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Atlanta Schools Created Culture Of Cheating, Fear, Intimidation

Atlanta Schools

By DORIE TURNER   07/16/11 11:20 AM ET   AP

ATLANTA -- Teachers spent nights huddled in a back room, erasing wrong answers on students' test sheets and filling in the correct bubbles. At another school, struggling students were seated next to higher-performing classmates so they could copy answers.

Those and other confessions are contained in a new state report that reveals how far some Atlanta public schools went to raise test scores in the nation's largest-ever cheating scandal. Investigators concluded that nearly half the city's schools allowed the cheating to go unchecked for as long as a decade, beginning in 2001.

Administrators – pressured to maintain high scores under the federal No Child Left Behind law – punished or fired those who reported anything amiss and created a culture of "fear, intimidation and retaliation," according to the report released earlier this month, two years after officials noticed a suspicious spike in some scores.

The report names 178 teachers and principals, and 82 of those confessed. Tens of thousands of children at the 44 schools, most in the city's poorest neighborhoods, were allowed to advance to higher grades, even though they didn't know basic concepts.

One teacher told investigators the district was "run like the mob."

"Everybody was in fear," another teacher said in the report. "It is not that the teachers are bad people and want to do it. It is that they are scared."

For teachers and their bosses, the stakes were high: Schools that perform poorly and fail to meet certain benchmarks under the federal law can face sharp sanctions. They may be forced to offer extra tutoring, allow parents to transfer children to better schools, or fire teachers and administrators who don't pass muster.

Experts say the cheating scandal – which involved more schools and teachers than any other in U.S. history – has led to soul-searching among other urban districts facing cheating investigations and those that have seen a rapid rise in test scores.

In Georgia, teachers complained to investigators that some students arrived at middle school reading at a first-grade level. But, they said, principals insisted those students had to pass their standardized tests. Teachers were either ordered to cheat or pressured by administrators until they felt they had no choice, authorities said.

One principal forced a teacher to crawl under a desk during a faculty meeting because her test scores were low. Another principal told teachers that "Walmart is hiring" and "the door swings both ways," the report said.

Another principal told a teacher on her first day that the school did whatever was necessary to meet testing benchmarks, even if that meant "breaking the rules."

Teachers from the investigation contacted by The Associated Press did not return calls or declined to comment.

Educators named in the investigation could face criminal charges ranging from tampering with state documents to lying to investigators. And many could lose their teaching licenses.

Parents of children enrolled at the 44 schools say they are frustrated and angry.

Shawnna Hayes-Tavares said her son's test scores dropped dramatically after he transferred out of Slater Elementary. She said a testing coordinator at the new school told her the test scores could have been inflated.

The possibility that there could have been cheating "gives me and him a false sense of security as to where he is," she said.

Uncertainty about her son's progress "has not afforded us the opportunity to do more remediation in those areas of weakness," Hayes-Tavares said. "It robbed us of those opportunities. We're going to try to play catch up now."

At Slater, investigators found multiple teachers changed answers on tests or allowed students to look up answers to questions. Teachers would gather in the school's media center to change wrong answers with the blessing of administrators, investigators said.

For Renee Columbus, whose 4-year-old son is starting pre-kindergarten at one of the schools in the state investigation, news of the cheating probe was disheartening.

"Right now it's our only option," said Columbus, who lives in south Atlanta. "I'm hoping by the time he gets into kindergarten, we'll be in a different school district."

The fallout from the state report has only begun.

So far, at least four of the district's top administrators and two principals have been removed and put on paid leave. The head of the district's human resources department resigned after investigators said she destroyed documents and tried to cover up the extent of the cheating.

The schools could owe hundreds of thousands of dollars in federal funding they received for good test performance – money that would be lost at a time when the state's education budget has already been slashed by millions. Districts are being forced to lay off or furlough teachers and cut programs to make ends meet.

And at least one member of the Atlanta school board wants to reclaim tens of thousands of dollars in bonus money that former Superintendent Beverly Hall received for the high test scores.

Investigators said Hall, who retired just days before the investigation was made public, dismissed those who complained about cheating as naysayers trying to discredit the district's progress. The investigators said she either knew or should have known about the cheating.

"Dr. Hall and her senior cabinet accepted accolades when those below them performed well, but they wanted none of the burdens of failure," investigators wrote.

Hall's attorney has denied the allegations, and Hall has said she did not know about cheating in the district.

She apologized in a statement last week for "any shortcomings" that might have led to the widespread cheating.

"To the extent that I failed to take measures that would have prevented what the investigators have disclosed, I am accountable, as head of the school system, for failing to act accordingly," Hall wrote. "If I did anything that gave teachers the impression that I was unapproachable and unresponsive to their concerns, I also apologize for that."

The testing problems first came to light after The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported that some scores were statistically improbable. The state released audits of test results after the newspaper published its analysis.

Experts say the Atlanta cheating scandal has become the new rallying cry for education advocates and parents in other urban districts like Philadelphia, Los Angeles and Washington, D.C., where cheating investigations are ongoing.

Bob Schaeffer of the National Center for Fair and Open Testing, which works to end abuses in standardized testing and wants changes made to the federal No Child Left Behind law, said many are wondering where the "next Atlanta" will be.

"Because of Atlanta, the media and policymakers are going back and looking at concerns raised about their states," Schaeffer said. "This is the top issue. When you see a story like this and see the incredible impact of the confessions, you start to look and say, `Hey, is there something comparable going on here?'"

___

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ATLANTA -- Teachers spent nights huddled in a back room, erasing wrong answers on students' test sheets and filling in the correct bubbles. At another school, struggling students were seated next to h...
ATLANTA -- Teachers spent nights huddled in a back room, erasing wrong answers on students' test sheets and filling in the correct bubbles. At another school, struggling students were seated next to h...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
boehnerstan
anti establishment is SO in
09:00 AM on 07/23/2011
If our society keeps tying everything our lives are composed of to the ALMIGHTY DOLLAR we will continue to see the degradation and failure of all of our institutions and the complete erosion of our humanity.
09:24 PM on 07/19/2011
I spent 15 years in the classroom deaing with a large number of students who did the bare minimum to get by, parents who rarely supported me when their children were discipline problems, and administrators who spent three in the classroom before moving into admin. When I tried to voice my concerns I was ignored. When I went to the school board to show them exactly what some of the problems were and how to fix them, I was led in circles.

Although this past year I had the best group of students I have had in a long time, the lack of support and problems clearly outweighed the joys of teaching. I left teaching this year and now work for the federal government as an Education Manager for the VA, making $10K more a year and working with people who want to learn and be trained. I did all I could to change a broken system, and no one listened. At this point, I'm not sure it can be fixed.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
thawalkingman
If your CAPS lock is on your brain is off.
12:46 AM on 07/19/2011
But, it sounds like students learned a lot about cheating to get ahead.

Sounds like perfect training for a career in the financial sector or in politics.

I'm sure Faux News could use their talents as well.

All in all this school system seems to be doing a pretty good job at preparing students for the realities of life in our new America.
02:48 PM on 07/18/2011
Atlanta is probably not the only place where massive cheating has occurred. I'm sure this goes on in other school districts across the nation.
11:36 AM on 07/18/2011
Right alongside the rest of the cheating, Atlanta "students" are entering middle school w/a first grade reading level. I'm quite sure Atlanta is not the only place this atrocity is occurring. BTW, ' having a 4th grade reading level constitutes 'fictional literacy'. Functionally literate (really, illiterate) people would not be able to function as a airline passenger making their way through directional signage at an airport.

I have, in the past, worked as a volunteer literacy teacher for adults - picking up the wreckage left by union teachers who care for nothing so much as their inflated paychecks and pension plans. The only adults who could be substantially helped by volunteers in my position were Asian immigrants highly motivated to become literate in the Roman alphabet. Hispanic immigrants (who had not been destroyed by American public education) were also good candidates for learning. Often, their strongest motivation to become fully literate was to be able to help their American children w/homework . What a terrible paradox that, as undereducated as they were, they were far ahead of where they could reasonably expect their children to be after graduating here in the USA.

Teachers, administrators and parents who shove students into middle school w/first grade literacy should not only be fired, they should be criminally charged, arrested, tried and imprisoned for child abuse/endangerment.

The 'graduates ' of government schools very ability to learn had been largely destroyed by the system that recklessly pushed them through -- educated or not.
08:47 PM on 07/18/2011
My inflated paycheck and pension plans are why I became a teacher? Wow, I am so glad that you clarified that one for me because I know it can't be because I love working with kids and teaching them new things. Now that would be a silly reason wouldn't it?

Push them through? I am all for holding a kid back if they are failing, however, no matter how many times we tell our head administrators that a kid is not ready to move on, we constantly get overruled and told that it just not a good idea. I can also say that I have never in my 20 years of teaching that I have ever come across a 14 year old that reads at a 1st grade level. Since I am a Spec. Ed teacher my students vary in abilities in several areas. Some can read at or above grade level and some are a couple of years behind. It just must be our district because we manage to catch struggling learners early.
09:35 AM on 07/19/2011
Do you mean to have me believe you don't work w/plenty of people whose major concern is collecting their paychecks while taxpayers work hard to provide them w/both inflated paycheck and pension plans?

Okay, now I understand better. It's the lacksidasical teacher who doesn't teach the child and the careless/greedy administrator who pushes the incompetent child along despite the teacher's pleas for help. The public schools need a complete overhaul. First that need to go are the unions that maintain the status quo.
09:20 PM on 07/18/2011
It is so funny when people assume that the teachers are allowing the students to move on. We are all of the time recommending children be failed or held back, for whatever reason. Unfortunately, we don't have the last say, and most of the time our recommendations are ignored. I have had administrators change failing grades to passing grades many times. I have complained to the state about it on numerous occasions. They simply brush me off. This is among one of the many reasons I left the teaching profession.
09:35 AM on 07/19/2011
It's not funny when teachers, albeit former teachers, can't themselves read/comprehend. Again, "Teachers, administra tors and parents who shove students into middle school w/first grade literacy should not only be fired, they should be criminally charged, arrested, tried and imprisoned for child abuse/endangerment."
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AbeMartin
The best person fer a job is never a candidate
09:08 AM on 07/18/2011
The only winner in the ridiculous scam to administer tests to assess the "progress" of elementary and secondary students is CTB McGraw-Hill, which writes, sells, and grades these instruments of terror.  Any one of CTB's test grading centers is a horror show/sweat shop.  Hundreds of "test graders" recruited through Kelly for $10-$12 per hour sit in front of computer screens with a matrix of "correct answers" that they were required to memorize.  The coached students who have been trained to recognize the "key" points in the story, or perform basic math functions, pass; those who have not been coached, fail.  Oh, yeah.  the "graders" who cannot maintain "adequate productivity" (one hundred tests or more per day) or "accuracy," in recognizing the pre-identified "correct" answers, quickly are replaced by other out-of-work college graduates.
11:49 AM on 07/18/2011
What utter nonsense.
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07:18 AM on 07/18/2011
Given my experiences in Tennessee when I lived there, I would be surprised if many teachers in elementary or junior schools could perform much better than their students. I don't know what is wrong with teacher training in the USA but I regularly had to correct a friend's child's information, especially word definitions where teachers gave incorrect information.
12:02 PM on 07/18/2011
It's not only Tennessee, it's New York and everywhere else in the country. There was a time in this country when women who, if the culture permitted, could have been brain surgeons (for example). Instead, they became teachers. Now that women are free to enter into the field of their choice, the field of teaching is filled w/people who, however well intentioned, basically have the same intellectual abilities of blue collar workers, for instance, cops.

The police don't really need to have academic intellectual abilities, however, teachers (both male and female) do need intellectual abilities that can function well in academia. Currently, most teachers simply don't have that intellectual bent or capacity. In the main, today's teachers have the same skill set as any other bureaucrat.

You'll find teachers w/academic intellectual abilities in private schools. When the rare one enters into the public school system, they soon depart.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
elamatt
Ever the optimistic realist
01:12 PM on 07/18/2011
In my experience in a wealthy Georgia district (retired from it), the teachers were excellent, hard-working and caring--except for those incompetents who were retained and shoveled from school-to-school because Mommy worked at the central office. These awful teachers are unfortunately EVERYWHERE!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sydneymoon
Dismiss what insults your own soul - WW
03:34 PM on 07/18/2011
"Currently, most teachers simply don't have that intellectu­al bent or capacity."

I'll quote you from another post:
'What utter nonsense"
02:10 AM on 07/18/2011
The two best predictors of educational success are educational level of the parents and amount of reading material in the home. Both of these factors correlate at least somewhat to decent income in the home.
But neither DEMs nor REPUBs are willing to squarely face reality.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Acharn
01:25 AM on 07/18/2011
Good grief, this has been an open secret for years. Not Atlanta, necessarily, but ALL the States and ALL the school systems. It's the inevitable result of using a sledgehammer instead of a tack hammer. But we should know that this abomination was never intended to "cure" the educational system; it was intended to make parents dissatisfied with public school systems so they will accept the more expensive "charter school" for-profit systems, which often perform worse than the public systems. It's the same as the lies about our "unsustainable" deficit, or "social security is broke." Lies, all lies, to increase the profits and bonuses of the vampire squids.
02:15 AM on 07/18/2011
A great example- after the Katrina hurricane, when many New Orleans residents fled to Houston, Bush the 1st and Barbara made a 100k donation to help, but specified that every penny of it must go to buying products from their son Neil's educational materials company.
Yes, that's the same Neil Bush who was caught up in the Savings and Loan scandal of the 1980's, a precursor to the wall St shenanigans leading to W's Great Recession of 2008.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sydneymoon
Dismiss what insults your own soul - WW
07:36 AM on 07/18/2011
Ugh.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
elamatt
Ever the optimistic realist
01:14 PM on 07/18/2011
Oh, ugh and yuck!! Of course nobody said "thanks, but no thanks".
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budanatr
US Expat in EU
01:00 AM on 07/18/2011
Bush's "No Child Left Behind" in action and reality.

It should be titled, "As Many Children Left Behind As Possible and No Critical Thinking Skills Taught so that we have Lots of Republicans and Low Wage Workers"
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TPaine1776
01:56 PM on 07/19/2011
How are dishonest teachers and principals the result of anyone except system that has been in place for a little more than 30 years? If you need a straw man, blame Jimmy Carter. The DOE has been nothing but a money funnel for dishonest politicians and public servants.
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12:37 AM on 07/18/2011
The district's top administrators and principals were put on paid leave, but the teachers were told to take a few days to choose whether you want to quit or be fired???

The problem--other than administrators who are bullies--is that ALL the responsibility for making sure a student succeeds is on the teacher. Nothing at all is on the student.

If any student does not take the test, except for an emergency, the school gets a zero on the AYP score. Not the student, the school. Parents can keep a child home during testing and the school gets a zero. A student can blow off the test by just filling in random bubbles (when a child finished the entire test in 10 minutes, it's a good indication the student didn't put much effort into it), and the test score reflects on the student, not the school. The student still goes on to the next grade, but the score is used for the teacher's evaluation. If a class wanted to, they could get a teacher fired just by deliberately failing the test. No consequences for the student, but plenty for the teacher and school.

This makes no sense at all, and I find it hard to believe it wasn't purposely designed that way to set up teachers and schools to fail.
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MarvinM
Where's the Ka-Boom?
12:03 AM on 07/18/2011
Part II

Long by 30 words!!!!!

If you have a beef with 'bad teachers', OK, but it doesn't take a computerized, standardized test to determine which teachers are good and deserve recognition (and monetary recognition is always appreciated) and which teachers are not up to snuff. In fact, a computerized, standardized test is the worst assessment tool possible to asses all teachers in every class, every discipline.
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MarvinM
Where's the Ka-Boom?
12:02 AM on 07/18/2011
Part I

After teaching community college classes I discovered that the higher I rated something on my grading scale - attendance, for example - the more the students came to me with all kinds of outrageous stories about why they were absent. So, when I minimized a strict attendance score and essentially said "unless you are in the hospital ..." I stopped getting all those stories.

I have learned that the greater importance you put on something, the more likely it will be that students will try to cheat. Take away that imperative, they will be less likely to cheat.

I don't condone all of the actions of the teachers here but they should never, and no teacher should ever, be put into a situation where their students' performance directly affects their pay (or the amount of money a school receives, which is really what they were more concerned about - not their individual take-home, but the very existence of the school funding itself.)

I don't know what I would have done had I been in that position and I hope to God I never will be. I know that these standardized tests are flawed assessment tools, and therefore they can only provide flawed results. Would you want your pay to be based on a flawed assessment tool? Of course you wouldn't.
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zuzuzpetals
11:40 PM on 07/17/2011
sydneyM-Thanks for the information on NCLB. Agreed.

Since AOL took over, can never find where to reply in the thread. Hope this goes to right spot.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sydneymoon
Dismiss what insults your own soul - WW
08:30 AM on 07/18/2011
I think this is for me.
Lol…AOL has driven me nuts. Initially, I was happy to see the edit button as I have a light touch on the keyboard and miss a letter here and there (I need to proofread better). Alas, when I edit sometimes the post is eaten up and is lost somewhere in cyberspace.

I think you are referencing the post on Sandy Kress. Neil Bush and ex-secretary of education, Bill Bennett, have also raked in some big $$$ from the testing industry.

Peace,
Syd
10:25 PM on 07/17/2011
I worked for Randi Weingarten and Michael Mulgrew for 13 years before Mulgrew fired me for trying to start a union for writers- at a union-and retaliated against me for challenging him on internal UFT corurption .....
Their immoral behavior was onl display when I asked to investigate one of the people involved in the Atlanta scandal who was working for the NYC school system in 2009.
This woman framed one of the city's best teachers by committing perjury and claiming that the teacher left a letter in the mailbox of Iris Blige, the principal of Fordham HS for the Arts-threatening to murder her. (Blige has sinced been reprimanded for her own scandal).
Think Tuscon for one second:
The teacher was released on her own recognizance, her passport was not lifted, no bail was requested, the principal did not get extra police protection and the charge was reduced to a misdeameanor. for a murder threat? Since then, the Bronx D.A., Robert Johnson has asked for 20 postponements-.
Weingarten and Mulgrew both told me the teacher was guilty -because cops said she was guiltyl!
(Weingarten in her role as a part time teacher which qualified her for a city pension, used to teach the 6th amendment to her students). My editor Deidre McFadyen and UFT Staff Director Leroy Barr refused to give me a vacation day to attend the teacher's trial..

Weingarten told me that her hands were tied because Joel Klein was investigating her sex life!