Wednesday, May 3, 2023
Can We Fix Civics and History Education
Tuesday, May 2, 2023
Happy Teacher Appreciation Day
Sunday, April 30, 2023
ICYMI: So Long, April Edition (4/30)
Well, that was a month. God bless all the teachers out there in the midst of testing season,
I'll remind everyone that part of the purpose of this weekly collection of pieces is amplification. It is harder than ever to break through the media fog, whether we're talking about legacy media, online media, or social media. You can help by sharing anything that you think others should read. Tweet. Post. Do whatever it is that people do on Instagram. You can help make writers some noise in the world.
These States Have the Most 'Underqualified' Teachers Stepping in to Fill Open PositionsA Far-Right Moms Group Is Terrorizing Schools in the Name of Protecting Kids
Friday, April 28, 2023
PA: Hillsdale Comes To Pennridge
The address Vermilion lists on the Sarasota contract proposals is a single family home (1640 square feet) in a residential neighborhood of Hillsdale. And their personnel--well, so far, it looks like one guy.
That guy is Jordan Adams, fresh from Hillsdale. There's a lot of story with Hillsdale (here's a short-ish version or get into it more heavily with a whole series of articles), but the current version is a private right-wing christianist college whose head, Larry Arnn ("Teaching is our trade; also, I confess, it's our weapon"), is the same MAGA-fied guy who headed up Trump's 1776 Education thingy (and said teachers are the dumbest). They've provided a platform for a lot of school privatization and taxpayer subsidies for private christian school rhetoric from heavy hitters like Betsy DeVos and Christopher Rufo, all arguing that government shouldn't be running schools--churches should.
Hillsdale has long had a charter school initiative called the Barney Charter Schools, and more recently they've been behind the launch of many "classical" academies around the country.
Jordan Adams is a Hillsdale grad ('13), which means he was a Hillsdale student when they were launching the Barney schools, and eventually became their Associate Director of Instructional Resources. I'll let you draw your own conclusion about his fitness for the role:
“I mostly focus on the history and Latin curricula, figuring out how things are taught in a fourth-grade or eleventh-grade classroom,” said Adams. He looks forward to experimenting with more accessible resources for teachers: “When you’re a first-year teacher, you’re just trying to stay one day ahead of what you’re supposed to be teaching. You don’t have time to sit down and read a long text about teaching. But maybe if there’s a short video that is clearly titled and easy to access, you might conceivably watch it while you’re making dinner.”
If only there were a place to go where you could study teaching so that you knew what you were doing on more than a day by day basis. Adams's original undergrad plan was to work at a think tank, then he went to grad school for a Masters of Humanities. One more educational amateur rediscovering the wheel. But apparently reinvented it well enough to move up to interim director of curriculum for the Hillsdale College K-12 Education Office, a job he was holding back in October of 2022.
Adams was part of the crew that screened the Florida math textbooks that DeSantis accused of being too indoctrinatey.
Adams is no longer listed in any current capacity as employed by Hillsdale, though there is no peep about his departure. Not sure what we can make of that.
Wednesday, April 26, 2023
What We've Forgotten About Pandemic Schooling
Tuesday, April 25, 2023
It's Testing Damn Season Again
So the phone rings yesterday (now that the Board of Directors are full-fledged kindergartners, we're on the district robo-phone list), and it's the announcement that third-through-sixth grade education is about to be suspended for more important things--testing.
It will take the next three weeks. Please have your child to school on time. Please feed them. Please don't schedule doctor or dentist appointments during the school day during these three weeks.
Three weeks. Three. Weeks.
Kindergarten will be spared. In some area schools, first and second graders will take other tests, not because those tests yield any useful data, but because they will help prepare the students for when the tests Really Count.
The testing won't take up the entire day, but the chance of educating students during the other hours becomes exponentially smaller with the disruption of routine for students who are worn out from sitting and testing for hours. At my old high school, testing is limited to only some grades, but because there are so many shared teachers, school stopped for everyone.
Administrators face an unmanageable choice-- compress the testing to "save" the most days, and the test results will suffer, because students can only do so much of that standardized testing baloney in a day before they just shut down. But the more the testing is spread out, the more days are disrupted.
And when they come out the other side, it will be well into May and students will smell summer. Testing season doesn't just mark an interruption of the school year, a weeks-long pause, but in many schools, the end of the year. Not a pause, but a truncation, an amputation of the last stretch of school year.
For what?
In Pennsylvania, the results of the Big Standardized Tests will be used to rate schools and teachers. The state will also pretend that the tests generate actionable data.
They do not.
A fancy shmancy website will provide graphs and charts that tell teachers which and how many students scored in certain brackets--basically, the state gives each student the equivalent of an A, B, C, or F on each test. But (as in most states) the teachers cannot see how the students answered particular questions, not even what the questions were. This is not useful data (and it's not even delivered in a timely manner). And the tiny bit of information revealed is not anything that teachers did not already know. A five minute conversation with a student's previous teacher told me more than BS Test results ever could.
Do you want extra education time to make up for Learning Loss, or to simply expand educational offerings and opportunities for students? Get rid of the state test.
Do you want to claw back some financial savings and reclaim taxpayer dollars for more educational supports? Get rid of the state test.
Do you want to refocus schools on meeting students needs for education and support instead of focusing on getting the students to provide the test scores the school needs? Do you want to focus on the whole child instead of the test-taking child? Get rid of the state test.
This is such a waste. A waste of time, resources, attention, money and teachers' professional expertise. A bad idea poorly executed. End it.
Monday, April 24, 2023
Teacher Evaluation: The Revolution Didn't Work
The National Bureau of Economic Research has just dropped a working paper entitled "Taking Teacher Evaluation to Scale: The Effect of State Reforms on Achievement and Attainment," and you can read the whole 72 pages of the thing if you wish, but instead, I would recommend a very thoughtful review of the paper by Matthew Di Carlo, a senior research fellow at the Albert Shanker Institute.
"The Rise and Fall of the Teacher Evaluation Empire" spins from the working paper into the decades long history of attempts to "fix" teacher evaluation somehow and (spoiler alert) why it has consistently failed.
This isn't the first time that the revolution in teacher evaluation has been tagged unsuccessful. Di Carlo tries to break down the whys and wherefores, and I think he gets it mostly right.
Di Carlo notes that evidence on teacher evaluations is "mixed, with no clear pattern-- low stakes, high stakes, various versions, some work well, some don't. The key issue for Di Carlo is that we don't know why the ones that work, work.
So, there is some good evidence out there, but it is far from perfectly consistent, and it is still outweighed by what we don’t know about teacher evaluations (including, most crucially, why systems do or do not work).