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    You must be kidding. I started this thread, and now my posts are being deleted because I am judged to be veering off topic. May I ask: according to whom? Exactly what is the topic of this thread anyway? Did someone else hijack the topic of this thread when I was not looking? If so, who is now leading the discussion?

    It wasn't just your posts that were deleted. The posts were deemed to be off-topic according to me, the board moderator. While some variation from strictly-gifted education topics are allowed, I have seen discussions like this fall off track before on this forum, and it is my job to keep them on track. So you are not being singled out. The topic of this thread is your NASA Academy of the Physical Science proposal. If you wish to discuss a topic that does not focus around gifted ed, I suggest you find the appropriate forum that specifies in that topic. You are also welcome to discuss whatever you like over private messaging. Please send me a private message if you have any questions (and that goes for everyone).

    Best regards,
    Mark

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    I am still fighting the battle at The New York Times website. I made the following comment to the October 6, 2010, Opinionator column "Waiting for Super Principals" by David Brooks and Gail Collins.
    http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/10/06/waiting-for-super-principals/

    My comment:
    http://community.nytimes.com/commen...-super-principals/?permid=122#comment122

    America's public schools need to redefine the concept of special education.

    Currently, the privilege of special education is limited to the bottom end students � those who are 1) functionally illiterate, 2) slow learners, 3) emotionally disturbed, 4) intellectually compromised by defect or injury, and/or 5) not fluent in English. Special education is needs-based, but the acceptable "needs" are very narrowly defined, and are only defined as deficiencies. This limited narrow definition is simply wrong � and is morally wrong at that. The necessary correction would have to identify those with excesses as being just as needy as those with deficiencies, meaning: special education would respond to the needs of the top end students, too � the geniuses, the profoundly gifted, and those who are able to excel in the most challenging academic courses out of pluck, hard work, and sheer determination.

    Much would be quickly accomplished if the National Education Standards in America were redefined by replacing the thinking that formed �No Child Left Behind� with the thinking that forms "Every Child 21st-Century-Literate at No Less Than Grade Level While Being Actively Challenged and Fully Facilitated to Achieve Personal Potentials in All Core Academics." Furthermore, an additional clarifying National Education Standard should require: Students Must Be Advanced to the Academic Level at Which They Can Succeed While Being Challenged.

    See: http://giftedissues.davidsongifted.org/BB/ubbthreads.php/topics/81675.html#Post81675

    A free 13-year public school education is now provided according to U.S. law, but it is wrongly interpreted as K-12 according to the standard curriculum. If my proposed new thinking were adopted, a 13-year commitment would actually become a 13-year commitment, even for America�s most brilliant young people.

    I have proposed a nationwide three-year public high school for those young people who are exceptionally brilliant in mathematics and the physical sciences: http://nasa-academy-of-the-physical-sciences.blogspot.com/

    Please read my proposal, and then do what you can to implement it. The future of America could depend on it.

    Steven A. Sylwester

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    Wow. Just wow. I'll bite, though.

    Is this still a federal solution?

    If so, how is this something that can be efficiently remedied at the federal level?

    Andy J. Dandifer


    Being offended is a natural consequence of leaving the house. - Fran Lebowitz
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    Andy J. Dandifer,

    I will answer your question if you can honestly tell me that you have read my proposal � if not the whole thing, at least the following three portions:
    http://nasa-academy-of-the-physical-sciences.blogspot.com/2009/11/history.html
    http://nasa-academy-of-the-physical-sciences.blogspot.com/2009/11/overview.html
    http://nasa-academy-of-the-physical...9/11/making-it-happen-nasa-and-naps.html

    I think you will find the answer to your question in my proposal document.

    Steven A. Sylwester

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    Oh no. Not again! crazy

    Val

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    I know this is a public board, but I am uncomfortable with the idea of listing this board as a link on a site like the New York Times - we did get rid of the Facebook links (Thanks Mark!). The great things about this board, are that no one has to prove that they should be here and that it is so supportive. I hope we can keep it that way.


    Warning: sleep deprived
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    Ask yourself: Is it possible for a man to walk on the moon?

    The answer is "Yes" � and that very feat was accomplished through a federal program, namely NASA.

    Ask yourself: Is it possible for America to educate its very brightest young people to their fullest potential in mathematics and the physical sciences?

    I believe the answer is "Yes" � and that the achievement could be accomplished by the very same federal program that landed a man on the moon, namely NASA.

    I do not consider the federal government to be incompetent. I am one who still believes that "We The People" are the government.

    Steven A. Sylwester

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    Chyrs,

    Do you consider those who read and respond to the Opinion pages at The New York Times to be riffraff? If so, why?

    It is up to you to be welcoming: to not require others to prove that they should be here, and to be supportive and kind.

    Do not be afraid of those who imagine themselves to be better than you, especially those who posture themselves as being part of the intelligentsia. I have lived my whole life among intelligentsia, and my best advice is this: take and hold your ground � find the courage of your convictions, and then speak your mind as plainly as you are able to, without embarrassment and without apology.

    Intelligentsia can be like mean dogs in that they sometimes respond to fear in others with aggression and attack. But intelligentsia can be as kind and generous as you are, too.

    If you expect goodwill from others, you will generally get it as long as you are offering it to them first.

    Steven A. Sylwester

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    Regarding Joan Freeman and her book Gifted Lives (September 2010):
    http://www.digimaxhost.co.uk/~joan/
    http://digimaxhost.co.uk/~joan/interview.php
    http://digimaxhost.co.uk/~joan/books.php

    News articles regarding Gifted Lives:
    http://www.guardian.co.uk/lifeandstyle/2010/oct/09/gifted-children-joan-freeman-psychologist
    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1315414/Gifted-children-just-likely-fail-life.html
    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/education/8028543/Gifted-children-no-more-likely-to-succeed.html
    http://www.pittsburghlive.com/x/pittsburghtrib/lifestyles/family/s_703803.html

    Psychology Today two-part article regarding Gifted Lives:
    http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog...ted-children-what-happens-when-they-grow
    http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog...ppens-when-gifted-children-grow-part-two

    * * *

    National Academy for Gifted and Talented Youth (U.K.):
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Academy_for_Gifted_and_Talented_Youth

    * * *

    I have not read the book Gifted Lives by Joan Freeman. The various links above suggest that the book is worth reading.

    The news articles linked make me weary. It seems the battle is always against those who are looking for reasons to not do what is possible. Of course, there will always be the sad stories, and it is forever likely that there will always be more sad stories than happy stories. But the measure of things is somewhat skewered to a wrong-headed bias. For who is to decide what defines success in life or what is the genuine stuff of happiness? In the final analysis, success and happiness can only be judged by the person who is living it. One must ask: Was Isaac Newton successful and happy? How about Beethoven? By most measures, Newton and Beethoven had strange and lonely lives, but I would argue that "most measures" do not apply to people like Newton and Beethoven.

    Life is for the living, but the accomplishments of a lifetime are for the ages. Genius realized is a burden and often a curse for the genius, but genius realized is always a gift for the rest of humanity.

    Isaac Newton observed, "Truth is the offspring of silence and unbroken meditation." Jesus said, "Then you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free." The genius finds happiness in the freedom that comes from truth � a question answered � a problem solved � a masterpiece accomplished. Such happiness is often a quiet and solitary satisfaction that is shared with no one, because no one else can quite appreciate it as fully as does the genius.

    Society tends to disappoint, and so the genius tends to isolate and withdraw, and that is how happiness can easily be mistaken for sadness when it is observed from the outside.

    NOVA Transcript: Newton's Dark Secrets:
    http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/transcripts/3217_newton.html
    Isaac Newton: The Last Sorcerer by Michael White
    http://books.google.com/books?id=l2...0and%20unbroken%20meditation&f=false
    Isaac Newton by Albert Einstein
    http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/newton/einstein.html

    Beethoven: A Brief Biography
    http://www.awesomestories.com/biographies/beethoven/preface

    In every case, a school should open a door for a student to become who the student actually is, not who the student should be by someone else's expectation. That is asking a lot, but no school should ever be satisfied if it accomplishes anything less than that. We must � all of us � insist that the truly gifted children be not overlooked, that their needs be met, and that they be challenged to their fullest potential in all of their academic pursuits.

    Steven A. Sylwester

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    The war begins now.

    Proficiency of Black Students Is Found to Be Far Lower Than Expected
    By TRIP GABRIEL
    Published Online: November 9, 2010 (A version of this article appeared in print on November 9, 2010, on page A22 of the New York edition of The New York Times.)
    http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/09/education/09gap.html?src=me&ref=general

    Excerpt:

    An achievement gap separating black from white students has long been documented � a social divide extremely vexing to policy makers and the target of one blast of school reform after another.

    But a new report focusing on black males suggests that the picture is even bleaker than generally known.

    Only 12 percent of black fourth-grade boys are proficient in reading, compared with 38 percent of white boys, and only 12 percent of black eighth-grade boys are proficient in math, compared with 44 percent of white boys.

    Poverty alone does not seem to explain the differences: poor white boys do just as well as African-American boys who do not live in poverty, measured by whether they qualify for subsidized school lunches. ...

    * * *

    Schools report finds �jaw-dropping� gap for black boys
    By Zachary Roth
    Wed Nov 10, 1:20 pm ET
    http://news.yahoo.com/s/yblog_upshot/report-black-boys-lagging-badly-in-school

    Excerpt:

    A new report has found that black boys lag behind their white counterparts in reading and math to an even greater extent than previously thought. The sponsor of the report -- the Council of the Great City Schools, an advocacy group for urban public schools -- calls the findings as "jaw-dropping."

    The study concluded that the school performance gap between black boys and white boys couldn't be chalked up to poverty alone. That could provide ammunition to those who argue that cultural factors, as opposed to economic forces, explain low educational performance among African-Americans. ...

    * * *

    �Culture of Poverty� Makes a Comeback
    By PATRICIA COHEN
    Published Online: October 17, 2010 (A version of this article appeared in print on October 18, 2010, on page A1 of the New York edition of The New York Times.)
    http://www.nytimes.com/2010/10/18/u...q=daniel%20patrick%20moynihan&st=cse

    Excerpt:

    For more than 40 years, social scientists investigating the causes of poverty have tended to treat cultural explanations like Lord Voldemort: That Which Must Not Be Named.

    The reticence was a legacy of the ugly battles that erupted after Daniel Patrick Moynihan, then an assistant labor secretary in the Johnson administration, introduced the idea of a �culture of poverty� to the public in a startling 1965 report. Although Moynihan didn�t coin the phrase (that distinction belongs to the anthropologist Oscar Lewis), his description of the urban black family as caught in an inescapable �tangle of pathology� of unmarried mothers and welfare dependency was seen as attributing self-perpetuating moral deficiencies to black people, as if blaming them for their own misfortune.

    Moynihan�s analysis never lost its appeal to conservative thinkers, whose arguments ultimately succeeded when President Bill Clinton signed a bill in 1996 �ending welfare as we know it.� But in the overwhelmingly liberal ranks of academic sociology and anthropology the word �culture� became a live grenade, and the idea that attitudes and behavior patterns kept people poor was shunned.

    Now, after decades of silence, these scholars are speaking openly about you-know-what, conceding that culture and persistent poverty are enmeshed. ...

    * * *

    I am a life-long registered Democrat who now at age 56 is starting to lean Republican. Why? Because when Obama became President of The United States of America, the Far Left ultra-liberals of the Democratic Party felt confident to paint me as unacceptably conservative, and I have felt unwelcome ever since. It is a very strange thing, because many who have made me especially unwelcome are some of my own blood relatives. Such are the realities of politics in America in 2010.

    I share this personal information because it pertains very directly to my NAPS proposal. The term "Bleeding Heart Liberal" accurately describes the Far Left perspective in my experience, and I am here to report that none of those hearts are bleeding for the top-end students I am trying to help. It absolutely shocked me to find that out, but my initial shock long ago turned to anger, and I am now more than willing to become an arch-conservative if that is what is necessary to make NAPS happen.

    America is in turmoil. The last election cycle just happened, and the Republicans have decisively taken over the majority of the U.S. House of Representatives. Meanwhile, the Tea Party is making itself heard from coast to coast, and every thinking person in America is quietly pondering the question: "What will happen next?"

    In my pondering, I have come to conclude this: the combination of the zeal behind the Tea Party and the zeal behind the rebirth of the Republican Party might be just what NAPS needs to go forward. Why? Because 1) Republicans believe in the part of The American Dream that rewards hard work, merit, and personal accomplishment, and 2) the Tea Party is hyper-patriotic, and would certainly be strongly interested in doing prudent things to enhance national security over the long term. NAPS is all about both #1 and #2 through and through.

    Does my heart bleed for the black male student who is not grade-level proficient in reading and math? Yes, absolutely! However, as difficult and unsettling as it is to do so, the concept of triage must be applied to the situation, because education resources in the U.S. are dwindling fast. As it is, U.S. law requires funding for bottom-end Special Education, but there is no similar funding requirement in the law for top-end Special Education. What that means is this: the top-end students � The Top One Percent � are expendable. That is reality. That is stupid. And that should be unacceptable to any and all who care about the future of America.

    Regarding the Concepts of Triage:
    http://orgmail2.coe-dmha.org/dr/DisasterResponse.nsf/section/08?opendocument&home=html
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Triage

    Triage requires brutal objectivity. Nobody wants to exercise such objectivity when the very lives of human beings are at stake, but triage is a must-do responsibility that cannot be shirked when circumstances require it. The two most basic concepts of triage require 1) doing the greatest good for the greatest number of people, and 2) making the most efficient use of available resources. What should that mean in the world of public K-12 education? Certainly, it should NOT mean ignoring the needs of the Top One Percent in order to provide extraordinary services to the Bottom One Percent, especially when the Creative Scientific Health of our nation is actually what is dying in the present disaster.

    Consider the November 10, 2010, news reported by NBC Nightly News with Brian Williams:
    http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21134540/vp/40118312#40118312

    When will the U.S. finally wake up to the national disaster in education that has already happened? And when will national leaders finally insist on the triage that will save America?

    What follows is a copy of a very long letter that I wrote to Bill & Melinda Gates on May 13, 2009. At that time, what is now NAPS was known as Linus Pauling Academy of the Physical Sciences (L.PAPS). Sadly, I conclude that my letter was never read by either Bill or Melinda Gates, but instead got tossed around like a hot potato until poor Stephanie Jones was given the task of responding. On May 26, 2009, she wrote to me the following:


    Dear Mr. Sylwester,

    Thank you for contacting the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. Your letter to Mr. and Mrs. Gates has been forwarded to me for reply.

    We appreciate your interest in the U.S. education system, and thank you for sharing with us your proposal to reestablish leadership in mathematics and science instruction in high schools nationwide.

    The foundation's Education initiative seeks to improve high school graduation and college readiness rates so that all students graduate prepared for success in college, career, and life. In pursuit of this goal, the foundation supports schools and policies that set high expectations for all students and provide the support they need to meet them. Our Education initiative also works to provide children with opportunities for quality early learning in Washington state and funds scholarship programs that reduce financial and other barriers to higher education for low-income and minority students. Please note that the Education initiative does not accept unsolicited proposals.

    For more information about the foundation's Education initiative, please visit www.gatesfoundation.org/topics/Pages/high-schools.aspx.

    We wish you all the best.

    Sincerely,

    Stephanie Jones
    Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation

    * * *

    That reply was in response to the following:

    May 13, 2009

    Dear Bill & Melinda Gates,

    My name is Steven Sylwester, and I live in Eugene, Oregon. I am a committee of one championing my own proposal to reestablish United States leadership in mathematics and science instruction at the high school level among nations worldwide.

    I have created a simple solution that can be used as a universal model for similar sites across the nation. My personal challenge was to neatly fit into the established university-level prerequisite stream for mathematics, computer science, chemistry, and physics instruction by creating a straightforward, scaled-down, efficient curriculum that directly uses the teaching resources of U.S. public research universities to educate high school students who are gifted in mathematics and the physical sciences. I have succeeded to the best of my ability. Now it remains whether others can improve on my solution.

    My solution neither favors nor disfavors economically advantaged students, but it does favor students who are gifted in mathematics and the physical sciences by creating three-year public high schools with academic merit-based admission standards. Though it might be more common that children of affluence are academically gifted, it is certainly not the case that all academically gifted students are the children of affluence - not at all. Additionally, given the rigors and the sacrifices that are unmistakable and unavoidable in what I propose, many poor children will strive and rise to the challenge while many affluent children will shirk away.

    It is completely wrong-headed to imagine that my proposal creates a special advantage for those who are already advantaged. In truth, our public school system is sometimes punishing to those who are academically gifted in mathematics and the physical sciences. Sadly, where advantage might have grown and flourished in some gifted students through their being challenged by skill level-appropriate instruction, what sometimes results instead is the lasting disadvantage that can be born out of the discouragement caused by the forced under-achievement of potential during the long years of high school.

    You will find my proposal attached to this email. I have included the below forwarded email to demonstrate that I am aggressively going public with my proposal. I have also emailed my proposal to select U.S. senators, select U.S. representatives, former Speaker Newt Gingrich (for many years, an outspoken advocate for the need to improve math and science instruction in U.S. public high schools), select public school district superintendents and public high school principals in Oregon, the presidents of Oregon's three public research universities with undergraduate programs, the Michael & Susan Dell Foundation, the Broad Foundation, and The Walton Family Foundation.

    I send my proposal to The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation with this encouragement: Please consider implementing a working model of my proposal at two public research universities in the Northwest, either in Washington and/or in Oregon. Originally, I developed my proposal as a local solution for a local problem. Then I pushed my thinking to the Oregon statewide level. And then, after listening to President Obama's inaugural address, I finally concluded that my proposal could (and should) be done nationwide.

    Dreaming big dreams is grand, but proving that the solution is good and workable in real life is something else entirely. The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation has both the resources and the good intent to make my proposal happen on a working model basis, and so I ask you to consider that possibility.

    If you have any questions regarding my proposal, please either call me or email me at your convenience.

    Sincerely,

    Steven Sylwester


    P.S. My youngest daughter was a 2007 graduate of North Eugene High School in Eugene, Oregon, which is a Small Schools site funded by your foundation. Fortunately, she graduated the year before the Small Schools initiative went fully into effect. She is a 2007 National Merit Finalist who entered her freshman year at the University of Oregon with 100 credits already on her university transcript, which means she entered her freshman year with junior status by credit count. My daughter had traveled across town to attend NEHS, because such an academic achievement as that was possible there - before the Small Schools initiative happened.

    For many years, NEHS was the best-kept secret in Eugene. Improbably, the smallest, economically poorest, and most blue-collar of Eugene's four public high schools awarded more Advanced Placement credits per student per year than any other Eugene high school - and it did so by quietly maintaining a phantom "small school" within the framework of the whole school. Though the "small school" did not actually exist in any formal sense, it naturally manifested because NEHS had steadfastly maintained a four-period school day while also refusing to let International High School (IHS) through the front door. The consequence was that the best students had no place to go but together, and so most of them quickly migrated to the available A.P. classes.

    It was a magnificent stage for excellence! Because of the long class periods, an entire year of instruction was accomplished in half of a school year. As a freshman, my daughter took a year of chemistry during the first half of the school year, and a year of physics during the second half. During four years of high school, my youngest daughter took math through A.P. Calculus, three years of chemistry (including A.P. Chemistry and high school Organic Chemistry at NEHS, and Advanced General Chemistry Laboratory at the University of Oregon), two years of physics (including A.P.-equivalent College Now Physics), and A.P. Biology.

    Well, the Small Schools initiative funded by The Gates Foundation killed the best "small school" Eugene ever had. The principal at the time your foundation got involved was new to NEHS, and he was determined to change things. He opened the door to IHS and so added the extra class periods the IHS program required - and the goose laying the golden eggs got weakened until the Small Schools initiative just killed it. Fortunately, my two daughters got through before the end came.

    My proposal (Linus Pauling Academy of the Physical Sciences) is contrary to what I understand your thinking to be. However, I will strenuously argue with anyone that my idea is better.

    I volunteered at NEHS everyday for half of the school day for 3/4 of a school year as a Read Right reading tutor, and some of the high school sophomores and juniors whom I tutored were reading at a beginning first grade level when I began working with them - they were functionally illiterate! By comparison, my oldest daughter had her reading ability tested by the local public school district during her first month of first grade when she was six years old, and was judged at that young age to be reading at an adult level BEYOND high school level!

    When my youngest daughter was a junior at NEHS at the beginning of the transition to Small Schools, the decision was made to have all NEHS juniors take A.P. English, because some misguided teachers thought everyone was capable of high academic achievement. The decision was made to purposely separate the best students from each other by distributing them equally among the different class sections while also doing the same equal distribution with the worst students. The whole bad idea was an utter failure that no one would own up to in the end, and was a complete waste of time for my daughter and her honest A.P. peers.

    Know this: The students who were functionally illiterate when I started tutoring them were reading well six months later. Some who began at a second or third grade level were actually reading at a ninth grade level or better just six months later. That is what is possible. That is what I witnessed with my own eyes and ears.

    But what impressed me the most was the kindness, gentleness, and patience that these poor-performing students had for each other when they were in the non-threatening environment we had created for them in the tutoring classroom, and how honestly encouraging they were to each other as they struggled to learn how to read. It was at once both heartbreaking and wonderful. More than that, it was a very rewarding experience that revealed much about the difficult divide that confounds effective education reform. Why? Because the classrooms I had grown up in and that my daughters excelled in were places of intense intellectual competition where something so simple as kindness was not always present. It is no wonder to me now that the poor-performing students fall behind, and that they eventually give up - they don't stand a chance.

    But there is a solution, and it is to be found in the simplest and most amazing of simple observations, and I can tell you with certainty that it is absolutely true. If you want to solve the problem of educating the slow learners who become the poor students who become the drop outs, you MUST start with this scientific fact: Every brain has a discernible brain speed at which it functions while learning; brain speeds vary from person to person; brain speed functioning is negatively impacted by stress; and slow normal brain speed can slowly be sped up to the point of classroom speed with no loss of skill, proficiency, and comprehension if both personal competency and personal confidence can be demonstrated by the brain to the brain (meaning: the slow learner drops the "slow" from his/her identity and simply becomes a learner who approaches learning with calm self-confidence).

    How do I know this? My father is Dr. Robert Sylwester, Emeritus Professor of Education at the University of Oregon. He is a world-renowned expert on current developments in brain research, and the implications of those developments for education. He has had a relationship with Scientific Learning for many years, and writes a column for their website (http://www.brainconnection.com/). The Scientific Learning story and its many discoveries are told here (http://www.scilearn.com/our-approach/ourfounders-story/index.php). But, in layman's terms, it is essentially what I have described above referring to "brain speed."

    The problem going forward is the problem of capitalism, which is the profit motive that controls intellectual property rights. In the case of Scientific Learning, the copyrights and patents have to do with computer hardware and software. In the case of Read Right, the copyrights have to do with materials describing the tutoring procedures, defining the reading libraries, and providing the progress tally forms. But everything my father told me about the scientific discoveries made by Scientific Learning using elaborate computer set-ups is true, and is plainly observable with the naked eye in a four-person tutoring group if you know what you are looking for. In fact, it is all as plainly visible as a snow line is on pavement as you drive from rain at low elevation to snow at high elevation - it is that undeniable: starkly plain and sharply defined. And what you are witnessing when it manifests so clearly is the brain speed of the learner.

    It is a truly remarkable phenomenon to behold, and it borders on miraculous what can occur in learning how to read if the "brain speed" reality is made the guiding light. Students fight it at first as you insist that they slow down, sometimes way down - sometimes slower than they have ever talked before. But then suddenly it happens: you find their natural brain speed >> and they can read! It is startling for a high school kid who has been stuck in Special Ed for ten years with a dunce cap on his/her head to suddenly be able to read. I preached confidence when I tutored (as in: "I know you can do this"), but my spiel was not according to the copyrighted abracadabra terminology I was supposed to use. Against the plan, the kids needed confidence, and so I gave it to them in heaps - and in straight talk. Thinking back now, it was these three things: calm down, slow down, and you can do it. And they could.

    Read Right had this simple belief: If a person can engage in meaningful conversation, that person can also read with comprehension. By what I have witnessed, I absolutely agree with that conclusion.

    But there is another obstacle in the way of successful education reform - and it is horrific! Sadly, it too is about "the profit motive," and again the slow learner is the one who is potentially harmed. Remarkably, it is not a capitalist corporation doing harm by legally withholding effective learning tools and processes if its products are not purchased, it is the school system itself doing harm by holding students in an official Special Ed classification who no longer belong there. It is a fox guarding the hen house situation: slow learners have become a huge revenue source in the education finance equation because the site school and the site school district are paid significantly more by the government for educating students who are classified Special Ed than they are paid for educating normal students - so significantly more that deciding to do the wrong thing can be judged the right thing to do!

    I witnessed this twice firsthand.

    In one case, a girl I tutored was as close to being a zombie as anyone I have ever encountered; she was emotionally unreachable - she was a walking dead person who was unreliable to follow even the simplest procedure. I was completely stymied by her, so I begged my supervising teachers for any privileged information they could possibly give me to help me understand the girl. I found out the girl was adopted, and that her adoptive parents were an older couple with no other children. Also, I found out that the girl's biological mother was alcoholic. The girl was long-term Special Ed. All of that did not help me one bit. What finally helped was the gentle kindness of a boy who was also in her group of four. Every morning, the boy greeted her, even though she never responded back. And every morning, before we started the tutoring session, the boy told a funny story of what he had done the previous day, and eventually - finally - the girl smiled one day. And then one morning out of the blue, the girl wanted to tell her own story of something she had done the previous night. And the boy was all ears, and was genuinely interested in hearing the girl's story. And thereafter the girl actually started participating, ever so slowly at first. When that girl began her tutoring, she literally responded to books like a kindergarten student if she responded at all - it was weird. But once she actually started reading, her progress was faster than anything I ever witnessed as a tutor. Before five months was over, that girl was reading Jack London books out loud near flawlessly at first read (maybe one word error per page), including dramatic readings of odd dialect story conversations with unique phonetic word spellings. It was a stunning thing to behold (the Jack London books were at the twelfth grade level, and have very sophisticated complex sentences with challenging vocabulary throughout). We actually contemplated how to possibly make that girl a tutor's aide to legitimize keeping her around, because she had surpassed any need at all to remain in the program. Yet that girl was kept in Special Ed afterwards, and away from the standard curriculum. Imagine that. How do you explain something like that without contemplating evil?

    The other case had a different twist. The girl was Special Ed since the beginning of her schooling, but was full of life and very talkative. She started at maybe a second grade level, and was very labored in her reading, though she was willing to try when it was her turn. Through the girl's story telling, it became obvious that she ran with a gang of troublesome losers, and that she submitted herself to the rule of the boys in the gang. As it happened, she was originally assigned to a tutoring group that included one of the boys she was subservient to. When that became apparent, we separated the two into different groups, and I kept the girl. Even so, the girl plainly felt the need to subordinate herself to boys by never excelling a boy who was in her company. One day I had had enough, so I excused myself and the girl from our group, and I took that girl out of the room into the hallway where I very seriously scolded her, and told her in no uncertain terms that she was better than any of the boys she was hanging around with, and that she needed to immediately and forever stop giving herself and her potential away. Wow! That girl changed thereafter. All she ever needed was permission to be all that she could be. She became determined. She wanted it to be her turn more frequently and longer - and she wanted to excel! Through dogged effort, that girl got fully to her own grade level with reliable competence and joyful, proud self-confidence. Her turnaround was so complete that one day I finally sprang the ultimate question to her without first talking with my supervising teacher. Even though a new term had already started and even though that girl had always been in Special Ed, I asked her if she would be willing to enter the standard curriculum classes at NEHS if I could open the door for her. Her response was an enthusiastic and very confident "Yes," and she was willing to start immediately, even knowing that she would be behind when she started. I made her ask her parents for their permission, and she eagerly ran home and ran back with permission in hand. Well, the NEHS teachers who should have then opened their classroom doors to that girl would not do so, and the administrators would not intervene - and I was done. In my mind, it was criminal that that girl was held back in Special Ed, and I could no longer in good conscience teach someone to read who would then not be allowed to learn to his/her fullest potential.

    One other tutoring story is revealing. A big sophomore boy was one of my students. He was a mess, and he was just plain dumb - a functional illiterate. He was always late, always eating something, and always confused. Slowly, I got that boy to focus, but it was two steps forward and only one step back if I was lucky. Finally, it kicked in: calm down, slow down, and you can do it. Suddenly, the boy could read a four-word sentence made up of one-syllable words - and for him that was an accomplishment! The boy was African-American (which is rare in Eugene) and likable, and he wanted to learn, but he was defeated academically - just broken. He needed hope. When that boy finally got just a glimmer of hope, he became like a bull in a china shop. The Read Right program has a multitude of procedures that I more-or-less ignored, both because they were silly and because they worked in spite of themselves due to their luck-on to the "brain speed" phenomenon. In the case of this boy, I quietly abandoned Read Right altogether. More than anything, that boy simply needed to read to the bottom of the page, and then feel the supreme accomplishment of turning the page - and I was not going to deny him that accomplishment, no matter how many errors he made getting there. It was wild. He wanted to advance faster than he deserved to advance, and I let him to a point. When I quit volunteering as a tutor and had to come clean with how I had made him a special case, I argued with the supervising teacher that she should maintain my strategy with the boy. She refused, and placed him back where he belonged in the program. It saddened me greatly, because I feared the boy's spirit would be broken. After I left and the supervising teacher came to appreciate what I had done with the boy and why I did it, she eventually followed my lead and set the established procedures aside like I had advised. At the end of his senior year, that boy graduated from NEHS and received an academic award for being the most improved student during his four years in high school. More than that, that boy is now happily employed in a child daycare facility as a caregiver.

    Back to the point: It is wrong to ever put students like my daughters in the same class in the same high school classroom as students like the three examples I have just described from my experience as a high school reading tutor. It is unconscionably wrong at both ends of the spectrum - absolutely so - unquestionably so! To think otherwise is to be ignorant of all applicable facts, and to have never known either a truly brilliant child or a child in desperate need of a reading tutor. Furthermore, children at both ends of the intellectual spectrum are children at risk, and I sincerely mean that in every literal sense. The easiest and best way to raise the low end into the general population is to get the high end out - not by ignoring them and/or dumbing them down, but by advancing them to educational opportunities that will fully challenge their potential.


    April 30, 2009

    This letter and attachment is simultaneously being sent to thirteen officers and councilors of the Council of the National Academy of Engineering, the Board on Physics and Astronomy of the National Academy of Sciences, and all seventeen members of the Council of the National Academy of Sciences.

    I am an American citizen with an idea that was inspired by President Obama's inaugural speech, and by the experiences I had while parenting my youngest daughter through high school. When my daughter was a freshman in high school, my wife and I discovered to our surprise and great challenge that she was incredibly gifted in the sciences, especially in chemistry. Hers was not just a gift in deep understanding and ability; my daughter found she also truly loved both chemistry and physics, especially the laboratory work. As a high school junior, she took Advanced General Chemistry Laboratory (CH 237, 238, 239) at the University of Oregon, a notoriously difficult three-term sequence course that almost exclusively enrolls UO honors college students. My daughter entered the sequence at winter term without the benefit of ever having taken fall term, and she earned an "A-" grade winter term and an "A" grade spring term. The course professor told me during that spring term that my daughter was easily in The Top One Percent of all the university chemistry students he had ever taught during his 25-year career to that point, including the students he taught while earning his Ph.D. at Princeton - and my daughter was then a high school junior. He noted that a former student of his is now a NASA astronaut, and that my daughter was farther along and more skilled at the same age than the now astronaut was. My daughter is a 2007 National Merit Finalist, meaning she was academically in the top one half of one percent of all high school graduates in the U.S. in 2007.

    Though my daughter's high school chemistry, physics, and calculus teachers were all truly superb, especially the chemistry teacher, I came away from it all knowing I had been blessed, but also knowing I was exhausted - and that my daughter would not have had the opportunities she deserved and thrived from if I had not strenuously advocated for her throughout those four years. When I nominated my daughter's high school chemistry teacher for a national award, the teacher told me that I had convincingly demonstrated her own need to advocate for her own children during their time in the public schools - and that teacher is a first-rate career public high school chemistry teacher!

    I was especially inspired to write my proposal because my daughter's childhood best friend - a girl who was smarter than my daughter according to the PSAT test they both took as high school sophomores - ended up dropping out of high school and earning a GED at a local community college because her parents and various school officials let her fall through the cracks. In my opinion, our public school system does not serve the needs of its best students unless strong unrelenting advocacy from those students' parents literally forces the issue. This should not be the case.

    My proposal puts some shared responsibility onto the public school system itself to identify the best mathematics and science students during the middle school years, and to then offer an extraordinary and deserved opportunity to those students during the high school years. My solution is a nationwide solution that would eventually certainly benefit all of us by creating a Linus Pauling Academy of the Physical Sciences at 150 different public research universities across the country.

    You will find my proposal in the attachment. If you printed it out, you would find my proposal to be nineteen pages long. The first two pages are a preface introduction, and the following two pages are an overview with stated premises. Then there are seven pages that describe The First Model: The Linus Pauling Academy of the Physical Sciences at The University of Oregon. Following that are two pages of class schedule charts, and an appendix that is six pages long. It would be helpful to print out the class schedule charts and have them as a quick reference while you are reading The First Model.

    I certainly hope some of you will find the time to read my proposal. Something like what I propose needs to be done, and an endorsement from your groups would certainly get things started. My proposal is written as if it were being described in an oral presentation. It does go full circle, and it does answer all necessary questions before it concludes. With the strictest discipline, I forced myself to simplify everything that could be simplified, and to strive for the most efficient elegant solution possible that could be most easily replicated as a universal model at various sites across the country. Ultimately, a careful read of the prerequisite streams in math and science education as found in the University of Oregon Course Catalog were defining of what could and should be done in my opinion.

    I am happy to answer any questions, and to receive any suggestions for improvements. Please feel free to share my proposal with anyone.

    Sincerely,

    Steven Sylwester

    * * *

    What a letter! The point being this: every child in the U.S. who is able to engage in conversation with another person is fully capable of reading at his/her grade level. There is literally no excuse for illiteracy. I know this from firsthand experience. It is shameful and inexcusable that some public schools in America allow significant numbers of black boys to be illiterate. In fact, I think it is a crime.

    Regarding black people in America, the problem of poor health, especially asthma, might be a significant contributing factor to poor academic performance. Please, please read this, and then act on it if you can: http://steven-a-sylwester.blogspot.com/2009/10/connecting-dots-asthma-and-vitamin-d.html

    The war is against stupidity in all of its manifestations, especially the stupidity that governs the thinking of too many smart people. Truly, we are our own worst enemies time and time again. Political correctness is an evil.

    Steven A. Sylwester

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