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Obama's Education Reform Push is Bad Education Policy
One simple solution for our schools? A captivating promise, but a false one.
There have been two features that regularly mark the history of U.S. public schools. Over the last century, our education system has been regularly captivated by a Big Idea -- a savant or an organization that promised a simple solution to the problems of our schools. The second is that there are no simple solutions, no miracle cures to those problems.
Education is a slow, arduous process that requires the work of willing students, dedicated teachers and supportive families, as well as a coherent curriculum.
As an education historian, I have often warned against the seductive lure of grand ideas to reform education. Our national infatuation with education fads and reforms distracts us from the steady work that must be done.
Our era is no different. We now face a wave of education reforms based on the belief that school choice, test-driven accountability and the resulting competition will dramatically improve student achievement.
Once again, I find myself sounding the alarm that the latest vision of education reform is deeply flawed. But this time my warning carries a personal rebuke. For much of the last two decades, I was among those who jumped aboard the choice and accountability bandwagon. Choice and accountability, I believed, would offer a chance for poor children to escape failing schools. Testing and accountability, I thought, would cast sunshine on low-performing schools and lead to improvement. It all seemed to make sense, even if there was little empirical evidence, just promise and hope.
Today there is empirical evidence, and it shows clearly that choice, competition and accountability as education reform levers are not working. But with confidence bordering on recklessness, the Obama administration is plunging ahead, pushing an aggressive program of school reform -- codified in its signature Race to the Top program -- that relies on the power of incentives and competition. This approach may well make schools worse, not better.
Those who do not follow education closely may be tempted to think that, at long last, we're finally turning the corner. What could be wrong with promoting charter schools to compete with public schools? Why shouldn't we demand accountability from educators and use test scores to reward our best teachers and identify those who should find another job?
Like the grand plans of previous eras, they sound sensible but will leave education no better off. Charter schools are no panacea. The nation now has about 5,000 of them, and they vary in quality. Some are excellent, some terrible; most are in between. Most studies have found that charters, on average, are no better than public schools.
On the federal tests, known as the National Assessment of Educational Progress, from 2003 to 2009, charters have never outperformed public schools. Nor have black and Latino students in charter schools performed better than their counterparts in public schools.
This is surprising, because charter schools have many advantages over public schools. Most charters choose their students by lottery. Those who sign up to win seats tend to be the most motivated students and families in the poorest communities. Charters are also free to "counsel out" students who are unable or unwilling to meet expectations. A study of KIPP charters in the San Francisco area found that 60% of those students who started the fifth grade were gone before the end of eighth grade. Most of those who left were low performers.
Studies of charters in Boston, New York City and Washington have found that charters, as compared to public schools, have smaller percentages of the students who are generally hardest to educate -- those with disabilities and English-language learners. Because the public schools must educate everyone, they end up with disproportionate numbers of the students the charters don't want.
So we're left with the knowledge that a dramatic expansion in the number of privately managed schools is not likely to raise student achievement. Meanwhile, public schools will become schools of last resort for the unmotivated, the hardest to teach and those who didn't win a seat in a charter school. If our goal is to destroy public education in America, this is precisely the right path.
Nor is there evidence that student achievement will improve if teachers are evaluated by their students' test scores. Some economists say that when students have four or five "great" teachers in a row, the achievement gap between racial groups disappears. The difficulty with this theory is that we do not have adequate measures of teacher excellence.
Of course, it would be wonderful if all teachers were excellent, but many factors affect student scores other than their teacher, including students' motivation, the schools' curriculum, family support, poverty and distractions on testing day, such as the weather or even a dog barking in the school's parking lot.
The Obama education reform plan is an aggressive version of the Bush administration's No Child Left Behind, under which many schools have narrowed their curriculum to the tested subjects of reading and math. This poor substitute for a well-rounded education, which includes subjects such as the arts, history, geography, civics, science and foreign language, hits low-income children the hardest, since they are the most likely to attend the kind of "failing school" that drills kids relentlessly on the basics. Emphasis on test scores already compels teachers to focus on test preparation. Holding teachers personally and exclusively accountable for test scores -- a key feature of Race to the Top -- will make this situation even worse. Test scores will determine salary, tenure, bonuses and sanctions, as teachers and schools compete with each other, survival-of-the-fittest style.
Frustrated by a chronic lack of progress, business leaders and politicians expect that a stern dose of this sort of competition and incentives will improve education, but they are wrong. No other nation is taking such harsh lessons from the corporate sector and applying them to their schools. No nation with successful schools ignores everything but basic skills and testing. Schools work best when teachers collaborate to help their students and strive together for common goals, not when they compete for higher scores and bonuses.
Having embraced the Republican agenda of choice, competition and accountability, the Obama administration is promoting the privatization of large segments of American education and undermining the profession of teaching. This toxic combination is the latest Big Idea in education reform. Like so many of its predecessors, it is not likely to improve education.
Diane Ravitch, a historian of education, is the author of "The Death and Life of the Great American School System: How Testing and Choice Are Undermining Education."



158 Comments so far
Show AllArticle is exactly correct.
I would add that lousy teachers are not above cheating on the tests
therefore actually eliminating the better more honest teachers.
This article was complete garbage to me.
I couldn't even stomach reading it to the end.
This article, and every other one I've read about education on common dreams
COMPLETELY MISSES THE POINT!
COMPLETELY!
No Child Left Without a Kick in the Behind sold ALL OF PUBLIC EDUCATION TO CORPORATIONS!
It's a done deal!
The "testing" is just the mechanism to phase in the take over.
When the whole thing got started, a school had to get, something like 20% of students to pass the test.
Then every year the percentage goes up.
At first, it looked really good because the "bad" schools got taken over.
But now, almost all schools are taken over.
What do I mean by "taken over?"
By 2014, a school must get 97% of their kids to pass the test.
If they fail, the board gets to "choose" between 3 corporate schools to run the show.
Do you want to guess if the corporations ever have to get their kids to pass the test?
In the state I live, only about 3% of kids are in schools that have not been taken over already.
SO WAKE UP!
The corporations are going to run the show like mcdonalds and walmart and home depot.
Hardly ANY high priced teachers, with a bunch of low paid tutors (no benefits) doing the rest
And the curriculum.....I've taught in the schools!
They're going more towards reading scripts.
ALL THIS ASIDE....I hate the model anyway.
Check out www.sudval if you want to get a handle on something really different in education
a school based on trust in kids
a school run 100% by the kids
a school run according to democratic principles
challenge yourself to see how much you truely believe in democracy and KIDS!
READ UP AND GET BACK TO ME - I challenge you all.
Thank you so much for mentioning the Sudbury School model! Our babies are born with a deep desire to learn. When they truly have control over own education, amazing things happen. At a Sudbury School, when a student needs assistance with learning a subject, they contract with a facilitator to get that assistance. What's the difference? The learning is student initiated and student controlled, not forced on the student by a set curriculum.
I read a story about a boy, age 8, who attended a Sudbury School. He didn't know how to read and it really wasn't an issue, until his friends were reading things that he could not. He paid a visit to a facilitator (A 'teacher') and set up a contract to learn to read. In two weeks, the boy could read well enough to keep up with his friends and had become an expert reader (books, newspapers, etc.) in a month. He did this because he had the desire to learn.
The Sudbury School model recognizes that everyone is different and has their own gifts to bring to the table. It's completely democratic and accountable to the very people education should be accounted to...the children. I could go on but, people should study the system for themselves and decide.
a school based on trust in kids
a school run 100% by the kids
a school run according to democratic principles
Ummmm... at what age would the kids run things? Would this include nursery school? Infant care? Would the kids pay for their education out of their piggy banks? Would they plan, order and prepare meals? Would they fix the plumbing?
The one group that I would not agree deserves complete equality is kids. That is because they are kids. That is because human children require care from parents and / or society for many years. Their brains are still developing rapidly. They are inexperienced.
All that being said, I do believe we could do a lot more to let kids design projects and content in education. Adults can support that.
Joe
i am part of a group facilitating a sudbury educational learning environment
i'm glad your interest was perked enough to respond
age range is from 4 years old to 19
no structured classes - no age segregation - no homeroom teacher type of thing - no principal or leader
what would the kids do?
elect officers
run a weekly meeting using robert's rules of order
have a student judicial committee that meets daily
make every rule
choose staff
let me tell you this much...
SUDBURY TURNS THE WORLD UPSIDE DOWN!!!!!
Best I can say is that.....
CHILDREN LIVE UP TO
or down to
OUR EXPECTATIONS.
If you put a child in an environment that says, fundamentally, you can not be trusted,
should it be a surprise that many grow up to be untrustworthy
If you educate a child in an environment that offers little freedom...
how will one learn the lesson that freedom and responsibility are one in the same
I challenge you to contact this school
If i could have one wish, you would read the graduation papers
you see, at sudbury valley, there are only 2 requiremennts
One is to participate in the judiciary committee
the other is, in order to graduate, a paper is written answering the question of...
HOW HAVE YOU USED YOUR TIME AT SUDBURY TO PREPARE YOU FOR THE WORLD?
A collection is published and you can read them all
After reading thru several dozens, a clear picture developed.
And I was hooked.
The graduates reflected so much depth, basically without exception, every person.
(almost all - several graduates were rejected and you get to read the schools response)
AND YES - THE KIDS DEFINITELY CONTROL THE PIGGY BANK!!
The insurance - the tree cutting - complaints from parents - contract with the landlord....
YES EVERYTHING is put to school meeing!
the kids won't use the chainsaw to cut the tree - but they will have to arrange for someone to do it.
So when a kid leaves sudbury---they have appreciation for the real stuff of live.
They exude GRATITUDE in such a way - most sound like they're adults reflecting back on their lives.
They know far more about what it means to sit in the seat of responsibility than I expected.
SO STOP THE MOMMY GAME!
Our educational system is fundamentally backwards/upside down.
We baby the young so much, UNDERESTIMATE THEM BY SOOOOOOOO MUCH...
We weaken their spirits and their hearts and their minds and their bodies.
Pay a ticket, go and visit.
Make a call
talk to some graduates
sudbury has been around for 40 years
there are about 20 copy cat environments
And try this one one - human beings require care from families and society.
Their brains are still developing.
They are inexperienced.
When I except that all ARE equal, the way I relate changes.
I basically stop enabling/training the little critters to sluff off responsibility for their own lives and choices.
what do you think of those apples?
"If our goal is to destroy public education in America, this is precisely the right path."
I don't think there is any "if" about it.
Sadly, you've touched on the whole point of the bipartisan republicrat education plan, which is to destroy public education so they can justify turning it over to the private section for extraction of profit with minimum investment in inventory. Did I say inventory? Sorry, I meant to say our children, the students.
I am a retired teacher and can heartily agree with Diane Ravitch's comments about fads and reforms. She is exactly right when she says:
"Education is a slow, arduous process that requires the work of willing students, dedicated teachers and supportive families, as well as a coherent curriculum."
It is dreadful to devote so much of the curriculum to test subjects and to neglect other subjects which lead to cultured and clear-thinking adults. It is short-sighted to neglect physical education, art, and music.
Failing schools should not be closed;they should be helped.
I wonder how the public schools are in the mostly poverty-stricken Washington D.C. area. (I wonder why our legislators
tolerate poverty in the Washington D.C. area.)
You wonder how the public schools are in the mostly poverty-stricken Washington D.C. area? Let's see how many top government officials send their kids to DC Public Schools. They have been in a swamp of lassitude.
Michelle Rhee, the new chancellor has many ideas. On the positive side, she believes that the students are all capable of learning. As a teacher, she brought a class up from the bottom to the top. I believe she must be a talented teacher. On the negative side, I believe she is trying to impose her personal type-A workaholic style on all teachers, something like a 12 hour day, six days a week on teachers in return for 6 figure salaries and giving up tenure. Teachers who have families are not likely to stay long, or else their families will suffer consequences from parent fatigue and absence from the home that may not appear for years, when the kids hit adolescence.
Once again it is about not having enough resources. If there were enough teachers, they could have a work week that will not burn them out.
Joe
Wonderful! Superb analysis of the already failed policy of the Obama Administration. Arne Duncan is his Michael Brown appointment.
Let's stop the Obama Adminstration plans for adding steroids to the Bush NCLB before it even gets going or our schools will be even worse off than they are now.
It's time for some good old fashioned citizen agitation directed at the proponents of these disproven education proposals along with a strong measure of the proven ideas: smaller class sizes (shoot for a goal of around 12 for all grades), more school work organized around projects to actively engage young minds, more assessment and accountability centered around portfolios, performances and exhibtions (as is already done in thousands of schools around the nation that de-emphasize weaker test score models), more bottom-up school governance (in opposition to the dictatorial mayor control model), and more money overall for the entire national school system (money works or the top schools in country would be spending it).
Held up as the paragon is Chicago's Urban Prep. The story told by the media doesn not pain the full picture. For example:
The other side of the story on Chicago's Urban Prep (where all seniors got into college)
Statistics taken from 2008/09 CPS Charter and Contract Schools Performance Report, p. 174-175
for 11th graders: this is the class which had a 100% acceptance rate into college.
http://www.ren2010.cps.k12.il.us/docs/ONS_PerfReport.pd...
Students/teacher:
Urban Prep: 13.5 to 1
District average: 19.5 to 1
*Urban Prep has fewer students for every teacher than the district average.
Percent low-income students:
UP: 79.6%
DA: 83.4%
*Urban Prep has a lower percent of low-income students than the district average.
Limited english:
UP: .2%
DA: 14%
*Urban Prep has a lower percent limited English students than the district average.
Special ed:
UP: 13.2
DA: 12.1%
*Urban Prep has a slightly higher % of SPED students, but: since "all" urban prep students got into college, we can guess that "no" urban prep special ed students were *severely* disabled or mentally handicapped (e.g. retarded, severely autistic, etc.). Or else students who were, left.
Percentage of 11th grade students meeting and/or exceeding state standards:
UP: 15.3%
DA: ~30%
* No precise number is given for the district; % is graphed on chart "PSAE Student Performance Over Time" only.
PSAE (State testing) scores, percent meeting standards:
Reading: 24.6%
Math: 12.7%
Science: 8.5%
* No comparison is given for district-wide scores.
ACT Average composite score: 16*
* National average composite score in 2001 = 21. 36 is the highest possible. No comparison given v. district-wide scores.
http://www.act.org/news/releases/2001/08-15-01.html
UP Combined drop-out & transfer-out rate = 10.1%.*
* No comparison given v. district-wide drop-out & transfer.
The "miracle" sounds a little different depending on which facts are reported, & how they're reported.
================
15.3% at grade level in combined areas.
v. 30% district-wide.
urban prep advantages: lower % poverty, 0% ESL, smaller classrooms, less severely disabled SPED population, more (private) funding.
================
Oh yeah they get a wee bit of corporate support.
The Bacchus Foundation Joseph and Pat Henry
Barton P. Cohen & Mary Davidson Cohen Char. J.E. Dunn Construction Co.
Ray and Linnea Brock James B. Nutter & Co.
Commerce Bank Jewish Heritage Foundation
Bill & Dorothy Curry Kappa Kappa Gamma Alumnae Association
Doug & Pam Curry Kauffman Fund for Kansas City
Curry Family Foundation Kenneth L. and Eva S. Smith Foundation
Davis, Bethune & Jones Charitable Foundation Mendon F. Schutt Foundation
Education for Kansas Foundation Milbank Manufacturing
James and Patricia Ericson Morgan Family Foundation
Francis Family Foundation Bob & Dianne Priest
George K. Baum Foundation Sosland Foundation
H & R Block Foundation St. Paul's Episcopal Church
Nancy Hawley Stanley H. Durwood Foundation
Health Care Foundation of Greater Kansas City William T. Kemper Foundation
Helen S. Boylan Foundation Frank & Virginia Young
=====================
The overall college acceptance rate for Chicago public school graduates is 52.5 percent.
But last year, only 15% of this school's students met state standards, v. ~30% district-wide.
So how come the 100% acceptance rate? & to some good schools, too.
Why is that?
"the first day of freshman year at Urban Prep, students go on a field trip to Northwestern University. The message is clear: This is your future."
hmmmm: northwestern. why northwestern?
cherchez la board.
Board of Directors
Judith Armstead, Malcolm X College (Retired)
Kendrick Ashton, Perella Weinberg Partners
Darryl Cobb, ACT Charter School
Merl Code, Nike, Inc.
Alexandre du Buclet, The Exeter Group
Oscar Johnson, The Private Bank
Loann King, Kennedy-King College (Retired)
Paul King Jr., UBM, Inc.
Tim King, Urban Prep Academies (teachs course on "philanthropy" at northwestern)
Joseph McCoy, Perkins Coie
Stephanie Neely, Treasurer, City of Chicago
Mary Pattillo, Northwestern University
Steven Rogers, Kellogg School of Management
Tim Russell, Quaker Tropicana Gatorade
Kurt Summers, Tidal Capital Partners
Joe Terry, Oprah Winfrey Show
Chris Zorich, Christopher Zorich Foundation
Thank you for this wonderfully-researched article!
Guess what, every high school in the nation could have 100 percent college acceptance, all their students have to do is apply to community college. Community colleges will not deny any student who graduates form high school, in the language of admissions they are none selective, so really the 100 percent number is meaningless.
I wish you would write an article that pulls stuff like this together.
Joe
thanks! but, why is the board of northwestern so much different than boards of other schools? (at least private ones) + how many actually went to northwestern?
Competition and accountability? When for-profit schools compete for students, shed the ones they don't want, and the only accountability is for pre-programmed test results? Education should not be a profit-making "enterprise". As previous posters have said, education is an endeavor, requiring students who want to learn and grow, teachers with tools and talent, and parents who want educated children - not "positive outcomes". Graduation is an achievement, not a "result".
As an educator, I have observed that many students apply to teaching schools as a default when they were not accepted into other faculties such as law, medicine etc. Secondly, there are few if any mentoring programs for would be teachers to work under experienced competent teachers. Thirdly, too many teachers have opted for the worksheet approach which stifles intererst, creativity and commitment to learning. What works in the classroom is looking at learning in the broad context of what is happening in the real world. Students, in my experience, work hard when programs reflect the real world. Holding round tables, having students write: newspaper articles, poems, ethnographer reports, imbues them with a stronger sense of purpose and a greater willingness to become engaged. It can be done with any socio economic group, and in my teaching experiences, with students as young as 10 years. Expecting students to be community members engaged in active learning is not that hard. Knowing and understanding the curiculums, and yes, reading teacher's manuals from progressive publishers, is something more teachers need to undertake to transform their jobs into a calling.
Am curious where you teach, since I have not observed that teachers were unable to get into other fields where I teach. Most of my colleagues elected to teach primarily because they liked working with young people. And then, most teachers I taught with never used worksheets either. And our small town district has a mentor teacher program for beginning teachers. All I can say is the educational climate varies around the United States and that it is difficult to make generalizations about public schools.
Why was Project Headstart a clear success? It poured resources, work with families, inspired teachers and a war on poverty into education. When Headstart funding ended so did progress. Stop scapegoating teachers. let's return to a version of what we know worked.
When Project Headstart began I lived in Chicago. One of my friends was a Headstart teacher. She told me a remarkable story about the first day. Almost all kiddies brought to school by their parents cried. Kiddies brought by their older brothers or sisters did not cry. I am not a psychologist but I have a hunch that there is a story here.
We probably respond more strongly to peer acceptance and pressure than we do from parental strictures. You can see examples of this in those societies where your standing in the community is based on your age group. My mom could tell me, when I was a boy, that my room was a pigs' sty. She could yell, smack me or whatever. I didn't care. However, let my friends decide that they want to visit, or a girl ask to come over and I became a human whirlwind to clean my room. Anecdotal evidence but, interesting all the same.
With regards to effectively promoting the enabling of learning instead of the insane classical teaching of children from disadvantaged environments I repeat once again that it was proven in the 1920's how to do that by the "Casa dei Bambini" of Maria Montessori. Why Diane Ravitch, supposedly a "historian of education" fails to even mention this is beyond my understanding. Here in Houston parents are standing in line to get their kids into the few Montessori schools. Are these kids from disadvantaged families? Nope. They are from upper-middle class yuppie backgrounds. Something is wrong in the state of Texas (after Shakespeare).
We can now add education to Obama's growing list of Bushism without Bush. However, unlike Bush, he has a far greater chance of enacting this noxious initiative that will wreck public education more than the fascist idiocy of the Texas Board of Education textbooks.
Read my comment on this article:
http://www.commondreams.org/view/2010/03/14-1
Yes, I think Obama could be successful at doing a lot of things Bush wanted, but couldn't for any number of reasons -- his plummeting popularity being the main one. So Bush wore out his welcome -- enter Obama, fully groomed by corporate America by this time and promoted by the corporate media. It really has been perfect. We're in for a real screwing and by the time we wake up it will be too late. It took a hurricane to get people to start waking up to Bush.
There has been a curious similarity and insistence in "improvement" in both education and voting in the USA during the last half of the 20th century and the early years of this century and the answer has always been: machines. Voting machines would make voting "easier" and "more secure"--as well as cheaper; test-scoring machines (and the inevitable multiple-chance questions they spawned) would be more efficient and more accurate than old-fashioned written answers.
In fact the inevitable happened: teachers began teaching to the tests and kids began learning by endlessly practising test-taking skills.
The truth is that none of what was claimed for either voting machines or testing machines is true, so why do we still have them? You know the answer: once the corporations that make those machines got their foot in the door there was no removing them. But the decline of education in this country will not be reversed until testing-by-machine is reversed and the insecurity of our elections will not be reversed until we remove the machines and go back to marking ballots with pencil on paper like other countries do. And there's the rub. Like health-care reform, Americans will always refuse to allow that other countries might do things better than they can so the last thing anyone does is ask how they do it elsewhere.
Dismantle the military-industrial complex, revise our foreign policy, raise taxes on 1-5% to 1950 levels, and fully fund the common good.
To paraphrase Eisenhower, bombs take food away from the hungry.
Someone argued here that education doesn't need more money. The ancients were wise without our modern amenities. But I recently read some of Dr. Brezuchka's works and he argues that the enormous growth in disparity of wealth in our country has taken a pretty horrific toll on the "relative" have-nots.
It would be good too to ensure that the kids are learning a complete picture of our social-political reality, past and present. For example, a 12th History book in California has one page on the CIA, defining only what it is. It also states that the overthrow of the democratically-elected Mossadegh (Time magazine Person of the Year) was engineered because we were threatened by the spread of communism in the middle east. And we're champions of democracy and the rule of law? What happens to the teacher who puts forth the argument that we did this to strengthen our imperial grip over the world's resources, and that our foreign policy is a tyrannical nightmare bent on destroying the village to save it, as we did in, say, Diego Garcia? No wonder the kids are jaded and tuning out. One 7th grader told me once that "our vote doesn't count anyway." Cynical 7th graders, folks. This is what we've come to. High school graduates who are not familiar with Chalmers Johnson's "Blowback." So we've got ignorant Americans pumping more money into the war machine, killing innocent people overseas, paying off victims' families, whilst wall street vampires are running off with the taxpayer basket full of money.
Teachers cannot deviate from year long testing that is linked to the end of the year state-mandated testing. So forget taking the kids to the computer lab and doing a month-long, group documentary project where the kids can create a video, say, around the anti-biotic ladened beef that they're eating in their schools, that they could send to their legislators to have them consider healthier lunch options. (but then if you want the computer lab and schedule months in advance, eventually you'll have to parcel out some days to other teachers who want to have their kids use it because there is not enough for everyone, except for the magnet/gifted classes who have their very own class sets.)
Charter schools without libraries, bypassing laws that regulate "public" schools from operating near hazardous freeways, teachers being laid off, school year shortened, furlough days, cuts in the arts, lack of field trips (one administrator denied me from taking the kids to a Doctors without Borders mock refugee camp because it didn't relate to the test, claiming also that it was for high school students) and on and on and on..
Wait for the following link to upload and fast forward to the end to see our kids perform at our 2nd annual festival last year (we're trying to build more community at our school--but so much for that for some us, as several teachers at our Los Angeles Unified school just got RIF notices-2,000 elementary total in the district..because elementary teachers are more expendable than secondary teachers?). Due to funding losses, we no longer have dance and theater teachers at our school, which is devastating for our kids who cannot afford summer $1,000 art courses for children at, say, UCLA.
Enjoy. The kids are pretty darn amazing when you give them the opportunity to shine.
http://www.highlightvideoproductions.com/transf3r/schoolvideo2.wmv
I did enjoy. That was a joy to see. Stuff like that should be part of every school. In the long run it has a profound effect on people.
Joe
What's most noteworthy about this article (and her recent book) is that Ravitch, historically, has been a "conservative" voice in education who's now woken up and done "somewhat" of a U-turn.
The earnest public dialogues that have occurred the past few years between her and progressive educator Deborah Meier, two women who care deeply about education, are especially revealing - and hopeful.
http://blogs.edweek.org/edweek/Bridging-Differences/
Note: the dialogues between Ravitch and Meier are NOT some "meet in the middle" milquetoast moderate "bi-partisan" front designed to further the aims of Neoliberalism shared by both political parties, but something else entirely different and needed wherein the dangers of Neoliberalism (and its market-driven education goals) are addressed and confronted by BOTH of these diverse women.
I agree that collaborations between a Meier,a Ravitch and other sincere people whose primary interest is in education such as Robert P. Moses, would lead to deepening our understanding of the problems and solutions of education.
Joe
I have always admired Ms. Ravitch for her advocacy of a rich and varied content in education even during the empty "self-esteem" and "anything goes" fads. Knowing traditional things like geography and grammar, knowing how to do things skillfully, knowing how to write well, feeling the thrill of creating something from nothing - that is part of what gives poor kids true self-esteem. Reading and math are better taught in a content-rich and purposeful context than in test preparation drills. They need to know how to use tools in order to reach their potential
I now admire Ms. Ravitch even more, for she has changed her opinions on the privatization and testing strategies as paths to reach her goals. This change is, I think, based on her long standing dedication to excellence in education and her willingness to examine new evidence. Diane Ravitch's article proposes a good solid approach evidence based approach to education. There is plenty of evidence of what works and what doesn't from around the world.
There are no cheap and easy short cuts when it comes to the intellectual development, physical and spiritual well-being of a child. There are no doctrinaire answers. Raising and educating children never has an easy one-size-fits-all solution. Anyone who says so is a fool, or has goals apart from what is best for the children. I would put Arne Duncan in that category. "Race to the Top" and charter schools are two divisive gimmicks meant to divide public school parents and teachers and divert them from demanding stability and adequate funding, buildings, staffing and programs in the public schools, which are the minimum pre-requisites for ANY plan.
Who said "If you want to truly understand something, try to change it"?
Joe
Thank you, Diane, for explaining something I could never understand about you: When I got my doctorate in Education in 1987, I read your work and was bothered by your insistence that accountability and increased testing would increase "student achievement," that wonderful piece of educational jargon that refers to how many right answers students get on a standardized test. You admit in this piece that you were wrong and that you regret advocating misguided policies in the past. Thank you for that admission.
At the time educational researchers were obsessed with standardized testing because so many illuminating statistical tests could be done with the data. Indeed, I shamefully confess my own thesis depended upon such mathematical manipulations (though I pleaded with my advisor to do a more ethnographic piece of work). With its dependence on statistics, educational research was considered to be down only a step or two from research in physics. Of course, the tests seldom measured anything of importance, but that fact was largely ignored by the School of Ed faculty.
Now, having both confessed our participation in the sordid past of educational research, it is time for us to raise our voices against the Bush/Obama plan to "improve student achievement." Not that we will be listened to, of course. The business interests that control politics will make all the final decisions. We should have known.
great post. the necessity of publication in the academy is a primary source of the corruption of the politics of education. politicians with varying agendas will always focus on how children are trained and educated, but the fact is, without the eager complicity of the professional class in education, they would never have had the ammunition to attack public education so successfully.
As an academic, your problem is less Bush, Obama, Clinton, et al. It's with the academic charlatans and careerists who have, like Friedman and his monkeys in economics, gleefully provided the intellectual cover for a one-sided political assault. That is what the egghead class needs to address and quickly.
The quantoid fetish must be stopped cold, and to do that, the foundation system that props up professorial paychecks and administrative perks must be stopped cold. careerism must be redefinied in a more student oriented manner, and research needs to return to its more imaginative and creative roots without sacrificing rigor.
As always, its' all about the money...:)
The biggest obstacle to educating children and young adults is the ethos of mendacity and me-first the mass media pounds into their heads from the time they are old enough to sit in front of the tube....
When all of our so-called leaders habitually lie through their teeth -- when doing so is a requirement of office -- why should young people give a flying F about "truth"? Why should they care about the English language when, as Orwell warned so well, shoddy usage is de rigueur in our political, corporate, and journalistic circles?
In a culture in which empty celebrity, Las Vegas economics, and Mafia "law" rule, why should students value the hard work of learning difficult things? All these dumb debates over "education" are more or less meaningless taking place in the intellectual/moral vacuum of the modern U.S. of A...
EXACTLY, YET those are ALL an inherent part of the "market goals," and the hidden curriculum, of Neoliberal Education - and yet, not so hidden, the ethics of capitalism:
...The moral nihilism of celebrity culture is played out on reality television shows, most of which encourage a dark voyeurism into other people’s humiliation, pain, weakness, and betrayal. Education, building community, honesty, transparency, and sharing are qualities that will see you, in a gross perversion of democracy and morality, voted off a reality show. Fellow competitors for prize money and a chance for fleeting fame elect to “disappear” the unwanted. In the final credits of the reality show America’s Next Top Model, a picture of the woman expelled during the episode vanishes from the group portrait on the screen. Those cast aside become, at least to the television audience, non-persons. Life, these shows teach, is a brutal world of unadulterated competition. Life is about the personal humiliation of those who oppose us. Those who win are the best. Those who lose deserve to be erased. Compassion, competence, intelligence, and solidarity with others are forms of weakness. And those who do not achieve celebrity status, who do not win the prize money or make millions in Wall Street firms, deserve to lose. Those who are denigrated and ridiculed on reality television, often as they sob in front of the camera, are branded as failures. They are responsible for their rejection. They are deficient....
The cult of self dominates our cultural landscape. This cult shares within it the classic traits of psychopaths; superficial charm, grandiosity and self-importance; a need for constant stimulation, a penchant for lying, deception, and manipulation and the inability to feel remorse or guilt. This is, of course, the ethic promoted by corporations. It is the ethic of unfettered capitalism. It is the misguided belief that personal style and personal advancement, mistaken for individualism, are the same as democratic equality. In fact, personal style, defined by the commodities we buy or consume, has become a compensation for our loss of democratic equality. We have a right, in the cult of the self, to get whatever we desire. We can do anything, even belittle and destroy those around us, including our friends, to make money, to be happy, and to become famous. Once fame and wealth are achieved, they become their own justification, their own morality. How one gets there is irrelevant. Once you get there, those questions are no longer asked.
It is this perverted ethic that gave us Wall Street bankers and investment houses that willfully trashed the nation’s economy, stole money from tens of millions of small shareholders who had bought stock in these corporations for retirement or college. The heads of these corporations, like the winners on a reality television program who lied and manipulated others to succeed, walked away with hundreds of millions of dollars in bonuses and compensation....
Celebrity is the vehicle used by a corporate society to sell us these branded commodities, most of which we do not need. Celebrities humanize commercial commodities. They present the familiar and comforting face of the corporate state....
This cult of distraction, as Rojeck points out, masks the real disintegration of culture. It conceals the meaninglessness and emptiness of our own lives. It seduces us to engage in imitative consumption. It deflects the moral questions arising from mounting social injustice, growing inequalities, costly imperial wars, and economic collapse and political corruption. The wild pursuit of status and wealth has destroyed our souls and our economy. Families live in sprawling mansions financed with mortgages they can no longer repay. Consumers recklessly rang up Coach handbags and Manolo Blahnik shoes on credit cards because they seemed to confer a sense of identity and merit. Our favorite hobby, besides television, used to be, until reality hit us like a tsunami, shopping. Shopping used to be the compensation for spending five days a week in tiny cubicles. American workers are ground down by corporations who have disempowered them, used them, and have now discarded them.
Celebrities have fame free of responsibility. The fame of celebrities, wrote Mills, disguises those who possess true power: corporations and the oligarchic elite. Magical thinking is the currency not only of celebrity culture, but of totalitarian culture. And as we sink into an economic and political morass, we are still controlled, manipulated and distracted by the celluloid shadows on the dark wall of Plato’s cave. The fantasy of celebrity culture is not designed simply to entertain. It is designed to keep us from fighting back.
- Chris Hedges, Empire of Illusion
http://www.truthdig.com/arts_culture/item/20090730_book_excerpt_empire_of_illusion/
FYI: On the rise are Neoliberal Tom "Flat World" Friedman "education training camps" (Camp Flat World, I kid you not!) for many US school systems to promote many of the values you decried and outlined purportedly as "a wake-up call to teens about the future."
The camp's tag line: "Do you want your child to be a lion or a gazelle?"
rbc is on the mark. See: http://tinyurl.com/y8cwx3r
Gary
"Part of the American myth is that people who are handed the skin of a dead sheep at graduating time think that it will keep their minds alive forever."
-- John Mason Brown
"When all of our so-called leaders habitually lie through their teeth -- when doing so is a requirement of office"
You got that right!! Yes indeed. There may be exceptions, but our political system acts as a filter so that only duplicitous people can succeed. If you cant lie well, you cannot be a successful politician in the western world. If you will not please those with money, then you cannot be a successful politician in the western world. This essentially guarantees that your politicians will pretend to represent you, but in reality will represent the rich....
I saw this demonstrated when the UK was imposing its own draconian versions of the patriot act. The unelected house of Lords would not pass it on moral grounds. They knew right from wrong. You see, they were born into their privilege and had not been passed through the filter. And thus, some decent people got through. It then came to the notice of Tony Blair that the House of Lords was undemocratic, and he change the system...
In theory our system is a democracy. To some extent, it might be. But since the media is owned by the rich, and since the rich provide the campaign money, and the lobbyist "advisers" to those in office, and since being able to lie well is essential, it works out as a plutocracy. You can vote for Tweedledee or Tweedledum and it makes no difference. You were offered a false choice in the first place. Take Obama, for instance.
Imagine though, a system where the representatives were chosen by lottery. By the laws of random numbers, this would at least guarantee a representative sample of people in government.
My overall impression regarding US education is that, at all levels, from slum districts to McMansion districts, it is simply badly dumbed-down compared to Europe and Japan, and probably China. A major part of it's teachers are not competent in the subjects they teach**.
The great epiphany of my life, which banished the myth of US exceptionalism in my mind forever, was when when I graduated, with a BSc degree in Geology from Virginia Tech in 1980, and went to work as a oil well mud logger for an oil field service company in Venezuela. The staff was 1/3USAn, 1/3 British or Australian and 1/3 Venezuelan. I had thought that I gotten a pretty good education, but it didn't take long the realize that the British and Australians were far ahead of the USAn's in educational attainment. Basically, a Bachelors degree in the UK is at least equal to a Masters degree in a good university in the US.
Some of the USAns I worked with with bachelors degrees really wouldn't have been graduated from 8th grade in Europe or the UK. they couldn't even perform simple volume calculations or unit conversions. They were well behind many of Venezuelan mud loggers, who generally only had some vo-tech type education. and yes, these incompetents were white guys from middle class homes.
I also heard that when US middle-class parents move to the UK, their kids almost always have to be set-back a couple grades.
The fact is that the US's education problems, just like it's health care problems, are experienced no where else in the industrialized world. So, the solution seems simple to me, study the education syatems in the other countries and adopt what works. But, just like health care, that wouldn't be allowed, wouldn't it, because it would require an admission that the USA is not god-on-high's gift to the world, wouldn't it?
**I am not picking on teachers, I am a civil engineer, and since starting my government job reviewing design plans for potentially dangerous coal waste dams, I will be the first to admit that many civil engineers are dangerously incompetent too, even state-licensed ones. Since I got my PE license, the PE exam has been converted into an entirely multiple-choice-type exam for several years now, and as far as I'm concerned, multiple choice ALWAYS dumbs-down a test.
Working in the computer industry, I had a chance to meet techie folks from many different countries. In general, I agree with you pjd412. I am not exaggerating much to say that lunchtime conversations with white suburban US workers revolved mostly around shopping, to the point of excruciating tedium. I once asked a US guy, who had just described his new and elaborate sound system in great detail, what kind of music he liked. He told me he didn't really like music. All stuff, no culture. Go figure.
Workers from Asia, South America and Europe had read more English authors than most of us, could discuss world affairs, could string together a few complex sentences. They were often technologically qualified far above their position and pay. I am not for outsourcing work or importing lower paid workers to take US jobs, but our poor educational system and lackadaisical attitudes toward work are some part of the problem. (The main sources of the problem are NAFTA and a desire on the part of employers to bust unions and pay less.)
Joe
But how many of these guys that you meet studied for their CS degrees at US colleges, if not undergrad, at least masters or PhD?
Go to the CS, or engineering, or math, dept of any US college. At grad level, non-American students (often easily) outnumber Americans.
Not many from US colleges. They got into the US on a special Visa based on their being "adopted" by an employer.
Joe
I had a similar experience working at Ohio State. The Statistics Dept was about evenly divided between US and foreign-born professors. When I ate lunch with the US professors, all they wanted to discuss were their houses. The foreign-born professors would talk politics -- much more interesting to me. Where I work now, a local government agency, I used to go to lunch with a set of co-workers until one of them demanded that I stop talking politics.
The Americans I'm talking about aren't dumb, but their interests are narrow and divorced from what is crucial for citizens in a democratic country. People don't develop intelligent viewpoints in a vacuum; you need the give and take of discussion and the sharing of information and opinions. These experiences are part of the reason that the US is making disastrous decisions from health care to financial policy to war.
pjd,
I agree that US schools do not measure up to international schools. This from a former educator (biology). Thinking back to my career, I would have to say the biggest thing keeping me from teaching all that I know (and I think my training (Masters in Biology, U of Mich was adequate), was the lack of preparation and interest of my students. Basically, there were never consequences for not learning material. There was an overriding feeling that good students were born, not made and a passive acceptance of social class differences: kids from white collar families were capable students and those from blue collar families were not. There was solid pressure placed on teachers to inflate grades--giving more than ten percent D's and F's could mean a trip to the principal's office to explain your grading system.
Sometimes exchange students come here and find they have to give up a year of schooling as a consequence, since they made no progress (except in English) during their year abroad. And immigrant kids from Europe come here, ready to learn, expecting to be driven as they were over there, but soon to find that no demands are made. In a couple of months they are doing what native-born Americans do--which is to say, damn little.
Under these circumstances it is hard for teachers to do their jobs. My ninth grade biology classes included students with IQ's of 140 as well as those with 85. The range of interest was similarly divided. Many times I wished that we could separate students by interest, if not ability--so I could make more demands on them, but that is not how the system works. That is the main problem--the structural defects of our system. It simply does not work to have five classes of high school students--33 in each with such diversity in each class. Hope new teachers can succeed where I failed (I am retired).
I don't consider myself very bright, but my early schools days were at the height of JFK's now largely forgotten public campaign to get kids interested in science and technology. Even the Saturday cartoons has science lessons in them, with NASA sponsored cartoon shorts (where toy ads would later be) like "Big World-Little Adam", and children's science/engineering shows like Mr. Wizard.
Those were the days when the FCC took "public interest" requirements for broadcasters seriously. Such a government campaign to get kids interested in science would be far too "socialistic" nowadays.
So, early on, me and my brother was fascinated with "how things work", both natural and man made. My brother built a weather station and made home weather forecasts, I did everything from building model rockets with a local kids model rocket club to studying the geology at a creek bed at the bottom of my street, once lugging a 50 lb rock a half-mile home for the quartz crystals in it. we set up telescopes to see the east-coast solar eclipse of 1970. (the one Carly Simon mentioned in "You're so Vain") My brother went on a school field trip to Virginia Beach where it was total, and made weather measurements and presented his findings at a special evening school "seminar" for parents and teachers. I was hobbled with learning difficulties (especially maths and writing), but i still went to school with a curiosity of learning how things work. My most memorable teachers were my science teachers.
Are there any kids like this today?
Yes, there are bright and imaginative and motivated kids today. Probably as many as before. My concern is with fairly ordinary kids, kids that regard themselves and school in an unfavorable light: they aren't getting much. The academically talented bunch gets a pretty decent education, though perhaps not quite as good as Germany or Sweden. It's the average kids that need more.
By the way, in my high school I was just able to ride the Sputnik wave of curriculum improvements. At that time (early 60's), the government put out big dollars into curriculum development. One thing we got was BSCS, Biological Sciences Curriculum Study, a program written at a fairly high level (actually too high for most students) that encouraged experimentation and science as inquiry. This was the horse I rode for thirty years. It had major problems in not paying enough attention to the student, his/her background, experience, and preparation, but it still was intellectually respectable. That was federal money well-spent, those curriculum development efforts, and I wish we could have a do-over.
Actually, in Michigan in the late eighties and early nineties, the state science assessment had a written essay component as well as an inquiry component in which students were required to do an experiment as part of the test, analyze results, and critique the design. They were also asked to read science-related articles from newspapers and interpret them. This was part of the science/society drive in our state. Unfortunately, due to cost concerns, all aspects of written assessment, inquiry, and science and society elements were eliminated. Now we are back to fill in the ovals, front to back. Many of us science educators had good intentions and worked hard to make science more than an exercise in textbook reading. As money dried up, all the effort went for naught.
My high school biology teacher (who was honored as Bio teacher of the year) would have hated what happened to the science department he headed. It too was dumbed down after his early death. No longer is a year long experiment a requirement of advanced biology and standardized testing rides high in the saddle.
Maybe his passing was a blessing in disguise.
Gary
"The chief wonder of education is that it does not ruin everybody concerned in it, teachers and taught."
-- Henry Brooks Adams, The Education of Henry Adams (1907)
Now this guy above, he’s not of the stuck-up intelligent middleclass, is he?
For the purpose of this world is to prove the harm in a brain-power dictatorship. For either the English are the most intelligent or the Hebrews.
But then time will tell, for the most intelligent nation, surely this will be the one that causes World War Three.
You are reading way, way too much into what i wrote. I was writing about comparative educational achievement and how the US population is way behind. No arrogant nationalism whatsoever was implied.
Why are you trying to liken being smart with being aggressive or arrogant? Actually level of education correlates very positively with rejection of arrogant nationalism and acceptance of socialist, solidaristic, and internationalist solutions.
The root cause of our difference is:
YOU BELIEVE
Most all people have equal intelligence
and ability to achieve is 100% dependent on ambition.
I BELIEVE
_1% High Society intelligence
10% Country Club intelligence
40% Intelligent middleclass
49% Slow and careful thinking laboring class
pjd,
What if American kids being way behind in education is as much of a myth as our healthcare system being the best in the world?