On Reading: Why Content Knowledge Matters

Why is content knowledge so important to reading? A couple of reasons are obvious: (1) you can’t comprehend if you’re missing some of the vocabulary, and (2) the text might use vocabulary you know, but reference ideas that you don’t know. For example, the sentence “Gosh, it’s January 5th-I’ve got to go get some wheatberries and raisins!” doesn’t use unusual vocabulary words, but it’s not sensible unless you know that the speaker is Armenian, and that a traditional dish for January 6 (Armenian Christmas) is a pudding that includes those ingredients.

But content knowledge serves reading in more subtle ways. A key feature of all writing (and speaking) is that information is omitted. For example, suppose you read the following sentence:

John said ‘look Dave, I would stand in line with you for the tickets, but I’ve used up all my sick days.’ 

There are two key ideas in the sentence: (1)  John wants to stand in line for the tickets but can’t and (2) John has used up his sick days. The second idea is offered as an explanation for the first.  But notice that a good deal of information that is necessary for the right interpretation is actually missing from the text. You need to know that (1) people may wait hours in line for tickets to entertainment events; (2) people may use sick days to avoid work even when they are not sick and (3) people are reluctant or unwilling to skip work when they have used all their sick days because their pay may be docked.  The writer has omitted this information, gambling that the reader already knows it, and can fill the logical gap in the sentence.  If the reader does not have the requisite background knowledge, he or she doesn’t comprehend the sentence.

Writers must omit some information-if they didn’t, writing would be impossibly repetitive and tedious. So readers must bring background knowledge to the task of reading so that they are ready to fill the gaps that writers will leave.  Small wonder that students who score poorly on reading tests suddenly look like terrific readers when given a passage on a topic that they know a lot about.

 I’ve described just one of the more subtle ways that background knowledge helps reading comprehension. There are others, described here http://www.aft.org/pubs-reports/american_educator/issues/spring06/willingham.htm.

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Reading About Reading

Fordham’s Mike Petrilli weighs in on the Core Knowledge reading program announcement.  So does Richard Whitmire.  Elissa Gootman’s longer piece in yesterday’s NY Times even manages to elicit warm words from Lucy Calkins.  But especially welcome is Richard Lee Colvin’s entry at Early Stories, which concludes

“Journalists might look into pre-kindergarten programs or elementary schools in their area that are using the Core Knowledge approach.  Are the kids bored? Do their heads hurt?” 

If anyone wishes to take up Colvin’s suggestion, a complete list of Core Knowledge Schools can be found here.  Such a visit would help counter the nonsense peddled for years by Alfie Kohn, for example, that Core Knowledge is merely a bunch o’ facts that “steal time from more meaningful objectives.”

Indeed, too many people in education still carry around the idea that reading is a content-neutral skill, and don’t appreciate the connection between background knowledge and reading comprehension.  There is an assumption on the part of many teachers that the ability to decode and to apply metacognitive “reading strategies” is enough to make any text comprehensible.  Isn’t it pretty to think so?

Over the next couple of days, UVA cognitive scientist Dan Willingham and Matt Davis, who heads the Core Knowledge Reading Program will weigh in here on reading.  Stay tuned.

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Big Day in the Big Apple

Richard Whitmire dropped a hint last week calling it “the biggest development in reading instruction that won’t make the front pages of any national newspaper. But it should.”  Today came the announcement: a three-year, $2.4 million pilot project to test a new Core Knowledge Reading Program in New York City Schools.  Chancellor Joel Klein made the announcement, along with Core Knowledge founder E.D. Hirsch, Jr., and Amida Gentile of the UFT.  The DOE’s press release is here.

Lots to say about this initiative, but here’s coverage in the New York Times, Edweek, and New York’s WABC-TV.

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Hello, Jennifer

The secret’s out.  Eduwonkette, the masked heroine who rights wrongs armed only with data and panache, has revealed her true identlty.  And she’s not who you think she is, not matter who you thought she was.  She’s Jennifer Jennings, Columbia doctoral student in sociology.  Tonight, she’s outing herself and ending one of the edusphere’s most entertaining guessing games.  Ms. Jennings says she began the blog last year because she was “bad at crocheting and tired of watching the Yankees lose.”  She clearly had no idea it would attract so much attention.

Why am I dropping the mask now? Over the past few months, two things happened. First, people started to wrongly finger other educational researchers as eduwonkette. Given the New York City Department of Education’s affection for my data analysis, some researchers rightfully worried that a case of mistaken identity could have negative implications for their relationships with the DOE. Second, others have started to figure out my true identity. It was a matter of time until someone else made my identity known, and I ultimately decided to introduce myself on my own terms.

Eduwonkette’s coming out party includes a nice little feature in New York Magazine.  So now those that have taken issue with the Eduwonkette because of perceived bias, will have to deal wth all those stubborn facts she throws around.  I’ll miss the mask, but I’ll continue reading Jennifer’s brilliant blog.

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21st Century Cliches

Does giving a kid an iPod mean you are teaching “21st century skills?”

A Chapel Hill, North Carolina middle school may become the first in the country to give an iPod to every teacher and student, “an experiment that would challenge teachers and administrators to ensure the hand-held devices are used as learning tools, not toys,” reports the News & Observer.  The school’s principal defends the iPod plan with a phrase that is rapidly becoming an education cliche:  “[Our teachers] state their commitment to teach 21st-century skills, because technology is the future for students and teachers.”

Reporter Matt Dees injects a healthy note of skepticism in his piece, noting “it’s still not clear how the iPod Touches would be used at Culbreth Middle School. And school officials know that students may use the iPod Touches more to download the new Jonas Brothers single than to tap the riches of human knowledge.” Dees quotes Core Knowledge founder E.D. Hirsch, who comments, “There has been a tendency to use technology as a substitute for curriculum.”

Technique and how-to ideas have taken the place of deciding what it is, exactly, we want these children to learn, says Hirsch. But I have nothing against the technology if it’s in the service of grown-ups facing their responsibilities to decide what the students need to know precisely. If they did that, these technical gadgets will be valuable.

I’ve been hearing the phrase a lot, so I ask the question in earnest: What exactly does it mean to ”teach 21st century skills”?  Is learning to play an instrument a 21st century skill because you use an iPod?  Is writing a research paper a 21st century skill just because you use Google?  I’m hard-pressed to think of a single use of the phrase that didn’t conflate the tool and the task.   

In a New York Times piece last week, Steve Lohr noted the technology is starting to “turn the corner” in schools, and offered an example of how it can transform learning.  “The emphasis can shift to project-based learning, a real break with the textbook-and-lecture model of education. In a high school class, a project might begin with a hypothetical letter from the White House that says oil prices are spiking, the economy is faltering and the president’s poll numbers are falling. The assignment would be to devise a new energy policy in two weeks,” Lohr wrote.  But as Joanne Jacobs noted, there’s nothing new about project learning.  I would add that neither is working collaboratively intrinsically “21st century.”

Critical thinking? Problem solving? As old as banging rocks together to make fire.  Working collaboratively?  You mean, like hunting in groups to bring down a antelope?  I’m no Luddite, and I’m all for using technology in the service of learning.  But what are these uniquely “21st century skills?”  Are there any?

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The Problem With Preschool

Mom, apple pie and universal PreK?  Not so fast argue Shikha Dalmia and Lisa Snell of the libertarian Reason Foundation in today’s Wall Street Journal.  With the exception of “very intense interventions targeted toward severely disadvantaged kids, “there’s little statistical evidence that strapping a backpack on all 4-year-olds and sending them to preschool is good for them.” While U.S. preschool attendance has gone up to nearly 70% from 16% in the last half century, they note, fourth-grade reading, science, and math scores on the NAEP have stayed flat since the early 1970s.

Preschool activists at the Pew Charitable Trust and Pre-K Now — two major organizations pushing universal preschool — refuse to take this evidence seriously. The private preschool market, they insist, is just glorified day care. Not so with quality, government-funded preschools with credentialed teachers and standardized curriculum. But the results from Oklahoma and Georgia — both of which implemented universal preschool a decade or more ago — paint an equally dismal picture.

 Dalmia and Snell maintain that preschool gains don’t stick because the K-12 system “is too dysfunctional to maintain them.”

“Our understanding of the effects of preschool is still very much in its infancy. But one inescapable conclusion from the existing research is that it is not for everyone. Kids with loving and attentive parents — the vast majority — might well be better off spending more time at home than away in their formative years. The last thing that public policy should do is spend vast new sums of taxpayer dollars to incentivize a premature separation between toddlers and parents.”

Update:  Richard Whitmire, guesting over at eduwonk, is having none of this.

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Exhilarating Drudgery

The Internet puts the world’s knowledge at the ends of our rapidly twitching fingers, yet the academic research skills of “average” students are poorer today than when they “had to trek to a library, sift through periodicals, muddle through card catalogs, and blow off dust from stacks of books, just to access potential material for a term paper,” observes ed.org columnist Ron Isaac, who wonders “What has replaced this exhilarating drudgery?”

Too often a student will go online, key in, say, “Shakespeare,” double click, and then muster the energy for one more click so that their ready-made dissertation will be printing while they split to check out YouTube or to surf some video channel. At the next commercial break they will scoop up their term paper from the tray, sandwich it between colored covers, and adorn it with some “photoshop” work and computer graphics. They may also type a preface to the teacher along the lines of “I hope you like this. Have a nice day!” and add the finishing touch of an “emoticon” smiley-face.

He’s painting with a broad brush, obviously, but Isaac raises a legitimate point with his observation that “everyone professes a passionate belief in the importance of teaching students critical thinking, but generally it’s left at that. The ability to think critically is not a secondary sexual characteristic that happens involuntarily. Nor does it materialize from the study of a non-existent curriculum. It is, rather, the product of many years of literal note-taking ( sometimes a lonely endeavor) and reflection.”

 

 

 

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Obama Trumps McCain Among Ed Voters

Democratic standard-bearer Barack Obama is widely perceived to be stronger than GOP nominee John McCain on education issues, according to a new poll.  Asked which candidate they would support “if you were voting solely on the basis of a desire to strengthen public schools,” 46% chose Obama to 29% for McCain.  Obama also leads on “promoting parental choice, an issue often perceived to favor Republicans. 

More poll results here.

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Corporal Punishment by the Numbers

Number of students hit, spanked, or subject to corporal punishment in the 2006-2007 school year, according to U.S. Education Department figures: 223,190

Number in 2000-2001: 342,038

Number of states that report more than 1,000 uses of corporal punishment per year: 13

Rank of Texas, Mississippi and Alabama among states most likely to use corporal punishment: 1, 2 and 3.

Ratio of boys paddled to girls:  4 to 1

Chance that a girl subject to corporal punishment is black: 2 out of 3

Percentage of students nationwide who are black: 17.

Percentage of corporal punishments nationwide meted out on black students:  35.6

Percentage of U.S. students classified as disabled: 10.7

Percentage of corporal punishments meted out on disabled students:  17.4

Percentage of Northeast, Upper Midwest and Pacific states that have banned corporal punishment: 100

Percentage of Southern states that have banned it: 0

Percentage of people in Twiggs County, Georgia who support the practice, according to a member of the community’s school board:  95

Average number of daily referrals for paddling reported by a former assistant principal in charge of discipline at a middle school in Meridian, Mississippi:  19-23 students

Single day record in the same school:  37 students.

Number of states and countries where corporal punishment is banned: 29, 106 countries, respectively

Sources: USA Today, Reuters, Human Rights Watch

(With apologies to the Harper’s Index)

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What’s In a Name?

David Whitman’s new book, Sweating the Small Stuff, looks at Amistad Academy, KIPP, SEED, and other successful inner city schools that have done the best work at closing the achievement gap.  The book is winning early praise from the education cognoscenti.  But there’s a problem: 

“I hate his subtitle, ‘Inner-City Schools and the New Paternalism.’ And I like his decision to refer to this group as ‘the paternalistic schools’ even less,” writes Jay Mathews in the Washington Post.  USA Today’s Richard Whitmire, guestblogging at Eduwonk agrees, saying simply Whitman’s subtitle “needs work.” Whitney Tilson, a big charter school supporter, praises the book in his latest ed reform email blast, but adds, “I don’t like the word ‘paternalism.’  What the schools are doing is instilling not only knowledge, but the absolutely critical soft skills that are necessary to succeed in life, such as ‘kindness, decency, integrity, and hard work.’”

Checker Finn of the Fordham Foundation, which brought out Whitman’s book, notes that the schools themselves don’t much like the label of ‘paternalism’ and reject any suggestion that their schools condescend to students or their parents, which some feel is implied by the paternalism label…But it’s undeniable that these schools aim to change the lifestyles of those who attend them.”

David Whitman explains his title this way:

By paternalistic I mean that each of the six schools is a highly prescriptive institution that teaches students not just how to think, but also how to act according to what are commonly termed traditional, middle-class values. These paternalistic schools go beyond just teaching values as abstractions: the schools tell students exactly how they are expected to behave, and their behavior is closely monitored, with real rewards for compliance and penalties for noncompliance. Unlike the often forbidding paternalistic institutions of the past, these schools are prescriptive yet warm; teachers and principals, who sometimes serve in loco parentis, are both authoritative and caring figures. Teachers laugh with and cajole students, in addition to frequently directing them to stay on task.

It’s the rare person who works with or observes struggling inner city schools who doesn’t cite family disruption and a low-level of parenting skills as part of the problem.  As a teacher, I often thought my job was not just to teach my students but to help raise them.  Matthew Tabor gets it right when he notes that “very, very few education leaders, from individual community leaders to those on the national scene, are comfortable and honest enough to tell it like it is. We need to say what we are, what we aren’t, and get on with things.”  Fordham’s Mike Petrilli writes that as uncomfortable as it might be to discuss in public, “what these schools are doing is providing a middle-class, achievement-oriented culture to children who come out of a culture of poverty. And for that, the schools should be applauded (and emulated). It might not be politically correct to use these terms, but they are accurate. And that should count for something.”  

Whitman deserves praise for calling ‘em like he sees ‘em.  From what I know of the schools he profiles, his analysis–and use of the term paternalism–is spot on.  Jay Mathews worries that when a defender of these schools uses a freighted word like “paternalistic” those who don’t like the the schools methods will use the word like a cudgel.  Methinks he worries too much.  Nothing marginalizes criticism like success.  As long as these schools deliver on their promise of a solid education, you could call them “Pact with Lucifer” schools and they’d still be oversubscribed.  We ought to have reached a point where our patience with failing inner city children has shamed us into applauding and emulating success, whether or not we like the methods by which it’s achieved or take exception to how they are described.

A school’s culture matters a great deal.  In neighborhoods where children often lack strong adult guidance and authority–or are surrounded by adults who undermine it–it matters more than anything.  Whitman has done a valuable service by focusing our attention on it.  I’m looking forward to reading his book. 

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