester Finn, former Assistant Secretary
- of Education under William Bennett. "It's not everyone who can
- teach a 14-year-old."
- </p>
- <p> The best argument in favor of the foundation's suggestions is
- that many of them have already been tried successfully: according
- to one study, 63% of middle schools provide health instruction, 40%
- assign adult advisers to students, 33% use team teaching, and 28%
- offer sex education. Breaking up large, impersonal schools into
- smaller units is also starting to gain acceptance. "It's a lot more
- work, but it's very stimulating," says Elizabeth Ophals, a
- social-studies teacher at the Louis Armstrong Middle School in New
- York City, where houses and team teaching were adopted last year.
- </p>
- <p> The price tag for transforming the country's middle schools
- will doubtless be higher than the federal, state or local
- governments want to pay. But, warns Carnegie, the real choice is
- whether to fund health clinics, counseling and teacher training
- today or pay the far higher cost of dropouts, an ill-prepared work
- force and swelling welfare and prison rolls tomorrow. "The nation
- cannot afford to continue neglecting these youth," concludes the
- report. Lorraine Monroe, director of the Center for Minority
- Achievement at Manhattan's Bank Street College of Education,
- agrees. "We can't hold school the way we used to hold school," she
- says. "Some educators may say, `I didn't sign on for that.' Well,
- that's the job now."
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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