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Saturday, February 14, 2009

It's About Time: Obama On Science

Sometimes there's nothing to add other than my wish that the speaker succeed in not only being heard, but heeded, and my gratitude for having been around when an intelligent, articulate, and above-all humane person once again holds the most powerful elected position on the planet.

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Reducing Class Size VERSUS "Best" Instructional Practices (and other rants by yours truly)


A recent commentary "It's Not All About Class Size" appeared from Ken Jensen on the discussion list of the National Council of Supervisors of Mathematics (NCSM):

I agree with the assertion that, "it is possible that smaller classes will actually widen the domestic achievement gap between the haves and have-nots." and the explanation as to why this may occur is well thought out. However, the article is void of any suggestions as to how we might increase achievement for all- both raise test scores and close the gap.

I would like to propose that a teacher with a well developed sense of best instructional practices does much more to increase achievement for all students than lowering class sizes. In fact, I would want this teacher's class to be full to the brim so that as many students can take advantage of this learning environment as possible, and I would expect this teacher to raise the achievement level of all his or her students in spite of the large size.

So much has been written about what makes for good instruction and yet it is so elusive in America's schools. Let's take the money the politicians would use to lower class sizes and instead use it for in bedded professional development. The coaching model as developed by Lucy West and Catherine Casey is making a difference in the district where I work, and I promote it everywhere the conversation comes up.


My response, which of course is to more than just what Ken wrote above:

Seems a bit puzzling as to why this is an "either/or" situation. EITHER we decrease class sizes OR we try to improve the quality of teaching? Why not both if each is important?

Effective classroom coaching is an important part of the story, no doubt. So is, I think, reduced teaching hours per day, more opportunity for collegial observation and interaction (as long as the school creates and supports actual professional development during the non-teaching hours, rather than offering more planning periods that are spent grading or talking about baseball (not that I oppose giving teachers time to grade, but not INSTEAD of meaningful collegial interaction and professional development. And much as I like baseball, I've sat as a guest in far too many math teacher lounges where that was the main subject, when bashing individual kids or certain "kinds" of kids was not, and no mathematical or pedagogical issues were ever raised at all)). So is lesson study, which incorporates features involved in coaching, planning, collegial feedback and observation, etc.).

As to the idea of cramming as many bodies as possible into the classrooms of the "good teachers." How long before they become burned out by their increased grading load? How long before you destroy the classroom culture by making the carefully-crafted dynamics impossible to rebuild or sustain? I think that's a rather questionable suggestion at best, unless of course you assume that the "magic' this teacher is doing is completely grounded in some sort of fabulous lecturing, a doubtful proposition in my experience.

And as long as I'm scatter-gunning here, I am for some reason skeptical of the phrase "best instructional practices" for a couple of reasons. First, I think teaching remains far more an art than science (not unlike pretty much everything else in the social sciences. I'm working on a blog entry about the relationship between psychoanalytic practice and jargon and educational practice and jargon. Suffice it to say that the more the jargon, the less impressed I am by the what's being spoken of, assuming I can piece out what that might be). The notion of "best" instructional practices sounds a little too smug and reminds me of how the word "authentic" gets used in the writing of some educational researchers and pundits: if what YOU are doing is "best" or "authentic," where does that leave me? I have this same reaction to the Core Knowledge Foundation gurus, who tout the solution to our educational woes as "teaching content." Obviously, since I don't subscribe to their religion, I must not be teaching content. Or at least not the "right" content.

I prefer to think about instructional practices as a palette from which we choose depending on the vicissitudes of daily teaching reality. It is not a scientific process. If it were, I could mail in my lessons (and my instruction). Yes, there are some things I choose quite consciously not to have on my particular palette. And some things I have in very small supply and use sparingly by design. Beyond that, I can't claim to know in advance what classes will be like other than in broad strokes, and the rest comprises details that emerge as part of an organic process that cannot be accurately foreseen. Stuff happens when you're dealing with human beings. And lest we forget, the main instrument we use to both teach and to assess the effectiveness of that teaching on a moment-by-moment basis as well as upon latter review is a flawed one: ourselves. That's fine, since we're all in the same boat. But I for one am tired of being asked to pretend that teachers or educational researchers, teacher educators, coaches, curriculum developers and authors, administrators, or others involved in the instruction process are objective scientists or anything of the sort.

Set rant to [OFF].

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Core Knowledge: Who Are the Snake-Oil Salesmen?


The following was recently posted on math-teach by the always-remarkable Professor Wayne Bishop, who never saw a progressive educational idea he didn't despise:


http://www.coreknowledge.org/blog/2009/02/03/21st-century-snake-oil/


21st Century Snake Oil

Published by Robert Pondiscio on February 3, 2009 in Core Knowledge, Curriculum and Education News. Tags: 21st century skills, Alfie Kohn, content knowledge, critical thinking, Curriculum, Jay Greene, Tony Wagner.

Yesterday, Alfie Kohn; today Tony Wagner.

Jay Greene goes after the education guru on his blog and in an op-ed in the Northwest Arkansas Morning News. The Fayetteville Public School system has purchased 2,000 copies of Wagner's The Global Achievement Gap and is holding a series of public meetings, according to Greene, on how Wagner's vision for 21st century skills "might guide our schools." Be afraid, says Jay. Be very afraid.

It's hard to get people to think critically about people who push a focus on critical thinking. To be for critical thinking is like being for goodness and light. The tricky part is in how you get there. To the extent that Wagner has any concrete suggestions, he seems to be taking folks down the wrong path. He wants less emphasis on content and less testing. But he shows no evidence that higher levels of critical thinking can be found in places or at times when there was less content and less testing. In fact, the little evidence he does provide would suggest the opposite.

Joanne Jacobs weighs in as well, pointing to a Sandra Stotsky op-ed on Tony Wagner, and noting succinctly: "I don't see excess knowledge as a big problem for today's students."

Cultural Literacy Bonus: Check out the illustration atop Jay's blog post. It's Bugs Bunny dressed as a Wagnerian Valkyrie from the cartoon, What's Opera, Doc? Can you imagine a kid's cartoon using Wagner's Ring Cycle as the basis of a parody today? It's a bromide to suggest that entertainment has been dumbed-down over time, but it's hard not to notice the difference in the vocabulary of Mary Poppins, for example, or the Rex Harrison version of Doctor Doolittle compared to contemporary kids' fare. Quantifying the change in cultural references and vocabulary level in children's entertainment over the last 50 years or so would make for an interesting study, if it hasn't already been done.


Well, pardon my lack of excitement at the above from Bishop and his Core Knowledge buddies, but I felt compelled to craft a response:

Just reading the name of this blog and the first few lines had me in hysterics (the fun kind).

"The Core Knowledge Blog

Closing the Achievement Gap: Teaching Content"


Funny. And the rest of us are, of course, NOT teaching content. Sez the Hirschies.

Of course, they have a very narrow definition of what comprises "content": namely just precisely what THEY say it is, and nothing else. Beware! Fascism lurks here.

Then, the blogger quotes Jay Greene in order to attack Mr. Wagner (whose ideas are not particularly appealing to me, but clearly any enemy of my enemy deserves my consideration):

"It’s hard to get people to think critically about people who push a focus on critical thinking. To be for critical thinking is like being for goodness and light."


Yeah, and being "for content" is not a pile of equally empty baloney? Doesn't "which content" matter? Oops. See above. THEIR content, of course. Want to know which? Pay Mr. Hirsch and pals and they'll sell you all the books you don't need to find out what a narrow-minded old white guy thinks your Nth Grader "needs" to know. And just as a reminder: this is the "educational expert" whose credentials are being a literature professor at University of Virginia who suddenly decided he could make a lot more money shilling guides to K-12 educational content. And whose literary theory is that there's one right interpretation to every literary work, based on the "intention" of the author (apparently he managed to ignore the notion of the "intentional fallacy" or simply figured no one would notice that his view was outdated and for the most part irrelevant). This is the guy you want telling you what you and your kids need to know? I think you could do just as well to get advice from MEIN KAMPF, THE LITTLE RED BOOK, and THE EXECUTION ORDERS OF JOSEPH STALIN (okay, I made that last one up).

And then we have this bit of sophistry:


"Cultural Literacy Bonus: Check out the illustration atop Jay's blog post. It's Bugs Bunny dressed as a Wagnerian Valkyrie from the cartoon, What's Opera, Doc? Can you imagine a kid's cartoon using Wagner's Ring Cycle as the basis of a parody today? It's a bromide to suggest that entertainment has been dumbed-down over time, but it's hard not to notice the difference in the vocabulary of Mary Poppins, for example, or the Rex Harrison version of Doctor Doolittle compared to contemporary kids' fare. Quantifying the change in cultural references and vocabulary level in children's entertainment over the last 50 years or so would make for an interesting study, if it hasn't already been done."


I wonder if this genius actually bothers to watch today's cartoons. Of course, first he pulls a little bait and switch: cartoons and Wagner (and who does he think was supposed to 'get' that joke? Four year olds? No more than the writers of Rocky and Bullwinkle expected little kids to know that Boris Badenov was a play on Boris Gudenov. There have ALWAYS been jokes in kids' cartoon shows that are for the writers and other adults. And such things are far MORE widespread today than ever. I could cite dozens of shows and movies ostensibly pitched at kids, from SPONGEBOB SQUARE PANTS to RUGRATS to Disney's ALADDIN to BILLY AND MANDY (and on to more sophisticated fare for older kids and up, like SOUTH PARK, AQUA TEEN HUNGER FORCE, ROBOT CHICKEN, FAMILY GUY, etc.) in which the references are multi-layered, culturally sophisticated, and fraught with vocabulary and references my son constantly learned from and continues to learn from. As he gets older (nearly 14 now) he sees levels of things in these shows he missed when he was younger. No kidding: just as I am amazed at things in those old WB cartoons and CRUSADER RABBIT, BEANIE AND CECIL, etc., that went right by the much younger me at the time they first aired or I first saw them). And then suddenly we're talking about Mary Poppins and Doctor Doolittle. Nice. So then let's compare the vocabulary in those books (as well as the sophistication of ideas presented) with Harry Potter and Philip Pullman's HIS DARK MATERIALS trilogy, to be fair and accurate? Or would that ruin the sales pitch for Core Knowledge?

Let me sum up: Wayne and his Core Knowledge pals are the snake oil salesmen. Don't buy it, it's really bad for you and expensive as well