The Better Part…

Today(This entry has languished in the Drafts folder since May. I must have regarded it as unfinished, but now, here it is, complete or not.), on NPR’s On Being, I heard poet Sarah Kay quote someone, I forget who, as saying “Listening is the better part of speaking.” It reminded me of a wise philosopher who said “We have two ears and one mouth so that we can listen twice as much as we speak.”

Likewise, it seems to me that reading is the better part of writing. In an interview, the late Pulitzer Prize winning writer Wallace Stegner was asked about the talent of the current crop of aspiring young writers in his writing classes at Stanford. He replied that in terms of talent, over the years young writers have gotten better and better. However, he lamented, as a group they have one great liability: they are not readers. Many, if not most, seemed not to have read much or to know much beyond their own experience. This, Stegner feared, will limit their development as writers. After all, how does a writer know quality unless he has read good stuff? How does he know techniques and how they work? What feel can he have for experience beyond his own? What frame of reference can he have?

This, I would like to think, goes a long way to justify the teaching of literature in our schools. I would like to think that teaching literature and teaching writing go best hand-in-hand. I do not mean just having students write essays and reports about what they have read, although that has its place also. I mean writing parallel to their reading and extending beyond their reading, and bringing their reading back to their experience: the literary work, the student, and the student’s essay.  (If you have yet to make the acquaintance of the late Louise Rosenblatt, remedy that soon: Literature as Exploration, 1939 and The Reader, the Text, the Poem, 1978. Start with the latter. It will change the way you teach writing and the way you read.)

I fear that as Reformism sweeps the nation, literature in our English curricula will be the loser – after all, it is not on the standardized tests by which “accountability” is reckoned. That is probably for the best. I fear the reductionism demanded by the machine-scored bubble sheet test.

Posted in Curriculum, Teaching Literature, Teaching Writing | Comments Off on The Better Part…

Now What?

The “Luna Laws” have been repealed. This is no time for self-congratulation, but time to begin the real work. It is time for thinking and talking about changes that will really make a difference, except that this time teachers need to be involved, both individually and as represented by their union and their subject-matter associations; they need to assume leading roles in the process. Administrators, both building and district, board members, parents, and other interested parties – there need to be diverse people in the meetings and at the table or tables. The whole community needs to be involved, all the stakeholders, even the politicians.

Part of the problem with the “Luna Laws” is that they are complex. Each one bundles together a number of different provisions. Each element deserves to be discussed and debated on its own merits. This sounds like it will involve a lot of talk, and it will, but I can think of no better way to end up with substantive and lasting improvements that all parties can live with.

Superintendent Luna, when he broke his six day silence after the election, seemed to think that time is of the essence, that some revised version of the bills be referred back to the Legislature to be re-passed. He seemed to dismiss talk as being delay, as “kicking the can down the road.” Governor Otter seems to think that the propositions can be repackaged and passed again in altered form, old wine in new bottles. Nothing could be farther than that from the way we need to go. It needs to be gotten out of the hands of politicians who know little of the workings of schools, except what they learn from ALEC or some other think-tank.

It is time for us to be pro-active and downright pushy about getting authentic dialogue going. We must be vocal and pushy and assume a leading role, not wait passively for the Reformists to accord us a leading role, for that will never happen. It is educators, particularly teachers on the ground, not Politicians, aloof in their lofty halls of power, who have the clearest close-up visions of what works and what doesn’t, of how kids learn, of the practical implications, positive and negative, of change.

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Is American Education Broken?

No and yes.

It depends on where you are looking at it from. What is broken is uniform access of students across the nation to a quality public education. American public schools range in quality from excellent to abysmal. I heard a commentator recently divide public schools into two groups: those that range from fairly good up to excellent, and those that range from barely adequate down to awful. The problem is not that some schools are better than others; that is a statistical imperative. Not all the children can be above average, nor can all the schools.  The problem is that the divide that separates them is so great.

Some of this divide (quite a bit of it, actually) comes down to a school’s access to resources. Some states’ legislatures fund their school systems more than others, whether this is due to the limits of the state’s available funds or the legislature’s priorities for what funds shall be spent on. Some school districts are “richer” than others, that is, they have better tax bases. They can afford better facilities, better equipped, with better paid staff. And these things are important; kids respond to their environment. I don’t know how you solve for this unless more uniform funding comes from the state or the federal government, and that has serious implications for local control of the schools.  This is a problem that cannot be solved from within the school system. It is at root a political problem, primarily at the state level, ultimately the government’s problem to solve, and solutions may prove politically unpalatable.

Of course some schools and school districts are better run than others. Some are better staffed.  That is a separate problem, but often related. It is a problem that is often susceptible, partially at least, to local action. It too can be regarded as a political problem.

But often “good” schools and “bad” schools are allowed to exist within the same district. This is almost always a local issue, a matter of how the board of trustees chooses to distribute its resources. Not all of the districts children are treated equitably and even-handedly, although they are governed by the same school board and the same district administrators. This is a local political issue, how the district chooses to distribute resources. The more prosperous parts of the district have the better schools. These parents are more likely to be politically active and to have more “clout” with the school board, to be taken more seriously. These parents would not tolerate in “their” schools conditions and practices that are allowed to persist in the “bad” schools in the same district. The “bad” schools are often run differently, with different expectations for students and staff, and far different outcomes for students. This is where American public education is broken. To allow good schools and bad to exist both in the same district is unconscionable. Jonathan Kozol wrote a book about this state of affairs: Savage Inequalities (1992). It seems that not much has changed since then.

The Reformist agenda, as exemplified by Idaho’s “Luna Laws,” do little to address the problem.

 

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Building a Better Science Teacher

The August 2012 Scientific American carries an article by Pat Wingert, “Building a Better Science Teacher.”  Much of his argument is same-old same-old: what a horrible job of teaching math and science the nation’s public schools are doing, the stock-in-trade of pundits. But he does bring up some new points worthy of comment.

Wingert laments that so few teachers are well prepared in the subjects they teach. American teachers simply know less about their subjects than their counterparts in higher-scoring countries. You can’t teach what you don’t know.  A disheartening number of math and science teachers, 75%, reckons Wingert, do not have an undergraduate major or even a minor in the subjects they are teaching. Essentially, they are not “literate” in the subjects they teach.  At first, this seems an exaggeration, but in my state, the requirements for a certificate endorsement are less than a minor, and the teacher in the classroom may not even carry an endorsement in the subject he is teaching. (I submit that this is a problem also in other subjects too, my field of English, for example.) Furthermore, I read that in some urban schools, classrooms are permanently staffed by an ever rotating series of “temps.” There must be reasons, political, financial, logistical, or whatever, why such practices are allowed to persist, but I can’t think of any worthy reasons. This is a serious problem that must be solved and a practice that must stop.

Instead of just saying “Fire all the teachers, and everything will be OK,” Wingert contemplates  improving the quality of math and science instruction by improving the competence level of teachers. He enthuses over Teach for America and similar programs to attract “the brightest and best” to teaching. At the same time, he recognizes that all too many of these young teachers leave the profession after a few years. Programs to attract talent from the business and professional worlds run into a fundamental problem: few people are going to go deeply into debt and spend a year getting a master’s degree in order to take a cut in pay. These are touted Reformist solutions, but they are not panaceas.

Wingert recognizes links between the adequacy of preparation and job satisfaction, between job satisfaction and job performance, between job performance and student achievement. Teacher preparation in colleges needs scrutiny; some colleges turn out qualified teacher candidates, but most – not so many. What is the difference? The basic teacher training program has not changed much from what I experienced fifty years ago. It is high time for some re-thinking.

Teachers go into the profession in spite of low pay because they want to make a difference. If they are not successful, if they realize that they aren’t making a difference and aren’t likely to, they grow frustrated and leave the profession – or they stay in and become jaded and cynical; lots of bad teachers are created by the system. Good teachers are prepared coming in, and then are nurtured by the system. I have never heard any Reformist propose anything that would do either of these.

I came away from this article feeling vindicated in some of my ideas. I have always felt that there is no substitute for a teacher’s knowledge of the subject being taught, a solid grounding in the subject matter and skills of the discipline. Many years ago, a usually wise principal opined that a good teacher can teach anything; knowledge of the discipline is not necessary – after all, that is what the textbook is for. Those days are gone, if they ever existed. There is no substitute for an academic major in the teacher’s primary assigned subject, and not just in math and science. English (my subject) should be taught by hard-core English majors. I have observed enough colleagues over the years to know that there is a difference.

Reformists generally jump straight to some form of merit pay. Wingert, however, treads carefully around the issue of pay. He concedes that there are few rigorous studies of merit pay systems and little evidence to support what works and what does not. It is not necessary to trash the traditional salary schedule because there are lots of ways it can be tweaked to meet specific needs. For example, there could be a distinction, reflected in pay grade, between the teacher with the academic major and the one who meets minimum certification requirements. When the teacher has remedied his deficiencies, he moves up that step or half-step. Perhaps until this is accomplished, additional credits that do not contribute directly to the teacher’s assignment, those toward an administrative certificate, for example, would not count toward a raise in pay grade. Perhaps academic master’s degrees in the subject should weigh more and pay more than master’s degrees in Education. This is a complex subject, and the result will likely be more finely articulated and more complex salary schedules that will be negotiated into contracts district by district. We must figure out what we want teachers to know and do and reward that.

Each district, each school, each department is a community, defining and working toward common goals, potentially if not actually, and should be regarded as a community and should be encouraged to become such. It is within these collegial communities that real and lasting change will take place. Anything that pits teachers against each other and has them competing against each other for resources or rewards is antithetical to a sense of community and is to be avoided.

Some things work better in the classroom than others. The best teachers are those with the best grasp on what works. It’s not like in the movies, where all a teacher has to do is exude charisma, and the kids all learn. There are best practices, which each teacher must learn, know, and employ. It is on the use of best practices that teachers must be observed, evaluated, and rewarded. It is a lot more complicated than reviewing test scores, but truer.

Wingert cites an expert as saying that we must give our teachers better tools if we expect them to do better tools. I think that by “tools” he means not just teaching materials and technology, but knowledge, both of subject matter and pedagogy. A key component of continuous improvement of our schools is continuous staff development. Ill-prepared teachers must be remediated and brought up to speed. Accomplished teachers must find opportunities to keep intellectually engaged with their disciplines and be exposed to new ideas about pedagogy because these are the teachers who are mainsprings of change in their collegial communities. A teacher’s education must never end with the completion of their courses for certification.

Most current “Reform” is political theater. With all due respect to Congressmen and Legislators speechifying and “Educators” posing on the covers of magazines with brooms and baseball bats, it is teachers that will bring about positive and lasting change, so let them be better teachers. Pat Wingert is a journalist, not a teacher, but she seems to recognize that real “reform” must happen district by district, school by school, teacher by teacher, student by student.

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Student Journals

Recently, a friend commented, regarding the theater shooting incident in Colorado

I just heard a news item that is one of the most appalling things I’ve ever heard.

James Holmes wrote his plan for the attack in a notebook and mailed it to a psychiatrist at the University of Colorado. The package sat unopened in the mail room for a week before the attack.

It still hadn’t been delivered and was only found because there was a search for a second package that the psychiatrist was expecting that wasn’t delivered.

How deep are the pockets of the University of Colorado?

It has since been reported that the notebook was in transit in the U. S. Mail, not in the University of Colorado mailroom and had not been delivered when the shootings occurred. We will probably learn more about this as events leading up to the shooting are analyzed and reported.

When something unfortunate happens, particularly if it is on a large scale, we want to attribute blame: “Someone is responsible for this, and by golly, they ought to be held to account!” In this case, some lowly clerk in the mail room is off the hook.

But this business got me thinking about the notebook itself. Was this something that Holmes sent as a cry for help – stop me before I do this terrible thing. Or was he setting the stage for a spectacular suicide by cop? Was this something the psychiatrist had requested Holmes to do? Therapeutic journaling has its adherents in some clinical circles. What would/should the psychiatrist have done with the journal had he received it in time to do something?

Unfortunately, one often does not know what is really important until afterword.

And that got me to thinking about how this business might translate to the classroom. More formerly than currently, English teachers would require their students to keep a journal with a minimum number of entries weekly. The rationale is that nothing improves a student’s writing like writing – the more the better. Ideally, a student should be writing hundreds of words daily, on a constant, on-going basis. Usually, the topics for entries are open, pretty much left to the student. If he can write on what his interests and concerns lead him to, he is more likely to write. The goal here is  fluency.

The problem is that when a teacher assigns lots of writing, he is assigning himself lots of paper grading. There are practical limits to the size of a paper-load. The advantage of a journal is that it gives the teacher a hedge. When the journals are submitted for evaluation, they are seldom read in their entirety. The teacher will evaluate how faithfully the student has been keeping it and will read parts selectively, usually more or less at random. Usually, the teacher is up front about this, that they will not read every word, but the student will not know in advance which entries will be read and which will not. Often, to encourage students to write more, teachers promise confidentiality, which is a real ethical can of worms.  The upside is that students write a lot, but the teacher’s paper load remains manageable. I did this in various forms, on and off, over the years. Mostly off, for several reasons. There is a down side.

Some years ago, as student in Meridian committed suicide. The parents contended that the suicide was preventable and the school had it within its power to prevent. The student’s English teacher required a journal. The parents’ contention was that a thorough reading of the journal revealed suicidal ideation. Had the English teacher read the journal attentively and in its entirety, as the parents maintained she was obligated to have done, she would have been alerted to the situation and could have alerted the parents, her superiors, and other appropriate authorities.

They sued the district as a whole and the teacher personally for educational malpractice, dereliction, or whatever they called it. It was in and out of the news for years and finally faded. Eventually, as I recall, the court found for the teacher.

Still, ethical questions remain. Behaviorist therapeutic theories generally hold that expression of ideation reinforces that ideation. What are a teacher’s ethical obligations regarding the writing he assigns and/or receives?

Obviously, unstructured, open-topic journals as a teaching strategy became notably less popular after that, at least around here. Ideally, all students’ writing should be read attentively as soon as received. There are practical limitations, of course, but they haunt us.

“A mote it is, to trouble the mind’s eye,” as the troubled Prince once said.

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VC

Coming up Geiger Grade, light snow.  At Nine-mile Flat, floor it. The road constricts to 110.

Mid-winter. Mid-week. Prime drinking time.

Tourists and summer people are gone. C Street is mostly parking spaces.

Closing time. The snow has stopped, the sky has cleared.

One street light, many stars.

A dog barking far off defines the silence.

There is not a tire track on the street.

I walk back to my car, leaving no footprints ahead of me.

I am afraid that if I look back, there will be none behind.

The arrow of time does not fly true down C Street.

On such a night, what is a century, more or less?

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The Ontario Model

Forty years ago, or forty-one perhaps, Genny and I took the long way ‘round returning from Sioux Falls, SD to Payette, ID. We drove north to Winnipeg, turned left, and followed Canada 1 clear across. We dropped south to Seattle and doubled back to home. It was quite the tour in a VW Beetle. Crossing Canada, we had the feeling that time had slipped a couple of decades to cross-country vacations we remembered from our childhoods.

This feeling was validated on the Vancouver-Nanaimo ferry.  We struck up a conversation with a city planner from Edmonton, Frank Kirby, I recall. He explained thus: “In many ways, we operate a decade or two behind you folks down in the States, and that, in other ways, puts us a decade or two ahead of you. You see, we watch your mistakes and avoid them.” We were talking about city planning and how driving through Canadian cities differed from driving through U. S. cities. Some of their solutions, to urban sprawl, for example, made admirable sense to me.

Today, that conversation came back to me in another context. I came upon an article on The Atlantic’s website, “What America Can Learn from Ontario’s Education Success.” It struck me that Ontario, like Finland, is achieving results ahead of the U. S. by practices that are behind the US. Such practices are the very sort of thing that the Reformists seem bent on un-doing.

As is the case with Finland, Ontario’s school system was mediocre and stagnant until the last decade or so. Since then, improvement has been, if not dramatic, more than gratifying. Like Finland’s, Ontario’s schools are now among “the most improved and highest performing in the world.”  Like Finland, Ontario seems to have laid out a rational path to school improvement and innovation (I hesitate to use the term “reform” because it has become fraught with particular ideologies and political agendas.)

The article is brief and quite general. I would like to quote and/or paraphrase some of the main points and expand on them with my comments.

Ontario public schools follow a model embraced by top-performing hospitals, businesses, and organizations worldwide. Specifically, they do five things in concert — focus, build relationships, persist, develop capacity, and spread quality implementation.

Reformists promote a business-management model for education. But businesses are one kind of organization with their own goals, methods, and measures of success that do not always translate literally to another kind of organization – schools for example. The authors of this article look to broader principles governing organizations, “five things done in concert.” With this broader focus, we can see applicable and useful business principles without treating schools as businesses, which they are not and should not try to be. We can also look to relevant medical and public health models as in “Hotspot Schools,” 5-9-2012.

Like many school systems, Ontario had too many “top” priorities. The Ministry of Education selected three–literacy, math, and high school graduation–with a commitment to raise the bar for all students and close achievement gaps between all groups. There are other goals, of course, but these three are non-negotiable and take precedence because they leverage so many other learning goals.

Public schools play a complex role in a modern democratic society, serving many purposes for a diverse constituency. Worthy goals and urgent needs are numerous. Trying to address everything, equally, all at once leads either to a kind of gridlock or to a random hit-or-miss pattern that makes it difficult to accomplish much of anything. The question is how do we prioritize? Too often, political and ideological hot buttons become the top priorities. Increasingly, priorities serve some particular test and end up being reductive, with literacy and math, for example, being seen in opposition to and detracting from other parts of the curriculum.

Rationally, top priority should be accorded to those goals which best serve the greatest number of other goals. Literacy is fundamental to every aspect of the school program. Scientific literacy is an important goal, but because science courses become increasingly math-intensive, math is key to science. It is important that the top priorities be seen as inclusive of other priorities, not exclusionary of them.

Focus and persistence ensure that these priorities are not going to be discarded along the way. The history of education innovations has generated a “this too shall pass” mindset among teachers. One of our colleagues calls this phenomenon “the law of innovation fatigue.” Any attempt to create a high-leverage priority (like the three adopted by Ontario) requires that the education system as a whole commits to them long-term.

Teachers are criticized as notional creatures, always latching on to every passing fad and discarding it just as quickly. Teachers are also criticized, by the same Reformists, it seems to me, for failing to take seriously necessary reforms, actively resisting them, and shrugging off progress with “this too shall pass.” The innovations thus resisted are almost always impositions from above by Administrators or Politicians. And indeed they do pass as political winds shift in the halls of power and new campaigns call for new slogans; as new Administrators with resumes to build replace older Administrators who have added some notches to their guns and are ready to move on. Good changes are swept away with the bad and whether they are replaced with better or worse seems not to matter. In the meantime, innovations that begin with the teachers themselves are ignored if not ruthlessly stomped upon – a matter of economics: who owns what. “Innovation fatigue” is regrettable but understandable and inevitable.

Even modest changes can be surprisingly difficult to implement and even effective changes suffer from lack of long-term commitment. In my school, attendance was a problem for years, and perhaps it still is. It was, or should have been a major priority because it is an important key to increasing graduation, among other things. You can’t teach those who are not there.

Every few years, a building administrator would decide to do something about it, by golly. A big zero-tolerance crackdown would be announced. Truancies would result in detentions. This was good. It seems to me that having to make up truant time in detention is a natural consequence, the best kind of consequence.  Problems always immediately presented, unexpected, it always seemed. First, by this time, the problem had gotten out of hand, with lots of students needing to serve lots of detentions. The numbers who showed up would be more than could be accommodated. What to do with them? Second, many students simply would not show up. What to do about them? The usual response was to assign more detentions. And if they didn’t show up for those?  Detention is, by definition, usually off the school day. When teachers are asked or required to work off the clock, they usually want a little extra for doing so. But there was never any extra money allowed for this purpose, so teachers became less than enthusiastic about the whole project. Eventually, the whole initiative, lacking support, would collapse or would be so watered down as to have little effect. The initiative would not persist; the problem would.

But priorities don’t mean anything if you don’t develop the relationships necessary to enact them. The provincial government set out to develop a strong sense of two-way partnerships and collaboration, especially between administrators and teachers, and in concert with teachers’ unions. This required providing significant leeway to individual school districts to experiment with novel approaches to reaching the province’s three main educational goals, and focusing significant reform efforts on investments in staffing and teacher development.

The structure of a school system is essentially hierarchical, a chain of command: at the top, the Board of Education, then the Superintendent, who answers to the board, then the officials in the district office who answer to the Superintendent, then the Principals of various schools, etc. A control-and-command way of doing business comes naturally. But it is rigid; change can only come down from above, and each teacher can be isolated at the bottom of his organizational “silo.” Building two-way collaborations (vertically, teachers collaborating with administrators; horizontally, teachers collaborating with teachers) requires thought and effort. If patterns of collaboration already exist, they require thought and effort to build upon – and simply not to kill. As soon as we wrap our heads around the benefits of collaboration, we begin to see that teachers, individually, in small groups, in departments, teachers and their professional organizations and their unions are not the problem, but part of the solution. Teachers may resist “innovations” that they feel are being foisted upon them from above, but they are a source of innovation that should not be overlooked. Yet most Reformist schemes call for more control and command, not less.

By focusing on teacher development, Ontario was also able to raise teacher accountability. Decades of experience have taught Canadian educators that you can’t get greater accountability through direct measures of rewards and punishments. Instead, what Ontario did was to establish transparency of results and practice (anyone can find out what any school’s results are, and what they are doing to get those results) while combining this with what we call non-judgmentalism. This latter policy means that if a teacher is struggling, administrators and peers will step in to help her get better. (There are, however, steps that can be taken if a situation consistently fails to improve.)

Most Reformist schemes trumpet “teacher accountability” in a way that most teachers find insulting. On one hand, monetize every little thing, on the assumption that if you don’t pay for that specific thing, the teacher won’t do it. “If we pay you more, will you work harder?” U. S. Reformists call for direct measures of “output” – numbers. Lots of numbers, what we call “data-driven.” Reformists usually don’t care to look too deeply into how those numbers are achieved, or what, exactly, may work better.

The final element of the strategy involves identifying and spreading quality practices. Most education systems are loosely coupled to say the least — behind the classroom door, teachers are islands unto themselves. In such isolated systems, two problems emerge. The first is that good ideas do not get around; they remain trapped in individual classrooms or schools. The other problem is that poor teaching can remain entrenched, because good practices are not being disseminated. A big part of the Ontario strategy has been to break down the walls of the classroom, the school, and even the district by increasing communication, cataloging and sharing best practices, and fostering a culture of teamwork. To that end, the Ministry of Education guides local school districts in developing more collaborative professional environments, while also acting as a clearinghouse for innovation and best practices.

Teachers want to know what – if we are accountable to the public, if we are accountable to our students, if we are accountable to ourselves as professionals – we can do in our classrooms to be more effective. It all comes down to practice. What we do. A page of numbers is simple. It all lies on the surface. What lies behind those numbers is much more complex, downright messy, in fact: practice. There are best practices, of course, and, realistically, some practices that are better than others. Teachers learn from courses they take and workshops they participate in. But more, they learn formally and informally from their own experiences and the experiences of colleagues, whether at national conferences, in committee meetings, or over coffee in the faculty lounge. Some systems are very successful in encouraging this kind of ongoing dialogue. Others, intentionally or not, create barriers.

The net result of these five forces is an education system that has the characteristics of a high-performing organization: relentless focus, interactive pressure and support, a preoccupation with results and how to improve them, a culture of mutual commitment, and what we call collaborative competition, where there is no limit to what is being attempted. The fact that this strategy develops leaders at all levels — leaders who focus on results, as they help develop other leaders — means that sustainability is built into the whole enterprise. Ontario isn’t perfect. But it proves that large-scale reform can be accomplished in school systems in fairly short periods of time.

Never mind “reform,” that politically fraught term. There are no panaceas. What is wanted is substantive continuous improvement. Ontario, like Finland, seems to offer a rational model that we would do well to take seriously, to study, to adapt, and to emulate to our ultimate benefit.

http://www.theatlantic.com/national/archive/2012/05/what-america-can-learn-from-ontarios-education-success/256654/

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The Better Part…

Today, on NPR’s On Being, I heard poet Sarah Kay quote someone, I forget who, as saying “Listening is the better part of speaking.” It reminded me of a wise philosopher who said “We have two ears and one mouth so that we can listen twice as much as we speak.”

Likewise, it seems to me that reading is the better part of writing. In an interview, the late Pulitzer Prize winning writer Wallace Stegner was asked about the talent of the current crop of aspiring young writers in his writing classes at Stanford. He replied that in terms of talent, over the years young writers have gotten better and better. However, he lamented, as a group they have one great liability: they are not readers. Many, if not most, seemed not to have read much or to know much beyond their own experience. This, Stegner feared, will limit their development as writers. After all, how does a writer know quality unless he has read good stuff? How does he know techniques and how they work? What feel can he have for experience beyond his own? What frame of reference can he have?

This, I would like to think, goes a long way to justify the teaching of literature in our schools. I would like to think that teaching literature and teaching writing go best hand-in-hand. I do not mean just having students write essays and reports about what they have read, although that has its place also. I mean writing parallel to their reading and extending beyond their reading, and bringing their reading back to their experience: the literary work, the student, and the student’s essay.  (If you have yet to make the acquaintance of the late Louise Rosenblatt, remedy that soon: Literature as Exploration, 1939 and The Reader, the Text, the Poem, 1978. Start with the latter. It will change the way you teach writing and the way you read.)

I fear that as Reformism sweeps the nation, literature in our English curricula will be the loser – after all, it is not on the standardized tests by which “accountability” is reckoned. That is probably for the best. I fear the reductionism demanded by the machine-scored bubble sheet test.

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Hotspot Schools

I want to make something clear: I do not agree with the Reformist’s premise that American Public Education is broken beyond repair and must be reinvented from the ground up, nor do I agree with their methods for “fixing” it, or, too often, their vision for what they want public education to become. There are problems that must be addressed. I just don’t agree with the Reformists what the problems are or what constitutes “solutions.”

I have said previously that I believe that Public Education is this nation’s crown jewel. Public Education is not an outmoded, discredited concept, but is, as a whole, reasonably healthy and does serve the nation well. Most schools do their job and serve most students pretty well. A few are truly exemplary. And some are indeed “broken”: so bad that they do not do anybody much good, students or teachers. But Waiting for Superman notwithstanding, I do not believe that worst cases represent public education as a whole. I am sure that if you were to evaluate schools on any reasonable criteria and plot the results, you would have something pretty close to a bell curve.

A few schools are doing just fine and should just continue doing what they are doing, because it obviously works. Most schools should pretty much continue what they are doing, but do it more and better; most schools have room for improvement and no doubt some pressing problems that need to be fixed. It is the schools on the bell curve’s back slope that are “broken” and require serious, urgent, but thoughtful attention.

I read in the January 24, 2011 New Yorker an article by Atul Gawande: “The Hot Spotters.”  http://www.camdenhealth.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/03/Gawande-Camden-Annals_17.pdf Jeffrey Brenner, a young Camden New Jersey physician, was asked to serve on a police reform commission. The commission undertook to study patterns of crime in the city by mapping assaults. Neither the police department nor the police union would cooperate with the mapping by making data available, and eventually the commission disbanded. But Brenner now had an idea.

He undertook to create his own maps by studying hospital records for emergency room admissions for assault. This led to making maps of health care costs around Camden, and the most expensive areas were designated “hot spots.” Next, the most expensive patients were identified, as well as what it was that made them expensive, both their individual medical ailments and the “system” that treated them. The idea then was to enlist the cooperation of doctors and social workers to work with the most expensive individual patients and, for example, to replace a reliance on expensive hospitalizations and emergency room visits with more pro-active primary care. To summarize, this initiative actually made more than a trivial difference in health care costs in Camden.

Now all this was very interesting because, if nothing else, it has great implications for containing Medicaid costs, while improving health care. But the real interest to me is the implications of this approach for school “reform” that will address real problems. Think of Brenner’s cost map of hospitals as an achievement map of schools. Think of that achievement map in medical terms – epidemiology.

I noted that Brenner did not proclaim American health care to be broken beyond repair, that more hospitals should be closed or doctors fired, rather that problems should be analyzed and addressed.

It got me to wondering if all the worst schools have really been identified. Basing identification on one or two tests may be misleading. Have the total programs been examined? Even the worst schools may be doing some good, for some students. A test score does not a program make. It indicates that problems exist, but it says relatively little about the nature of the problems (diagnostics), their causes (etiology), or effective remedies. The Reformists wave the bloody shirt of test scores, but they cite a limited body of research. They do not look very deeply. Their “reforms,” besides being heavy-handed will ultimately result in little actual improvement.

Find and identify the worst schools, especially the ones that seem to have been resistant to previous efforts to “improve” them. Start with them and really concentrate on them. Consider them public education’s “hot spots.” We will certainly learn things that will have applications elsewhere. But there is an important caveat.

According to Tolstoy, “Happy families are all alike; every unhappy family is unhappy in its own way.” When it comes to schools, Tolstoy had it half right: schools, both good and bad, are not all alike.  What good schools do that works for them may not translate directly to other schools, just as a medication may not be effective or even safe for all patients. The failures of bad schools may not be universal. Just as it is with patients in Camden, each is an individual with its own culture and its own complex of problems. No competent physician would utilize the same treatment with all patients, especially if the treatment addressed one symptom. Yet, most Politicians’ approach to Reform does essentially that.

How much do we really know about bad schools, both in general and particular bad schools?

How is a bad school bad? Yes, it has low test scores, like the patient has a fever. The fever is a symptom of an infection, but by itself, it can’t tell us much about that infection. We must look past that for what the real problems are. Has anyone really studied a bad school in depth? Really diagnosed it? Administration? Policies? Organization? Philosophy? Has philosophy ever been discussed, deliberated upon, eventually agreed upon, and set down on paper? What does the school think it is doing and why is it doing that? What should it be doing and why? The “is” and the “should be” are separate questions, but if they are widely divergent, that is both a problem and a starting point toward solutions. Faculty – collectively and individually, department by department? What mechanisms for change already exist, whether they are being utilized or not? How do teachers work and plan and brainstorm together? Are teachers even included in curriculum formulation? Do they have a voice in policy? What are individual teachers’ ideas about problems and possible improvements? What is the faculty culture? The student culture?

Study the school, for that matter, as a community. A class becomes a community after a while. The student body is a community, or an assemblage of interrelated communities, and the faculty is a community, or an assemblage of interrelated communities, for better or for worse, functional or dysfunctional.

Has anyone ever done a thorough, multi-part, multi-layered ethnographic study of a school, both good schools and bad? It would be quite the ambitious project. It would also be instructive. In the 1990s, Bruce Robbins and Driek Zirinsky of Boise State University did such a study of Nampa High School’s Language Arts Department (“Growing Into Leadership: Profiles from a ‘Good’ Department,” The English Journal, September 1996 http://www.jstor.org/pss/820706). The report was mostly laudatory, but the point is, it took a close look at how a school, or a department therein, actually works, in this case for better, in another case perhaps for worse.

Jeffrey Brenner could have been satisfied to lament that these “hot-spot” hospitals were inefficiently run and that “those people” “over-consume” health care.   The problem was more complex, and instead he chose to study it in a systematic manner, and on his findings base not just the treatment of individual patients, but the structure within which medical care is provided. The result, in Camden at least, seems promising. Costs for disrupting these patterns were more than offset by reductions in health-care costs in the areas studied. This seems counter-intuitive in the sense that we have all been taught “you can’t solve a problem by throwing money at it.” That is probably true if throwing money is the end, not the means, and if no attention is paid to targeting the money or evaluating the results. But it is also true that in too many cases, if no money is spent, nothing changes. No doubt there were many ways money could have been thoughtlessly spent in Camden without making one bit of difference. But relatively modest well thought out expenditures saved money in the end.

If we would identify the educational “hot spots” and the “sickest” students, if we would take care to diagnose the problems and distinguish the symptoms from the causes, if we would take the care to distinguish between healthy and diseased tissue (to continue the medical analogy), the results might well be better education for all, and more cost-effective education as well.

Posted in Education Reform, School Program | Comments Off on Hotspot Schools

Bad Systems, Bad Teachers

You all have probably gathered by now from my rants that the world of school is not easily walked away from. You have probably gathered that I have little use for the school “reform” movement, which, in the cynicism of geezerhood, I consider to be misguided at best, and at worst, deliberately malicious. I hope you have also gathered that I believe, with equal ardor, in Progress, in the continuous improvement of our schools, their institutions and practices, and I am concerned when I read of dysfunctional and deteriorating schools that do not do right by their students. I hope that over the years I did my bit, both in the classroom and out of it, to contribute to the improvement my school in particular and American Public Education in general.

So it is that when I read something that makes sense, amidst all the hoopla and hype, I feel compelled to pass it on. In a letter to the editor of the Statesman, no less, I came across this website:  One Nation Supporting Education. I recommend it if you have the least interest in such issues.

Be aware that this site has links, and the links have links. As far as I have followed them, all are good reading, all seem sound and sensible, advocating a much more reasoned approach to the actual improvement of our public schools than the propaganda propagated by the Reformists – you know, those usual suspects, the Politicians, Pundits, Polemicists, and all too many Professors Who Really Know Better.

I have written at some length about bad teachers.  We usually think of bad teachers as those who are characterized by malfeasance, misfeasance, and/or nonfeasance: that is, wrongdoing, incompetence, and/or dereliction. But how do bad teachers become bad? No doubt some should never have gone into the profession in the first place. The time to identify these is the first two or three or four years (depending on state law), a probationary period, when it is relatively simple to tell such a person “this isn’t working out” and show him the door.

Sad cases are the bad teachers who started out with the best of intentions and perhaps even with lofty ideals, but are bad because their system sets them up to fail. How often are incompetent, indifferent, or downright hostile administrators at the root of the problem? With a “toxic” principal who undercuts her teachers at every opportunity, there is no way this school or anyone in it could succeed.  How often do such administrators take their cues from the District Office? How often were they hired expressly to punish the teachers in bad schools?

I recently read an essay, “Confessions of a Bad Teacher” by John Owens.   Owens left a lucrative career in publishing because he wanted to teach. He found himself in front of a classroom for the first time at the age of 55 in one of a number of small public high schools started by the Bloomberg administration in the past decade, the 350-student Latinate [not its real name] … housed in a former elementary school. In this regard, he was very much like Ruben Jackson, but his experience was far different.

This is why getting rid of Continuing Contract (calling it “tenure” is a deliberate and malicious lie) is a really bad idea. Just think, what if a controlling, punitive, unsupportive Principal like Ms. P. could strut down the hall and bellow ‘You’re fired!” at whomever she pleased. On the other hand, I fault that union for not negotiating a better evaluation instrument and fair rules for its implementation. I fault the union for not supporting teachers like Owens by filing grievances on their behalf. That’s what you pay your dues for.

Owens was lucky. He had another (more lucrative) line of work that he could go back to. But consider someone who started out to be a career teacher, who invested four to six years and much treasure on his degree and certification. Consider that in the world of work, teaching experience is not very portable to other jobs. He is sort of stuck isn’t he? Think about being stuck in this system year after year, with nowhere else to go. Who wouldn’t become jaded and cynical, one of those burned-out cases, a sour old fart who just goes through the motions and keeps his ass covered, and spends the next thirty years counting down the years to retirement?

Why do I suspect that Mr. Owens replaced “Mr. K.,” a quiet fellow with aspirations to writing, who phoned in sick one morning, said the kids bugged him, and never came back. He would have been part of a 50% annual teacher turnover at that school. Owens describes what sounds like a successful year, given that his students were not an easy bunch. He got most of them on board and actually taught them English, even if he took liberties with the prescribed curriculum. I have been there and can think of no better way he could have done things. But no good deed goes unpunished, and his performance evaluations were consistently negative – he was a bad teacher – and before the end of the year, he had a chance to return to his old job, and he too left.

With all due (dis)respect to Mayor Bloomberg and Bill Gates and Superintendents Luna and Rhee and all the other Reformists who sing the same tune, a lot of “bad teachers” are made by the systems in which they work.  Owens describes it thus:

Little did I know I was entering a system where all teachers are considered bad until proven otherwise. Also, from what I saw, each school’s principal has so much leeway that it’s easy for good management and honest evaluation to be crushed under the weight of Crazy Boss Syndrome. And, in my experience, the much-vaunted “data” and other measurements of student progress and teacher efficacy are far more arbitrary and manipulated than taxpayers and parents have been led to believe.

http://www.peavinequarter.com/thoughts-on-bad-teachers/

http://supportingpubliceducation.yolasite.com/

http://www.salon.com/2011/08/29/confessions_of_a_bad_teacher/

http://www.vpr.net/episode/52210/burlington-teacher-profiled-on-story/

Posted in Education Reform, Memoir, Teacher Accountability | Comments Off on Bad Systems, Bad Teachers