“The Bastardization of Reading”

by Robert Pondiscio
March 18th, 2010

Complaints about teaching to the test and narrowing the curriculum are nothing new, but a smart new blog called The Ed Skeptic has an interesting analysis on how test prep leads to a “bastardization of reading” in elementary schools–especially low-income schools.  Teaching and practicing test taking strategies is ”a more efficient input towards the goal of maximizing testing performance” than rigorously teaching academic subjects.  And that’s a problem.

Consider the test prep ritual, surely familiar to every elementary school teacher by now, of teaching children to read the questions and answer choices first, and then read passage itself, underlining key sections and phrases that offer clues to the answers.  Notes blogger Jennifer Page:

This read-questions-and-answers-then-scan-text-strategically approach isn’t natural, but it works.  Thing is, you can’t introduce this strategy to students the week before The Big Test, or only a few will use it.  You might be able to guess where I’m going here.  To achieve high performance on standardized tests, it is perfectly sensible for teachers to have students read 500-word passages instead of chapter books all year long, and to read them in a way that will get them in the habit of strategically attacking multiple choice questions.

“This is the bastardization of reading, folks,” she concludes, ”and it’s precisely the sort of classroom practice that is galvanized when school accountability is the end-all.”  Indeed,  Page correctly concludes that teachers who don’t maximize time spent on testing strategies are acting as “ irrational agents.”

It’s become to common to claim that testing hasn’t narrowed the curriculum (the problem is more accurately defined as an insistence on teaching reading as a content-neutral, all-purpose skill).   But Page’s argument is broader, and more troubling:  the focus on testing changes and subverts how children are taught to read.    She proposes making it illegal for Race to the Top Funds to be spend on commercial test prep materials to send a signal that “replacing the language arts block with multiple-choice practice is unethical.”  She also suggests we no longer test reading.  No, really.

I am very deliberately attacking the substitution of mind-numbing 500-word passages for novels.  For reasons that I don’t have room to discuss here, I’m much more optimistic that critical thinking in math can be measured by the multiple choice format and that testing math doesn’t lend itself to test score pollution in the same way that reading does.  If every school in America administered the same rigorous math assessment for grades K-12, dataphiles at state education departments would have one incredibly useful measure of how well students are doing (by classroom, school, district, state, region, etc.).  Creating such an assessment system, and eliminating the standardized test in reading, would promote the goal of meaningful accountability while delimiting that harm that strategic test preparation can do.

The view of people with classroom experience is too often marginalized in policy debates or mindlessly assumed to be echoing union positions, so mark The Ed Skeptic as a blog to watch.  “Dysfunctional school culture was frequently undermining my best efforts in the classroom,”  Page says in an email.  She is a former Teach for America corps member and elementary school teacher, now a doctoral student in political theory at Harvard.  “I began to think about how policy reform at the federal/state level could make a dramatic impact on educational outcomes.”

Speaking of the voice of experience, I’ve been inexcusably remiss in not heralding the arrival in the blogosphere of Walt Gardner, a 28-year veteran Los Angeles teacher, who has in recent years gained a reputation as the Isaac Asimov of letters to the editor, penning dozens of missives in every major print publication in the country.   But wait!  Wasn’t it Gardner who once said of education blogs, “I have an aversion to them because they too often become venues for rants rather than for reason…they seem to attract a disproportionate number of self-styled experts with dubious credentials who just want to ventilate.” 

Yes, well, plus ça change.  I’m glad he’s over his aversion, and that EdWeek has given a high-profile gig to a smart, independently-minded pro.

Ed Reform’s Redheaded Stepchild

by Robert Pondiscio
March 16th, 2010

Over at Gotham Schools, New York City parent and occasional Core Knowledge Blog commenter Matthew Levey points out an inconvenient truth about teacher quality as an reform lever:  the numbers are fanciful.  He imagines an educational utopia in the Big Apple, where the perfect teacher assessment tool has been invented, the state assembly “rescinds the tenure provisions of the Taylor law, and the UFT cooperates.”  Even in this best of all imagined worlds, it’s still not enough. 

New York City alone would need to recruit and hire 27,000 superb teachers by Year Three for teacher quality to work as a reform lever, raising logistical problems we’re not ready to solve, he says. 

“Knowledgable reformers know we cannot build and maintain an army of superteachers ready for 10- or 20-year careers in Red Hook, Mott Haven and Washington Heights. While teacher quality is important, can the city responsibly assume that it will be able to develop effective tools, win (or roll) over the unions and fix today’s Albany disaster?

Curriculum reform, Levey concludes, must play an equal role in reform efforts. In New York City, he writes, curriculum can be developed and replicated at almost no marginal cost, “earning a far greater return on investment than merit bonuses for every qualifying teacher or hiring 10,000 high-quality teachers.”  Where teacher quality is a long-term, expensive, and politically difficult fix, he notes, curriculum is “fast, cheap, and also effective.” 

“Teacher quality advocates may ask:  ‘How does a good curriculum help a poor teacher?”  I would rephrase the question: “Does a good curriculum make a poor teacher worse?” Lesson planning, delivery of instruction and classroom management — how to teach — are daunting enough without having to develop good content every week. A solid, coherent curriculum improves the odds for new or struggling teacher, and allows master teachers to focus on their kids’ needs or mentoring colleagues.”

Levey doesn’t mention it, but it’s difficult to imagine why our best and brightest would agree to take up the chalk to begin with at pay levels far below other professions, at a time when the President thinks firing entire staffs of schools is a good idea, and ill-informed ed reform Aldo Raines are braying for teachers’ scalps.  In short, we’re making the teaching profession ever less compelling, which doesn’t inspire confidence that our army of superteachers can be mustered without an absurdly large infusion of public money (another nonstarter).   Levey concludes his analysis with a call for New York City to use its enormous leverage to lead the charge on curriculum reform.  “The content we want our kids to learn is the fraternal twin of teacher quality,” he writes “and it is high time we stopped treating it like a redheaded stepchild.”

A “Not-To-Be-Missed Opportunity for American Education”

by Robert Pondiscio
March 10th, 2010

The Common Core State Standards released today represents a ”not-to-be-missed opportunity for the nation to begin catching up in verbal achievement,” says E.D. Hirsch, Jr.  The Core Knowledge Foundation issued a statement in support of the initiative in which Hirsch describes the English Language Arts standards as “a significant improvement over the earlier drafts.”

“Especially welcome is the drafters’ insistence that the language arts standards must be complemented by a well-developed, content-rich curriculum and their recognition that verbal achievement–including reading comprehension–is based on general knowledge. By emphasizing the critical fact that language mastery also requires knowledge of history, art, music, and science, and moreover that these subjects should be included in the class time devoted to literacy, these standards go beyond the narrow literary emphasis of even the best of the existing state standards.” 

The big win for those who advocate for a coherent, specific core curriculum is the Standards’ call for elementary reading instruction to be “fully integrative, including a rich blend of stories, drama, and poetry as well as informational texts from a range of content areas.”  The call for schools to teach a coherent curriculum (not just nonfiction for the sake of nonfiction) that builds knowledge across grades is a validation of the Core Knowledge approach to literacy, notes Foundation President Linda Bevilacqua.  

“While various reading approaches include nonfiction, and textbook publishers are paying greater attention to reading in the content areas, they have typically failed to grasp the importance of developing a cumulative and coherent approach to building knowledge within grades and across grade levels.  States and textbook publishers who wish to be standards-ready will now need to understand that randomly selecting and inserting individual nonfiction titles into their English Language Arts programs is not sufficient.

“This random approach to content in language arts fails to recognize how domain knowledge builds within and across grade levels. It’s a missed opportunity and a waste of precious instructional time,” she said.   Hirsch is also quoted in support of the standards in this morning’s Washington Post.  Elsewhere Edweek’s Catherine Gewertz posts a comprehensive look at the reactions to the standards, both good and bad.

Sorry for the Inconvenience

by Robert Pondiscio
March 9th, 2010

If you’re a regular visitor, you may have noticed a new look for this blog.   Please excuse us while we complete the changeover.   User comments are not functioning, and our blogroll is AWOL.  Notice any other issues?  Feel free to email me at rpondiscio@coreknowledge.org.  And thanks for your patience!

Teacher Quality: The New Magic Bullet

by Robert Pondiscio
March 8th, 2010

It’s official.  Forget accountability. Forget choice and charters.  Forget mayoral control, standards, class size and universal pre-K.  Teacher quality has now been annointed The Answer for what ails American education. 

Those who pay attention to the life cycles of ideas will note that the tipping point occurred on or about March 8, 2010 when the New York Times Magazine and Newsweek simultaneously devoted their covers to teacher quality–guaranteeing that the issue has achieved escape velocity, breaking out of the education bubble and into the mainstream.  Elizabeth Green’s “Building a Better Teacher” is a lengthy article about efforts to describe and quantify what makes good teachers effective, and it’s unfair to compare it to Newsweek’s cover story, which is classic example of the newsmagazine formula: take bits of data and pieces of string that have been rattling around — the bit about how “2, 3, or 4″ (which is it?) good teachers in a row close the achievement gap; the bit about how teachers come from the bottom third of students  – and combine them into a single piece of received wisdom. Newsweek’s cover  pronounces in stentorian tones: “We must fire bad teachers.”  Lest the point be lost, the magazine tells us in bright yellow letters that this is “The Key to Saving American Education.”  And that’s subtle compared to the article itself which declares: ”The problem with education is teachers.” 

Well, thanks for clearing that up. 

“Getting rid of bad teachers and hiring good ones is the solution to turning around failing urban schools,”  Newsweek tells us.  Note the definite article.  Not “a” solution, but “the” solution.  The Answer.  The Way. The True and Only Heaven.  Cue choirs of seraphim and cherubim.  No more calls, we have a winner.  If we want to fix schools we must fire bad teachers.  That’s it.  Period. Full stop.

Let me say this clearly:  teacher quality matters.  I’ll say it again.  Teacher quality matters.  Did I mention that teacher quality matters?  Because it’s really true.  Teacher. Quality. Matters.  Are we clear?

But let’s be clear on something else.  The very worst phenomenon in education is the True and Only anything.  Pondiscio’s First Law states there is no good idea in education that doesn’t become a bad idea the moment in hardens into orthodoxy.  And teacher quality now threatens to become the latest good idea that we will follow off a cliff. 

Curriculum?  Doesn’t mean a thing without a great teacher.  School leadership.  Sure.  That’s how we hire great teachers.  Testing?  That’s how we identify great teachers.  Merit pay?  We need to compensate great teachers for delivering results.  Class size?  A great teacher can handle 50 kids more effectively than a mediocre one can teach five.  Choice? Parental support?  What part of great teacher do you not understand?

But enough of all that.  We now know — we know — what it will take to fix education.  Great teachers. 

And only 3.2 million of them.

Ravitch: No U-Turn

by Diana Senechal
March 4th, 2010

In The Death and Life of the Great American School System, as in her previous work, Diane Ravitch takes apart many education fads and clichés, and explains the changes in her views on testing, choice, and accountability. Now a cliche has arisen in the media about Ravitch herself: the assertion that she has made an “about-face,” a “U-turn,” or a “180-degree turn.” Reviewers, reporters, and bloggers have latched onto these phrases as though they were established truths.

As Ravitch’s research assistant, I had the great honor of reading her book many times prior to its publication and assisting with documentation and editing. In addition, I have read all the books she has written and some of those she has edited. In the spirit of her work, I will challenge the “about-face” bromide.

She has changed some views and retained others, and the change has not always been 180 degrees (sometimes more like 45, 90, or 115 degrees). Or perhaps, like many of us, she has several concentric circles, some staying still, others rotating. She has always been critical of rushed reforms and educational fads. She has always supported a strong, rich curriculum and warned about the pitfalls of standardized tests. And she has a profound understanding of the challenges that teachers have faced over the past century.

 In chapters 18-20 of her first book, The Great School Wars (1974), Ravitch described how policymakers rushed to expand a reform model without adequate thought and planning. In the spring of 1914, NYC Mayor John Purroy Mitchel visited Gary, Indiana, to see the reorganized schools, where students spent the day in workshops in large spaces rather than classrooms. He liked what he saw and approved a pilot plan at a school in the Bronx, based on the Gary model. Soon afterward, a Brooklyn school was added.

Despite the skepticism (and, later, the scathing report) of Superintendent William Henry Maxwell, despite parent concerns about the weak curriculum, despite growing protests in the community, Mayor Mitchel insisted on expanding the plan throughout the city. “Why the haste to install the Gary plan?” Ravitch asks. “The Mitchel administration had decided that it was the answer to the problem of overcrowded schools and had stopped the school-construction program.” The expansion was both rushed and academically unsound—two recurring characteristics of reforms that Ravitch criticizes in her new book.

Throughout her career, Ravitch has repeatedly criticized the tendency of reformers to latch onto the newest educational idea without regard for the substance of a curriculum. In The Troubled Crusade (1983), and later, in Left Back (2000), she describes the curriculum revision movement of the early decades of the twentieth century: it typically began with an administrator learning that “his own school’s program, no matter how successful it might seem, was outmoded.” The efforts to bring the school in line with the times invariably destroyed the academic curriculum. In her latest book, too, she shows the futility of reforms that ignore the substance of learning.

Many assume that Ravitch was previously an ardent supporter of accountability and testing and has switched her views completely. But she has warned over the decades that standardized tests could narrow the curriculum. In her 1984 essay “The Uses and Misuses of Tests” (included in The Schools We Deserve), she observes:

Overreliance on standardized testing may be dangerous to the health of education. It is certainly dangerous to the integrity of the high school curriculum. The introduction of the SAT, which (in its verbal component) is curriculum free, left many high schools without a good argument for requiring students to take history, literature, science, or anything not specifically demanded by the college of their choice.

A decade later, after serving as assistant secretary of education, she wrote in National Standards in American Education (1995):

The SAT tested linguistic and mathematical power and had no connection to any particular curriculum, which left secondary schools free to require whatever they chose. The literature curriculum, which had been anchored by the college entrance examinations for many years, was completely abandoned by the SAT, allowing secondary schools to teach whatever books they wished and even to drop the traditional classics altogether.

Ravitch’s work shows compassion for teachers and understanding of their extraordinary responsibilities. In “Scapegoating the Teachers” (1983, in The Schools We Deserve) she points out that “the most common response to the current crisis in education has been to assail public school teachers.” This is unfair, she argues, because there are “many guilty parties still at large”; moreover, “as teaching conditions worsen, it is teachers who suffer the consequences.” In Left Back, she describes the overwhelming demands on teachers over the past century, as one drastic movement replaced another. These themes recur in The Death and Life of the Great American School System.

Yes, Ravitch has undergone a significant transformation. For those who insist on reducing her views to “thumbs up” or “thumbs down,” her change may resemble a 180-degree turn. She herself describes the change as wrenching; in the first chapter of her new book, she recalls her own bewilderment: “But why, I kept wondering, why had I changed my mind? What was the compelling evidence that prompted me to reevaluate the policies I had endorsed many times over the previous decade?” She freely admits: “I too had fallen for the latest panaceas and miracle cures; I too had drunk deeply of the elixir that promised a quick fix to intractable problems.” This is not to be taken lightly. But there is much more to her views than a flip or a turn. There is wisdom, scholarship, and a sense of the complexity of education. If her changes can be reduced to a U-turn, then the earth does not orbit, nor does a room have shape.

Diana Senechal taught for four years in the New York City public schools and has stepped back to write a book on the loss of solitude in schools and culture. Her writing has appeared in Education Week, GothamSchools, the Core Knowledge Blog, Joanne Jacobs, the Answer Sheet, and Common Core.

“No Daylight Between Us”

by Robert Pondiscio
March 3rd, 2010

Diane Ravitch’s new book, The Death and Life of the Great American School System, has tongues wagging from one end of the edusphere to the other.  The New York Times’ Sam Dillon weighs in with a profile of Ravitch, which gives play to the overhyped “I was blind but now I see” angle that’s dominating reviews so far

Checker Finn files a review of the book over at Forbes.com, and he makes an important point about Ravitch’s putative reversals.  When it comes to curriculum, Ravitch’s views haven’t changed a bit:

Diane and I go back a very long way–three decades, give or take–and in addition to the personal friendship we have, during that period, shared a basic diagnosis of what’s awry in U.S. education. It boils down to this: Most kids aren’t learning nearly enough of the important stuff that they ought to be learning.  That was true in 1981, when we jointly launched the Educational Excellence Network, and it’s still true today. Our view of the central problem needing to be solved has, I believe, remained constant, and there is no daylight between us on that score.

Where Finn parts company with his friend is on where we go from here.  “She has become more conservative,” Finn writes, “while I have become more radical.”

Learning By Doing

by Robert Pondiscio
March 3rd, 2010

Perhaps it was Take Your Child to Work Day at JFK International Airport.  Or maybe Project Based Learning: Extreme Edition?

Diane Ravitch: A Prophet Without Honor

by Robert Pondiscio
February 26th, 2010

Last summer I had the great privilege of reading Diane Ravitch’s new book The Death and Life of the Great American School System in draft form.  It’s a splendid book and a must-read for anyone who cares about our schools and our education policy.  I have been eagerly anticipating the release of this book and the reaction to it. 

At Washington Monthly, Rick Kahlenberg frames his review as Ravitch’s return to her liberal roots, noting she has become “one of the nation’s leading critics not only of conservative educational policies like vouchers but of more centrist ideas too, like charter schools, testing, and merit pay for teachers.”

The new Ravitch exhibits an interesting mix of support for public education and the rights of teachers to bargain collectively with a tough-mindedness that some on the pedagogical left lack; she supports a strong core curriculum and a no-nonsense approach on discipline, while casting a skeptical eye on efforts to artificially prop up student self-esteem….Ironically, Ravitch’s return to the left comes precisely as centrist ideas are consolidating their hold on Washington. Even left-of-center thinking—at the Obama administration’s Education Department, leading foundations and think tanks, and the editorial pages of the New York Times—has galvanized around greater emphasis on charter schools and performance pay for teachers based on test score gains.

At the Washington Post’s Answer Sheet blog, Valerie Strauss urges readers to pick up the book and focuses on its most important takeway: Ravitch’s strenuous pushback against data-driven, business-minded reformers who ”imagine that it is easy to create a successful school.”

“They imagine that the lessons of a successful school are obvious and can be easily transferred to other schools, just as one might take an industrial process or a new piece of machinery and install it in a new plant without error. But a school is successful for many reasons, including the personalities of its leader and teachers; the social interactions among them; the culture of the school; the students and their families; the way the school implements policies and programs dictated by the district, the state and the federal government; the quality of the school’s curriculum and instruction; the resources of the school and the community; and many other factors. When a school is successful, it is hard to know which factor was most important or if it was a combination of factors.”

“Amen,” Strauss chimes in.  “The U.S. public school system would not be as troubled as it is if most of the reformers of the past few decades really understood this.”

Amen, indeed.  It has been dispiriting to see some in the ed reform community, including some I otherwise respect, dismiss Ravitch in the past several years  (no links; you know who you are) accusing her of anything from apostasy to idiocy.  Being right is the best revenge, however, and I suspect when some future Diane Ravitch writes the history of this era in education, he or she will wonder why more attention wasn’t paid to our best and clearest educational historian.  Too often a prophet without honor, she has spent the last several years of her career acting as a one-woman counterweight to the worst excesses of the ascendant, 0ften-wrong-but-never-in-doubt brand of ed reform.  The Death and Life of the Great American School System is her clearest and most powerful statement to date.

The Common Standards Mousetrap

by Robert Pondiscio
February 24th, 2010

Build a better mousetrap and the world will beat a path to your door, said Ralph Waldo Emerson.  He did not say “states will not be considered for federal dollars for rodent extermination that have not pledged to follow common state standards for mousetraps.” 

Will the Common Core State Standards Initiative (CCSSI) represent a better mousetrap?  Fordham’s Checker Finn is concerned that the initiative is already being laden with heavier and heavier burdens.  Only states that are on board are eligible for Race to the Top dollars.  Now President Obama now says he wants to link states’  Title I funding to the new standards and assessments.  Why are the DOE, the White House, the Gates Foundation and others  are “sounding and acting as if these standards and assessments had already proven themselves,” Finn wonders.  It’s “enormously risky and, frankly, hubristic,” he writes.

A little humility would seem to us to be in order. If these standards and assessments end up representing a huge improvement over those in use in most states today, then much that’s good may reasonably follow from their installation and use. But what if they don’t? And even if they do, what about those (few) states that have done a creditable job on their own and for which CCSSI may represent either a lateral move or a step backward? In any case, would it not be prudent to appraise their safety and efficacy before demanding that they become the center of America’s new education universe?