The
LABC was invited by Education Critic, Joyce Savoline and our local MPP Khalil
Ramal to present our concerns regarding Bill 157 (Mandatory Reporting). It was
an honour to represent the parent/victims voice as we continue to shine the
light on the problem of bullying in our schools. Attached is our entire
presentation. Many voices...One Vision to eliminate bullying.
Documents:
Proposed Amendments to Bill 157
Kathryn Wilkins and Corina Morrison's Speech
Parents Comments
Changes we would like to see to Bill 212
LABC 3 Year report
LABC
comments on Bill 212
In January 2007 in Chatelaine magazine there was an article written by Rebecca
Godfrey entitled "Murder and Mercy".
We
are pleased to announce that Corina Morrison was one of this years winners of
the 3rd annual Today's Parent For Kids' Sake Awards. Please see the May
2006 issue of Today's Parent (page 102) for the article. This can also be
accessed at www.todaysparent.com
Congratulations Corina!! The rest of
Canada
now knows
what we have known all along. You are an inspiration to the entire
community. Your sister-in-law sure knows how to recognize a hero.
Bullying_keeps_overweight_kids_off_the_field.htm
The
following article appeared Today's Parent October 2005:
B Is For Bully by John Hoffman Page 1/Page 2/Page 3/Page 4
Bullying In The Workplace - Executive Summary - Click below
Bullying In The Workplace
Ministry of Education website http://www.edu.gov.on.ca to access a report
written by the Safe Schools Action Team. The report is called, "Shaping Safer
Schools: A bullying prevention action plan November 2005". The Safe
Schools Action Team has presented their recommendations on a province wide
bullying prevention plan. Note: The TVDSB is requiring every school to have an
action plan using this report as a template. The secondary schools should have
their plan in order by now and the elementary schools are in the planning stages
presently.
The
following article appeared in a recent newspaper:
IS
MIDDLE SCHOOL BAD FOR KIDS?
Cities across the
U.S.
are
switching to K-8 schools. Will the results be any better?
By
CLAUDIA WALLIS
It's 10 a.m. on a bright May day, and the arts wing at
Gustav
A.
Fritsche
Middle School
in
Milwaukee
,
Wis.
, is hopping. In a
band room, 21 members of the jazz ensemble are rehearsing Soul Bossa Nova with
plenty of heart and impressive intonation, in preparation for a concert
downtown. In another room, woodblocks, timpani and bells are whipping up a
rhythmic frenzy as the 75-member Fritsche Philharmonic Orchestra tackles Elliott
Del Borgo's Aboriginal Rituals. In an art room, eighth-graders are shaping clay
vessels to be baked in the school kiln. Down the hall, students are dabbing
acrylic paints on canvas to create vivid still lifes à la Vincent van Gogh. At
10:49, when the 82-min. arts period ends, kids of all sizes, colors and
sartorial stripes pour out of classrooms, jostling and joking, filling the
hallway with the buzz of pubescent energy. Then it's off to language arts, math,
social studies and the array of other subjects offered at this sprawling arena
for adolescents.
A
few blocks away, at
Humboldt
Park
Elementary School
, which
serves kindergarten through eighth grade, a charming scene unfolds in Karen
Hennessy's classroom. Her kindergartners are enjoying a visit from their
eighth-grade "buddies." All around the room, big kids sit knees to chest in
miniature chairs or cross-legged on the alphabet carpet. Each little kid has
chosen a picture book to share with a big buddy. Some lean on eighth-grade laps
as they listen. Logan Wells, a strapping 14-year-old, reads The Little Engine
That Could to Alec Matias and Jacob Hill. Jacob, 5, seems mesmerized equally by
the bright illustrations and by the eighth-grader turning the pages. He presses
against
Logan
as if to absorb some big-kid magic. The older boy reads on with gentle
forbearance.
If
you were 13 years old, where would you rather be? Big, frenetic Fritsche, with
its thrilling range of arts classes, bands, Socratic seminars and TV studio, all
aimed at 1,030 sixth-, seventh- and eighth-graders? Or calm and cozy
Humboldt
Park
, where the
teachers seem to know the names and histories of all 585 students, ages 4 to 14?
If you're the parent of a 13-year-old, which would you choose for your child?
The two schools represent two sides of a debate that has ripped through
Milwaukee
and other
U.S.
cities. For the past decade, middle schools have been the educational setting
for roughly two-thirds of students in Grades 6 through 8. But increasingly,
communities are questioning whether they really are the best choice for this
volatile age group.
In
Milwaukee
, both Fritsche and
Humboldt
Park
have fine reputations, but the district has decided to place most of its bets on
the likes of
Humboldt
Park
. Since 2001, it
has expanded the number of K-8 schools from 12 to 48, with 14 more on the way.
Meanwhile, the number of middle schools in
Milwaukee
has shrunk from
23 to 14. "Once young adolescents get to the sixth grade, the achievement level
begins to decline a bit and disruptive behavior increases," says William
Andrekopoulos, the superintendent of schools. "We're providing a number of
different options," including some big middle schools, he notes, "but we know
that a small learning community is going to make a difference."
A
surprising number of other
U.S.
cities have
come to the same conclusion, reversing the trend that created thousands of
middle schools in the 1970s and '80s.
Cincinnati
and
Cleveland
,
Ohio
;
Minneapolis
,
Minn.
;
Philadelphia
;
Memphis
,
Tenn.
; and
Baltimore
,
Md.
, are in various stages
of reconfiguring their schools away from the middle school model and toward
K-8s. Some suburban districts, including the wealthy
Capistrano
School District
in
Orange County
,
Calif.
, are also making the
switch.
While issues such as crowding and cost cutting were factors for some of these
districts, the change is driven largely by a series of studies that depict
U.S.
middle schools as the "Bermuda Triangle of education," as one report put it.
It's the place where kids lose their way academically and socially--in many
cases never to resurface. The most comprehensive report, a review of 20 years of
educational research, was released last year by the Rand Corporation, the
nonprofit research group in Santa Monica, Calif. Cheerfully titled Focus on the
Wonder Years: Challenges Facing the American Middle School, it offered a harsh
critique of the middle school record. Among its findings:
*More than half of eighth-graders fail to achieve expected levels of proficiency
in reading, math and science on national tests.
*In
international ratings of math achievement, U.S. students’ rank about
average--ninth out of 17--at Grade 4, but sink to 12th place by Grade 8, setting
the stage for further slippage in high school.
*Reported levels of emotional and physical problems are higher among
U.S.
middle
school students than among their peers in all 11 other countries surveyed by the
World Health Organization. The same "health behavior" survey found that
U.S.
middle schoolers have the most negative views of the climate of their schools
and peer culture.
*Crime takes off in middle school. Statistics from 1996-97 show that while 45%
of public elementary schools reported one or more incidents to the police, the
figure jumps to 74% for middle schools--almost as high as high schools (77%).
*While not many studies directly compare K-8 schools with middle schools, those
that do suggest that young teens do better both academically and socially in K-8
schools.
Most significant, the
Rand
report questioned the very idea of having separate schools for preteens:
"Research suggests that the onset of puberty is an especially poor reason for
beginning a new phase of schooling." Jaana Juvonen, the UCLA psychologist who
spent more than 18 months crunching data for the report, believes that 11- and
12-year-olds are already dealing with so many changes that it makes little sense
to pile on a change in schools. "Right around the time that most kids are
transferring to middle school, everything starts to happen," she says. "There's
physical development: you're starting to look different. And because of that,
people's expectations of you are changing. In addition, there's cognitive
development and new reasoning abilities. It is a very fragile period."
In
Milwaukee
, school vouchers
and a policy of choice put a lot of decision-making power in parents' hands, and
pressure to keep vulnerable sixth-graders in their familiar grade schools has
sprung up from the grass roots. "I don't care if you have world-class middle
schools, parents just don't like moving their children from the elementary
school," says Andrekopoulos, who used to be principal at Fritsche. Pressure to
score high on the math and reading tests mandated by the No Child Left Behind
Act also seems to favor K-8s. "Elementary schools have done a better job of
organizing themselves around math and reading," he observes.
Boosting achievement in math and reading is a big factor in the drive to reshape
schools in
Philadelphia
, where reform has come from the top down. A
2002 study found that eighth-graders at the city's K-8 schools typically score
50 points higher on state tests than peers who attend middle schools. Under Paul
Vallas, the energetic CEO of Philadelphia's schools, the district is pruning the
number of middle schools from 46 in 2003 to eight by 2008, while upping K-8s
from 10 to 120. "I haven't seen anything to support the creation of middle
schools, especially the way they work in large urban areas," Vallas says.
How
did middle schools, which were ushered in with such fanfare 25 years ago, fall
into such disrepute? The answer, many educators say, has less to do with the
philosophy behind the middle school movement and more to do with how it was
executed. Coming after a period of youth unrest, when juvenile crime and drug
use were rising, middle school proponents argued that old-fashioned junior
highs, which usually served Grades 7 and 8 and sometimes 9, were not meeting
kids' social and developmental needs. Instead, they were providing a
watered-down version of high school, literally a junior high. Reformers proposed
that schools for this age group needed to educate "the whole child," addressing
social and emotional issues as well as building academic skills. Sixth grade
became the usual entry point for new middle schools, both because of crowding at
grammar schools and because puberty was occurring earlier.
Among the key tenets of the middle school movement are these: fostering a close
relationship between teacher and child so that every student has an adult
advocate, having teachers work across disciplines in teams (example: students
read Johnny Tremain in English while studying the Revolutionary War in social
studies), creating small learning communities within larger schools and
stressing learning by doing. "Young adolescents learn through discovery and
getting involved," explains Sue Swaim, executive director of the Ohio-based
National Middle School Association. "They're not meant to be lectured to the
whole day."
Some critics contend that the whole movement was soft in the head. It "had as
its ideological antecedent the notion that academics should take a back seat to
self-exploration, socialization and working in groups," writes Cheri Pierson
Yecke, a former education commissioner in Minnesota, in a forthcoming report for
the Thomas B. Fordham Foundation titled Mayhem in the Middle: How Middle Schools
Failed America and How to Make Them Work. "A disproportionate regard for student
self-esteem and identity development," Yecke argues, yielded a "precipitous
decline" in academic achievement.
But
many educators believe that ideology was not the problem. "There were some very
good middle schools out there, but middle school reform never got fully
implemented," says Jacquelynne Eccles, professor of psychology at the University
of Michigan and a member of a task force that issued Turning Points, a landmark
1989 report on middle schools funded by the nonprofit Carnegie Corporation. Many
districts created big warehouse-like middle schools to address crowding and
court-ordered busing but without embracing the pedagogy of the movement. "They
ended up looking very much like the junior high schools they were designed to
replace," says Eccles.
In
urban areas, middle schools often became the antithesis of what reformers had
intended. Instead of warm incubators of independence and judgment, they became
impersonal, oppressive institutions. "In many urban schools," says Juvonen, "you
can't help but notice that there are security guards around. There's someone
expecting you to misbehave." That's especially destructive, she says, because
young adolescents need their independence to be guided and nurtured, not
squashed. "This is when kids start challenging social conventions. They say
things like 'Why do I have to make my bed?' It's proof of their cognitive
maturity, and it's all good." Sadly, this cognitive development isn't well
supported by the middle school curriculum either, according to several studies.
"It doesn't help students see the bigger picture or to understand abstract
concepts," says Juvonen.
Ironically, K-8 schools are in some ways better positioned to implement the
ideas of the middle school movement. Not only do these more intimate schools
tend to foster strong teacher-student relationships, but they often put their
older students in positions where they can exercise judgment and leadership. At
Humboldt
Park
, for instance,
seventh-graders have worked with the third-graders to write letters to
U.S.
soldiers in
Iraq
.
"The older grades become mentors and tutors to the younger kids, giving them a
sense of responsibility that may not happen in middle school," says
Milwaukee
parent Tina Johnson, who has two kids in a K-8
school. "All these raging hormones are kind of directed in a positive way." Some
administrators believe there are fewer behavior problems in K-8s, where your old
first-grade teacher--and her current pupils--are watching. Says
Humboldt
Park
student Savannah
Bracero, 14: "You have to be much more careful here so the little kids don't
pick up bad behavior."
Along with grownup responsibilities, K-8s tend to offer the occasional--and
still wanted--hug from a teacher, says Dr. Lottie Smith, a K-8 principal in
Milwaukee
. "In middle and high school, that's a no-no. We
don't touch," says Smith. Middle schools were originally intended to be
nurturing places, but it hasn't been easy to pull that off, says Harry Finks, a
veteran middle school teacher and principal, who wrote one of the first
handbooks for middle school staff: "You want to create a dialogue, so that an
eighth-grade boy can come up to you and say, 'Man, my guinea pig died and I'm
really upset.' Most schools don't have that atmosphere."
Those who champion middle schools, however, say that done right, such schools
offer leadership opportunities, a caring environment plus a rich variety of
courses, facilities and subject-matter specialists that K-8s can't begin to
match. Fritsche, for instance, not only has its elaborate program in the arts
but also offers an extensive library, a graphics and electronics lab, three
gymnasiums and many extracurriculars. While the best of
Milwaukee
's K-8 schools
have adopted such middle school features as lockers, science labs, changing
classes throughout the day, they can't equal a program like Fritsche's. At
Humboldt
Park
, for instance,
Spanish is taught by a paraprofessional using computerized lessons; the only gym
doubles as the cafeteria.
Milwaukee
parent
Jeff Wagner decided to send his daughter to Fritsche instead of keeping her at
Humboldt
Park
past fifth grade. "There was no comparison," he says. Fritsche "had activities
after school from forensics to track--plus the quality of teaching and the tough
curriculum." Middle school fans also question the impulse to shelter young
adolescents. "You're not in some sort of cocoon. You need to evolve," insists
Fritsche eighth-grader René Espinoza. And what happens when it comes time to go
to high school, asks Fritsche band teacher Joyce Gardiner: "To go from a
little-bitty K-8 school to a high school that has 2,000 kids? I can't even
imagine that."
But
educators on both sides of the debate tend to agree that how the grades are
packaged ultimately matters less than what's happening inside the school. "The
exact configuration is a distraction," says Anthony Jackson, a middle school
expert and co-author of the Turning Points report. What counts, he says, is good
instruction and caring relationships. "You can make that happen in a stand-alone
middle school or a K-8 school,"
Jackson
adds, although he believes that schools with more than 100 kids per grade should
be broken up into smaller units. Hiring qualified teachers and giving them time
to plan and upgrade skills is also critical. Nationally, only about 1 in 4
middle school teachers has special certification for teaching middle school
grades.
Educators watching the flight from middle schools are worried that school
districts will see the K-8 building as a solution in itself, without devoting
the resources needed to support good education. And there's reason to be
worried. Because that's precisely what happened 25 years ago, when
administrators rushed to abandon nasty old junior highs for those nifty new
middle schools. --Reported by
Carolina
A. Miranda/
New York
and Betsy Rubiner/Milwaukee.