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	<title>Comments on: Don&#8217;t Hate, Appreciate</title>
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	<link>http://blog.coreknowledge.org/2008/06/20/dont-hate-appreciate/</link>
	<description>Closing the Achievement Gap: Teaching Content</description>
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		<title>By: Diana Senechal</title>
		<link>http://blog.coreknowledge.org/2008/06/20/dont-hate-appreciate/comment-page-1/#comment-4161</link>
		<dc:creator>Diana Senechal</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 20 Jun 2008 13:28:39 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.coreknowledge.org/blog/?p=522#comment-4161</guid>
		<description>Lately I have seen so many false polarities in education discussion--and Kevin Carey&#039;s piece, for all its merits, takes part in some of this. He sets up a false opposition between the &quot;regular teacher&quot; and the TFA fellow.

He describes the &quot;regular teacher&quot; as follows: &quot;Teachers tend to be a lot like my aunt, who has lived in the same mid-sized southeastern Pennsylvania town for the last 30 years, raising three kids, marrying twice, and generally living a prosaic American life while making a career as a middle school math teacher. 

Then you have the young, up-and-coming, Ivy-degreed TFA-er: &quot;Many (though certainly not all) TFA corp members, by contrast, come from the privileged backgrounds inherent to Yale and other elite colleges where the organization likes to recruit.&quot;

There are many teachers who fit neither profile: teachers with excellent education and vast experience who have been teaching for years. This is one of the key flaws of the North Carolina TFA study: it compared TFA teachers to &quot;traditional&quot; teachers, without considering the diversity of the latter group.

I have a pretty good education and am not a TFA fellow. I hope to continue teaching for many years. I have no desire to move up any ladder except for an internal one. People say, &quot;oh, but you&#039;re different, Diana.&quot; I am weary of hearing that. There are others &quot;like me&quot; who are &quot;different.&quot; We did not fit any typical profile, but we wanted to teach, and teach we did and do.

This false opposition reminds me of the ed school dogma  opposing constructivism to &quot;traditional&quot; teaching that consisted of course entirely of &quot;chalk and talk&quot; and regurgitation of &quot;mere facts.&quot; We must look past these stereotypes into the vastly richer truth.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Lately I have seen so many false polarities in education discussion&#8211;and Kevin Carey&#8217;s piece, for all its merits, takes part in some of this. He sets up a false opposition between the &#8220;regular teacher&#8221; and the TFA fellow.</p>
<p>He describes the &#8220;regular teacher&#8221; as follows: &#8220;Teachers tend to be a lot like my aunt, who has lived in the same mid-sized southeastern Pennsylvania town for the last 30 years, raising three kids, marrying twice, and generally living a prosaic American life while making a career as a middle school math teacher. </p>
<p>Then you have the young, up-and-coming, Ivy-degreed TFA-er: &#8220;Many (though certainly not all) TFA corp members, by contrast, come from the privileged backgrounds inherent to Yale and other elite colleges where the organization likes to recruit.&#8221;</p>
<p>There are many teachers who fit neither profile: teachers with excellent education and vast experience who have been teaching for years. This is one of the key flaws of the North Carolina TFA study: it compared TFA teachers to &#8220;traditional&#8221; teachers, without considering the diversity of the latter group.</p>
<p>I have a pretty good education and am not a TFA fellow. I hope to continue teaching for many years. I have no desire to move up any ladder except for an internal one. People say, &#8220;oh, but you&#8217;re different, Diana.&#8221; I am weary of hearing that. There are others &#8220;like me&#8221; who are &#8220;different.&#8221; We did not fit any typical profile, but we wanted to teach, and teach we did and do.</p>
<p>This false opposition reminds me of the ed school dogma  opposing constructivism to &#8220;traditional&#8221; teaching that consisted of course entirely of &#8220;chalk and talk&#8221; and regurgitation of &#8220;mere facts.&#8221; We must look past these stereotypes into the vastly richer truth.</p>
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