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EdAction
Maple River Education Coalition PAC
105 Peavey Rd, St 116
Chaska, MN
55318
952-361-4931
http://www.EdAction.org
E-mail
May 9, 2002
Print Version
No Plans, No Graduation
Rite, Seniors Told
"Some seniors don't even know what they want to do after
school. They feel like it's none of the district's business."
The following article from the LA Times is another important
indicator of the direction of the new restructured education in our land
-- schools taking authority over the personal decisions of students and
their "life long learning," as it is often called.
Note that LA superintendent is Roy Romer. Romer is the former 3-term
Governor of Colorado and former Chairman of the Democratic National
Committee. Romer served on the original Goals Panel set up after the
infamous federal Goals 2000 law was passed into law in 1994. As a strong
advocate of the comprehensive School-to-Work system, he was asked in 1997
how the federal "standards" were going to be enforced. Romer
replied:
"I believe if you were to get all employers of this country
saying that we would not hire anybody unless we see a high school
graduate certificate that has on it the results of this potential
employees record... Then I think this nation will come to the
realization that there is no job for them, there is no life for them...
There is the motivation."
This LA Times article gives a hint of this transformation to a
"seamless system," which involves a total government system of
job training, job certification, job placement and continuous retraining
of employees. ("Cradle to Grave" as
stated by Marc Tucker)
The one-stop centers established in every state by mandate of the 1998
federal Workforce Investment Act are set up to be "universal,"
that is, for all. (America's
One Stop System ) The training, certification and placement is all
aligned with a federal plan that aligns K-12 training with a planned
economic system. (See
"U.S. Department of Labor 5-Year Strategic Plan,")
"Facilitate the coordination, integration and performance of
workforce, education and economic development..." (Getting
To Preeminence," August 15, 2001, p.1.)
"Develop modular curricula... linked to industry skill
standards." (p. 3)
=============================================
By David Peterson, Times Staff Writer
More than 3,700 seniors at eight San Fernando Valley high schools may
have taken all the English, history and math classes required for a
diploma, but if they want to cross the stage at graduation, they'll first
need to take big steps for their future.
Under a new, much-debated policy, those students will be allowed to
participate in graduation ceremonies only if they have committed to
post-secondary education or training--whether university, community
college, trade school or the military.
Officials in the Los Angeles school system's local District C, covering
the southwest Valley, defend the policy as a way to encourage more
students to consider college or at least get them to think about the
future. Civil libertarians call the rule elitist, and students complain it
violates their right to graduate before parents and friends. Some students
said they obtained acceptance letters from community colleges just to
qualify for the graduation ceremony but have no intention of enrolling.
"It's nonsense," said Van Nuys High School senior Rafayel
Ambartsumyan, who also wrote an editorial against the policy in the
Mirror, the school newspaper. "A lot of students are going to lie
about [their plans for college]."
While getting ready for the prom, seniors at Taft High scrambled last
week to meet a deadline to produce evidence of a post-secondary
commitment.
"I don't like [the policy]," said Kassie Finch. She got a
letter of acceptance from Pierce College in Woodland Hills so she can
participate in the graduation ceremony, but will likely work at her
mother's law office after graduation. "I'm not sure if I'm going to
college or not."
Administrators acknowledge that the change is difficult for some to
accept, though no one will be denied a diploma if they don't comply. But
they stress that it has had positive results.
Initial estimates show that 90% to 95% of District C seniors have made
a post-secondary commitment this year. Last year, without the policy, 54%
took that step. District C also has seen a 10% increase in the number of
students accepted into the University of California system for next year,
officials said.
"The policy basically says to our community that we hold very high
expectations of our graduates," said District C Supt. Robert Collins,
who first implemented the policy at Grant High School in 1987 when he was
principal there. "We feel all our graduates are ready and recognize
that to really be successful, you're going to need some kind of post-
secondary [education].... Is the policy harsh? I don't think so at all. A
harsh policy is when we ignore youngsters."
Acceptance to a four-year college or university, a two-year college, a
trade or vocational program, an internship or apprenticeship, or military
service all qualify.
The policy affects 3,764 graduating seniors at eight high schools:
Birmingham, Cleveland, Grant, Reseda, Taft, Van Nuys, Sherman Oaks Center
for Enriched Studies and Valley Alternative. None of the other 10 local
districts in Los Angeles Unified has such a rule.
Because some students did not realize they were eligible for the
ceremony, administrators are trying to reach and counsel the estimated 185
students who have not complied. Three Birmingham High School seniors who
wanted to be chefs recently were persuaded to take culinary courses, and a
Cleveland High School student traveling in France was declared eligible
because he planned to learn French.
Collins said the policy, announced in March 2001 for this June's
graduation, was cleared by the District C legal office.
The rule was approved by Los Angeles Unified School District Supt. Roy
Romer, who called it an attempt to get kids focused. "And that's a
good intention."
Kati Haycock, director of Education Trust, a school reform advocacy
group based in Washington, D.C., said the policy was "odd" but
important.
"It's not unusual for high schools to be exploiting new ways to
[get students] thinking about college and preparing for college," she
said. "In this economy, if you don't have some post-secondary
education, the likelihood that you're going to get a decent job and help
support a family is nearly nonexistent."
Teachers have discussed the policy in class and encouraged students to
write essays and letters to elected officials. Melody Separzadeh, vice
president of Taft's senior class, said she has been inundated with
questions about the policy.
"They don't want to do it," she said. "Some seniors
don't even know what they want to do after school. They feel like it's
none of the district's business."
Still, many students are going to great lengths to comply because they
don't want to miss their graduation ceremony, Taft senior Mayra Sanchez
said.
"This is the whole reason we go to school," Sanchez said of
graduation. "My parents would have been very upset if I didn't walk
on stage."
Elia Sheiner, a Taft guidance counselor, was skeptical of the policy's
long-term effect. "I don't know if it's going to make a difference. I
think the students who were already going to college will, and the
students who weren't, won't."
But at the same school, Jeff Santana said he would have started work at
his dad's car transmission shop after graduation had he not been made to
think about college.
Now he's planning to spend two years at Pierce College before pursuing
a degree in business administration at Cal State Northridge.
"I think it's actually pushing students to go to college,"
Santana said. "Some kids wouldn't even know what they were doing if
it wasn't for [the policy]."
Grant High School Principal Joseph Walker said the new rule seeks to
instill career ambition in students from impoverished neighborhoods.
"I think people are making a mountain out of a molehill," he
said. "What [Collins] did was encourage kids to think about what to
do after high school....The culture of going to college is foreign to many
here."
District C serves a mixture of middle-class and low-income communities,
including Van Nuys, Valley Glen, Reseda, Woodland Hills, Tarzana and
Encino.
Because many of the school district's students come from working-class
families, Ramona Ripston, executive director of the Southern California
chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union, said she opposes the
policy.
Her group, however, won't sue to block it.
"I approve of the aim, but I think it's unrealistic, because many
students probably are in families that are looking forward to their
children graduating so that they can get a job and help make ends
meet," she said. "It would be great if everybody could go to
college, but that's not always possible."
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