The elite minds at The Thomas B. Fordham Institute have unmasked a serious but neglected crisis in education:
"[M]any high-achieving students struggle to maintain their elite performance over the years and often fail to improve their reading ability at the same rate as their average and below-average classmates. The study raises troubling questions: Is our obsession with closing achievement gaps and 'leaving no child behind' coming at the expense of our 'talented tenth'—and America’s future international competitiveness?"
This study has prompted Room for Debate at The New York Times to ask: "Are Top Students Getting Short Shrift?"
The answer? According to Rick Hess, "We are shortchanging America’s brightest students, and we’re doing it reflexively and furtively."
The top students in U.S. schools are in crisis, and the economic competitiveness of our country hangs in the balance. With this now exposed, I am calling for a move to trickle-down education reform, modeled on the trickle-down economic theories driving our commitment to avoid overtaxing the wealthy in the U.S. since they are our job creators and the backbone of our thriving economy.
Trickle-Down Education Reform
Trickle-down education reform requires our current education reform movement—spearheaded by Secretary of Education Arne Duncan, philanthropist Bill Gates, and student-first advocate Michelle Rhee—to shift its focus on the bottom 10% of student performance and apply their same reform to the top 10%. This transformation must include the following:
• Initiate funding of Teach for America (TfA) to send their core of teachers to teach in high-needs schools serving the top 10% achieving students. This core must replace the current experienced and certified teachers now teaching the top students.
• Initiate funding to support Knowledge Is Power Program (KIPP) charter schools to serve schools consisting only of the the top 10% of students. These top students must be held to "no excuses" and taught to form lines, make eye contact, shake hands, say "yes, sir" and "no, sir," and chant daily words of inspiration that will serve them well in corporate America.
• Place the top students in classes with 40-to-1 student/teacher ratios.
• Eliminate all band, music, art, and PE courses at the schools serving the top students and insure that these students focus exclusively on math, ELA, and science in order to perform well on state and national tests.
• Increase dramatically the number of tests top students take and provide these top students the intense test-prep they deserve.
Once these reforms have been implemented, of course, we must hold the TfA teachers and KIPP schools accountable for not only the test scores of these top students but also the trickle-down effect of these policies on the remaining 90% of students who are currently being served to the detriment of our top students.
As Michael J. Petrilli implores us:
"But if we want to do right by our highest-achieving students — and maintain America’s international competitiveness — we should rethink the move to eradicate tracking. Future generations will thank us."