Well, here we go.
Here's Morgan Polikoff in the Los Angles Times, explaining that we are in a terrible mess, that educational attainment, or at least test scores (as measured by another testing manufacturer) are dropping, that the mental health of children in the nation is a mess. And hurray for the Biden relief plan, which throws a pile of money at all these education. But. But but but. Our educational structures can't handle this, Polikoff argues. Too many districts with boards and parent groups and teacher unions and famnilies and students and they just aren't up to "identifying what works and then providing it equitably to students and families."
What does he think has to happen?
This is where state and national leaders simply must step in. They need to provide clear and specific guidance on the best ways to spend American Rescue Plan dollars to address the negative impacts of the pandemic on children and families. They must not leave decisions to local actors — burdening them with the task of figuring out what works and implementing it.
Local control is a bad thing, and it needs to be swept aside, as witnessed by the data we have so far.
Polikoff asserts that three things are needed going forward in this state-controlled education universe. And number one is measurement--academic tests, social and emotional well-being tests. And they should go on for years "so we can follow our progress well beyond the end of the pandemic." Oh, and the "measurement plans should be carefully constructed to ensure the results are directly useful for informing instructional and other decisions" which is a cool idea except that there are no such standardized tests currently in existence, especially if you also want them to simultaneously serve the entirely other purpose of providing government reports on how the system is going as a whole. Teachers can do this kind of assessment, and, in fact, do so every day, but not in a way that scales up for state-level progress reporting.
Polikoff also wants high-quality interventions that are "supported or directly provided" by the state; his list includes the current reform darling, tutoring. And third, he wants to target those who need the interventions most, which he seems to already know means low-income communities and communities of color. And all of this state-run takeover "should be designed in collaboration with community leaders, not merely imposed." Sure. You know one reason this sort of thing is always targeted for low-income communities and communities of color? Because rich white folks in wealthy communities will tell the state to get stuffed and take a hike.
All of this leads us back to the old refrain:
Simply put, we can’t undo the negative effects of this national crisis on our children with 13,000 districts working independently. We must not allow our dysfunctional educational systems to block the serious response that our children need.
Nobody ever seems to say "We have an army of innovative creative teachers across this country who know their subjects, know their students, and know how invest in kids so they will actually want to learn. Let's tap into their expertise and encourage them to be creative!" Why does know one say this? Because it doesn't make anyone outside the system boatloads of money. This piece had me cheering until your last sentence... which gave me a sinking feeling. Because I think you're right.
ReplyDeleteDearest Edu-Meddlers,
ReplyDeleteSometimes the solution to a problem is just too obvious to see.
If you really want to improve the "educational outcomes" of the millions of poor, underserved, underprivileged, academically struggling students, I have really good news for you. There a millions of very successful students who thrive in the very same public school system you claim is "failing" our children. The secret to their success is no secret at all; in fact they have been providing a blueprint for academic success on standardized tests, in their classrooms, on into college, trade schools, and beyond! You see the public school system is not "broken" as you suggest, what we have are broken and dysfunctional families produced by a combination of generational poverty and dependence, institutional racism, and political neglect. So invite some of those super successful high school students into your think tanks and pick their brains for a few days. Guaranteed they will divulge the secret to their academic success. Or I can save you all some of your valuable time:
Two parents who are engaged and supportive while maintaining high expectations for their kids (from birth).
Students who attend school daily, pay attention in class, take their studies seriously, work hard, study hard, and turn in all their work.
And while we're at it, try to remind yourselves that many of the students who struggle have serious learning disabilities and they have been forced through the same narrow academic keyhole that the valedictorian must pass through. Pretending that they're no different has produced policies that do more harm than good.
What the 50+ million children and adolescents in our public schools need most include, an expanded curricula, enrichment in not just the academics but the arts and vocational areas as well. They need many more doors of opportunity opened for them instead of the two (two!) that schools have been coerced into pushing all kids through thanks to 20 years of failed test-threaten-and-punish policies.
Bad news, I know. Improving academic success for those who struggle will never be solved with software, standards, standardized tests, vouchers, charters, mentors, or you!