Text Only
Search

Debating Eighth-Grade Graduations

02 July 2008
MP3 - Download (MP3) audio clip
MP3 - Listen to (MP3) audio clip
RealAudio - Download audio clip

This is the VOA Special English Education Report.

Diploma and capIn the United States, middle school is the period between elementary school and eighth grade. Often this is a difficult period of change for children. If all goes well, four years later, they are high school graduates.

Graduation is a term traditionally connected with high school or college. Yet there are even kindergartens and preschools that hold "graduations." These might be mostly for fun. But some people are concerned about the popularity of eighth-grade graduations.

Some families may have trouble paying for costly celebrations organized by parents or schools. Yet they may feel social pressure to take part.

The same criticism has been made for years about high school graduations and senior proms. A prom, short for promenade, is a formal dance.

But critics say that, more importantly, eighth-grade graduations may send the wrong message -- that an eighth-grade education is enough. They are concerned especially about poor communities where many people never finish high school.

                                                                                           The subject has even entered the presidential campaign. Democratic candidate Barack Obama talked about it in a recent speech at a Chicago church. The senator from Illinois said children should be expected to finish high school and college. He reminded people "you're supposed to graduate from eighth grade."

"Let's not have a huge party," he said, "let's just give them a handshake."

A growing number of middle school administrators seem to agree. They are making changes. For example, instead of graduation, some schools now call it a promotion ceremony.

James Williams is the superintendent of public schools in Buffalo, New York. He is urging the schools in his district to hold "moving up" ceremonies at the end of eighth grade. Families would celebrate that students are moving up to the next level of their education.

The school chief says graduation from high school should be the goal. And the ceremony then, he says, should be an important, special and serious event in students' lives.

But some parents in schools that are trying to limit eighth-grade graduations say administrators are overreacting. They say graduation ceremonies are a good way to celebrate success in school. And they say the recognition might make some students more likely to complete their education.

And that's the VOA Special English Education Report, written by Nancy Steinbach.  I'm Steve Ember.

emailme.gif E-mail this article
printerfriendly.gif Print Version

  Featured Story
People Who Are Making a Difference in the World  Audio Clip Available

  More Stories
Fat Cell Gene Linked to Colon Cancer  Audio Clip Available
US Food Stores Must Identify More Foods by Country  Audio Clip Available
Storms of September: One Month, Three Hurricanes in the Atlantic  Audio Clip Available
Another World, Underground: Carlsbad Caverns National Park  Audio Clip Available
At Home in a Shipping Container  Audio Clip Available
Willa Cather, 1873-1947: She Celebrated Europeans Who Settled in the American Midwest  Audio Clip Available
Before Next McCain-Obama Debate, Palin and Biden Take Their Turn  Audio Clip Available
Infectious Disease Expert, Sax Player Are Among MacArthur Winners  Audio Clip Available
Credit and the Crisis of Confidence  Audio Clip Available
Foreign Student Series: Public or Private?  Audio Clip Available
American History Series: In Election of 1824, a Clash of Personalities    Audio Clip Available