Latest Article|September 3, 2020|Free
::Making Grown Men Cry Since 1992
11 min read
We all talk the talk. We all say our kids need to learn that if they screw up—or screw off—there are going to be consequences. You don’t show up. You don’t do your work. You don’t get a free pass, no matter who your parents are. The world outside the sanctuary of the classroom doesn’t offer free passes. If we want our kids to become functioning members of society, the world inside the classroom shouldn’t offer free passes, either.Of course, stating principles and living up to them are two entirely different things. We all got a harsh lesson in the division between the two this year, courtesy of the Albuquerque Public Schools (APS) bureaucracy, which merely talked about holding students accountable, and a Rio Grande High School English teacher named Anita Forte, who demanded her kids live up to the expectations we set for them.The new school year starts this week. We thought now might be a good time to sit down with Ms. Forte to talk about her story as well as her views on the shortcomings of our troubled educational system. First, though, let’s rehash the debacle that brought us to this point.
• The district is the 26 th largest in the nation.• It serves approximately 90,000 students.• Last year, the district’s budget hit the $1 billion mark.• Due to its size, APS is broken into clusters based on its 11 high schools. The district’s 12 th cluster consists of its 10 alternative schools.• According to a list released last week by the New Mexico Public Education Department, 39 percent of APS schools achieved “adequate yearly progress,” a controversial standard set by the federal No Child Left Behind Act. (Rio Grande High School was not one of them.) Last year, only 35 percent of APS schools achieved adequate yearly progress.