Heraldnet.com
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 7, 2009 10:35 am
ADVERTISEMENT

LocalNorthwestNation & WorldPoliticsSpecial ReportsPhotosColumnistsMultimedia 
Blog
The Buzz
Life's no Beach for Silvertips
Your town news
Julie Muhlstein
Columnist Julie Muhlstein's take on life in Snohomish County.
•Latest: Marysville man's 1948 Ford tractor a bit of Elvis history
Kristi O'Harran
Columnist Kristi O'Harran writes about people in Snohomish County.
•Latest: Don't forget a little wave for neighbors
Latest gallery

Everett Fire
January 3. 2009 (12 photos)
[More Herald photos]
 
WEEK IN REVIEW
Tuesday


New product safety law a blow to shops
Hoax claims 'ridiculous,' Minutemen leader says
Deadly Everett fire's cause still elusive
Monday


Why are the white pines dying?
Many arrested for DUI said last drink served at...
Wondering how clean your favorite eatery is?
Sunday


One dead in Everett fire
Snowfall in county not expected to last
Friends mourn loss of 'Mr. Lake Roesiger'
Saturday


Violent attacks in home sparked by politics, vi...
No trial in death of crash victim; family outraged
It's a dangerous time to go hiking in backcountry
Friday


Pilchuck plunge rules: Jump in, dash out, shiver
Computer and TV recycling now free
Providence Hospice plans are put on hold
Thursday


State's minimum wage increases 48 cents today
Device gives DUI suspects driving option
Dozens out of work at county, more cuts to come
Wednesday


Liquor sales not shaken by tough times
Bystander helps rescue woman after carjacking
Shuffle may give cramped Everett court bigger digs
 

ADVERTISEMENT

Local News   Print This Article  Email This Page  Subscribe Now! facebook digg reddit del.icio.us fark stumble

(click to enlarge)
Crystal Bailey is a second-grade teacher at Everett's Garfield Elementary School.
 
ADVERTISEMENT

 
CONTACT THE HERALD
Robert Frank, City Editor
frank@heraldnet.com
 
Published: Sunday, November 23, 2008

Are you smarter than a second-grader?

It looks like a second-grade classroom. When young eyes wander from books and papers, they see an alphabet banner and a chart for recording lost teeth.

Teacher Crystal Bailey's room at Garfield Elementary School isn't much different from the classroom I had in second grade. Books are color-coded by reading levels. Desks are grouped into tables. In one corner, kids sit on a carpet and listen to the teacher's lesson or a story.

Except for computers and the absence of a blackboard, the Everett class I visited Thursday reminded me of childhood -- that is, the room did. The schoolwork? That's something else entirely.

After an enlightening and exhausting day with Bailey and her pupils, I know for sure that second grade in 2008 bears little resemblance to my experience in 1961. Today, it's a lot harder.

I'd been invited by Bailey to spend the day as a "guest educator." She sent out multiple invitations for the school's Educator for a Day event, held during American Education Week. Her invitation explained that the National Education Association program helps people see "school successes and challenges." I was the only one to take her up on the offer.

Spending six hours with Bailey and 22 second-graders (she has 23; one was absent), I saw plenty.

Can you look at a picture of a tree or flower and draw a line of symmetry? The kids did much better than I could.

And how about this? I'm warning you, it's a story problem: "Jake is building with blocks. He has a tower of five blue blocks, two red blocks and three yellow blocks. How many connecting blocks does he have?"

Hint: It's simple addition, despite that tricky word "connecting." But you need to show how you got the answer in several ways -- one of them being something called a number string. Good luck.

My heart sank when one little boy looked up and asked, "Can you help me?" His plea came as I walked around watching them toil on Unit 3 in their math books. (When I was little, we called it arithmetic -- because that's what we did).

I couldn't help him much at all with the verbal part of an addition problem with three numbers. You try: "When you change the order of the numbers, do you get the same answer? Why do you think so?"

Why? I tried several explanations, then had to call for Miss Bailey because none of my answers explained it quite right. What's right? There are too many possible correct answers to share here.

Welcome to second-grade math, 2008. It's an eye-opener. A tiny sampling goes a long way toward explaining why math remains a high hurdle for many kids taking the Washington Assessment of Student Learning.

"Expectations are so much higher now," said Bailey, a 27-year-old graduate of Western Washington University now studying for a master's degree in education.

With the federal No Child Left Behind law and WASL pressures even in the primary grades, Bailey has seen academic struggles even in kindergarten, which she taught several years ago. For some kids, she said, the curriculum "is not developmentally appropriate, I don't think."

That said, I saw children in Bailey's class, most of them girls, reading as well or better than my fourth-grade son. During a reading period when each child could choose a book, one studious girl was zipping through "Charlotte's Web," even as a boy at a nearby desk needed help with some words in the picture book "Go, Dog, Go!"

In Bailey's second grade, students reading more advanced "chapter books" seemed to evoke awe and envy from the others.

When I was in second grade, finger painting was a break from routine lessons. On Thursday, Bailey's pupils had breaks when they visited the school library and had a lesson from Patti Salerno in the computer lab. Librarian Barbara Weber had a surprise, a free book for each child. The books came from a Page Ahead Children's Literacy Program grant.

Several times during the day, the children evaluated their own behavior, assigning themselves points and offering up concerns about other kids. It's part of Make Your Day, a self-management program adopted by schools around the country that revolves around the idea that "No one has the right to interfere with the learning or safety of others."

In practice, the points system looked to me to be both time consuming and a time to tattle. But after just one day, I can't say whether the classroom would have been a tougher place to teach without Make Your Day.

I left school after 3 p.m. with a newfound appreciation for teachers. During her 20-minute lunch, Bailey said she rarely gets time to use the restroom. From the kids come constant interruptions, from "I feel sick" to a student telling a long story about a pet in the middle of a lesson.

"We do a lot of work in here," Bailey said before I left her class.

That's truer than you know, unless you've been there.



Columnist Julie Muhlstein: 425-339-3460 or muhlstein@heraldnet.com.

1. Hoax claims 'ridiculous,' Minutemen leader says
2. New product safety law a blow to shops
3. Gregoire's whereabouts a mystery
4. Flood watch on for Snohomish County rivers
5. Gregoire visits National Guard troops in Iraq
6. Deadly Everett fire's cause still elusive
7. Avalanche closes U.S. 2 near the summit
8. Tuesday Hot Sheet: Governor found, budget battles, ferry tales
9. Silvertips trade Beach to Lethbridge
10. Smokers' struggle to quit is even harder during tough times
Enterprise Newspaper Snohomish County Business Journal
Clues to destructive fire frozen in plastic
Bonding on the lanes
Lacking money, state legislators look for causes
Snow puts city work crews to the test
A winter wonderland of performances
Man pleads not guilty in girl's May death
Skating like a family proves to be a winning formula for these athletes
Special Olympics athletes receive check from Wal-Mart
Neighbors come through for food bank
The Enterprise Online Newspaper

TODAY'S TOP JOBS
 View All Top Jobs 
Top Cars
Top Homes


ADVERTISEMENT