Florida (state motto: Death to public education!) has been leaping to capitalize on the current COVID disaster, as witnessed by this extremely on-point headline:
Florida Will Pay for Parents to Move Kids Into New Schools if They Experience ‘COVID-19 Harassment’Saturday, August 7, 2021
FL: Bullying By Mask
Friday, August 6, 2021
Raging Against Reality, Crisis, and Education's Kobyashi Maru
So here comes yet more panicky news from NWEA, hollering that Learning Loss is consuming New Jersey. It is, in many ways, baloney. First, everyone keeps ignoring the loss of standardized test prep and practice that is a factor in test results, and second, the Learning Loss here is reported based on what NWEA imagines the scores on last years test would have been had students taken them.
I'm a little tired of pointing out the many, many, many problems with the continued chicken littling about Learning Loss, pushed most often by people who intend to make money by selling a solution.
We are being subjected to a constant crisis narrative, and as well chronicled in this post at Your Contractual Obligations, certain folks have been trying to drive education in a particular direction for decades, using a tale of impending doom soaked in deficit language. The great Pandemic Learning Loss tale is the same story, with one critical difference.
All previous crises, from the handwringing of Why Johnny Can't Read to the imminent national collapse of A Nation at Risk, have depended on a manufactured problem. NCLB and RttT made the crisis manufacture process more efficient, by requiring test scores that could be then used as "data" that "proved" what dire straits the country was in.
What's new this time is that there is some basis in objective reality.
There's no reason not to believe that students mostly learned less last year than in a "normal" year. When people squawk about Learning Loss, they're not making up an issue out of thin air. As education crises go, that's kind of a first.
However.
Dealing with that reality is turning out to be a challenge that the world of policy and edu-business is ill-equipped to face.
First, we don't know exactly what the problem is. Edu-pundits keep calling for data and measurement, but we don't have an instrument to do that. We've wasted the past couple of decades developing Big Standardized Tests that serve no real purpose except as a tool for policy makers--not educators. A bad measure of some math and reading multiple choice questions is not going to give us a full picture of where students are educationally (and it never has). We've been using a foot-long wooden ruler to measure clouds, and now that we'd really, really like to get an accurate cloud measurement, all we have at hand is a crappy useless box of rulers.
Teachers know--or will know, after a few first fall weeks--what specific students need. Some parents know. But none of this helps bureaucrats and politicians set global policy and objectives.
So we don't know on a large scale level what, exactly, students are missing. And we have a batch of bad solutions for filling the gap.
Accelerate. Sure, teachers will all just somehow teach a lot more, faster, because they've always been able to do that--they just chose not to.
Tutoring. The idea of tutoring is sound enough, but the number of people required to tutor 55 million students (give or take a few million) is daunting. Not to mention training and paying them.
Teacher differentiation. Best shot we've got, since teachers do it already. But every week filling up last year's gaps is a week less spent on this year's usual material. Meaning that even in a best case scenario, the pandemic pause will ripple on through the coming years. Remember--this year's high school seniors haven't had a "normal" year since they were freshmen.
Do some big outside the box thing. Now is a good time to question some of our assumptions about what public education needs to look like. Just don't imagine that you are coming up with some cool idea that will Totally Fix Everything.
There's a lot of raging and anger about this, and it just like the raging about masks and vaccinations and the prospect of more pandemic disruption in the fall, in that they all boil down to simple gut-level cry of "I don't want things to be the way they are!!! I want to do something to make them Not This Way!!"
It's education's Kobyashi Maru. In Star Trek, a training exercise in which all options are bad to serve as a test not of how trainees can come up with wins in a no-win scenario, but to see how they would deal with it. We can't make the gappage not be there, and there is no simple program that will suddenly reset education and students to the place they would be in some imaginary non-covid alternate universe. Some of us are not dealing with it well; instead, they're getting kind of ragey.
Raging at people because they will not create/implement any such magical fix won't help. It especially won't help if one's version of raging is to try to spur people to action by trying to raise the panic level ("An entire generation of students is falling behind and they will all end up jobless and eating dog food off a hot plate while living in a van down by the river!!") Nor does it help to get personally angry at people because you've convinced yourself that they could Fix All This but they just won't, perhaps for nefarious reasons.
The pandemic pause happened. The interruption of "normal" schooling happened. Most students missed out on some stuff. Nothing is going to change any of that.
There will not be a single Big Fix for this, which is actually true of every education issue ever, though people tend to forget it. The good news is that humans are actually pretty resilient. It's also useful to remember that the whole list of standards that students Have To Meet by a certain grade are relatively recent, and many students have already met the standards for their age from a generation ago; your state standards were not lowered on stone tablets from a burning bush, but were made up by some guys just a decade or two ago. And some benchmarks, like "read by third grade = later success," are matters of correlation, not causation. Many of the factors that drive markers, like high scores on the Big Standardized Test, are not school-related at all, which is one reason why all of this mess will probably hit poor students harder than wealthy ones.
No single Big Fix. Just steady dogged work to help our nation's young humans, student by student, to get back in educational gear. And it won't help any of them if folks insist on freaking out.
James T. Kirk dealt with the Kobyashi Maru by cheating. We don't have that option. We can, instead, suck it, take a deep breath, hunker down, and do the painstaking work. And that will still be true whenever the pandemic pause finally ends.
Thursday, August 5, 2021
Should School Board Elections Be More Partisan
Aaron Churchill, the Ohio research director for the Fordham Institute, this morning wants to make the case for partisan school board elections.
Lots of states have non- or bi-partisan school board elections. Ohio doesn't note a party affiliation. In Pennsylvania, candidates can cross file and run in both R and D primaries, and so are listed as both parties on the final ballot. Churchill notes that this fall districts are pre-occupied with things like masking and "critical race theory" (in other words, things actually not directly related to actual education) and school board are, for sure, currently heating up.
Churchill notes that a "small body of research" shows that, lacking partisan labels, voters choose based on an assortment of bad reasons, and it's certainly true that an awful lot of US citizens do a crappy job of fulfilling their civic election duty. I'm just not convinced that adding an R or D label to school board elections doesn't just add one more bad reason to choose a candidate.
Is there a Democrat or Republican approach to education? Neither party has ever shown itself to be particularly interested in or knowledgeable about public education. "When leading our local school district, I will follow my party's line," is a terrible pledge for candidates from any party. Nor does party affiliation reveal a particular bent. A Democrat could be a public education supporter, or a corporate education reformster with privatization on their mind. A Republican could be a traditional GOP supporter of public education (as long as it doesn't get too spendy) or a raving Trumper intent on keeping masks and Black Person Stuff out of schools.
Churchill asks
Are nonpartisan elections really insulating public schools from divisive politics? Or is it naïve to think that school boards are apolitical governing bodies? If indeed there are ideological differences about how to run schools and educate children, shouldn’t the electorate get a hint about where candidates are likely to stand?Tuesday, August 3, 2021
NEA and AFT are wrong on vaccinations
Fred Klonsky has said this today, but I'm going to say it, too.
The national teachers unions (and a few other unions as well) are wrong on vaccinations.
Randi Weingarten has said it should be locally negotiated:
"In order for everyone to feel safe and welcome in their workplaces, vaccinations must be negotiated between employers and workers, not coerced," Weingarten said in a statement.Monday, August 2, 2021
Fear and Silence in the Classroom
It comes down to administrators.
States have moved from passing vaguely-worded laws about That Race Stuff and on to the penalty phase. I don't know know exactly how well the anti-CRT crowd understands what they're doing, but it doesn't really matter. At this point, it is all about scaring administrators.
Tennessee has emerged as a big player in the Stifle Teachers Olympics, and they've come up with a proposed penalty system for punishing naughty schools that "knowingly violated" the state's vague and poorly defined law by withholding state funds for the district:
First violation during the school year: 2% of annual state funds or $1 million, whichever is less;Second violation during the school year: 4% of annual state funds or $2 million, whichever is less;
Third violation during the school year: 6% of annual state funds or $3 million, whichever is less;
Fourth violation during the school year: 8% of annual state funds or $4 million, whichever is less;
Fifth violation during the school year: 10% of annual state funds or $5 million, whichever is less.
Sunday, August 1, 2021
ICYMI: August Already Edition (8/1)
Well, that was quick. But here we are, counting down to a new school year. In the meantime, here's some new reading from the week.
Will fewer Black students come back to school this fall?
Adam Laats in the Washington Post provides some useful historical perspective on this question.
Why school boards are now hot spots for nasty politics
Stephen Sawchuk at Ed Week looking at the spreading network of anti-"crt" politicking groups and money.
Nancy Flanagan takes a look at some of the attitudes and ideas that have surfaced as everyone offers an opinion about Simone Biles.
Industry lobbying firm rushed to defend charter schools that think of children as a business
Jeff Bryant has dug into the folks pushing for more charter funding, and there are few surprises there.
John Merrow comes out of retirement to look at Carlson's support for the idea of putting a camera in every classroom in order to catch the evil indoctrinatin' teachers.
Why white journalists need to stop focusing on 'learning loss'
Ray Salazar guest posts at The Grade and lays out why white journalists really need to get off the learning loss train.
Pandemic learning loss reports that sell online programs are harmful for students with disabilities
Nancy Bailey looks at how the ongoing marketing push behind learning loss are bad news for students
Bob Moses and the Enduring Education Injustice
There have been many good pieces written about Bob Moses and his unique legacy; I recommend this one by Jose Luis Vilson is especially worthwhile.
Elites profit from "nonprofit" charter schools
Carol Burris sits for an interview with Jacobin and talks about how nonprofit charter schools actually are quite profitable.
Please Correct the Highlighted Section
Blue Cereal Education talks about the experience of being on the receiving end of standards and requirements and remembering to be empathetic with students.
This will be our last post together
Russ Walsh is hanging up his blogging hat, and his voice will be missed. I wish him well in his continued work in the meat world.
Saturday, July 31, 2021
USA Today Offers Ed Tech Baloney
This morning USA Today dropped this thing from freelance writer Matt Alderton, serving on this occasion apparently as a PR flack for tech companies. I'm responding to the piece here so that you can have a handy reply for your aunt when she sends you the article which, unfortunately, will get wide distribution through the platform.
Alderton starts by citing data about teachers considering leaving the profession, says that Covid is certainly partly to blame, and then pivots to this:
“Part of the problem is that teachers spend a lot of time doing things that ... in their view are not the best and highest use of their time,” says former teacher Jake Bryant, now a partner at management consulting firm McKinsey & Co., where he serves the company’s education practice. “Nobody becomes a third-grade teacher because they love collecting permission slips and filling out attendance sheets. What motivates you to get into the profession is interacting and engaging with students, and helping them learn.”And we end with this: