Ideas in education

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Revision as of 00:06, 10 February 2010 by 71.234.133.230 (talk)

AN ACT RELATIVE TO THE ACHIEVEMENT GAP

I believe it takes important steps toward addressing some of our most urgent and persistent needs and putting our children on a path to success.

The  education collaborative shall be  managed by a board of directors which shall be comprised  of 1 person appoint ed by each  member school committ ee and 1 person appoint ed by  each  member  22  charter board of trustees.23 


Each board of dir ect ors of an education collaborative shall  establish and  manage a trust fund, to  be  known as an Education Collaborative Trust Fund, and  each such fund shall be designated by an  38  appropriate name. All  monies contribut ed by the  member  municipalit ies and charter schools and all  39  grants or gifts from the federal  gover nment, state government, charitable foundations, private  40  corporations or any  other source shall be paid to the board of dir ect ors of the  education collaborative and  41  deposit ed in the fund.  42 

apply for state, federal or corporate grants or contracts  to obtain funds necessary to carry out the purpose for which such collaborative is  established57 

The board of directors of the  education collaborative shall be consider ed t o be a public  employer  and  have the authority t o employ personnel, including teachers, to carry out the purposes and functions  67  of the  education collaborative68 

 (1)  expand, alter or replace the curriculum and program offerings of the school,  including the  implementation of research­based  early literacy programs, early int ervent ions for  198  struggling readers and the t eaching  of advanced placement courses or ot her rigor ous nationally or  199  int ernationally recognized courses, if the school does  not already have such programs or courses; 

(2)  200  reallocate the uses of the  exist ing budget of the school;201 

(4) increase the salary of any administrator, or teacher in the school, to attract or retain highly­  205  qualified administrators, or teachers or to reward administrators, or teachers who work in  206  underperfor ming schools that achieve t he annual goals  set forth in the turnaround plan; 

(5) expand the  207  school day  or school year  or both of t he school; 208 


widget

quotes

Are teachers just interchangeable widgets? I just lost my teaching assignment, the job I had for 4 years of teaching humanities to seniors. The stated reason was that we should all be able to teach in any position. I guess this is better than last year. Last year I was told in the middle of the summer that I would be teaching tenth grade. On the first day of school I was told I was teaching twelfth grade after all. Some teachers found out what they were teaching a class they had never taught before. They found out on the first day of school. The students are the ultimate victims of this widget philosophy.

Being a good teacher requires a tremendous amount of thought and design in preparation for the school year; on average I spend a couple of hundred hours even on the classes I have taught for years. In order for the material to be compelling to your students it has to be fresh and compelling for you.

The beginning of the year has its own significant requirements for preparation. Every day you are getting feedback from your new students. Their individuality combined with the chemistry of each class has an enormous effect on your ideas of what you are going to do the next day and every day.

The Widget Effect by The New Teacher Project takes a critical look at how we view and value our teachers. It is their view that, "a culture of indifference about the quality of instruction in each classroom dominates". I find this to be true.

They postulate that, "If districts could systematically identify which teachers perform at the highest level, they could use this information to inform teaching assignments, target teachers for teacher leader positions, and prioritize the retention of these teachers." I wish it were so easy.

The authors move from "If districts could systematically identify" to "yes districts can systematically identify." This is a huge leap and one that neglects the very real problems that make education such a messy business.

In 30 years of running a company I became very dependent on having a systematic approach to product quality and customer satisfaction. Applying good business management practice will certainly reap improvements, but the run-it-as-a-business approach has already become part of the underlying problems.

One example is the mission statement / shared vision / team approach to education promulgated by advisers based in business culture. Being on board is viewed as an indication of being a good teacher. Questioning the 'vision' is seen as detrimental to school culture.

It is thought that teachers can be objectively evaluated using "performance standards based upon student achievement outcomes" and to a certain extent this is probably true. But we have created an industry that produces these standards measures externally from the classroom and another whole industry that creates products to help you meet those standards. It all becomes very self-referential and removed from the classroom and its students.

Additionally we have the political dimension. Opinion leaders identify problems and schools try to address them. A "good" high school, for example is one in which students pass the standardized tests and graduate. A mayor or other official may expand the definition, perhaps instituting a plan in which the number of AP offerings must be increased by some percentage in a district.

While on the face of it all of these ideas have some merit, as they become intertwined with the definition of a good teacher, we move further, not closer, to understanding and recognizing good teaching and good education. A "good" teacher agrees with the vision and happily consumes the products and lingo of the publishers, consultants and Ed. schools. A "good" teacher defines student expectations in line with the what makes the school look good and successful.

Systematic identification of good teaching is far from a foregone conclusion in the real world of education. The very forces who say they would like to see it are often working against its realization. The externally influenced definitions of what good teaching is may have little to do with what it actually is. The Boston Teacher Residency teaches these external measures to its new teachers. Teachers attempt to comply, teaching the the script that they are given at the pace that is approved. They are immunized, cleared of responsibility for their students by their compliance with the strategies and standards. Their superiors are trained in the same vein by the Boston Principal Fellowship Program. The Ed. schools produce these programs in collaboration with Harvard Business School and they are implemented by NGO consultants with an interest of wresting education from the grip of the evil teachers' unions.

The New Teachers Project oversimplifies the issue of why there are bad teachers. "The contours of this debate are well-known. One side claims that teacher tenure and due process protections render dismissal a practical impossibility; shielding ineffective teachers from removal in all but the most egregious instances. The other argues that the process provides only minimal protection against arbitrary or discriminatory dismissal, but that administrators fail to document poor performance adequately and refuse to provide struggling teachers with sufficient support."

The report has collected some interesting data. It states,"47 percent of teachers report not having participated in a single informal conversation with their administrator over the last year about improving aspects of their instructional performance". With all of the external forces acting on the administrators, I am not sure that they are even capable of having that conversation.

A more important conversation needs to happen and it needs to happen as the normal course of business. If the administration wants to support good teaching than it has to know what is going on in the classroom so that they are able to bring their considerable influence to bear in helping to make a case for that specific education to students they see in the halls and to motivate those students and keep them motivated. They cannot rely on platitudes.

My students don't buy platitudes. They have been burned by them before, left high and dry while the rest of the world sails into an optimistic future. Part of being a good teacher is the ability to help students understand and define their own educational challenges, set personal goals and see them as attainable. A good administrator elicits those goals from and reinforces them.

When I ran a construction company I made certain to see what 30 or 40 workers on a building site (of say 14 houses) were doing every day. I talked to each of the workers about how the job was going, was there anything in your way, did you see any problems. I did that and I ran a carpentry crew, working with the tools for 6 hour each day. It was a management style that worked, we produced good housing and we all made a good living.

A school like mine (~300 students, 20 teachers) needs a leader who is involved in the education that is going on in the building. That involvement requires commitment, time and effort. It should not be delegated. Ask your teachers individually, every day: What are your current challenges? What are you thinking of doing to address them? Elicit ideas and contribute your own. Spend time in the classrooms to see how the ideas you toss around with your teachers are working out then catch up with them in the hall between classes and compare notes; judge together what works. It will be huge benefit to students. Students respond positively to an adult in the room. They are pleasantly surprised when someone knows what they are working on. It makes their work more important to them. All of this should become the core job definition. Avoid the bureaucracy, do what you have to quick and dirty, ignore what you can.

My school spans parts of 3 floors. I have seen my headmaster on my floor 3 times this year. She was never in my classroom in spite of my open invitation. There are 2 other headmasters and another 4 or 5 people fulfilling administrative functions. Administrators define their job as protecting the students from the teachers. I worked for a city bureaucracy too and it wasn't as big but the Dept of Neighborhood Development was just ineffectual and distracting from the real job of building houses as BPS and its consultants are distracting to the real work of education.

I was in the Boston Public Schools schools for 13*3 school-years as a parent. Involved parents got good at finding out who the good teachers were. We wanted our kids to have those teachers and wanted administrators who would stay out of their way. That was the best we thought we could get. Clearly that isn't enough. Supporting good teaching needs to be reformulated from the top down. You don't bring out the best in people with a periodically applied, computerized carrot and stick. "A comprehensive performance evaluation system...that credibly differentiates teachers" has to happen every day, it has to be local and it probably has little to do with a system. Teachers give up and get to stay since no one cares to check as long as they talk the talk. I would hypothesize that you can't hide having given up on your kids if someone is checking in with you every day and talking with you about what inspires you about your material and how you intend to inspire your students. If it is not working it should be self evident. A bad teacher will realize and accede that they can't do the job. Teachers wake up in the middle of the night and ask themselves that question anyway. There is no job as hard in my experience. I cannot say with certainty how long I will last. The administration usually gets to you first. I'd like to be in the classroom for as long as I am good at solving the puzzle of the kids, am inspired by my material, know I have something to say and still have the energy to run the show.


other

http://www.tntp.org/newsandpress/060109_TNTP.html

"On education, we will expand exchange programs, and increase scholarships, like the one that brought my father to America, while encouraging more Americans to study in Muslim communities. And we will match promising Muslim students with internships in America; invest in on-line learning for teachers and children around the world; and create a new online network, so a teenager in Kansas can communicate instantly with a teenager in Cairo.

On economic development, we will create a new corps of business volunteers to partner with counterparts in Muslim-majority countries. And I will host a Summit on Entrepreneurship this year to identify how we can deepen ties between business leaders, foundations and social entrepreneurs in the United States and Muslim communities around the world." - http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/06/04/obama-egypt-speech-video_n_211216.html