Parents Behaving Badly ¨ë

Parents understandably argue that there is a good reason to keep a close watch if their child is one of 500 kids in a grade level.
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These parents are not serving their children well, Sapon-Shevin argues. 'You want them to learn lessons that are powerful but benign. Your kid gets drunk, they throw up, feel like crapthat's a good lesson. They don't study for an exam, fail it and learn that next time they should study. Or not return the library book and have to pay the fine. But when you have a kid leave their bike out, it gets run over and rusty, and you say, 'O.K., honey, we'll buy you a new one,' they never learn to put their bike away.'

THE AGGRESSIVE ADVOCATE

Marguerite Damata, a mother of two in Silver Spring, Md., wonders whether she is too involved in her 10-year-old son's school life. 'Because he's not in the gifted and talented group, he's almost nowhere,' she says. 'If I stopped paying attention, where would he be?' Every week she spends two hours sitting in his math class, making sure she knows the assignments and the right vocabulary so that she can help him at home. And despite all she sees and all she does, she says, 'I feel powerless there.'
Parents understandably argue that there is a good reason to keep a close watch if their child is one of 500 kids in a grade level. Teachers freely admit it's impossible to create individual teaching programs for 30 children in a class. 'There aren't enough minutes in the day,' says Tom Loveless, who taught in California for nine years and is now director of the Brown Center on Education Policy at the Brookings Institution. 'You have to have kids tackling subject matter together as a group. That's a shoe that will pinch for someone.'

A. ¾îÈÖ
benign ¿ÂÈ­ÇÑ, »ó³ÉÇÑ, (º´¸®) åÕàõ(¾ç¼º)ÀÇ. throw up ´Ü³äÇÏ´Ù. crap ¾²·¹±â, ¶Ë.
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run over (Â÷³ª ÀÚÀü°Å°¡) »ç¶÷À» Ä¡´Ù, ±ò¾Æ¹¶°³´Ù. rusty ³ì½½´Ù.
put away °£¼öÇÏ´Ù, Ä¡¿ì´Ù, ÀúÃàÇÏ´Ù. aggressive °ø°ÝÀûÀÎ. advocate ¿ËÈ£ÀÚ.
MD. Maryland. gifted õºÎÀÇ Àç´ÉÀÌ ÀÖ´Â, ¸Ó¸®°¡ ¾ÆÁÖ ÁÁÀº. talented ÀçÁÖ ÀÖ´Â.
math class ¼öÇмö¾÷. assignments ¼÷Á¦. vocabulary ¿ë¾î, åÞýÄ(¾îÈÖ).
despite ...¿¡µµ ºÒ±¸Çϰí. grade level ¼®Â÷, µî±Þ¼öÁØ. institution °ø°ø±â°ü.
tackle ´Ù·ç´Ù. subject matter ÁÖÁ¦. pinch ²¿Áý±â, ²À Á˱â, ³­°ü, °ï±Ã.

B. ±¸¹®
- he's almost nowhere
[±×°¡ µé¾î°£ ÀÚ¸®°¡ °ÅÀÇ ¾ø´Ù.]
- If I stopped paying attention, where would he be?
cf. °¡Á¤¹ý°ú°Å: ÇöÀç»ç½ÇÀÇ ¹Ý´ëÀÇ °æ¿ì¸¦ °¡Á¤.
[³»°¡ °ü½É µÎ´Â °ÍÀ» Áß´ÜÇÏ¸é ±×´Â ¾îµð¿¡ °¡ ÀÖ°Ú½À´Ï±î?]
- That's a shoe that will pinch for someone.
[±×°ÍÀº ´©±º°¡¿¡°Ô ³­°üÀ» °¡Á®¿Ã ½Å¹ß(»óȲ)ÀÌ´Ù]

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Since the passage of the No Child Left Behind Act, which requires schools to show progress in reading and math test scores in Grades 3 through 8 across all racial and demographic groups, parents are worried that teachers will naturally focus on getting as many students as possible over the base line and not have as much time to spur the strongest kids or save the weakest. Some educators argue that you can agree on the goals of accountability and achievement, but given the inequalities in the system, not all schools have the means to achieve them. 'A really cynical person who didn't want to spend any more money on an educational system might get parents and teachers to blame each other and deflect attention away from other imperfect parts of the system,' observes Jeannie Oakes, director of the Institute for Democracy, Education and Access at UCLA.
Families feel they have to work the system. Attentive parents study the faculty like stock tables, looking for the best performer and then lobbying to get their kids into that teacher's class. 'You have a lot of mothers who have been in the work force, supervising other people, who have a different sense of empowerment and professionalism about them,' notes Amy Stuart Wells, professor of sociology and education at Columbia University's Teachers College. 'When they drop out of the work force to raise their kids, they see being part of the school as part of their job.' Monica Stutzman, a mother of two in Johnston, Iowa, believes her efforts helped ensure that her daughter wound up with the best teacher in each grade.

A. ¾îÈÖ
passage Åë°ú. No Child Left Behind Act ÇнÀ ºÎÁø¾Æ ¹æÁö¹ý. act ¹ý·É.
in Grades 3 through 8. 3´Ü°è¿¡¼­ 8´Ü°è±îÁö. racial ÀÎÁ¾Àû.
demographic Àα¸Åë°èÇÐÀÇ. base line ±âÁؼ±, Çհݼ±. spur ¹ÚÂ÷¸¦ °¡ÇÏ´Ù, °Ý·ÁÇÏ´Ù.
accountability Ã¥ÀÓ. inequalities ºÒÆòµî. means ¼ö´Ü.
deflect ºñ³¢°Ô ÇÏ´Ù, ø¶ú¾(ÆíÇâ)½ÃŰ´Ù. observe ¼Ò°ßÀ¸·Î¼­ ¸»ÇÏ´Ù.
access ¸ñÇ¥¿¡ Á¢±ÙÇÏ´Â ¹æ¹ý(¼ö´Ü). attentive ÁÖÀÇ ±íÀº. the faculty ±³Á÷¿ø.
stock table ÁֽĽü¼Ç¥. performer ¼±¼ö, ½ÇÇàÀÚ, ¿¬±âÀÚ. empowerment ±ÇÇѺο©.
sociology »çȸÇÐ. drop out of the work force Á÷ÀåÀ» ±×¸¸µÎ´Ù.
wind-wound-wound ģģ °¨´Ù, ²ÙºÒ²ÙºÒ ³ª¾Æ°¡´Ù, ²ø¾î¿Ã¸®´Ù.
wind up with ...¿Í ¸¸³ª°Ô µÇ´Ù.

B. ±¸¹®
- teachers will naturally focus on . . . kids or save the weakest.
[ÀÚ¿¬È÷ ±³»çµéÀº °¡´ÉÇÑ ÇÑ ¸¹Àº ÇлýµéÀ» Æò°¡Çհݼ± À§·Î ²ø¾î¿Ã¸®·Á°í ³ë·ÂÇϰí
°¡Àå ¿ì¼öÇÑ ÇлýµéÀ» °Ý·ÁÇÏ°í °¡Àå ¿­µîÇÑ ÇлýÀ» ±¸ÇÏ·Á´Â µ¥´Â ½Ã°£À» ¸¹ÀÌ µéÀÌÁö ¾Ê´Â´Ù]
- mothers who have been in the work force
[Á÷Àå¿¡ ±Ù¹«ÇÏ¿´´ø ¾î¸Ó´Ïµé]
- they see being part of the school as part of their job.
[±×µé(Á÷Àå±Ù¹«°æ·ÂÀÌ ÀÖ´Â ¾ö¸¶µé)Àº Çб³±³À°ÀÇ ÀϺΰ¡ µÇ´Â °ÍÀ» ±×µéÀÇ Á÷¾÷À¸·Î °£ÁÖÇÑ´Ù(Çб³¿¡ °£¼·ÇÏ´Â °ÍÀ» ´ç´çÇÑ Á÷¾÷À¸·Î °£ÁÖÇÑ´Ù).
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