“Diversity of Preparation”

by Robert Pondiscio
September 2nd, 2010

At the Chronicle of Higher Education, Emory University professor Mark Bauerlein takes up a piece E.D. Hirsch, Jr. and I wrote in the American Prospect a few months back titled “There’s No Such Thing as a Reading Test.”  The essay explained why, contrary to popular belief, reading is not an all-purpose, transferable skill, and argued for a domain-specific approach to reading instruction and assessment.

But a commenter on Bauerlein’s Brainstorm blog wants to know why the professor is taking up the issue at all.  The piece, after all, was in an issue of the Prospect concerned with getting kids to read by third grade.  What does this have to do with higher education?  Everything, Bauerlein responds.

Just look at the numbers of freshmen who end up in remedial reading courses. And, as I argued awhile back, according to ACT, the biggest college readiness problem in reading is, precisely, inability to comprehend “complex texts.” The point of the post is to argue that reading comprehension doesn’t improve simply by practicing the “skill” again and again. Readers need to build domain knowledge in order to handle texts at the higher levels.

Right.  And that doesn’t happen overnight, nor can it be remediated at the college level. 

Ed reformers take note: if you’re not concerned with building domain knowledge in students, increasing graduation rates is only doing half the work (and the easy half at that).  If kids aren’t prepared to succeed in college–and the evidence cited by Bauerlein suggests they’re not–then what have we really accomplished?

Walt Gardner, in an unrelated post over at EdWeek,  considers President Obama’s recent declaration that “by 2020, America will once again have the highest proportion of college graduates in the world” and sees a divide between “Determinists” and “Romanticists.” Determinists like Charles Murray hold that “only a small minority of high school graduates possesses the intelligence to succeed in college.”  Romanticists like Arne Duncan believe far more students should go to college.  “Which side in the debate is right? The truth lies somewhere in the middle. Success in college is not solely the result of intelligence or aptitude. Perseverance and dedication play a powerful role that is not fully appreciated,” Garner concludes.

Right again.  But surely preparation is an even more powerful determinant of college success or failure.  “The chief problem in American education,” notes Hirsch, “is not diversity of income, race, and ethnicity but diversity of preparation.”

If we continue to insist on treating reading as a formal skill, while dismissing the importance of the slow, steady buildup of domain-knowledge, we are not adequately preparing kids to succeed in college–a phenomenon most vividly appreciated by Bauerlein and his colleagues who work with the finished products (and only the “successful” ones!) of our K-12 education system. 

If we’re setting kids up to fail in college, what have we really gained?  Gardner puts it well:  ”Let’s hope that the record percentage of female and male high school graduates now enrolled in college get their money’s worth.  A mind is a terrible thing to waste, but let’s not forget either that debt is a terrible thing to carry.”

Best Ed Books of the Decade

by Robert Pondiscio
August 31st, 2010

Education Next has a terrific poll, sure to be hotly contested, on the best education book of the past decade.  E.D. Hirsch’s The Knowledge Deficit is among the41 finalists.  So is Dan Willingham’s Why Student’s Don’t Like School. 

Other great choices made by Ed Next’s editors:  Diane Ravitch’s The Death and Life of the Great American School System; Richard Kahlenberg’s Albert Shaker bio, Tough Liberal; Tested by Linda Perlstein; Daniel Koretz’s Measuring Up: What Educational Testing Really Tells Us; Whatever It Takes by Paul Tough; and David Whitman’s Sweating the Small Stuff.

Great books, difficult choice: the poll lets you pick three favorites

Value-Added Mashup

by Robert Pondiscio
August 30th, 2010

The Los Angeles Times clearly gave the wrong impression when it put a teacher on its front page and described him as “among the least effective of the district’s elementary school teachers.”   We now learn the purpose was not to single out or embarrass bad teachers.  The reason the paper has published a database with value-added scores for 6,000 LAUSD teachers is to correct the intolerable injustice of excellent teachers not getting the credit they deserve.

“The Los Angeles Unified School District has hundreds of Jaime Escalantes — teachers who preside over remarkable successes, year after year, often against incredible odds,” notes the paper’s latest. “But nobody is making a film about them.”

It’s an outrage,  I tell you!  Emboldened by the Times support for teachers, perhaps the workers should strike for fame.  More VAM commentary from veteran L.A. teacher Walt Gardner, who has issues with Arne Duncan’s embrace of full public disclosure of teacher value-added data.  “If the purpose is to help teachers improve, then the strategy is totally counterproductive,” Gardner writes.  “Teachers who are ineffective don’t deliberately choose to be that way.”

As a result, by figuratively putting failing teachers in pillories in the public square, Duncan engages in colonial justice. He will certainly not get them to reform their wicked ways. In fact, he will only break their morale. If that’s what he wants, I say it’s more humane to fire them. After all, they shoot horses, don’t they? What these teachers need instead is one last attempt to support them to transform their classes into vital places of learning.

Over the weekend, the Economic Policy Institute released a paper that discouraged the use VAM in decisions about teacher evaluation and pay.  If you’re wondering how it will be received, look no further than Eduwonk.  Andy Rotherham links to the paper from the “teacher’s union funded EPI.”  Nuff said. 

I see the value in value-added.  Really and truly I do.  As a teacher I’d want to see my scores (in my inbox, please, not in the paper).  I also see the obvious danger in allowing a tool that’s not ready for prime time to dominate and subvert a worthwhile dialogue on teacher quality.  Like the classic Far Side cartoon, you can try to give context to the scores, layer on the caveats, the false positives and negatives, reliability issues, heap nuance upon nuance, but what gets heard is “blah blah TEST SCORES blah blah blah blah blah TEST SCORES blah blah blah TEST SCORES blah blah blah.

Failure to Launch

by Robert Pondiscio
August 27th, 2010

This summer, I have made an informal project of trying to track down as many of my first class of South Bronx students as possible.  My 5th graders in the 2002-2003 school year should have graduated from high school in June, and I was curious to see how many of them had in fact done so.  Plus, I simply wanted to see how they were doing. 

The exercise has been a bit dispiriting but not entirely surprising.   Too many of the girls in my first class are already mothers.  One has two children and a “husband” (it’s unclear if there’s a legal marriage in place) at Riker’s Island.  I’ve heard lots of talk of getting GEDs, not always attached to concrete plans for doing so.  On the plus side, I’ve so far found three students – two boys and a girl – who were accepted into four-year colleges.  In a small world coincidence one of the young men was accepted to SUNY Oswego, where I began my college career in 1980; the other to Pace University, where I taught grad school as an adjunct for a few years.  The girl, I’ll confess, is a special case and one of my favorites.  As a struggling first year teacher, this was the kid I could always count on.  She was cheerful, eager to learn.  I still have the pictures of my family she drew and presented to me when she was in my class.  One of the nicest kids I ever had the pleasure to know, let alone teach, I was over the moon to learn this young lady had been accepted to Boston University. 

An unexpected turn of events this week has left me even more depressed about the college-bound kids than the ones who dropped out.   Both of my students who were going away to college decided at the last minute not to go.  The Oswego-bound young man opted to stay home and enroll at a CUNY college.  The young lady, however, is no longer headed for BU.  She has no firm plans for September but is “thinking about going to Hostos,” a South Bronx community college.

In both cases, these two kids cited the same reason not for going away to school and in nearly identical words.  There is “too much going on at home right now.”   Both said they have sick relatives.  The young lady said her mother was not well and that she was needed at home. 

To those of us who grew up simply assuming we would go away to college and eagerly anticipating doing so–or as parents, looking forward to sending our children off to school–this failure to launch is perplexing and frustrating.   Where are the parents?  Why aren’t they insisting these children go?

A vexing mystery, but I’ve seen this enough to perceive it as a pattern and a problem.  I worked for a time with an organization in New York City that identifies talented minority children, preparing and placing them in elite private schools.  It’s a wildly successful program and harder to get into than Harvard, with dozens of applicants for each precious slot.  When the organization launched a similar program for elite boarding schools some years ago, it was a much tougher sell.  Boarding school was beyond the experience and comfort level of too many kids and families.   Overcoming the resistance to separation is challenging–even if it means a life-changing educational opportunity. 

I pressed my now non-BU student to rethink her decision.  I explained the personal and economic upside to going away to school.  For her sake and for her family, I all but begged her to reconsider.  She made it clear she would not and didn’t want to discuss it any further.  Finally, after promising not to try to persuade her, I asked her simply to help me understand her decision not to leave the Bronx.  Why, I had to know, do I keep seeing the same thing over and over?  She emailed me last night.

“Different kids base their decision on different situations, not all South Bronx kids want to stay here.  I know A LOT of kids who would love to get out of this state and go to a college away from here and their families but I just can’t. I don’t feel right and I don’t feel ready. I don’t want to leave my parents and be on my own and my mom is the MOST important person in the world to me and if anything were to happen to her while I’m away, it would effect me and break me down and I’d end up leaving anyways.”

This has nothing to do with curriculum or teaching.  This is not a story of how schools and teachers failed a student.   If anything, it’s a story where against all odds everything goes right, but the outcome is still less than ideal, and far from satisfying.   I want to find a lesson here, to make this make sense.  So many of her classmates have already failed.   So many have already repeated the mistakes of their parents—quitting school, becoming teen parents.  Lives going nowhere fast.  But here’s a terrific, sweet kid who grows up right, with a good family in a tough neighborhood.  She has the brass ring not just in her sight but in her hand and decides, “I just can’t.”

“I don’t feel right,” she said.  “I don’t feel ready.”

And I don’t have an answer.

Rigor? Who Has Time for Rigor?

by Robert Pondiscio
August 25th, 2010

Most people would agree that it would be beneficial for high school students to write the kind of research paper that Will Fitzhugh publishes in The Concord Review, the only publication in the country that features scholarly papers penned by high school students.   The ability to research and write a thoughtful, cogent research paper fairly screams “College Ready” no?

Just back from a three-day workshop with a group of “diligent, pleasant and interesting teachers” in Florida, Fitzhugh describes at the Washington Post’s Answer Sheet blog  teachers who “were genuinely interested in having their students do serious papers and be better prepared for college (and career).”   The problem is that the teachers each have at six classes of 30 or more students–180 to 210 students each.

Fitzhugh is a man of letters, but he does the math:

“After absorbing the fact of this shameful and irresponsible number of assigned students, I realized that if these teachers were to ask for the 20-page history research paper which is typical of the ones I publish in The Concord Review, they would have 3,600 pages to read, correct, and comment on when they were turned in, not to mention the extra hours guiding students through their research and writing efforts. The one teacher with 210 students would have 4,200 pages of papers presented to him at the end of term.

“It made me both sad and angry that these willing teachers, who want their students to be prepared for higher education,  have been given impossible working conditions which will most certainly prevent them from helping their students get ready for the academic reading and writing tasks which await them in college,” Fitzhugh concludes.

The man’s got a point.  Always does.   It’s easy to make grand pronouncements about college readiness, rigor, and high expectations.  It swells the chest with pride to be on the side of the angels.  Fitzhugh’s example shows the long distance between what it takes and mere homilies.

Vox Populi

by Robert Pondiscio
August 25th, 2010

The 4th annual Education Next poll shows a sharp divide between teachers and the general public on merit pay, teacher tenure, Race to the Top, and a host of other hot-button education issues.  The poll, which was conducted by researchers at Harvard shows

“most Americans support merit pay for teachers, while teachers oppose the policy by a large margin; there is strong opposition among the public to teacher tenure, while teachers favor it; and teachers are significantly more opposed to the federal RttT program than the broader public.”

No surprises here.  Teacher tenure will never make sense to those who don’t enjoy that kind of job security.  And merit pay will always have an intuitive appeal.  Who can begrudge the standouts in any field deserve more. 

Here’s a poll question I’d like to see asked: 

In general, do you feel your child’s teachers spend too much time, too little time, or the right amount of time preparing students for standardized state tests?

Or this one:

Please indicate whether you strongly agree, somewhat agree, somewhat disagree or strongly agree with the following statement: my child’s school places too much emphasis on standardized tests.

Just a hunch, but I suspect a majority of Americans would express reservations about the amount of test prep their children endure–at least those with kids in the prime testing grades 3 through 8–and the degree to which testing dominates elementary education.  If so, this might skewer Ed Next’s finding that “support for ‘basing a teacher’s salary, in part, on his or her students’ academic progress on state tests’ jumped five percentage points in one year, increasing from 44 percent in 2007 to 49 percent in 2010. 

Another figure that jumped out at me:  everyone “knows” that teachers are the weakest link in the chain and that attacking teacher unions is a political winner.  Maybe not.   More people believe teacher unions are “blocking school reform rather than helping it,” but the margin is slim, 33 to 28 percent.  “But 39 percent take no position at all,” says Ed Next.

Other interesting data points in the Ed Next poll:

  • Growing support for online schooling.  The percentage of Americans in favor of allowing high school students to take a course on the Internet increased from 42 percent to 52 percent in the last year. 
  • Support for charter schools “remained essentially unchanged between 2008 and 2010—rising from 42 percent to 44 percent, while opposition increased from just 16 to 19 percent.”
  • While 45 percent of the American public supported vouchers in 2007, only 31 percent did so in 2010. 

 “When it comes to school choice, charters and learning on the Internet are ‘in,’ while vouchers are ‘out,’” notes Harvard’s Paul E. Peterson, the editor-in-chief of Education Next.

My humble request for my friends at Ed Next.  How about a few questions next year on curriculum?  It would be intriguing to learn what Americans think about the content of their children’s education and how they feel it compares to their own.

Five Blogs You Need To Have In Your Feed Right Now

by Robert Pondiscio
August 24th, 2010

NYC teacher/blogger Jose Vilson offers Five Blogs You Need To Have In Your Feed Right Now.  Good idea, so I’m stealing it.

I treat my Google Reader like the starting lineup for the Indianapolis 500, with feeds running three across.  Joanne Jacobs, for example, has been at the upper left, or pole position, for a very long time.   The closer to the top, the more often I read it.   Once a blog slips toward the bottom, I read it only sporadically.   

Picking up on Jose’s meme, here are five blogs I now read avidly that are either recent additions to my feed reader–or that have elbowed their way toward the top: 

1. The Answer Sheet is the only “new blog” (it’s almost exactly a year old) to have cracked the top row of my feed reader.   I started reading it when it became the online home for Dan Willingham’s peerless writing about education.  Valerie Straus has become the sharpest, most opinionated voice on education in the mainstream media.  Honestly, I’m not sure how she gets away with it. 

2. Rick Hess Straight Up.    Hess has forgotten more about education than most of us will ever know.  The man ignores every blogging convention there is, cranking out long thoughtful, provocative posts day after day.  The most appealing thing about Hess as a writer and thinker is that he’s aggressively independent.  You think he’s on your side?  Here’s a thumb in your eye.

3. I’m a sucker for great writing and sound opinions grounded in actual classroom experience.  Jose Vilson included Nancy Flanagan’s Teacher in a Strange Land, which occupies a choice position in my feed reader.  But since this is about new blogs, I’ll recommend Walt Gardner’s Reality Check.  Gardner’s perspective is informed by nearly 30 years of teaching in Los Angeles, longer than most edubloggers have been alive. That’s hard-won authority.

4. In the process of writing this post, I realized that Get Schooled by the Atlanta Journal-Constitution’s Maureen Downey needs to be much higher on my must-read list.  Downey is another smart, independent blogger who’s not shy about expressing her opinions and backs it up with good reporting.   Bonus: she’s attracted a large cadre of thoughtful, engaged commenters.

5. In fairness, Better Living Through Beowulf is not an edublog, per se.  By my own criteria, I should round out my list of five from among Education Next, Shanker Blog, RiShawn’s Biddle’s Dropout Nation, Linda Perlstein’s The Educated Reporter or Larry Ferlazzo’s blog, which have all found their way into my reader in the past year.  But BLTB features  thoughtful, personal and beautifully written ruminations of the human condition filtered through the lens of literature.  A brilliant defense of the liberal arts without even trying.

Two broad trends I notice in my blog reading via this exercise:  compared to a year ago, I’m paying more attention to teacher blogs and major news outlets; less to think tanks and ed tech blogs. 

And what are you reading?

Curriculum Effects and Value-Added

by Robert Pondiscio
August 23rd, 2010

Lost in the argument about using value-added measures to evaluate teachers is any mention of curriculum effects, notes Barak Rosenshine, emeritus professor of educational psychology at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.  At Shanker Blog, he describes the results of a large-scale study in the Journal of Research on Educational Effectiveness.  Four different elementary school math programs were randomly assigned to first-grade classrooms in 39 low-income schools in four different school districts:

Students who were taught using two of the programs (let’s call them A and B) obtained achievement scores that were 9 to 12 percentile points higher than student achievement scores using the other two programs (X and Y). In other words, a student who scored at the 50th percentile when taught using curriculum X or Y would have scored at about the 60th percentile had they been in a class that used curriculum A or B. If we assume two teachers of equal ability, the teacher whose class used the A or B curriculum would have had a much higher value added score than a teacher whose class used the X or Y curriculum.

The obvious question:  How accountable can we hold the first-grade teachers for the achievement of their students when the study demonstrated such variable curriculum effects?   The study “illustrates the fact that some specific curriculum programs can help raise student achievement in the hands of an average teacher whereas other programs aren’t as successful even in the hands of an excellent teacher,” Rosenshine writes. 

Unfortunately, when we look at student achievement scores for a specific teacher or a specific school, we don’t know whether the curriculum program helped enhance the scores or had little effect. But I suggest that the quality of each curriculum program a teacher is using needs to be considered when student achievement scores are used to grade teachers. I believe that teachers are responsible for implementing a program well, but are only responsible for the implementation. As this research shows, the quality of a given program has a strong influence on the students’ achievement.

When I think of the curriculum and teaching methods I was required to use in my classroom, the idea that my effectiveness might be dependent upon them makes me want to lie down with a damp wash cloth on my forehead.  Manipulatives and discovery instead of basic arithmetic?   Endlessly revising ”small moments” and teaching the writing process to 10-year olds instead of basic grammar?  No time for even basic science, social studies because of district demands for ever larger math and literacy blocks?  If it fails, it’s on me?  Seriously?

Rosenshine agrees.

“Teachers, who generally have little say over which curriculum programs their states, districts, and schools select, should not be held responsible for the quality of the program they were given,” he writes.  “The program developers and adopters, not the teachers, are responsible for the results when the program is implemented well.”

Is it so?  Or is it not so?

A Model for Excellent Teaching?

by Diana Senechal
August 19th, 2010

Note:  This essay by former Core Knowledge teacher Diana Senechal originally appeared at Gotham Schools.

The path toward teacher certification is laden with demands that prospective teachers prove that they’re sensitive, socially conscious, and self-critical. If a national group of education agencies has its way, those demands could soon extend throughout teachers’ careers.

Teachers and others would do well to look at the “Model Core Teaching Standards: A Resource for State Dialogue,” released in July for public comment. Developed by the Council of Chief State School Officers’ Interstate Teacher Assessment and Support Consortium (InTASC), the new teaching standards (separate from the Common Core State Standards that have been in the news recently) retain much of the language of the 1992 teaching standards, with some reordering and rewording to match the “new times.” Whereas the 1992 standards were intended for beginning teachers (and adopted by 38 states), the new standards are for all teachers.

The ten standards fall into four categories: The Learner and Learning, Content Knowledge, Instructional Practice, and Professional Responsibility. Each standard is broken down into Performances, Essential Knowledge, and Critical Dispositions. Like the 1992 standards, the Model Core Teaching Standards downplay subject matter knowledge while emphasizing the social processes of the classroom and the attitudes that teachers should have. Because these standards come so soon after the Common Core State Standards, they might influence how the Common Core standards are interpreted and implemented.

The 1992 document devoted the first standard to content knowledge; the new standards address content in standards 4 and 5. Two standards devoted to content seem like more than one, but neither standard addresses the need for specific knowledge. They treat content as fluid and relative, not enduring or precise. One of the “critical dispositions” for the fourth standard states that

the teacher realizes that content knowledge is not a fixed body of facts but is complex, culturally situated, and ever evolving. S/he keeps abreast of new ideas and understandings in the field.

This statement reflects only part of the truth. Content is both changing and unchanging. Teachers should be aware of developments in one field, but they must know the subject well, down to the details. One cannot teach physics unless one knows its rudiments–regardless of recent discoveries in physics. One cannot teach a language well unless one is thoroughly versed in its grammar, idioms, pronunciation, inflection, and nuances. Anyone can babble about the latest theories on Shakespeare’s identity; fewer can illuminate the logic of Sonnet 146 or help students grapple with folly and reason in “Lear.” Such understanding requires years of immersion and thought.

The standards appear to treat knowledge as a subjective, personal, social matter. Consider one of the “performances” for the second standard, “Learning Differences”:

The teacher brings multiple perspectives to the discussion of content, including attention to students’ personal, family, and community experiences and cultural norms.

Why should this be expected of all teachers? There is a time and place for multiple perspectives, but when you take this too far, the teacher may deny students the clarity of a right answer or direct approach to a problem. In algebra class, for instance, it is important that students actually learn how to solve algebra problems. Personal experiences, likewise, can obscure as well as illuminate. Even champions of “text-to-self connections” warn that faulty connections can lead to confusion and distraction.

Collaboration is mentioned far more often in the standards than independent work; this imbalance may undermine the collaboration itself. Collaboration is valuable when students have something to collaborate over. Sadly, the more they are asked to collaborate, the less they will bring to the table, unless they also learn how to wrestle alone with problems, ideas, and language. There should be equal emphasis on rigorous solitary thought. The best collaboration happens when the members have worked on their own and put thought into the project. If they are unable to do that, the collaboration quickly degenerates into chatter.

The standards articulate many attitudes and “critical dispositions” expected of teachers. The ninth standard (Reflection and Continuous Growth) states that a teacher

reflects on his/her personal biases and seeks out resources to deepen his/her own understanding of cultural, ethnic, gender, and learning differences to build stronger relationships and create more relevant and responsive learning experiences.

Yes, teachers should be able to question their own actions and assumptions. An introspective bent is important if not essential to good teaching. However, things become murky when teachers must show evidence of their self-questioning. Teachers who resist that sort of public display might receive low evaluations in this area, while those who produce confessions may be praised. It is fair to expect teachers to abide by an ethics code; it is not fair to require them to display their self-questioning. This may be hardest on teachers who take introspection seriously (and there are many such teachers), for they will be asked to bare their souls or else come up with a superficial version of their thoughts.

All in all, the “Model Core Teaching Standards” rely on faulty premises. They downplay the importance of concrete knowledge. They disregard the enduring aspects of subject matter, the things that need to be learned, pondered, read, and reread. They emphasize collaboration without likewise emphasizing independent thought. They expect teachers to be reflective, but without autonomy of thought. None of this is particularly new; many education schools have similar value systems. Once upon a time, such requirements were part of a teacher’s initiation; once you made it through the hoops, people left your thoughts alone, unless there was reason for concern. Now teachers may have to demonstrate “correct” attitudes and thoughts throughout their careers.

Far from meeting the needs of a new world, these standards ignore the qualities that have characterized fine teachers over the centuries: knowledge and love of the subject; keen awareness of the students and respect for their privacy; and the ability to demand concentration, precision, integrity, and hard work. Within this, there are many personalities and variations — but these qualities are not outdated, nor will they ever be.

Roll Over, Beethoven

by Robert Pondiscio
August 18th, 2010

College freshmen entering the class of class of 2014 don’t write in cursive and have little use for wristwatches, preferring to get the time from their ominpresent cellphones.  To those born in 1992, Fergie is a singer, not a princess; Clint Eastwood is a director, not an actor; Woody Allen has always been with Soon-Yi Previn; and David Letterman and Jay Leno have always been the hosts of competing late night talk shows.  They have grown up in a world without a place called Czechoslovakia, untargeted by Russian nukes. 

Their toothpaste has always stood on its cap. 

These and other interesting and amusing observations are on Beloit College’s annual “Mindset List,” a now familiar annual ritual begun over a decade ago  as a reminder to the school’s faculty “to be aware of dated references.”  The list is a lot of fun, and is certain to make teachers feel old.  That said, I’m a wee bit skeptical of the list’s implicit premise that students are wholly ignorant of all that pre-dates them–do a majority of 18-year olds really think Beethoven is a dog? — and take all of their cultural references from the present day.