Watch Out for 6th Graders
From The Care and Feeding of Teenagers blog at the Muskogee Phoenix:
I recently attended the Model Schools  Conference in Washington, D.C. The major players in educational research were  there, stressing their mantra for today's public schools: RIGOR, RELEVANCE,  RELATIONSHIPS. Any teacher worth his/her salt knows that mantra  instinctively.
What was new information, however, was something I  just touched on in July: failure in school begins to manifest itself in the 6th  grade. Sixth grade - who knew?
Prior  understanding of potential drop outs said that the ninth grade is when failure  begins to set in, after a person is in high school. The 9th grade has always  been looked upon as a transitional year. Grades are usually low for freshmen and  many a senior has rued their lack of serious approach to school when they find  out it takes making 6 straight A's to get a C average out of the 6 straight F's  they made in the 9th grade. 
It has  also been a strongly held assumption that attendance began to lag during the  freshman year. This is the year most people attempt to skip school, cut class,  run from the truancy officer, and call in sick for themselves.  
But current research shows that  a person's potential risk for failure at school actually begins in the 6th  grade. This is the key transitional year from elementary school to middle school  or junior high. Four key indicators of potential danger are:
>Attendance problems
>Behavior problems 
>Math failure
>English failure
These are  problems that do not normally self-correct. In other words, it takes some strong  intervention from the school and on the home front to fix a potentially  dangerous problem.
If you don't view this as a problem, statistics show  you are wrong. For people trying to work their way up the social ladder, entry  into the middle class nowadays is easiest through access to post-secondary  education (not just college, but training and vocational programs, too). By not  taking the above problems seriously as a parent, you are running the risk of  limiting your child's personal and financial success. 
The great thing is, when addressed in the 6th grade, there is plenty  of time to turn the problem around. Parents are tempted to say, "Oh, it's just a  phase and it will run its course." Maybe it will, but maybe it won't. Sixth  grade year is no time for parents to go on auto-pilot waiting for little Johnny  to grow up. It's time we started watching out for 6th graders to make sure we  set them up with the best possible foundation for success. 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment