The Notebook

view counter
Guest opinions

Report cards: a missed chance to give parents meaningful feedback

by Helen Gym

Painful as it is, I can look beyond my niece’s gleaming halls, the campus-like feel of the school setting, and the fact that the school auditorium isn’t also the gymnasium and the cafeteria. That’s the unjust reality of a system that gives my niece every bit of the $17,000 annual per student allotment she deserves, but holds my child down to just $9,000.

No, the thing that really makes me feel the inequity and frustration of Philadelphia public schools has little to do with physical or material differences. It doesn’t even cost much money.

It’s the report card.

For most Philadelphia parents, the report card conference is one of the few times we can sit down with our child’s teacher and actually talk. It is one of few times schools have arranged for parents to have meaningful and structured focus on their child’s instructional program.

On my niece’s report card, there are a handful of grades that indicate how well she is doing. But the real beauty of it lies in the paragraphs of the teacher’s own handwriting, thoughtfully testifying to what the teacher sees my niece learning and doing in her class. Everything about my niece’s report card feels personal and meaningful. During report card conferences, the teacher has ready a full portfolio of examples of my niece’s work, including marked pages in books that indicate where my niece has done an exceptional job reading or struggled to understand a math concept.

And then there’s Philadelphia’s report card.

For elementary school, it starts off with reading grades via a letter grade rating students on a scale from A to S. When I asked one of my daughter’s teacher what the letter “K” had to do with my child’s classroom reading, I learned this was an independent reading assessment that had nothing to do with how my daughter performed on classroom reading assignments.

And that detached approach to assessment continues throughout the report card.

Math, science and social studies share equivalent space with enrichment programs (whatever are left, that is). That means one number from 1-4 to let you know how she’s doing in these critical subjects. There’s the standard behavior section of “cooperating with others” and “putting forth effort” (pick your choice of “S” for satisfactory or “N” for not).

For ESOL students, there’s nothing on the report card except the level of the child, which is as informative as indicating what grade your child is in.

But the real winning aspect of the Philadelphia report card is under the Teacher Comment section. That’s when the teacher selects from a bland menu of computer options, like “eager to try new things” – if you’re good – and “needs to work harder” – if you’re not so good. And don’t be surprised to see the exact same teacher comments from the first cycle to the last cycle, like my daughter got in first grade.

Donate today!
view counter

About the Author

Helen Gym is a Philadelphia public school parent and member of the Notebook Leadership Board.

Print | | ""

Comments (0)

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <h1> <h2> <h3> <p> <br> <br /> <a> <em> <strong> <cite> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd> <span>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.

More information about formatting options

By using this service you agree not to post material that is obscene, harassing, defamatory, or otherwise objectionable. We reserve the right to delete or remove any material deemed to be in violation of this rule, and to ban anyone who violates this rule. Please see our "Terms of Usage" for more detail concerning your obligations as a user of this service. Reader comments are limited to 500 words. You are fully responsible for the content that you post.

Table of Contents

Black and Latino boys disrespected, task force finds

by Dale Mezzacappa
More from the NEWSFLASH

The NEWSFLASH, a free e-bulletin, provides timely stories and updates in between print editions of the Notebook.

Subscribe to the NEWSFLASH
Past Editions of the NEWSFLASH

Notebook Chatter

What makes you so sure that there is ZERO cheating going on?

-- Anonymous responding to Have we reached a tipping point? A skeptic weighs in
Top

Public School Notebook

3721 Midvale Ave
Philadelphia, PA 19129
Phone: (215) 951-0330, ext. 2107
Fax: (215) 951-0342
notebook@thenotebook.org

© Copyright 2009 The Philadelphia Public School Notebook. All Rights Reserved.
Terms of Usage and Privacy Policy