EMAIL SIGN UP!
Most Popular This Week
- One American Who Isn't For Sale
- Edward Snowden: Saving Us from the United Stasi of America
- Major Loss to Organic Farmers as Court Rules in Favor of Monsanto
- The Judicial Lynching of Bradley Manning
- Remembering Satyajit Ray’s Hirok Rajar Deshe: On Edward Snowden, Resistance and Inverted Totalitarianism
Popular content
Today's Top News
Joy in Education
The failure of the market place view of education should be evident to everyone. In a little publicized announcement the College Board said that SAT scores fell across the nation. The average writing, reading and math scores all dropped. Only 43% of all test takers achieved a score that indicated they were prepared for doing B minus work in college.
Meanwhile the Obama administration was forced to set aside the demand for continual improvement in local schools because more than 50% of all schools are unable to meet the draconian standards set by No Child Left Behind.
We have endured a decade of testing of our children, the expansion of charter schools and the introduction of business and military personnel to lead our teachers and students. These measures were designed to correct the previous foundation-funded decade of experimentation that emphasized small schools. This effort failed to produce results, but managed to evade real issues of small classrooms and teacher preparation.
With more than half the schools failing to meet the improvement standards of No Child Left Behind and less than half our students prepared to succeed in college you would think that the politicians and foundations who have been backing these failures would pause to question their approach.
Robert Schaeffer, public education director of FairTest, a nonprofit group critical of much standardized testing, said the declines were an indictment of the nation’s increasing emphasis on high-stakes testing programs.
“How many wake-up calls do policy makers need before they admit that their test-and-punish strategy is a failure?” Mr. Schaeffer said. “Policymakers need to embrace very different policies if they are committed to real education reform.”
Instead of looking at themselves and the policies that have so evidently failed, the College Board blamed the failure on the students, specifically all the immigrants and other “minorities” who took the test. According to the NY Times:
“The College Board attributed the decline to the increasing diversity of the students taking the test. For example, about 27 percent of the nearly 1.65 million test-takers last year came from a home where English was not the only language, up from 19 percent a decade ago.”
“About 30 percent of those who took the SAT were black, Hispanic or American Indian, groups whose scores have stubbornly remained lower than those of whites and Asians.”
This effort to blame the students who take the tests rather than the testing culture that has destroyed education is outrageous. It is further evidence that those driving educational reform are so committed to the market place ideology that they cannot admit to the obvious.
Meanwhile, one of our readers pointed to an important article in this month’s Smithsonian. There LynNell Hancock writes about the success of Finland’s child centered, place-sensitive educational culture. Hancock says of Finland’s success, it “kind of came out of nowhere. No one had really been focusing on Finland. Then as I read about how they had done this without standardized testing, with a strong teachers’ union and with lots of things that are just the opposite of America, it further piqued my interest. And as the debate has escalated—with conservatives pushing for marketplace reforms and progressives pushing for greater public support—Finland keeps coming up, argued and misunderstood by both sides. It became even more important to me to go see what’s up.”
And what is up in Finland’s schools? “These schools are joyful places,” says Hancock. “In America, we tend to think you have to suffer to be the best, but the Finns think, no, if the kids are suffering, you’re doing something wrong.”
Our children deserve much better than to be blamed for the failures of adult policies makers. Joy in education would be a far better standard.
Comments
Note: Disqus 2012 is best viewed on an up to date browser. Click here for information. Instructions for how to sign up to comment can be viewed here. Our Comment Policy can be viewed here. Please follow the guidelines. Note to Readers: Spam Filter May Capture Legitimate Comments...




12 Comments so far
Show AllAlthough I agree that the emphasis on testing is absurd ("The beatings will continue until morale improves."), Finland is not the solution to our educational problem. The population there is homogeneous and they have a culture which values education.
The fact that our population is not homogenous should not be as important as our culture. Here, the powers that be could not care less about educating kids. The only thing that matters today is making money.
No sheepherder,
Try to find that article about Finland. Their schools that have the diversity with FSL immigrant minorities do succeed under their model.
With your second paragraph, I agree 100%.
You can not compare US test scores to any other country as it is mandatory for every child to attend and even the scholastically challenged or special education students are mixed in, it's the law .
1. With the Pacific Rim schools, all the kids who have no scholastically aptitude are diverted to sweat shops or assembly lines , they are not called DROP PUTS.
2. It's difficult to teach a class when even one student can't speak English it slows the entire class. No other country has 30,000,000 undocumented immigrants PLUS the influx from legal immigration. A great percentage of these students KP-12 have never attended school.
3. It is not the highest scholastic score that achieves. It's the person that tries and tries again and is not afraid of failure that excels . Both Steve Jobs and Mr. Microsoft, Bill gates both dropped out. Albert was working in a copyright office when he conceived his Theory of relativity. Look at the Donald, declared bankruptcy 3 times. Diane the swimmer who had to quit because she was stung on the face by a jelly fish. She was so happy to have the chance to try declaring she would try again. Most oriental countries if you fail you commit seppuku. Not in America. That's why WE innovate like no other country. That's why China has to steal from us even though they sink billions in R&D and get NOTHING.
In defense of the US school systems they are working under all kinds of handicaps including the handicapped. It's the cost of freedom and open immigration. And still we produce such additional outliers as; Alexander Graham Bell, Ben Franklin, Nikola Tesla, James T. Russell (inventor, CD), Martin Cooper (cell phone) Gordon Gould LASER, Vinton Cerf & Bob Kahn (fathers internet) and the Wright Brothers to name a FEW.
It is a credit to our teachers that in the face of adversity, they are able to instill the free mind which is better than the high score.
I'll say it again. Education is the planting of seeds, not the harvesting of a crop. If we instill the joy of learning in our children, they will become students for life. The fruits of that harvest, gathered over a lifetime, will far surpass test scores that assess learning and teaching at the most superficial levels.
Well said!
@Old Guy Perhaps education is instilling the job of learning but how, exactly, does one do that?
As for myself, I think the foundation for learning is curiosity, the joy coming when the answer arrives. From my experience with my daughter, her curiosity began almost from day one when she began to explore her new world … but of course that was my curiosity in action.
However, according to what I've seen -- and what has been set down many times by others -- the basis for American education tends toward learning to obey orders which is what early-on workers needed in 19th and early 20th century manual labor factories. Since times have changed, there are no longer many jobs that require this kind of "skill" for either students or teachers.
I disagree in that early workers did need a liberal education so that they could have avoided being enslaved in the manual labor factories of the 19th and 20th centuries. The mind numbing, physically debilitating factories existed to enrich the few at the expense of the many.
And here we are today with the same problem (except in addition, the factories have picked up and moved abroad, leaving behind uneducated unemployable fodder). I have read somewhere that in the past at least, the physically deformed and crippled beggars in India would deform and cripple their own children so that their children would be assured a position in begging too.
The jobs that need to be done need a "Need To Be Done" wage. Not everyone has scholastic aptitude. What happened to trade schools? I grew up on a farm. It's hard work in the sun. I said to my dad, "Why do we have to pick the beans?" He said, "Someone has to pick the beans. It's important picking food. Cause everybody would die without food." We are not fodder. We are human beings contributing and out of this uneducated fodder some of the greatest minds have been borne. My dad took a home studies course in tool making through the mail. He wound up working on the Apollo and was one of the first LASER carbide experts in the US. He took me to work one day, in the 50s to a Borrough's warehouse full of computers working in tandem on a problem. He said to me, "Some day you'll ware this room on your wrist."
Joy? Joy in curiosity? Oh, no, none of that here, not in our schools. The only joy allowed is beating someone else for a prize or a grade or crushing someone on the football field. A friend of mine told me about what gym was like in the early part of this century. Twice a day, music was played and the children danced however they wanted to.
In our mass-mesmerized society, it’s best to keep the people as incurious as possible. Boredom plus stress is a powerful social tool to that end. Don’t expect the DOE to adopt the Finnish approach anytime soon.
Yep, no joy. While I stay away from the local elementary school, I've heard that they also play music and children dance or something like that.
However, it's not only the school but at least some of the parents who believe that the basic lesson is to Obey Authority.
Just to be complete the school filed a suite against four parents for "asking to many questions" as to how money was spent. Fortunately for the parents, a non-profit took the case, the school lost, and had to pay $50,000 in lawyer's fees in addition to their own lawyer. At least we know where some our tax money went ...
Elizabeth,
I've once read a theological interpretation of Hell, whereby the gates of hell are actually always open for anyone to walk out of; there is no sentence of eternal damnation. But, few take the opportunity to leave.
I've known for a long time that if there's a Hell, I'll be going there which is why I decided to believe there isn't one. But come to think of it, if you could get used to the pain, fire and brimstone sounds a lot more exciting that sitting on a cloud doing nothing in particular.