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Dr. Jim Taylor

Dr. Jim Taylor

Posted: May 17, 2010 03:42 PM

Public Education Reform Is Doubly Off the Mark

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Even before any action is taken to reform our public education system, the current efforts being championed by President Obama and administered by Education Secretary Arne Duncan are missing the mark at two fundamental levels and, in doing so, ill-serve the needs of all students. First, let's start with what public education reform really is.

As I argued in a previous post, "public education reform" is really a code phrase for "education for the poor." Just about all of the reform efforts are devoted to helping struggling schools that are comprised of students who are poor and overwhelmingly minorities and immigrants. Yet that is not how the reform is characterized. The euphemism public education reform is, at best, politically correct and attempts to convey the decidedly democratic message that all children should be treated equally. At worst, this inaccurate language is just plain harmful, causing it to divert us from the real purpose of education reform. Such pretense, regardless of its intentions, creates a house of cards on which current public education reform is built.

If we're going to solve this massive societal problem, we must start by being honest. Past and current legislation and policy initiatives have been disingenuous. No Child Left Behind made great political theater and established admirable (though thoroughly unrealistic) expectations, but was really just an expensive band-aid for a gaping wound. Race to the Top couldn't be more poorly named (though Race to Mediocrity is probably too pessimistic to sell); educating children shouldn't be a competition and aiming for the top, however inspiring it may sound, is setting a bar that, like NCLB, can't possibly be cleared, at least in the near future. Both attempts at public education reform got us on the wrong road that has kept us from reaching the destination we all want.

Let's call this public education reform something that is honest and descriptive, say, Removing Obstacles, Creating Opportunities (ROCO): Public Education Reform for Disadvantaged Children. So the goal is now clear: to remove the obstacles and create opportunities that will encourage a decent education for underprivileged kids.

Second, recent education reform initiatives miss the mark on their target population. By trying to impose education reform where it is not needed, we fail to make meaningful changes where it is needed. The fact is that students in affluent school districts don't need reform; they're getting a perfectly fine education without our government's additional "assistance." In fact, when all of the current efforts at education reform are applied to well-to-do schools, the students end up being hurt rather than helped. School administrators and teachers at affluent schools are handcuffed by rigid teaching standards and intrusive testing requirements. "Teaching to the test" prevents teachers from real teaching and stifles the joy of learning and intrinsic motivation of these students who are already prepared for academic success.

Children in higher-income school districts have every advantage that makes these past (No Child Left Behind) and current (Race to the Top) efforts unnecessary. Their early childhoods are education enriched with involved parents, exposure to reading and other educational activities, and the values, attitudes, and skillsets that are required for academic success. The school districts in higher-income areas also have active foundations that raise substantial sums that go directly to staff salaries and needed resources.

You might think that this approach is unfair because we are not treating our students equally, but equality is not equity. As a commenter on this post on another web site noted, "We would not treat a blind person the same way we treat a sighted one, nor should we treat socially disadvantaged children in the same way as we treat their more privileged peers."

If we took away the so-called reforms, meaning the standards and testing, would these schools sink into the quagmire of underperformance? Not a chance. The cultures of the school and the communities would simply not permit that to happen. In fact, these schools might actually improve the quality of the education they offer because teachers would be liberated to be creative and innovative in their curricula. The students, in turn, would be more deeply engaged and could pursue learning for its own sake and for their own personal goals.

So can we forget about the schools and the students that don't need education reform? Without doing so, we are simply wasting energy, time, and money that should be more appropriately directed to children who actually need help. Without doing so, those students most in need get watered-down policies that are meant to appease all students (and constituencies) and don't strike directly at the heart of the immense barriers that lie in their path.

With our full attention now focused on the target, we will be able to ask the key questions about what the real obstacles are and apply America's considerable intellectual and innovative weight to finding real solutions to educating disadvantaged children. Simply put, when we are honest about what education reform really is about and who it is for, we might just find a way to accomplish the Everest-like reform goals we have set for ourselves.

 
 
 
Even before any action is taken to reform our public education system, the current efforts being championed by President Obama and administered by Education Secretary Arne Duncan are missing the mark ...
Even before any action is taken to reform our public education system, the current efforts being championed by President Obama and administered by Education Secretary Arne Duncan are missing the mark ...
 
 
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11:06 PM on 05/18/2010
Single motherhood drives poverty. If we could convince teens to refrain from becoming parents until they have an education AND a skill, we could turn much of this around in about ten years. No matter how hard they try, teens just don't make very good parents. There is no substitute for maturity and education. Obviously teens aren't getting the message that having a child that you can't provide for is a very bad idea. Those children are the majority of the "poor" kids in schools.

Also, perhaps the idea of grouping kids in classes based on ability should return. That worked when I was in school. Some kids need to go slower while others can learn more quickly and handle more complex ideas. Mixing everyone up in classes, is another "one size fits no one" idea. No teacher can teach each lesson in each subject at three different levels at the same time. Everyone should have the opportunity to achieve the most they can but we have to be willing to admit that not everyone has the same abilities. Telling a low ability child that they must go to college or they are a failure is simply cruel. There are skills out there for everyone, but not everyone can learn the same skills.

Without being honest about all aspects of our population, we will never find any real answers.
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Roybe
You can't fix stupid.
02:06 PM on 05/18/2010
Doc, I would suggest that you change your idea of ""public education reform" is really a code phrase for "education for the poor."" to "Public education is education for the poor". This has always been the case in this country.
10:26 AM on 05/18/2010
Well if your claims were true - which you didn't cite sources for the public school system consisting of largely minority or poor and etc or according even to location/geography of schools . So where are the mostly comprised of divorce, single parent, poverty- jobless parents schools located ? Are you speaking of inner city schools ? Rural schools ? Where is it stated that public school children are disadvantaged ? Or that public school is for the poor ? It used to the case - most Americans send their kids regardless of income.. Then how does then match up with our ability to be able to compete internationally in academia ? Are these well to do schools with their suburban families , white picket fences not being considered in those tests where we are failing and bottom wrung - barely above the poorest of nations ? Yes they are ... and they fail to be able to meet international standards which effects our ability to be able to compete globally.

So if these schools where they children need no help ... are so wonderful ... then why are we failing in test scores in comparison to some of the poorest nations ? The reformation isn't just about poor children ... It shouldn't even be just about public education ... Our children across the board scored lower.

In 2005 - over 34% of kids enrolled in Nursery- Pre-K had family income exceeding 100k. In Kindergarten 30.4% exceeded 100k. From there
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mlaiuppa
Pres. Sarcasm Society. Like we need your approval.
02:40 AM on 05/18/2010
The reason no education reform has ever succeeded is because teachers have never been a part of it.

It's always be forced upon them by people that aren't teachers.
04:08 PM on 05/17/2010
And it is absolutely right on. White Plains New York doesn't need any help. Nor does Sidwell friends.
04:06 PM on 05/17/2010
Finally a person with some sense of reality. A typical average American class room would have several children from minority status several special needs students, a couple of kids from single parents and several whose parents are going through divorce or job loss. Duncan's test and "fire the teacher" is cruel at best stupid at worst. Now we are going to test them and evaluate teachers on the results? Insane? yup.
11:17 AM on 05/18/2010
It is just as insane to require scripted teaching where everyone reads from the same page regardless of the ability or learning styles of the students in the classroom. In America we place high value on our right to be individuals. To draw a ridiculous simile, would you require all students in a classroom to wear the same size clothing to school - shoes included???