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A Nation's Education Left Behind
My theme for today: Whose children have been left behind?
Let me tell you a little bit about myself. For many years, I was a strong advocate of testing, accountability, and choice. I worked in three conservative think tanks where these ideas were held sacred. In 1998, I went to Albany, New York, to testify on behalf of charter legislation. At the time I was connected to the conservative Manhattan Institute. I thought that testing would help diagnose the problems that children had and enable teachers to identify their needs. I thought that charters would enroll the kids who had failed in regular public schools or who were not well served by regular public schools. I thought that charters would collaborate with the public schools.
In a book published last year, I said that I was wrong. I was wrong on every count. Testing should be used for diagnostic purposes, to help students and teachers, but it has turned into a blunt instrument that is used to reward and punish teachers and schools. Charters should serve the neediest, but, with some notable exceptions, they have become aggressive and entrepreneurial. Instead of seeking out the neediest students, many of them exclude the neediest students and skim the best. In some states, like Michigan, most of the charters are for-profit, with big dividends to the investors; their profits come right out of the public school budget and into the pockets of shareholders. In some states, like Ohio, Colorado, and Pennsylvania, virtual charter schools are making millions of dollars for their owners, while children sit home alone in front of a computer. These cyber charters get full state tuition, but they have no buildings, no playgrounds, no library, no custodian, no nurse, and few teachers. They often have one teacher to monitor 100 screens. For investors, it’s a great business, but the educational results are awful. In Colorado, for example, only 12% graduate from the Virtual Academy, compared to a statewide graduation rate of 78%.
We have had a full decade of No Child Left Behind, and we now know that the law has been a disaster. True, it has documented the shocking gaps in passing rates between different groups of children, but it has done nothing to change the conditions that cause those gaps. We know the gaps are there; actually, we knew about the gaps long before NCLB was passed. Yet Congress is still patting itself on the back for identifying a problem and doing nothing meaningful to solve it.
Many children are still left behind. We know who they are.
In the year 2000, during the Presidential campaign, candidate George W. Bush told the nation about the Texas miracle. He said that there was a simple way to reduce the gaps: Just test every child every year, he said; reward the teachers and schools where the scores went up; and humiliate the teachers and schools where the scores went down. Texas did this, he said, and the gaps were closing; test scores were rising; graduation rates were going up; dropout rates were going down. He said that we had to end the “soft bigotry of low expectations” and set the same standards for all children, rich and poor, black and white, advantaged and disadvantaged.
After his election, Congress bought this story and passed No Child Left Behind. This law mandated that all children would be proficient by 2014 in grades 3-8. All children without exception. Bear in mind that no nation in the world has ever achieved 100% proficiency.
Now we know the results of this absurd law. More than 80% of our schools have been labeled failing schools. By the year 2014, nearly 100% of our schools will be considered failures. Has any other national legislature in history ever passed a law guaranteed to label every single one of its schools a failure? I don’t know of any.
We now know that NCLB was based on a phony claim. On national tests, Texas does not lead the pack; it’s right in the middle. We now know that the achievement gap did not close in Texas, and that dropout rates went up. But the whole nation is stuck with this testing regime.
Let’s be clear about what NCLB has really accomplished: It has convinced the media and major philanthropies and Wall Street hedge fund managers that American public education is a failure and that radical solutions are required. The philanthropists and Wall Street hedge fund managers and Republicans and the Obama administration and assorted rightwing billionaires have some ideas about how to change American education. They aren’t teachers but they think they know how to fix the schools.
Their ideas boil down to this strategy: NCLB failed because we didn’t use enough carrots and sticks. They say that schools should operate like businesses, because the free market is more efficient than government. So these reformers—I call them corporate reformers—advocate market-based reforms. They say that states must hand public schools over to private management because the private sector will be more successful than the public sector. They say that teachers will work harder if they get bonuses when test scores go up. They say that teachers should have no job protections because workers in the private sector don’t have job protections, not even the right to a hearing. They say that if schools have low scores, they should be closed and replaced by new schools, just like a chain store—a burger franchise or a shoe store--would be closed if it didn’t make a profit; or the entire staff should be fired and replaced by new staff. They say that the quality of teachers should be judged based on whether their students’ scores go up or down.
The Tea Party governors embraced this narrative and took it to the next level. They used their sweeping victories in 2010 to eliminate collective bargaining rights for public workers and to slash spending on public education, even as they demanded more funding for charters and vouchers. The mayor of New York City said a week ago that if he had the power to do it, he would fire half the city’s teachers, double the pay of those that remained, and double class size. He said when he went to school, he was in a large class and he turned out OK. He didn’t mention that his daughters went to schools where the class size was 12. My youngest grandchild attends kindergarten in a Brooklyn public school. He has a class size of 24. Under the mayor’s plan, his teacher would have a class of 48. None of them would get any individual attention. I don’t see this as progress, particularly because the evidence is clear and strong that minority children benefit most when class sizes are reduced below 20 in a classroom.
So which children would be left behind?
We have now had ten years of No Child Left Behind, and we now know that there has been very little change in the gaps between the children of the rich and the children of the poor, between black children and white children, between Hispanic children and white children. Meanwhile our policymakers say we need higher standards, more rigorous standards, and more testing. How exactly will that help children who are struggling to read and do math? Or, in some cases, struggling to read and speak English? Or in the case of children with disabilities, how are they helped by harder tests? This is like saying, “if these children can’t jump over a four-foot bar, let’s lift the bar to six feet and see how they do.” Do you know how they will do? It seems obvious to me.
Just this week, the federal government released the urban district test results and we could see that the gap remained as large as ever. After ten years of NCLB, the children at the bottom were still at the bottom. Those districts where poverty and racial segregation—such as Detroit and Washington, D.C.--are most concentrated had the lowest scores.
But wait, some of the districts tested by the federal government have been actually implementing the market-based reforms advocated by the corporate reformers: New York City, which has had mayoral control since 2002; Washington, D.C., which has had mayoral control since 2007; Chicago, where Arne Duncan launched market-based reforms in 2001; and Milwaukee, which has had vouchers since 1990.
Since the mayor took charge in 2002, New York City has enthusiastically imposed market-style reforms. It has more choice than any other major city—parents and students get to choose among 400 high schools, as well as more than 100 charter schools. All schools are given letter grades based on test scores. NYC spent $56 million on merit pay, then abandoned the program when it showed zero results. After nine years of market-based reforms, however, the achievement gap between black and white students is unchanged. On the federal tests, math scores are up but no more than in districts without market reforms. Eighth grade reading scores have been flat since 2003.
Which children do you think were left behind?
In Washington, D.C., there have been many claims in the media about sensational test score gains, but that’s not what you see on the latest federal tests. In fourth grade reading, the scores have been rising steadily since 2003, but not for all students. The scores of high-income students have gone up but the scores of black students, Hispanic students, and low-income students remain unchanged for the past four years. In eighth grade reading, scores are down for the past four years for black students, Hispanic students, and low-income students. And most importantly, the District of Columbia public school system has the largest achievement gap of any city in the nation between white and black students, a staggering 64 points in 4th grade, compared to an average of 30 points for all urban districts; and an equally staggering 58 points in eighth grade, compared to 28 points for all urban districts.
So whose children were left behind?
In Chicago, where Secretary Duncan’s reform program led to the closing of 100 neighborhood schools, only 18% of the new schools were judged successful by the state of Illinois. On the NAEP for cities, Chicago continues to be one of the lowest performing in the nation. Since 2003, black and Hispanic students have seen no improvement in their reading scores in fourth grade. In eighth grade reading, there have been no gains whatever for black students or low income students since federal testing began in 2002, and no gains for Hispanic students since 2005. According to the latest research, the black-white achievement gap is larger now in Chicago than when the reforms began.
In Milwaukee, after 21 years of vouchers, black students have among the lowest scores of any city tested, ranked at the bottom along with Detroit, Fresno, and Cleveland. Independent research has shown that the black and low-income students in Milwaukee’s voucher schools have the same low scores as the black students in the public schools. Their scores are about the same as those of poor black kids in the Deep South. Vouchers and competition did nothing for the children of Milwaukee. These children were left behind.
And consider this: Tea-party governors know that vouchers do nothing to improve education, but they are pushing them anyway. The Governor of Indiana, Mitch Daniels, pushed through the first statewide voucher program in the nation. Governor Scott Walker in Wisconsin got his conservative legislature to expand the Milwaukee program, to raise the income eligibility cap, so that more children could go to voucher schools, despite the evidence that vouchers don’t improve education. The whole point seems to be to decimate the public sector.
And here is the latest voucher scandal. When Jeb Bush was governor of Florida, he pushed through a voucher program. The state courts struck down one part of the voucher program, the part for students in failing schools. But the courts did not eliminate the McKay Scholarships, which enabled students with disabilities to get vouchers to attend any school. Just this week, the Florida press revealed that some of the deregulated voucher schools are fly-by-night operations, conducted in storefronts, churches, and dingy homes, staffed by administrators and teachers with criminal records. They found students who spent their entire day filling out workbooks or hanging around a gymnasium watching television. One school had a class, described as “business management,” which consisted of shaking cans on street corners. Florida has pumped over $1 billion into this voucher program and Governor Scott wants to expand it to more deregulated schools.
Whose children are left behind by these policies?
From all the developments, experiences, and research of the past decade, here is what I have learned:
First, charter schools have been portrayed as a silver bullet that will raise up every child, especially poor and minority children, but they are not. By their very nature, charters vary. Some are excellent, some get high scores but are boot camps where children are taught to obey without question, some are terrible. On the whole—and study after study shows this—charters don’t get different results from regular public schools. When I was active a decade ago with the Manhattan Institute, which is led by conservative business leaders, it was decided that the best way to market charter schools was to present them as a way to save minority children. This strategy, it was believed, would win liberal support for a very conservative idea. They were right. Liberals could not resist this narrative.
So today we see Wall Street hedge funders and billionaires saying that they are leading the civil rights movement of our time. I have trouble imagining Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., walking arm in arm with billionaires in a crusade to privatize control of public education. Dr. King understood that social movements need a mass base, and that they are not based in Wall Street. He knew that the civil rights movement depended on its moral authority as well as its ability to mobilize poor and working people in coalition with labor unions. He had no desire to privatize. He wanted to make private interests bow to the demands of the public interest. As I watch rightwing politicians doing their best to destroy the public sector unions, I recall that Dr. King was assassinated at the very time that he was fighting to organize the sanitation workers of Memphis. How dare they invoke his legacy to attack public education and public sector workers!
We know—or we should know—that poor and minority children should not have to depend on the good will and beneficence of the private sector to get a good education. The free market works very well in producing goods and services, but it works through competition. In competition, the weakest fall behind. The market does not produce equity. In the free market, there are a few winners and a lot of losers. Some corporate reformers today advocate that schools should be run like a stock portfolio: Keep the winners and sell the losers. Close schools where the students have low scores and open new ones. But this doesn’t help the students who are struggling. No student learns better because his school was closed; closing schools does not reduce the achievement gap. Poor kids get bounced from school to school. No one wants the ones with low scores because they threaten the reputation and survival of the school.
The goal of our education system should not be competition but equality of educational opportunity. There should not be a Race to the Top. What is the Top? Who will get there first? Will it be poor and minority students? Don’t count on it. The Top is already occupied by the children of the 1%.
To be a healthy society, we must improve our public schools. We must provide better schools in every neighborhood. We must help the children who need help. We must treat our teachers and principals and administrators with respect. If they need support, they should get it.
With all the talk about the achievement gap, it is important for you to know that there are two different achievement gaps. One is the gap between the children of the wealthy and the children of the poor. This gap has doubled in the past half century, as poverty and income inequality have increased. The racial achievement gap was actually cut in half in the 1970s and 1980s. Paul Barton of the Educational Testing Service attributed the shrinking of the racial achievement gap to the creation of federal assistance programs for the neediest children, such as Title I; to desegregation; to reduced class sizes; to early childhood education; and to increased economic opportunities for African-American families. He pointed out, however, that the racial achievement gap has remained almost unchanged since the 1980s.
We now know that none of the current carrot-and-stick policies will shrink the gap. We know it because they have been tried for 10 years and they haven’t worked. Structural changes like charters and vouchers overall will not make a difference. Merit pay makes no difference. Judging teachers by test scores demoralizes teachers and will lead to narrowing of the curriculum—so that the districts where children have the lowest scores will have more time for test preparation and less time for the arts, less time for history or civics, less time for science, less time for physical education. The children who need a great education the most will get the least.
And many more children will be left behind.
The entire current reform movement rests on a fanatical belief in standardized testing. Yet testing experts warn us that the tests should be used for diagnostic purposes, not to fire teachers and close schools. The basic rule of testing is that a test should be used only for the purpose for which it was designed. A test of fifth grade reading tests whether students can read at a fifth grade level; it is not a test of teacher quality. Testing experts warn that tests are subject to statistical error, measurement error, and human error. Sometimes the answer is wrong. Sometimes the question is wrong. Sometimes a thoughtful child will pick the wrong answer because it sounds plausible.
One thing we know for certain about standardized testing. Poor and minority kids consistently get lower test scores than white and privileged kids. So why would we make testing the most important measure of education? Why would we take the technology that is most discouraging to children in the bottom half and then insist that it matters more than anything else? Why would we give more credibility to standardized tests than to teachers’ and parents’ judgments about children’s potential?
In September, I visited Finland and I want to share with you what this tiny nation has accomplished. It regularly scores at the top of international tests in reading, mathematics, and science. It has the least variance from school to school, meaning that almost every school is a good school. Students in Finland never take a standardized test until they complete high school. Teachers in Finland are required to have a master’s degree. Teaching is a highly respected profession. Parents trust teachers. Teachers have autonomy to exercise professionalism.
Every child has regular medical checkups and healthcare, at no cost. Schools have health clinics. Whereas more than 20% of our children live in poverty, less than 4% of Finnish children do. Higher education is tuition-free.
Finland has no charter schools, no vouchers, no merit pay, no standardized testing. Instead, every teacher is trained to take care of the needs of individual children. If children are having learning problems, there are specialists and social workers in every school to take care of them early and provide whatever assistance is needed. Nearly half of all Finnish students get extra attention and services in the early years of schooling.
Finland has no tracking. All children get the education and support they need to succeed in school. Finland does not have a longer school day or a longer school year. Finnish schools emphasize creativity, ingenuity, problem-solving, the arts, projects, activities, physical education, and risk-taking.
By the way, Finnish teachers and principals belong to the same union. It doesn’t seem to be a problem.
So what can we do? First, we should speak out when politicians say “there is no more money.” There is money to do what we want to do. There is money to fight wars in the Middle East. There is enough money to give big corporate cuts. There is enough money for 1% of this nation to live lives of splendor. Why is there not enough money to provide the basic public services that every child needs?
- Every pregnant woman should have good pre-natal care and nutrition so that her child is born healthy. One of three children born to women who do not get good prenatal care will have disabilities that are preventable. That will cost society far more than providing these women with prenatal care.
- Every child should have the medical attention and nutrition that they need to grow up healthy.
- Every child should have high-quality early childhood education.
- Every school should have experienced teachers who are prepared to help all children learn.
- Every teacher should have at least a masters degree.
- Every principal should be a master teacher, not a recruit from industry, the military, or the sports world.
- Every superintendent should be an experienced educator who understand teaching and learning and the needs of children.
- Every school should have a health clinic.
- Schools should collaborate with parents, the local community, civic leaders, and local business leaders to support the needs of children.
- Every school should have a full and balanced curriculum, with the arts, sciences, history, civics, geography, mathematics, foreign languages, and physical education.
- Every child should have time and space to play.
- We must stop investing in testing, accountability, and consultants and start investing in children.
Do we want to be a decent society or a decadent society? Do we want to nurture, protect and inspire all of our children? Do we want children who are leaders or followers? Do we want to make sure that this generation of young people is prepared to sustain our democracy? Do we want citizens prepared to ask questions or just to answer questions posed by authorities?
We must stop the trash talk about our public schools and dedicate ourselves to making every one of them a school that is just right for all our children. Yes, it will cost more, but ignorance and neglect are much more expensive.
Surely the greatest nation in the world can mobilize the will to do what is right for the children. It won’t be easy, it won’t be cheap, and it won’t be fast. Doing the right thing never is. The only simple part is to recognize that what we are doing now is not working and will never work. What we need is a vision of a good education for every child. We should start now. Today.
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98 Comments so far
Show AllYou are not forgiven. The aim of NCLB was always the same - to siphon money out of public education budgets and into private pockets. The result and side effects were predictable from the beginning. Your advocacy has done lasting harm and you are not forgiven.
"Your advocacy has done lasting harm and you are not forgiven."
ShadowDancer, who sometimes posts on commondreams, makes a point of ending his comments with the reminder that "it's always better to forgive," and I have seen the wisdom of this in my own life.
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. said, "When our days become dreary with low-hovering clouds of despair, and when our nights become darker than a thousand midnights, let us remember that there is a creative force in this universe, working to pull down the gigantic mountains of evil, a power that is able to make a way out of no way and transform dark yesterdays into bright tomorrows."
Maybe it is that "creative force in this universe" that has opened Ms. Ravich's eyes. Ms. Ravich has not only confessed that she was wrong about NCLB, but she has been working tirelessly ever since to sound the alarm about how destructive NCLB is. Anyone who turns away from the dark side should be welcomed back with rejoicing, not turned away with scorn.
Peace.
Bit it's an unending cycle for those still entrenched. Learn lesson. Forget lesson. Learn lesson. Forget lesson. Over and over and over in Merka. I mean how many decades of this should we tolerate?
Then, by the same logic, you should not "forgive" Daniel Ellsberg, John Perkins, Ray McGovern, Scott Ritter, Scott Olsen, or Iraq Veterans Against the War (etc) either.
Thank you Tom for pointing out the dangers of the guilt complex. I appreciate your understanding and enjoy reading your comments even when I may have disagreements.
I know a little bit more about Daniel Ellsberg since he is my contemporary. He advised Robert McNamara developing the initial propaganda lead-up to the Vietnam War. He worked at the RAND Corporation - not forgiven. I know less about Perkins, McGovern, and Ritter but I am inclined toward not forgiven. They all had long careers on the inside. Scott Olsen, Iraq Veterans Against the War and may I add Vietnam Veterans Against the War - forgiven.
Wally, if you really mean what you posted, you're missing quite a lot, including the power of forgiveness. Consider the following persons: because each one served as a consumate insider, by their own conversion to a better way, we're privileged to learn how The Dark Side operates!
For instance, there's the exposures made by Smedley Butler and James Perkins about what their service in the military accounted for. They make clear that the Armed Forces generally preserve the "right" of industry to profit from resources held in a foreign land.
There's Wendell Potter who left the Insurance Industry to expose the awful shenanigans that go on there, all in the interest of keeping sick (i.e. expensive) people off the eligible medical care lists.
I can't recall the name of the fellow in the CIA who wanted to stop the illegal wiretaps before they were retroactively rendered legal... he paid the price as whistle-blower. Similarly, Bradley Manning and Julian Assange exposed what passes for diplomacy amid circles of international leadership. Disgusting insider deals along with the cowardly cover-ups of naked acts of murder (passed off as accidents and "mistakes") have been revealed.
Ray McGovern, undestanding how the CIA works, is in a better position to challenge it than are many lay persons.
It's a WONDERFUL thing when someone experiences a transformation based on Truth and their own moral repugnance to systems and protocols that are under use. Were these individual not brave or intelligent enough to share what they do, the insider knowledge necessary for exposing the depravity of The Beast would be missing!
That is a loss our society cannot afford. So I'd ask that you go a bit more gentle into your call for castigation.
The whole forgiveness-is-powerful talk seems dated. I'll go with the Anonymous slogan:
We are Anonymous. We are Legion. We do not forgive. We do not forget. Expect us.
Maybe I would have been more open to your argument, however, if you hadn't included Julian Assange. An insider? When and where? What sort of conversion or transformation did he undergo? What in the world are you talking about?
She is forgiven by me. Even when she was a conservative, in the pre-NCLB days, she advocated for a rich curriculum. She was for child development. She was always child centered rather than political or engaged in faddish ideology.
Now she has seen that neo-conservative, content-empty and profit driven approaches to education are harmful, she has had the courage to admit past mistakes. What more can you expect from people? Most of us have seen some error in things we have done, and have attempted to correct them. It is hard to live an entire life without making any mistakes, especially when we are trying difficult things.
Her current list of the basics that schools should have is good and down to earth. It is way more than most public schools have. Her analysis of the current system reflects reality. She clearly states that the funds are available. I believe that most parents, teachers and students could unite around Ravich's proposals, and they would be worth fighting for.
Apparently Ms Ravitch got 'fooled' by the classic 'bait & switch' scam just as too many so-called 'liberals' allowed these corp non-educator 'Deformers' to 'fool' them by playing the 'Race-Card' [every-time I hear a poly-trickster {IE: Obama} talk about bi-partisanship & public-private-partnerships - I CRINGE - These guys are expert marketeers & masters of the 'Ole Trojan Horse' ploy- 'Beware of Greeks Bearing Gifts']- as if most of these white corp elites really care about the lives of Black & Brown school-kids & their families! So now Ms Ravitch sees that Bush Jrs' NCLB was a scam [but what did you expect from a guy who hi-jacked his way into the White-House Twice & LIED to the World about 'Saddam having WMD's & working w Al-Qaeda on 9-11] - there was no TX Education 'miracle' just as the hype about great improvement in NYC's schools under corp-billionaire Bloomberg has proven FALSE [the hypocrisy of guys like Bloomberg, Obama, & Duncan who want to double class-size & teacher work-load while sending their children to exclusive private schools]! Should Bloomberg fire 1/2 of NYC teachers what will likely happen is double the trouble without the remaining teachers getting double the pay - leading to double the rate of teachers leaving the profession- which might be great for corp deformers ala Bloomberg to exploit- but would be a DISASTER for NYC School Kids! The reason these phony corp education reformers [deformers] pushed standardized testing & charters was always to dismantle teachers' union [part & parcel of the corp elites wholesale assault on workers rights] & leverage a corp take-over of public schools & roll-in $BIG at public expense!
It would have been better had Ms Ravitch not fell for this scam in the first place -but- Better Late Than Never. AND- Make no mistake about it, the US' Public Education System needs improvement & has failed too many Black, Brown & poor school kids - but this phony corp-elite non-educator NCLB / RTTT Deform ain't the way to achieve it! Plus- Thinking that improving inner-city schools without reversing the devastation of inner-city communities & families - ain't gonna work either!
I have some recommendations for actual school reform based on class-room experience:
Implement formal school {course} programs dealing w the topics of Morals, Ethics & Proper Respect.
- Class sizes of more than 12 -15 students should have 2 trained / screened / authorized adults [the main teacher -&- a sub, trainee, parent teacher's aid, hall monitor, etc] - If 25 – 30 there should be 3 such adults, etc [though classes w over 25 -30 students should be avoided as much as possible].
- For grades 7 – 12 [possibly even 5 – 12]- should have primarily separate the classes for girls & boys. Separate schools are likely infeasible - but separate classes for boys & girls in this age-range could exist on separate floors &/or wings [sections] of school buildings. Likely Exceptions: Lunch, Assembly, Library, Music, Art. – For the Boys’ classes- at least one of the assigned adults [preferably the main teacher] would be a man; for the girls’ classes- at least one of the assigned adults [preferably the main teacher] would be a woman [which shouldn’t be a problem since the teaching profession is currently saturated w women].
- In Sr & Jr high-school, instead of students rotating between classes of different subjects, the teachers of those subjects should rotate [w one of the assigned adults staying w that particular class continually thru the day]. Likely Exceptions: Phys Ed [IE: Gym], Science/Computer Labs & trade-craft shops, Library, Music/Arts, Lunch.
- Bring Phys Ed back into schools – Kick junk food & pop vending machines out schools. This situation has help exacerbate the obesity epidemic amongst school kids.
- Lunch periods should be more than the standard 20min allotted. All regular jobs have at least 30min & often up to 1hr allotted for lunch. Most school periods last 40-45mins & even up to 1hr. So why is only 20min allotted for school lunch – 5-10min of which is used going back & forth to the cafeteria & waiting to be served??? Lunch periods should be at least 30min & even the 40-45min of the standard class period- to allow students to enjoy their meal without having to gulp it down. [NOTE: The whole lunch routine is regimented like a military &/or prison mess-hall. Also many of the foods in the schools are rejects from the market place – which are then ‘dumped’ on schools. And the milk lobby has used its political clout to influence the Dept of ED to mandate milk in schools, even though many/most Black & Brown children have some degree lactose intolerance.]
- Schools should have on staff at least 1 bona-fide nutritionist to regular check / test / review school cafeteria menus, & snack items served in school vending machines for appropriate nutritional value, content, & balance.
- Schools gardens [primarily food rather than flower – organic as much as possible] should be encouraged in both urban & rural schools [this will help urban students learn how to grow food]. This could be implemented as part of the natural sciences curriculum &/or as a separate program.
- Bring trade skill courses back to high-schools. All knowledge isn’t theoretical book knowledge. Students should understand the importance of being able to build / make &/or do practical things w their hands.
- Stop over-emphasizing standardized testing. Put them in proper perspective. This has too often led to ‘teaching to the test’ instead of teaching useful knowledge & concepts. Plus these tests have been used as a whipping tool against teachers & inner-city public schools.
- Heads of the major school districts should be educational professionals w proper educator credentials & actual teaching experience. Those w business back-grounds can play appropriate roles in more appropriate positions.
- Increased appropriate & meaningful parental involvement- Beyond PTAs & schools notices to parents. IE: With proper training & screening parents might take on semi-volunteer positions as- parent-teacher aids, hall monitors, in after-school programs for tutoring & life mentoring, lunch-room staff aids, maintenance staff aids- w appropriate compensation. [This should have been implemented during Pres Clinton’s so-called Welfare ‘Reform’- IE: Properly trained & screened so-called ‘welfare’ mothers could have been directed toward Schools as an alternative to working at McDonalds for work-fare programs. This also could have helped w the day-care problem faced by many work-fare mothers – because most schools either have or could easily implement preschool / day-care programs.]
Life is change, how it differs from the rocks.
-- Jefferson Airplane
California Community Colleges are now fighting the same "market forces" that took over k-12. Help us to fight this corporate takeover. http;//nosstf.blogspot.com
First they came for the elementary and middle schools, then they came for the community colleges...
The rhetoric is the same. The results will be the same.
Thank you, Diane Ravitch, for laying it all out for us so clearly, and thanks also for your tireless efforts to open our eyes to the NCLB scam.
It takes a lot of courage to admit that you were so wrong about NCLB, and great integrity to work as hard as you have since at trying to wake us up to the ongoing destruction of our public schools, and the harm we are doing to our children under NCLB.
This article by Diane Ravitch comes on the heels of numerous editorials, articles and op-eds in the Los Angeles Times that essentially blame our K-12 teachers for everything that is wrong with our schools. The editors of that newspaper seem to be on a crusade to use student test scores as a way of publicly humiliating teachers, regardless of the many extenuating factors that influence student performances on these standardized tests. To the editors of the LA Times and other media, educational reform is a simple black/white issue. According to them, the public wants better schools, and intransigent teachers and their unions are standing in the way of needed reforms. I wrote a piece recently challenging this simplistic thinking and submitted it to the LA Times. They declined to publish it. Since it addresses many of the issues Ravitch addresses in her article, I will post an abbreviated version of the op-ed below:
Unstable Families Impact Schools
Many educational reformers mistakenly assume that all American families share the same goals and provide similar opportunities for our nation’s children. From this assumption, the writers frame the issue of educational reform in the context of “intransigent teachers” versus a “public” that wants better schools. This logic would be fine if all families were equally committed to providing stable homes and supportive learning environments for their children. The reality is that the “public” is comprised of many diverse families, some of which provide significant educational support for their children. Others, unfortunately, create many obstacles for their children to overcome if they are to learn.
I grew up in a dysfunctional home where alcoholism and domestic violence were daily occurrences. My stepfather put my mother in the hospital on several occasions. I often stayed awake at night to protect my sisters should he decide to come upstairs. At school, I was so exhausted I slept during study halls, recesses, lunch breaks, and sometimes in class. I developed the reputation of being a classic “underachiever” because my aptitude test scores were high, but I did little homework. I was too busy dealing with the problems in our home.
I knew three boys in my class who also struggled with domestic violence. Their fathers often beat them. One came over to our house late at night to avoid the beatings. When he saw that our home had similar issues, he went somewhere else to sleep.
Years later, at a reunion, other classmates revealed what their lives had been like in high school. One classmate I thought came from a “good home” said that she was the victim of domestic violence throughout her teenage years. Other classmates revealed problems in their homes ranging from parental infidelity to drugs and alcoholism.
I don’t know how many similar stories there were in our graduating class. I only know that many of us who survived our teenage years did so because our teachers and schools provided us with a lifeline. Our schools were the caring, stable homes we did not have. Once I left home, I found that I enjoyed learning. I earned two graduate degrees and enjoyed a successful professional career.
My sisters eventually joined with other volunteers to create a statewide organization to support battered women and abused children. The statistics are a stark reminder of how many children are affected by domestic violence. According to the U. S. Department of Justice, “Of the nearly 32.2 million total victims of violence between 1998 and 2002, 11% were victims of family violence.” This does not account for “unreported” cases of domestic violence, which undoubtedly exceed “reported” cases.
Domestic violence is not the only factor that impacts student learning. There are many other obstacles. Divorce: the 2000 U. S. Census reported that more than 60 percent of all American children were from divorced homes. Alcohol and Drugs: the American Medical Association reported in 2004 that 72 percent of American homes have at least one member with an addiction. Hunger: Share Our Strength reported that “Nearly one in five children in America can’t count on having enough to eat.” Poverty: The National Poverty Center recently reported that “Children represent a disproportionate share of the poor in the United States; they are 24 percent of the total population, but 36 percent of the poor population.”
Today, when I hear politicians and educational reformers talk about penalizing and rewarding teachers and schools based on student performance, I feel they are increasingly blind to what really goes on in our nation’s homes. Recent educational reforms are often based on the false assumption that all students have stable homes. Unfortunately, many do not! Uninterrupted study time is frequently nonexistent. These students live in disruptive, even dangerous environments. A good night’s rest, free of fear, is a luxury—not a given.
Most recent school reforms penalize rather than encourage students from these backgrounds. The reforms also reduce teachers to robotic test-preparers, when they are often the only adults many students can turn to for support.
When we build stronger families and communities, we build better schools. When we base educational reform on the myth that all families are equally supportive of their children’s educations, we risk losing our K-12 teachers and the students who count on them to fill the void created by unstable homes.
This is a great analysis, Old Guy.
May I add to your listings the fact that so many children come from families that might not be violent or addicted, but are in families with parents who--for lack of a better description---are simply ignorant themselves, and therefore do not know what to do to help their children. Or they lack the resources that could contribute to their children's success in school.
In the high poverty school where I volunteer, one of the biggest hurdles is language. 52% of the students are Latino, and many parents speak no English, and even large numbers of the children struggle with understanding English. There are not enough resources in the district to provide the ESL and translating help that is really needed. And then the state wonders why test scores are so low. (Or perhaps they know, but secretly don't care so as to advance their regressive, profit-motivated agenda.)
And don't get me started on charter schools. I volunteered in one whose scores are still 801 out of 812 high schools in the state, and the place remains open to this day. The public schools around it score higher.
Many parents themselves are still children in terms of educational attainment, so how can we expect them to be that helpful to their children at home? Most of the parents in my school are clueless, although they love their children very much. It is the result of their having grown up in an uncaring society that cast them aside, and now their own children are being treated the same way. The teachers care very much in my experience. But there is only so much teachers can do when children's needs are so great and varied from child to child. The job is exhausting, especially in low and lower-income schools.
Our society should not be divided by "good" neighborhoods and "bad" neighborhoods. Our housing policies must change before we can truly change the results in our schools. That's a whole other issue, but so closely related to why there are "successful" schools and "failing" schools.
Wonderful post, Old Guy. I'd like to add to it. First, in addition to domestic violence (which is often the way men let out their frustration for financial problems), we should mention what all sorts of statistics reveal: that costs of living have been rising while wages have stood still; and that's IF families have jobs. Therefore, the focus on teachers and "failing" public schools is a typical right wing diversion away from the key matter that's really setting all the problems into motion: that money is being engineered to ONLY nourish the wealthy, and everyone else is left to struggle more. We've seen the statistics about the 1% owning half the nation's assets or more.
Second, just note the way the MSM covers the OWS movement? There's every effort to paint its brave, principled participants as wayward youth with poor hygiene, or those too lazy to get jobs.
It's critically important to think of our media as embedded. 98% of the time it touts state-sponsored propaganda, and this propaganda is designed to replace all things public with private ownership. "Heckuva job, Brownie" may as well become its mantra!
Ms. Ravitch provides excellent data that shows how all the charter schools produce zilch because the reasons why children under-perform involve many causes, and being at the bottom of the financial pyramid is the most significant one of them all... but it's also the 3rd rail that must never be openly discussed by the MSM. Much easier to blame those lazy parents, or poor teachers, or unmotivated students!
The same kind of CRAP is being used to privatize our post office, and God knows what else. Heck, at the rate they're going, the U.S. president will soon be a blackwater private employee!
"I only know that many of us who survived our teenage years did so because our teachers and schools provided us with a lifeline. " Good post, old guy.
Hey Old Guy:
It’s a good thing that schools can offer havens for abused kids, but my experience shows a flipside that is not so unusual. Frankly, as the perennial new kid, I was abused by my peers throughout many years of school, and the teachers and guidance counselors did nothing but exacerbate the problem. So, although I realize that school is a safe haven for many students, this reality doesn’t resonate with me. I dreaded going to school for most of my time there. Violence against me went unnoticed, and when I tried to say something, I was told to not be a tattletale, so the fact that I was continually smashed onto walls passed unnoticed.
The worst example was the beginning of 7th grade, when some fellow students thought it would be fun to leave a letter on the floor in a study hall room, reputedly written and signed by me, that I wanted to have sex with everyone. I was twelve.
The guidance counselors, in their idiocy, thought that the answer to this was to have me tell on those who had written the note. Even at twelve, I could see it was a lose/lose situation: they wanted proof, which I could not possibly provide, so to comply with their demand would have to make an unprovable, unactionable allegation, with no recourse. I refused to comply, understanding the ramifications of being a snitch, and got slammed against lockers much more after that, although none of the “counselors” seemed to notice.
Hey, though, I learned a lot, much more than I ever learned in their classes.
This is, of course, anecdotal information. For every story you can tell, as heartfelt and true as it may be, there’s a counter story, such as yours.
My home life was no cakewalk either, but what is in question here is who should raise the child. My vote is against the state.
There were so many FINE points made by Ms. Ravitch in this article. I have neither the time, nor energy to point them out to you. EVERY one of them explains why it would be a travesty to further arm the right in its wish (and interest) to privatize education in this country. You DID go on record recently (in this forum) stating that you'd vote for Ron Paul (or would consider doing so). Several of your stated opinions reflect, shall we say, a high "tolerance" for libertarian "values." The libertarian is so locked into his or her own PERSONAL experiences that they generally miss the forest for the trees. Libertarians want to remove restrictions from business, and obliterate pesky things like regulations and the EPA. They are NOTORIOUSLY short sighted.
What do you think would happen to this nation if education becomes further gutted? Shall we slide with ease into the abyss and accept 3rd world status? Just about every comment you make is detrimental to the PREMISE and PRACTICE of public education.
I doubt if most people found their teen years any cake walk. The pecking order that most of us endured is one that's extracted from a Dominator Culture. Even the pretty people get turned on when it's convenient. I've seen bullying, and often risked my own safety in standing up for the victim du jour. So while it's unfortunate that you had this experience in your youth, I'd URGE you to get beyond it... and reconsider the points made in this exceptionally clear thesis.
I had a similar debate with Rfloh about pornography. At the time, Rfloh's contention was that s/he likes it. Again, here we have an individual preference standing in support of something which has become vile and damaging to half the population. Which is the greater good? I've argued that every sane and wise arbiter of law must find a good balance between the greater good (or that which protects the fabric of society) and the rights and privileges of the individual. Beyond individual preference, we really need to take in the wide angle view of what is best for the nation. Gutting public education clearly is not!
Every time you argue AGAINST public education you add weight to the arguments of the right, and those intent upon tearing down the public school system. I am ALL for improvements; and as I've related, the tone of the times factors substantially into what's considered relevant to learning (in substance and style) at any given juncture.
Given the wide financial gaps on view in this nation, taking the last block away from those who need schools to advance the chance to learn is cruel. Your idea that well-educated parents can sit around and home-school is, at best, a "solution" for a very small percentage. It will do nothing in the way of exposing children to those of other ethnic backgrounds, and nothing to liberate a child from what may be a very toxic home environment. It just blows my mind that you can continually argue for this position due to your PERSONAL disappointment with education and its current curricula, or because YOU were bullied as a child. If this isn't the height of ego-centric thinking, I don't know would better qualify. Lest you're here in the forum to purposely plant a right wing anti-public ed message. Argue to IMPROVE public education instead of laying ideological logs on the fire that would burn the whole system down... as if there's money in place to replace these halls of learning once they fall into the hands of the privateers.
"I had a similar debate with Rfloh about pornography. At the time, Rfloh's contention was that s/he likes it. Again, here we have an individual preference standing in support of something which has become vile and damaging to half the population. Which is the greater good? I've argued that every sane and wise arbiter of law must find a good balance between the greater good (or that which protects the fabric of society) and the rights and privileges of the individual. Beyond individual preference, we really need to take in the wide angle view of what is best for the nation. Gutting public education clearly is not!"
Spare me the crap. I have clearly stated several times that I have little interest in porn. Every time I get into a debate with you about porn, I have stated I have little interest in it. It does nothing for me. The same with other sex work.
Let me repeat for you:
I do NOT like it
Once again.
I DO NOT LIKE IT.
For the 3rd time:
I DO NOT LIKE IT.
The problem with you, is that you need to turn every argument into something personal. Either someone has to agree with you, and sing your hosannas, or it immediately becomes personal. Your viewpoints are entirely based on your personal likes or dislikes of something. My support for porn has NOTHING to do with my personal preference for it or against it. Similarly, my support for the legalisation of marijuana has nothing to do with my personal ambivalence towards marijuna ( I personally do not smoke it, and would not smoke it, having tried it before).
The contention that porn is damaging to half the population is an argument that you, and those who want feel a need to ban it, often make, but cannot substantiate, cannot show evidence for. My view on banning porn, or marijuana, is that the benefits for such a ban need to be compelling, need to be shown by those who want such a ban to be compelling.
"So while it's unfortunate that you had this experience in your youth, I'd URGE you to get beyond it" What the hell makes you assume that I haven't gotten beyond it?
Quit bitching that I’m attacking you, as you did the other day and have on other occasions. Saturday you called me a “repressed, one-dimensional Libertarian clone.” Do I say such nasty things about you? No I don’t. I did say that your insistence that we must all turn our children over to the state to be educated strikes me as fascist, that’s true. You write ridiculous posts psychoanalyzing me and accusing me of being a saboteur with right wing, fundamentalist ideas that I am, apparently, insidiously infecting this site with, and then whine about how I’m trying to tear down your credibility. You even attack me for not making comments when you think I should. You’ve suggested that my antipsychiatry stance is a ruse to get people to admit that they take antidepressants (to what evil end I’m not sure), told me I should “up my meds,” and suggested that I’m not really a teacher, among all manner of bullshit. Constantly attacking me and then whining when I defend myself is bad form.
You whine that so many women on this site refuse your “sisterhood.” Maybe you should think that through.
You seem to think my ideas are dangerous to the progressive cause. I think people should be trusted to be able to think for themselves. If my ideas are truly right wing and fundamentalist, people can figure that out for themselves—they don’t need you to protect them. Yet you seem to think most people are incapable of thinking for themselves, and are constantly lauding yourself for donating your time to educating people here on CD (and if we want more of your secret wisdom we can buy your books). Why don’t you do what I’ve suggested—post a list of things one must believe in order to be a “true progressive.” You haven’t delivered, probably because it would seem sorta like that list the Teabaggers made that they insisted all Republicans should hold to.
You keep bringing up the fact that I once said I’d vote for Ron Paul over Obama. What I’ve said is pretty clear: he’d never be elected, and if by some miracle he was, he’d be shot in the head. That I agree with some of his positions—like we should end the endless illegal invasions and stop using the military for profiteering, murder, and terror, and expose the Fed for what it is—makes me as libertarian as, well, Nader. Libertarians have some good ideas and some really bad ones. So do progressives who can’t see what’s in front of their faces because their ideas are rigid. I don’t know where you think you’re living. I think I’m living in a fascist-corporatist state. You seem to agree but then think that progressives can bend such a state to their will. Silly thought, that.
You’re really creepy. Talking to you is like talking to a goat.
Ah here comes the idiotic homeschooling argument again.
"Frankly, as the perennial new kid, I was abused by my peers throughout many years of school, and the teachers and guidance counselors did nothing but exacerbate the problem. So, although I realize that school is a safe haven for many students, this reality doesn’t resonate with me. I dreaded going to school for most of my time there. Violence against me went unnoticed, and when I tried to say something, I was told to not be a tattletale, so the fact that I was continually smashed onto walls passed unnoticed.
The worst example was the beginning of 7th grade, when some fellow students thought it would be fun to leave a letter on the floor in a study hall room, reputedly written and signed by me, that I wanted to have sex with everyone. I was twelve. "
Well, yes, bullying happens. It isn't public systematic schooling that causes the bullying, it is groups of kids / teens. Do you propose that kids be locked up at home, and have no interaction with other kids?
"This is, of course, anecdotal information. For every story you can tell, as heartfelt and true as it may be, there’s a counter story, such as yours. "
Well yes, which is what systematic collection of data, then systematic analysis of that data is for.
"My home life was no cakewalk either, but what is in question here is who should raise the child. My vote is against the state."
And my vote is against delusional home schoolers.
Fine. So I should tell that woman who lives down the street that she shouldn't homeschool her kids? She's no expert, with only a high school education, but she did know that her son was being wasted by the schools, who had decided that he didn't write fast enough so needed a scribe and couldn't do math so should use a calculator. He was coming home saying he was stupid and acting out, and the school thought he needed Ritalin. So she took him out of school, and a year later, in fifth grade, he tested proficient in English and accelerated in math and science. But I should tell her that she's delusional and the schools had the right idea.
Anyone who knows homeschoolers know that their children are not isolated. Homeschoolers develop networks and the kids develop friendships, and as the woman down the street tells me, they don't form cliques or beat each other up like they do in school. Being forced into sitting around all day with people of the same age group doing boring, pointless things on demand and being constantly rated and berated does something to children's behavior, and it's not pretty.
"Fine. So I should tell that woman who lives down the street that she shouldn't homeschool her kids?"
Yes.
"She's no expert, with only a high school education, "
That is why. She is not qualified. That is reality.
"but she did know that her son was being wasted by the schools, who had decided that he didn't write fast enough so needed a scribe and couldn't do math so should use a calculato"
So what? The world changes. Being able to write well, ie letters on paper, is much less important than it was 100, 50, or even 30 years ago. Similarly arithmetic. Note, arithmetic is only one part, one very small part of math. Can she teach her son trigonometry? Algebra? Calculus? If not, then yes, she is delusional.
And even if she is some great teacher, and is capable of teaching her son to a high level, why do you think she proves that anyone and everyone with a high school cert is capable of teaching?
"nyone who knows homeschoolers know that their children are not isolated. Homeschoolers develop networks and the kids develop friendships, and as the woman down the street tells me, they don't form cliques or beat each other up like they do in schoo"
Well yes. Again, so what? Nothing you say here is an argument for homeschooling on a large scale. Yes, homeschooling works for a small minority of motivated parents, who have the time to homeschool their kids. So what? That doesn't mean that it will work for the majority of parents and kids.
"Being forced into sitting around all day with people of the same age group doing boring, pointless things on demand and being constantly rated and berated does something to children's behavior, and it's not pretty."
Yeah of course. Because if every parent were homeschooling their kids, kids would not spend their time bored, believing that they are doing pointless things. And they won't get berated. Nope. Do you even remember your childhood? When you were a teen? You enjoyed hanging around with your parents as a teen, instead of other people your age group?
Well then just march right over to all those homeschoolers' houses and tell them to turn their kids over to the state. Those kids need to accept their "disability" status, take their Ritalin, and get on with the progressive movement, no matter how they may be hurt as individuals! What do those parents think--that they should be able to raise their own children? Experts need to be in charge!
I've had enough of the unsympathetic character of libertarians, but the hive mentality of progressives can be worse. Read 1984 VERY CAREFULLY.
"Well then just march right over to all those homeschoolers' houses and tell them to turn their kids over to the state. "
No. I don't really care. If those homeschoolers want to limit themselves by homeschooling, be my guest. Go ahead.
"Those kids need to accept their "disability" status, take their Ritalin, and get on with the progressive movement, no matter how they may be hurt as individuals! What do those parents think--that they should be able to raise their own children?"
*yawn*. That pathetic strawman is the best you can come up with?
"Experts need to be in charge!"
Sure, and when those kiddies get sick, the parents know best eh?
"I've had enough of the unsympathetic character of libertarians, but the hive mentality of progressives can be worse. Read 1984 VERY CAREFULLY."
*yawn* What you regurgitating here, is typical of the arguments that libertarians have regurgitated endlessly. I've read those arguments many many times. Libertarians are the one group with the greatest hive mentality. Every single libertarian makes the same arguments, using the same words, the same rhetorical stunts. On every issue. So, pot kettle.
"No. I don't really care. If those homeschoolers want to limit themselves by homeschooling, be my guest. Go ahead."
Good. Then shut up. Aren't you the one with the wife who teaches in a public school?
"Good. Then shut up."
Do you own this site?
"Aren't you the one with the wife who teaches in a public school?"
Nope.
"Those kids need to accept their "disability" status, take their Ritalin, and get on with the progressive movement, no matter how they may be hurt as individuals! What do those parents think--that they should be able to raise their own children?"
"*yawn*. That pathetic strawman is the best you can come up with?"
The physical, intellectual, and mental health of the children is a strawman? Gosh, no wonder I'm so confused. I thought it was supposed to be the main point.
"The physical, intellectual, and mental health of the children is a strawman? Gosh, no wonder I'm so confused. I thought it was supposed to be the main point." -- Elizabeth H.
I agree, Elizabeth, I thought/think the physical, intellectual and mental health of the children was/is the main point!
I used to share a misconception about the goals of homeschooling parents, and thought, at one time, that they were all fundamentalist Christians. However, I was wrong. Quite a few years ago, I began to read about schools/principals and teachers insisting to parents of children that their children needed Ritalin in order to attend, or return to, school. Quite honestly, I was horrified to discover the prevalence of prescription drugs, all prescribed by "good" doctors, amongst the children who live in this country. Parents, for the most part, be damned!
Like you, Elizabeth, I have read quite a few books on the subject of prescription drugs, and also on the subject of education. In addition, I have my own experiences with the public school system (my own experiences and the experiences of my two sons) and the psychology/psychiatry industries (my mother was a prescription drug addict for a few years which is NO different that being a street drug addict). These are only two of the systems in this country that are completely broken, and these two systems are connected directly to other systems that are also broken. If anyone is still deluding themselves that this country, and our elected officials, along with those who are appointed, really care about the kids, all kids who live in this country, guess again -- some do care, that's true, but like everything else in this country, it's about the bottom line and making money. Kids, like all of us so-called consumers as adults, are just one more commodity in the eyes of power.
"I used to share a misconception about the goals of homeschooling parents, and thought, at one time, that they were all fundamentalist Christians. However, I was wrong. Quite a few years ago, I began to read about schools/principals and teachers insisting to parents of children that their children needed Ritalin in order to attend, or return to, school. Quite honestly, I was horrified to discover the prevalence of prescription drugs, all prescribed by "good" doctors, amongst the children who live in this country. Parents, for the most part, be damned! "
Whether they are fundie Christians, or left wingers is irrelevant. Completely utterly irrelevant. I would still disagree with home schooling even if every single home schooling parent was a leftie socialist.
With the way "public education" in the USA has been battered to DEATH by the far right, one can never know the potential of home schooling progressive parents to help fight back and possibly bring public education in the USA to life. If public education in the USA were like Finland, students would be allowed to self-develop and teachers and unions would not be under the knife. It is a sad reality that with the crushing of teachers' unions and massive foreclosures of public schools, today's children will be overcrowded and given less attention or real education that children from homeschool could come out to be better. It would be helpful if public schools and left-leaning homeschooling parents could get together and communicate even as the corrupt pols continue to axe funding for whatever is left of public education while secretly funding religious and/or pro-corporatist private schools that most parents cannot afford.
Yes, it is a strawman, since no one here made that argument.
Do you even know what the "term strawman means? I'm not surprised that you're so confused.
"I've had enough of the unsympathetic character of libertarians, but the hive mentality of progressives can be worse."
This is why I have come to give up not only political party labels but also ideological labels. Seeing how dishonest and disingenuous the Obamabots are in soiling the word "progressive", they will turn a blind eye while their criminal leaders shamelessly crush whatever is left of "public education" and call that "progress". I do not believe that I can be a good homeschooling parent should I ever have children; however, I appreciate your posts on homeschooling and know from your earlier posts that you would support public education were it like the 1970s type. Either we will succeed in bringing back quality driven public education or it will have to come from scratch.
The biggest obstacle to real progress is anyone who dishonestly defends the status quo and pretends that all is alive and well as if this were the 1960s-70s. Their denial mode is a mystery and I have no idea on what they expect to get out of being arrogant and snobbish about it. I blame them for enabling "1984".
"reward and punish teachers and schools" --same goes for students!
I agree with petrkrop--and Ravitch knows whereof she speaks.
The intelligence that is missing in so much public dialogue can be traced to lack of education. Rote learning does not promote the ability to evaluate events and relationships, much less constructive use of our minds. Generally speaking, education continues to be stultifying and rigidly constructed with little opportunity for creativity or engaging activities, much less opportunities to learn from failure and real success (other than passing a test). After all, the 1% doesn't really want citizens to think for themselves.
"After all, the 1% doesn't really want citizens to think for themselves." -- Janis Rose
Exactly!
In 1957, William H. Whyte evinced in his landmark book, The Organization Man, that personality tests were developed to weed out independent thinkers. Today, we recognize the results of those policies and practices.
The other night, here in NYC, I went to hear Diane Ravitch speak. She was very inspiring and she definitely "knows whereof she speaks." I agree! I, for one, am glad she changed her mind about NCLB, and other issues facing public education.
That said, I grew up during the 1960s in a small conservative town in Iowa, and I spent most of my time at the library -- learning on my own. In school, I experienced so much resistance from my teachers -- just like I did at home. In fact, my math teacher in the 9th grade, Mr. McKie, went so far as to tell me that I held my hand up too often. If there was a golden age of education in the U.S., I have NO idea when that was.
For anyone interested, John Taylor Gatto, a retired NYC teacher, wrote a book titled, Underground History of American Education. The book is available on his website, and can be read without purchasing anything:
http://www.johntaylorgatto.com/underground/index.htm
I would add to Ravitch's recommendations that educators cannot continue to be educated by the same restrictive and inhibiting methods either.
When I earned my PhD, my first promise to myself was not to become an 'academic.'
If I lost who I was as a human being there would be no point in being a psychologist. I conducted violence prevention programs at K-8 schools and learned how much schools contribute to the hardening or de-humanizing of children in general but especially those who live troubled homes. As we continue to learn, all schools tend to harbor the same ills found outside of their walls. For example, a survey that included the question "where do students drink?" a typical answer was "everywhere, including on campus." Academic idealism or purism does not make a decent human being. It does tend to produce amorality and the type of disengagement called "objectivity."
If this comment seems familiar, thas is because I posted it here on Common Dreams about 16 months ago. But since Education issues progress at a glacial pace, I will post it again:
"Here are a few facts to add to those listed above. First, the "failing schools" frame has been around since at least 1983 when Reagan's pals published "A Nation at Risk." (For a concurrent rebuttal, see the Sandia Report.) American sheeple took up the belief that "our schools are failing." Regardless of any real reforms advocated, the true outcomes have been a constant cutting of school funds. Check your local schools for proof, and I don't even know where you live.
As for NCLB, I've posted here and other places before that after listening to a Ph. D. tell our collected staff what the new law meant, I asked her, "I understand my role as a teacher, but what is the responsibility of the students and the parents?" Her reply, "None. It's all up to you." As we can see from the perspective of history, she was right. However, the "Responsibility" for blame remained with the teachers and schools. Oh, and by the way, in my 36 years, no one asked the teachers how we could improve things, in fact the Administration went out of their way to block any improvement attempts teachers suggested or tried to employ.
The current push, RTTT, is about destroying the teachers' unions. Vouchers, charter schools, and merit pay are required by Obama and Rahm. Merit pay sounds good if you are the teacher who gets all the wealthy, highly motivated students. What if your classroom is filled by your Principal with children of poverty, gang bangers, and the unwanted? Think it doesn't happen? Think again. I got the latter because my Principal knew I'd do my best to give them a leg up in life. However, burn-out happens.
Face it. The elite want things just as they are.
Finally, like most stories published here about Education, I expect this one to draw about 12 comments. You see, we at Common Dreams are just a slice of America."
In the midst of experiencing its ongoing slow-motion train wreck, Merka is getting addicted to the pain and trauma and so seeks to accelerate the process to intensify the pain and trauma. The failure of Merkan children to succeed in school is the product of Das Kapital's infiltration of the media and corruption of the general world view of Merkans, and their systems, processes, skills and habits, Now, Merka seeks to turn up the intensity of that, so it can purge what remains of common sense and rendezvous sooner with its complete doom. But those of us on the Far Left have put into practice the recognition that we don't need the establishment's involvement in educating the children. We can enlighten the children far easier at home and in local schools where we have control over the curriculum.
"The failure of Merkan children to succeed in school is the product of Das Kapital's infiltration of the media"
Good one. You do see how some people might think you accusing Mr. Marx of American public school failures.
"We can enlighten the children far easier at home and in local schools where we have control over the curriculum."
Glad to see that, one at a time, people come to their senses.
BTW, you spelled American wrong.
I lived in Finland and attended high school there for one year, and at
that time there was a crucial difference that the writer does not
mention: the teachers had master's degrees, yes, but in their subject
of interest first and education second. The woman who taught biology
was passionate about biology and made the history of living systems into
a fascinating story. The man who taught writing (Aidenkieli, or mother
tongue--so I wrote in English, most kids wrote in Finnish, and a few
kids wrote in Swedish) was in love with writing and with stories
generally. He's still the best writing teacher and critic I have ever
had, and I went on to complete an English degree in college. The music
teacher was infectiously addicted to music of all kinds and involved us
in hearing and playing music from all over the world (including American
music that I had never heard before). The art teacher was actually an
artist and very interested in what the students might make as fellow
artists. The dance teacher was a dancer, not a PE teacher forced to
teach dance. The Swedish teacher was fluent in Swedish from birth, and
the Russian teacher was actually fluent in Russian and had spent
significant time in the (then current) Soviet Union.
In the US, teachers often have master's degrees in education. They may
or may not have advanced degrees in the subjects they teach. I have
seen several friends through the process, and my impression is that a
degree in education is inconsistent and subject to trends, and it leaves
you a generalist prepared to teach things whether you care about those
things or not. There is a world of difference between a
degree in education and a degree in something you are passionate about
and very much want to share with others. All master's degrees are not
created equal.
In the US, my Spanish teachers typically were not fluent in Spanish.
They had taken enough Spanish to be allowed to teach it, and they taught
a weird and bookish Spanish that no one speaks anywhere. But they had
taken lots of education classes. Maybe we should flip that around?
Maybe a few education classes, and lots of work in a particular area of
focus?
The teacher having a passion for the subject makes sense, like a pair of dots that connect. Nature connects many dots and we can too. Establishment of protocols of disconnect is the habit in Merka. Merkans must disconnect from what makes sense in order to make room for new innovations that don't make sense. This leaves us confused and open to exploitation by elites, which is crucially needed in Merka. Notice that when the teacher is obviously enjoying the subject and the student sees that, this situation leaves no crack in the door for the elite's foot. So the situation is simply not acceptable, in Merka.
Thanks for your comment. Ravitch points out that in Finland teachers need to have masters. What she fails to say is that, beyond what we call elementary education, they have to have a masters degree in their subject before applying for further training as a teacher, and the competition to get into teaching is rough.
Compare that to how teachers are trained in my state, Ohio. First of all, education degrees are the easiest to get—all but mindless (just repeat what you are told). Then, in most districts, you can’t get hired if you have too much education because the union mandates a higher pay for those with credits over a bachelors. So the schools hire people with bachelors degrees and then require those people to get further training.
When I was getting my masters in English, I learned not to take a night class because those getting a masters in English for their teaching requirements would be there, and adamant about getting the class dumbed down enough so they didn’t really have to challenge themselves: it was, they were vocal in saying, just a hoop they had to jump through to get their required hours. They’d complain that the readings were too long or too difficult, and the baffled professors usually gave in.
If that’s how the educators think about their own schooling, what do you suppose they think about education in general?
You are painting with a VERY broad brush there, Elizabeth H.
I'm just relating my experiences. But here on CD, we aren't supposed to believe what we see with our own eyes.
Come over here and sit by me.
I am. Would you like some fries?
Pass the ketchup.
Yeah, your lying eyes.
Everyone on CD, everyone on the internet, can come up with their own experiences based on their own eyes.
You are free to say whatever you want. But this site does not belong to you. People are free to disagree with you. If you do not want disagreement, start your own site.
When did I ever say this site belongs to me, or that people can't disagree with me? Would you like some fries?
.