In reflecting on my education in the MAT program at Chatham,
I’m surprised to realize how much I’ve learned. The frustration with the program’s failings has often
eclipsed any awareness of gaining skills or knowledge relevant to my chosen
career. However, as I head into
student teaching in a public school, I find myself wondering why they bother
teaching us these things at all.
It is incredibly frustrating, disheartening even, to know that I’m entering a system that is fundamentally antithetical to what I’ve learned about good teaching. We know that mastery-oriented motivation produces better adjusted people who care about their learning and have a lifelong curiosity. But the public school system is not only performance motivated but performance obsessed. We are inadvertently teaching our students that their PSSA scores are all that matter, that they are the only valid and valued measure of who they are. Psychological research has shown that the most important aspect of good parenting and good teaching is consistency. Yet the system changes constantly, moving benchmarks and goal posts almost yearly. People can’t meet expectations that are unclear and always changing. We know that teaching for depth rather than breadth of understanding is the best way to develop students’ critical thinking skills and knowledge base. Yet we insist upon teaching ninth graders the nitty-gritty details of protein synthesis, rather than giving them an overview of the living world and their place in it.
It is incredibly frustrating, disheartening even, to know that I’m entering a system that is fundamentally antithetical to what I’ve learned about good teaching. We know that mastery-oriented motivation produces better adjusted people who care about their learning and have a lifelong curiosity. But the public school system is not only performance motivated but performance obsessed. We are inadvertently teaching our students that their PSSA scores are all that matter, that they are the only valid and valued measure of who they are. Psychological research has shown that the most important aspect of good parenting and good teaching is consistency. Yet the system changes constantly, moving benchmarks and goal posts almost yearly. People can’t meet expectations that are unclear and always changing. We know that teaching for depth rather than breadth of understanding is the best way to develop students’ critical thinking skills and knowledge base. Yet we insist upon teaching ninth graders the nitty-gritty details of protein synthesis, rather than giving them an overview of the living world and their place in it.
American public education was founded upon the Jeffersonian
ideal that “the cornerstone of a democracy is an educated electorate.” The common school movement sought to
provide an equal, democratic, humanistic education to all American
children. (Technically all
non-laborer class, white, male children.
But we’ll give Jefferson and the founders the benefit of the doubt that
when they said all “men” were created equal, they were referring to all of
humanity. Which isn’t a huge
intellectual leap given the modern applications of that most famous turn of
phrase. But I digress…)
As America’s shores were inundated with immigrants and the
Industrial Revolution seized the economy, a new purpose was identified for
public education: To Americanize all children and to create a skilled workforce
for the industrial machine. This
goal was expanded upon after the Sputnik crisis, when the powers of public
education were turned toward beating the Soviets in the STEM race. This is the
trend and legacy of 20th century American education: The
commoditization of children.
Adults decided that education should be the development of future human
capital. They stopped seeing
children as people and became blind to the deeper, more meaningful outcomes of
a good education.
We must move forward by returning to our roots: Equitable,
democratic, humanistic education for all.
It won’t be easy. There are
major practical and political obstacles.
As in so many spheres of American public policy, we have moved far from
the founding ideals. (Or is it just that we haven’t yet agreed on what those
founding ideals were?) The
American education system is a slow, unwieldy leviathan not easily given to
change. There will be opposition
to the “progressive measures” or “excessive federal influence” or the dangerous
proposition of a “socialist” education system. But if we’re serious about closing the achievement gaps—both
domestic and international—and about preparing our kids for the 21st
century, we don’t have a choice.
What we were doing barely worked under the old paradigm; otherwise, A
Nation at Risk and No Child Left
Behind wouldn’t have been necessary. Certainly the old status quo can’t meet
the needs of the new paradigm. As Sir Ken Robinson quoted Abraham Lincoln, “The
silent dogma of the past is insufficient for the stormy present.”
We face real challenges in American education. How do we educate an increasingly
diverse student population? How do
we affect meaningful systemic change within the confines of a populist
system that is allergic to federal interference? How do we prepare today’s kids for a future we can’t even
imagine? And if we figure it out,
how are we going to pay for it?
These are valid questions.
But challenges are no reason to accept the status quo.
Before we address these practical concerns, we have to
change the values of the system.
There are two major philosophical obstacles to any meaningful reform in
American education: How we view
the children and how we view the teachers. We must view children not as future cogs in the economic
machine but as developing human individuals in need of care, guidance, and
support. We must view teachers as
what we claim to see them as now: The source of all student success.
It might seem obvious that we have no choice but to educate
our children for the 21st century. It is, after all, the 21st century. But we’re using a system designed for
the mid-20th century.
We’ve tried to fix it, but clearly we have failed. So yes, we must choose to education our
children for their century.
But 21st century learning is not about technology. Or rather, it doesn’t
have to be. It can be more than an
upgrade in instructional methodology and materiel. As Trudy Sweeney makes clear, effective, meaningful
incorporation of new instructional technology requires a pedagogical
shift. If you just tack the
technology onto your existing teaching you are doing both yourself, your
students, and the technology a disservice.
And as Mitra discussed in his TED talk, educational
technology has the potential to do more than change how we teach. It has the potential to change how we
think about education. Sir Ken
Robinson, Alan November, and other innovative 21st century
pedagogical thinkers agree. Sir
Robinson identifies the major challenge to today’s teachers: It isn’t using technology, or preparing
kids for a global tech economy. It
is preparing kids for a world we literally cannot envision. How are we supposed to do that? How can you prepare for something you
can’t even imagine? How do you teach
students the necessary skills for success when you don’t know what they’ll have
to be successful at?!
If we accept the basic premise of American public education,
that the K-12 system is designed to prepare students for the workforce, then we
must conclude that we’re doing a terrible job. A high school education isn’t what it used to be. The
earning power of a bachelor’s degree has declined significantly. College is the new high school. The
master’s degree (I can attest) is the new bachelor’s. So we must assume that we are educating our students for the
unskilled, sub-living wage workforce: for jobs at McDonald’s. Is this really our goal? Logically, it must be.
Likewise, if we accept that the K-12 education isn’t what it
used to be, then the purpose of K-12 education must change. K-12 education becomes about preparing
students for success in whatever line of study they choose to pursue in higher
education. Because we cannot
provide all children with the prerequisite declarative knowledge necessary for
all college majors, we must deduce that our goal should be to provide them with
the prerequisite, universal procedural knowledge necessary for the pursuit of all higher education and for successful adulthood.
What defines a successful adulthood? The individual. One of the blessings (and curses) of
the modern global economy is choice.
Each student will be able to choose how to define success for him or
herself. There are students who
will define success as working for a hedge fund, arguing a case in front of the
Supreme Court, or curing cancer.
Still more will define it in less traditional ways, ways that are made
possible by the global, technological world in which we live. Success for one might be getting off
the grid or running a locally sustainable farm. For another, it might be seeing her painting in MoMA or
tagging as many global cities as possible with his street art. For many, success will be defined as
having a job they don’t hate that allows them, both financially and temporally,
to live the life they want outside of work. So how to we prepare students for such diverse futures?
"Rather than focusing on specific technologies or specific problems, we need to equip students with those concepts that are common to all problems, all technologies, all skills."(Gunderson, Jones, and Scanland: "Jobs Revolution: Changing How American Works)
By focusing on procedural, rather than declarative
knowledge. We want a literate
populace. What does literacy mean,
beyond being able to read? It
means being able to find and evaluate information. It means being technologically savvy. It means being able to understand
domestic and international news through the lenses of history, politics, and
economics. It means being able to
understand, apply, and make decisions about ethically gray scientific
topics. It means being able to
respectfully, productively communicate with people different from
ourselves. These are the tenets of
Jeffersonian education.
So the answer is deceptively, dauntingly simple: We teach them to think. How? By remembering that children
should be at the center of any conversation about education; not money, not
politics, not the economy.
Children. By taking a leaf out of Finland’s book. By refusing to believe that teachers who can’t do are good
enough for American children. By
caring about the education of our educators. By not just listening to but
implementing the advice of smart, creative, innovative people. By training our teachers well and then
loosing them into a system that supports, encourages, and trusts them to apply
their talents and skills to meet the needs of the unique groups of kids in
front of them. By barring complacency from our educational institutions. By
considering the questions of passionate, frustrated pre-service teachers who
demand to know why, when they are devoting their lives to education, their own
education is so insufficient. By not being afraid to dowhat we know works.