USA
(By Jay Mathews, Newsweek) May 8, 2005 - Morgan Wilbanks was in for a series
of shocks when he transferred to the Jefferson County International
Baccalaureate (IB) School in Alabama at the beginning of his sophomore year.
The little-known school near Birmingham, which tops Newsweek's list of
America's Best High Schools, is on the leading edge of a growing movement to
make secondary education much more rigorous. Wilbanks, then 16, found himself
taking tough courses right from the start. In his Advanced Placement (AP)
European-history class, teacher Jeffrey Clayton gave startled students this
initial assignment: memorize the map of Europe and be able to draw every
country, along with 10 capitals, 10 rivers and 10 bodies of water. And that
was just a warm-up. Clayton and other teachers told Wilbanks that he would be
tackling nearly a dozen similarly demanding courses before he received his
diploma. A few of the school's 325 students fled, preferring a less strenuous
life at a regular public school. But Wilbanks, looking back this month a few
weeks before graduation, says it was a "great experience" that prepared him
well for the University of Alabama—where he'll major in chemistry and aim for
medical school.
Parents and even
some educators might cringe at the idea of turning adolescence into a forced
march toward college. What about time for fun, football games and memories of
life beyond test scores? But even the most relaxed among them agree that
something needs to be done to reform the American public high school, a
184-year-old institution that has been as resistant to change as a teenager
ordered to clean his room. U.S. high schools generally score low in
international comparisons. Unlike elementary and middle schools, high schools
haven't made significant gains in reading achievement and have been erratic in
math. Almost a third of all students—and half of blacks and Hispanics—fail to
graduate. This dismal performance has captured everyone's attention. "There is
a growing consensus behind high-school reform," said U.S. Education Secretary
Margaret Spellings. "Never before have so many groups—governors, business
leaders, children's advocates—been so united on the need to act."
United on the need, perhaps, but not on a
course of action. The Bush administration, as part of its No Child Left Behind
program, wants more accountability from high schools by requiring them to give
annual tests in core subjects and show regular improvement in their results.
At the National Education Summit in February, governors and business leaders
focused on aligning the high-school curriculum with the demands of college and
work. One of the speakers at that summit was Microsoft's Bill Gates, who
called high schools "obsolete." He has made another approach, smaller schools,
a major target of his philanthropy, with $734 million from the Bill & Melinda
Gates Foundation going to support 1,500 new high schools with more personal
attention. It's a tough sell, Gates says, in part because breaking up big
schools "really messes up the football team."
As a college degree becomes ever more
essential in the workplace, much of high-school reform centers on getting as
many students as possible ready for higher education. That's what the NEWSWEEK
List tries to measure by ranking schools based on participation in AP and IB
tests written and graded by outside experts. In these courses, students
prepare for the demands of college and can earn college credit if their scores
are high enough. NEWSWEEK omitted schools with strict academic admission
standards that exclude average students. Although there's much debate about
the value of standardized tests and AP in particular, Newsweek's List is based
on the conviction that no other standard works as well to measure a high
school's success at challenging all students to perform at a high level. AP is
the better known of the two programs and is used all over the country. IB is
less common. It's a series of college-level courses and tests, similar to AP,
originally designed in Geneva for the children of diplomats and international
business executives preparing for baccalaureate exams but now used in a range
of U.S. schools to energize students.
Some new small charter schools, like the
BASIS school in Tucson, Ariz., and the Pacific Collegiate School in Santa
Cruz, Calif., require all students to take AP courses. The Bard Early College
High School in New York City and other similar schools enroll high- school
juniors in full college programs. But even with energy and creativity behind
high- school reform, it won't be easy to change things. The vast majority of
high-school students are following a pretty leisurely path. One of the largest
studies of teenage behavior, the 400,000-student survey of college freshmen by
the Higher Education Research Institute at the University of California, Los
Angeles, reported that only 34.3 percent of incoming college freshmen in 2004
said they did six or more hours of high-school homework a week, down from 47
percent in 1987.
And not everyone applauds efforts to
raise those standards, especially the NEWSWEEK List's emphasis on AP. Critics
say requiring advanced courses stresses kids, dilutes quality and doesn't
always make them readier for college. Patrick Welsh, an author and AP English
teacher at T.C. Williams High School in Alexandria, Va., favors challenging
students, but contends that taking AP tests is only one tiny measure of
whether a school is stretching students. "You have image-conscious
public-school officials so intimidated," he says, "that they're putting as
many kids as possible—and I am not talking about average kids who are willing
to do the work—into AP courses so that they can get a higher ranking on your
index."
A few private high schools have discarded
AP altogether. Bruce Hammond, director of college counseling at Sandia
Preparatory School in Albuquerque, N.M., has found a dozen schools, including
his own, that have rejected, or are about to reject, AP in favor of designing
their own courses. Many teachers agree that instead of focusing on a
standardized curriculum like AP, they should concentrate on making lessons
exciting, well taught and linked to students' lives. "The troubles that arise
in high schools are precisely an extension of the lack of intellectual
vigor—forget rigor—in the elementary-school curriculum and pedagogy," says
Deborah Meier, founder of a small East Harlem high school that succeeded in
motivating low-income students by emphasizing discussion and writing.
But superintendents, principals and many
teachers in districts that have increased their commitment to college-level
courses say even with their shortcomings, AP and IB are the most effective
ways to take a demanding curriculum to the widest range of students. The tests
have an incorruptible high standard, since a teacher cannot dumb down the
final exams, and some AP and IB courses appear to be better than the college
courses they substitute for. Luther Spoehr, lecturer in education and history
at Brown University, says the AP American-history course "is one of the last
places where students can get a survey course that really insists that they
try to understand change over substantial periods of time." Jon Reider,
guidance counselor at San Francisco University High School and a former
Stanford admissions officer, believes that because of smaller classes, better
student motivation and more-experienced instructors, "calculus is almost
always better taught in high school than in college."
The message is getting out ... slowly.
This month, 1,173,000 students are scheduled to take 2,050,000 AP tests.
That's double the number of students and triple the number of tests since
1995. Still, the new total of AP test takers is only about 15 percent of
high-school juniors and seniors, and some studies suggest that may be one
reason that so many students who start college find they do not have the
academic muscles to survive and get a degree. University of California
researchers Saul Geiser and Veronica Santelices, for instance, reported last
year that 54.9 percent of California students who took the SAT in 2002 had not
taken advanced classes in high school, including AP, IB or honors courses.
That's a major problem because some large
studies, such as an analysis by the National Center for Educational
Accountability of Texas state-college data, suggest that even students who do
poorly on AP tests have significantly higher college-graduation rates than
those who do not take AP tests at all. In public schools where average
parental income is low and minority students are numerous, enthusiasm for AP
and IB has never been greater. "Only 17 percent of our parents have attended
college," says Brian Rodriguez, the AP coordinator at Encinal High School in
Alameda, Calif., "but AP has had a tremendous impact here, as we regularly
send kids to Stanford, Brown, Dartmouth, Harvard, Berkeley and UCLA who never
would have had a chance to go there even six years ago."
Raising expectations clearly inspires
many students. Sharon Alford, a junior at the Jefferson County IB School,
looked at the regular high school in Cullman, Ala., when her father, a
Methodist minister, was transferred there in 2003. Cullman High had no AP
courses, and though it started AP chemistry the next year, and plans on adding
more courses, that was too late for her. So at 6:30 a.m. each school day,
Alford climbs into the family's white Ford Explorer, with her mother at the
wheel. She finishes her homework while chewing on a Pop-Tart or cereal bar
during the hour long drive to Jefferson County IB. On the ride back in the
afternoon, she tries to nap. Adults who hear of her two-hour commute to and
from high school are astonished. Her friends make fun of her. But, she says,
her response is always the same: "I really, really wanted to go there." It's
just the first stop on a journey that she hopes will someday take her as far
as she wants to go.