Once again, we have had a busy summer. Foremost among our administrative tasks during our break was the hiring of new personnel. Since many of you were not able to attend our parents’ nights, I thought I would start the year by giving you a brief introduction to our new faculty.
Natalie Jeffcoat, our new Library and Media Specialist, is not new to Houston Academy. She and her husband, Cliff, have two children at HA, Sydney, who is a freshman and Lucy, who is a 7th grader. Natalie has a B.S. Degree in environmental science from Troy University, an M.S. in environmental analysis and management from Troy University, and a M.Ed. in library media from the University of West Alabama. Natalie has worked as a science teacher, a resource specialist, and a media specialist.
Emily Smith is our new Learning Specialist. Ms. Smith holds a B.A. in communication disorders from Auburn University and master's degree in communication disorders from Auburn University. She has received Orton Gillingham training to work with dyslexic students, and she has extensive experience in cognitive linguistic and speech disorders. Additionally, Emily is licensed by the Alabama Board of Examiners for speech language pathology and audiology. She is a native of Dothan and is a former Houston Academy student (and student of Mrs. Boothe).
Laura Smith will be serving as our new 3P teacher. Ms. Smith holds a B.S. in early childhood education from Troy University, where she was the recipient of the Outstanding Student Award. Moreover, she earned an associate of arts and associate of science degree from Wallace College. She has worked in a Montessori school, as a kindergarten teacher, as a second grade teacher, as a first grade teacher, and as tutor and mentor at the Wiregrass Children’s Home. Significant to our 3P program, she has received Alabama Reading Initiative Training and has also been trained in technology integration.
Connie Capaldo will be teaching 4P. Ms. Capaldo has an Ed.S. in learning technology from University of Missouri, an M.S. from Troy University, and a B.S. from University of Montevallo. Ms. Capaldo has been teaching for almost 20 years. She has a daughter in fifth grade named Bella,who has been at HA since kindergarten. She has a tremendous love of children's literature, and she is looking forward to sharing her love of reading with her students. When she is not teaching, she enjoys spending time with family, doing crochet, digital scrapbooking, and caring for her two dogs.
Eve Espy is our new third grade teacher. Ms. Espy has a B.S. from Auburn University, and she has taught for 18 years. She spent the last eight years at Deerfield Windsor in Albany, Georgia, which is a quality independent school that is very similar to HA. Ms. Espy is moving back home to Dothan after being away for 26 years. She has three children, Emily, who is a graduate student at Auburn, Miles Jr., who is a sophomore at Auburn, and Michael, who will be a junior here at HA. Ms. Espy is a huge Auburn fan, and as a fun fact, Mrs. Boothe was Ms. Espy’s fourth grade teacher.
Lindsey McAllister will be taking over our very successful lower school Spanish program. Mrs. McAllister is an Honors College graduate of Auburn University and has experience as both a second grade teacher and an elementary and high school Spanish teacher. Mrs. McAllister was also salutatorian here at HA. She is married to Anthony McAllister, and they have four children. She loves spending time with my family, good food, and Broadway musicals.
Ashleigh Savoy will be teaching fifth grade, and she is certainly no stranger to HA. Ashley and her husband, Kevin, have three children who attend Houston Academy - Davis, who is a junior; Emma, who is in eighth grade; and William, who is in fourth. She has lived in Dothan 15 years. Mrs. Savoy completed her undergraduate work at Auburn and has done her graduate work at Troy-Dothan. Ashley has experience in both public and independent schools, but she has been a stay-at-home mom for the past 17 years. However, in the last two years, she has subbed at HA, at which point we found out she was a veritable rock star. We are excited to have her as a part of the HA Faculty!
Amy Hafen will be teaching sixth grade. She holds a B.S. degree in elementary education from Dixie State University in St. George, Utah. She was born in England and has lived in Texas, Nevada, and Utah. She has experience teaching both fourth and sixth grades. Her husband has just started medical school at ACOM, which is what brought them here. Her hobbies are photography, skiing, hiking, camping, singing, playing the flute, technology, serving, sewing, and raising a dog. One of her goals is to travel the world.
Julie Capouch is one of two new upper school English teachers. Mrs. Capouch recently received an M.A. in English from Austin Peay State University, and she holds a B.A. in English from the University of Maryland. She has taught pre-AP English, AP English, and English composition at the college level. Julie has been nominated for and has won at least two awards for her writing. Originally from Clarksville, TN, she and her husband Tom have been married for 10 years. He is a flight engineer and has been in the Army for 15 years. She has two children, Jason who is eight and Brandi who is six. In terms of hobbies, she loves reading and really enjoys watching science fiction shows and superhero movies.
Jeff Edge is our second upper school English teacher, and he is also an upper school parent. He and his wife, Penny, have a son (Alex) in the 11th grade at HA. He has a B.S. in secondary English from Troy-Dothan, an M.S. from Troy, and a B.S. in business from the University of West Florida. He is an accomplished writer - he wrote for the Dothan Eagle and the Enterprise Ledger for 16 years. Jeff has twice been named teacher of the year in his schools in Florida, and he is a very accomplished AP English teacher who has a strong reputation for pushing his students to achieve their potential. Additionally, Jeff is a sports fanatic. He has been a very successful basketball coach, and he enjoys playing basketball and golf. You will probably see him at most HA sporting events –whether or not his son, Alex, is playing.
As in years past, Mrs. Boothe, Mrs. Holman, and I are extraordinarily pleased with the quality of our new faculty. Not only do they have outstanding credentials, but they all love children. Please join us in welcoming this talented group of people to the Houston Academy family.
A blog about educational issues, independent school education, and Houston Academy in Dothan, Alabama.
Wednesday, August 26, 2015
New Faculty, 2015-16
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Wednesday, April 29, 2015
"You Can't Fatten a Cow By Weighing It!"
In my last blog entry, I briefly alluded to the “high stakes
testing” regime that has accompanied the standards movement. “High stakes”
tests have taken different forms in different states, but primarily, they involve standardized tests that students have to pass in order to allow them to move on to the next grade level, graduate from high school, or pass
a given class. To be clear, these exams do not typically comprise any
percentage of a student’s grade in a class; these tests are the sole criteria
used to measure student mastery and proficiency.

I believe that our nations’ high stakes testing regime has
had a crippling effect on our nation’s schools and has harmed our children.
It’s been disheartening to teachers and administrators, but it’s also caused
many school systems to focus on teaching to the tests instead of teaching
children. The pressure to have students perform well on standardized tests has also
led to widespread cheating by teachers and administrators across the country.
In fact, there is strong evidence that some sort of cheating or score
misrepresentation has gone on in 48 out of 50 states (Beckett, 2013).
One would think the nation would have moved to a different school accountability measure by now. The preponderance of educational literature has been highly
critical of the federal No Child Left Behind Law [NCLB], which is the law that
has required that states institute high-stakes testing. The literature has pointed out that NCLB was an
unfunded mandate based on faulty assumptions about teaching and learning; that
it was antithetical to all philosophical dispositions towards a more democratic
leadership style; that it ignored the possible contributions of mixed methods
or qualitative studies; that it had the unintended consequence of increasing
dropout rates, narrowing curricula, and discouraging good teachers; and that many
of the statistics assumptions on which it was based were not accurate (Amrein
& Berliner, 2003; Chatteriji, 2000; Jones, 2004; Mathis, 2003; Neuman,
2003; Slavin, 2001; Wheelock, 2003 ). In
actuality, the testing movement is working under the implicit assumption that
test score indicators are the only true and “scientific” way to measure
learning outcomes – ignoring all recent research on the effectiveness of
constructivist pedagogy; ignoring the realities of multiple intelligences; and
ignoring the truth that, by their very nature, standardized tests are pedantic,
rudimentary, and limiting. Furthermore, standardized tests were never intended
to decide if one went from the 8th grade to the 9th (Ghezzi,
2005). The tests were supposed to be “used to determine how best to teach kids”
(Ghezzi, 2005), not to narrowly define what learning is and punish those who
cannot operate within that narrow definition. Moreover, in a norm-referenced
test, won't half of our children always be below average? This, after all, is
not Lake Wobegon.[1]
To this point, there’s an old Iowa farm adage that says,
“You can't fatten a cow by weighing it.” In other words, its one thing to say,
“Our students are failing;” it’s another thing to figure out what to do about
it. Even if you assume that criterion reference tests identify the problems
correctly, they do not begin to offer us a solution.
What is most troubling to me, though, is the research that shows that
since the passage of No Child Left Behind, American students’ creativity[2]
has plummeted. In 2010, Newsweek published an edition of their
magazine titled “The
Creativity Crisis.” I urge you to
read the magazine in its entirety, but the gist of it is that what has made
America great and economically successful has been our ability to be creative. Moreover,
the world is facing environmental and social problems on a global scale. These
problems require leaders with an ability to come up with creative solutions to
complex problems. These problems also require an ability to build consensus and
work collaboratively. We have traditionally been a country of entrepreneurs and
innovators. America has led the world in scientific, technological, and
artistic endeavors. While children in China were learning how to take tests,
American children were learning how to think.
The research tells us that as a direct result of our “drill and kill”
daily drudgery and emphasis on standardized test scores, our schools have now
become a place (in the words of Pat Bassett) where “creativity goes to
hide.” They have become a place where,
by fourth grade, most students wallow in boredom and misery.
While researching my blog on Common Core, I read a letter to
the editor in the New York Times
written by Howard Miller, who is the chair of the department of secondary
education at Mercy College School of Education. He said it better than I could:
The sticking point rests not with
the standards, but with the ways in which we attempt to measure student
learning through a combination of multiple-choice test items and short essays.
Learning is a very complex human
enterprise. It is a building up of a depth and breadth of knowledge and skills
over time through a process that includes trial and error, interpretation and
analysis, “aha” moments of discovery, and applying what we have learned to different
situations.
Standardized tests are flawed
because they decontextualize learning and attempt to break it up into tiny
measurable segments. With learning, the whole is definitely greater than the
sum of the parts that we do measure.
Simply put, I'm not convinced that ANY of our standardized
tests accurately measure if a student has what it takes to be successful in
work and life. For example, does the ACT measure persistence? Resiliency?
Emotional intelligence? Does it
adequately address the competencies (“6 C’s”) that have been identified as the
core facets of 21st century learning: collaboration, communication,
creativity, critical thinking, cross-cultural competency, and character?
On a national scale, the high-stakes testing movement
works to absolve society or the
broader educational system of any real
accountability for the root problems in of poverty, malnutrition, housing, and
unequal opportunity. We know what our root social problems are, and they are
not going to be solved by giving students a test, the results of which will be
used to hold them back a grade level, fire teachers, or shut down a school. 
References
Amrein, A.L.,
& Berliner, D.C. (2003). The effects of high-stakes testing on student
motivation and learning. Educational
Leadership, 60(5), 32-37.
Bassett, P.
(2011, October 11). School: Where creativity goes to hide. [Web log comment].
Retrieved from http://www.nais.org/Independent-Ideas/Lists/Posts/Post.aspx?ID=318
Beckett, L.
(2013). America’s most outrageous cheating scandals. ProPublica. Retrieved from http://www.propublica.org/article/americas-most-outrageous-teacher-cheating-scandals
Biddle, B.J., and
Berliner, D. C. (2002). Unequal school funding in the United
States. Educational Leadership, 59(8),
48-59.
Chatterji, M.
(2000). Models and methods for examining standards-based reform accountability
initiatives: Have the tools of inquiry answered pressing questions on improving
schools? Review of Educational Research,
72, 345-386.
Darder, A. (2005). Schooling and the culture of dominion: Unmasking the
ideology of standardized testing. In G. E. Fischman, P. McLaren, H. Sünker,
& C. Lankshear (Eds.), Critical
theories, radical pedagogies, and global conflicts (pp. 3-22). Lanham, MD:
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc.
Ellinger, K., Wright, D.E. III, & Hirlinger, M. W. (1995). Brains
for bucks?: School revenue and student achievement in Oklahoma. The Social Science Journal, 32(3),
299-308.
Ghezzi, P. (2005, May 8). Experts: Student testing overdone. The Atlanta Journal-Constitution,
Goldberg, M. (2000). An interview with Harold Hodgkinson: Demographics,
ignore them at your peril. Phi Delta
Kappan, 82(4), 304-307.
Jones, K. (2004).
A balanced school accountability model: An alternative to high stakes testing. Phi Delta Kappan, 85(8), 598-605.
Mathis, W.
(2003). No child left behind: Costs and Benefits. Phi Delta Kappan, 84 (9), 679 – 686.
Miles, K.,
Ware, K. & Roza, M. (2003). Leveling the playing field: Creating funding
equity through student-based budgeting. Phi
Delta Kappan, 85(2), 114-119.
Miles, K.H.
(2001). Putting money where it matters. Educational
Leadership,59(1), 53-57.
Miller, H. (2013,
June). Will common core improve schools? [Letter to the editor]. The New York Times. Retrieved from http://www.nytimes.com/2013/06/12/opinion/will-common-core-improve-schools.html?_r=0
Neuman,
S.B. (2003). From rhetoric to reality:
The case of high-quality compensatory prekindergarten programs. Phi
Delta Kappan, 85(4), 286 – 291.
Odden, A. (2001).
The New School Finance. Phi Delta Kappan,
83(1), 85-91.
Odden, A. (2003).
Equity and adequacy in school finance today. Phi Delta Kappan, 85(2), 120-125.
Payne, K. J.
& Biddle, B. J. (1999). Poor school funding, child poverty, and mathematics
achievement. Educational Researcher, 28(6),
4-13.
Reville, S. P.
(2004). High standards + high stakes = high achievement in Massachusetts. Phi Delta Kappan, 85(8),
591-597.
Slavin, R.E.
(2001). Putting the school back in school reform. Educational Leadership, 58(4).
Slavin, R.E.
(2003). A reader’s guide to scientifically-based research. Educational Leadership, 60(5), 12-16.
Starratt, R.
(2003). Opportunity to learn and the accountability agenda. Phi Delta Kappan, 85(4), 298-303.
Wheelock, A.
(2003). Myopia in Massachusetts. Educational
Leadership, 61(3), 50-54.
_______________________________
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Wednesday, February 25, 2015
Common Core?
As we begin our admissions season for the 2015-16 school
year, I have been getting a number of questions from prospective parents about
the Common Core Standards, which most states have adopted in their public
schools. For those of you who are interested in my take on the Common Core, I
will say this: Houston Academy will not be adopting the Common Core Standards.
In this blog entry, I’ll explain why.

As it stands, though, states have poured billions of dollars
into implementation of the Common Core. Nationally, putting the Common Core in
place will cost the states as much as $10 billion, with an additional
estimated cost of $800 million per year.[1]
This, according to many, has diverted needed resources away from teacher
recruitment and training, facilities, and remediation for our most challenged
students. For example, amidst numerous complaints about a crumbling school
infrastructure, Los Angeles spent $1 billion dollars of revenue from a “school
construction bond” in order to put Common Core testing software on iPads.[2]
Last year, the state of Alabama spent $6.7 million dollars on their testing
program, alone.[3] Of
course, the textbook companies are thrilled with this development, because it
allows them to sell brand new “Common Core aligned” textbooks to every district
in the United States. This amounts to a profit windfall.
While I certainly have problems with some of the content of
the Common Core, I think we could all find problems with any universal set of
standards. The reason why Houston Academy will not be adopting Common Core has
nothing to do with the quality of the standards. It is because I have not found credible research that
backs the notion that common standards, alone, will lead to increased levels of
student achievement.[4] Sure, high standards are important, but it’s
only a fraction of what goes into student achievement and gains in student
learning. What’s interesting is that
when one explores the scores on the Department of Educations’ National Assessment
of Educational Progress (NAEP), there has persistently been a four to five
times greater difference within
states than between any two states.[5] In
other words, in Alabama, there’s likely to be more of a difference in test
scores between any two school districts in Alabama than there is likely to be
between the state of Alabama and the state of Massachusetts. Of course, states
have had common sets of standards for decades. If standards, alone, could work
miracles, we’d see similar achievement within our state. Additionally, whether
a state has strong standards or weak standards bears no statistical relationship
to either standardized test scores or student achievement.5
What does make a difference in student achievement? Well, years
of data tell us that much of student learning is influenced by context
variables that are beyond the control of the school. However, of the factors we
can control, the literature has consistently confirmed that quality teaching is the single most
powerful factor in increasing and improving student learning.[6]
That seems like common sense, right? I mean, I’ve never had
a student come back after graduation who said, “I’d really like to thank the
person who wrote your curriculum! That curriculum has made all the difference
in my life. When I look back on Unit 6, Goal 3a in Chemistry – ‘Derive the
empirical formula for a compound by using percent composition data’ – I can’t
help but smile and think about how that has helped me in my life’s work and
career success.” No, what former
students DO want to talk about is how Starla Lewis made them love math, Wanda
Emblom made them want to be a doctor, or Paige Knight made them want to be a
writer.
Put another way, students don’t learn from standards; they
learn from teachers.
Permit me to use this analogy. I can determine the absolute
best type of fertilizer to put on my lawn to make it grow and prosper. However,
if I dump the fertilizer in the middle of my lawn instead of spreading it
properly and at the correct weight, I’m going to kill my grass. We can have all
the finest standards in the world, but if we don’t apply those standards
properly, we are not going to improve student learning. It’s the quality of the teacher that matters.
Actually, I’d argue, you could give us students at Houston
Academy from any socio-economic background, and given a certainly level of motivation
and God-given ability, our teachers at HA will lead them to achieve. Furthermore, I’d argue that it’s precisely because our teachers are freed from the
demands that public school teachers face– high-stakes testing, Common Core, exhaustive
evaluation systems, individualized educational plans, state certification
requirements, monotonous paperwork, Goals 2000, No Child Left Behind, etc. –
that our teachers are free to focus on children and their learning
needs. It’s because our teachers don’t have to focus on a broad set of national
standards that they can focus on having high standards for every individual student.
Those standards are much higher than anything the government has prescribed.
Learning is a very complex activity, and we know that every
student learns differently. Not all of our students are going to be successful
all the time, but what I can tell you for certain is that throwing billions of
dollars at a set of national standards is not going to fix our problems.
Focusing on teachers and students just might.
[1] Chiaramonte,
P. (2014, February 5). High cost of Common Core has states rethinking the
national education standards. Retrieved February 24, 2015.
[3]
State of Alabama Department of Education. (2014). ACT assessments establish new
baseline for student achievement [Press Release]. Retrieved from http://www.alsde.edu/sec/comm/News%20Releases/12-11-2014%20Statewide%20Assessment%20Results.pdf
[4] Loveless,
T. (2012, February 1). The 2012 Brown Center Report on American Education: How
Well Are American Students Learning. Retrieved February 24, 2015.
[6] Brophy,
J. E., & Good, T. L. (1974). Teacher-student relationships: Causes and consequences.
New York: Holt, Rinehart, and Winston, Inc.
Cruickshank,
D. R., Jenkins, D. B., & Metcalf, K. K. (2003). The act of teaching (Third ed.). Boston: McGraw-Hill.
Good, T.
L., & Brophy, J. E. (2003). Looking
in classrooms (9th ed.). Boston: Pearson Education, Inc.
Wayne, A.,
& Youngs, P. (2003). Teacher characteristics and student achievement gains.
Review of Educational-Research, 73(1),
89-122.
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