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‘Book Reviews’ Category

  1. BK Rev: Credentialed to Destroy . . . Education as Weapon

    January 21, 2014 by Tunya

    Credentialed to Destroy:  How and Why Educstion Became a Weapon, Robin Eubanks

    my review in Amazon.com & Amazon.ca

    We Must Comprehend The Title’s Meaning

    It’s much easier to describe, “licensed to kill”, than it is to explain this title — Credentialed to Destroy.  But, there is a story that explains both title and general theme of the book.

    Here is the story:  A Math PhD was hired as an administrator and there was relief and belief that with this person at the helm, math scores would go up.  They didn’t.  The school board failed to take into account the specialization.  The dissertation was on Equity Pedagogy — declaring traditional mathematics to be a form of social oppression.  The “expert” was intent on moving the coursework “away” from the transmission of math knowledge, skills, and practices.

    Critical Theory and Equity Studies are common in teacher training and it is not uncommon to integrate these concepts with a school subject as math or literacy.   Often these graduates bring a tacit agenda with them when hired into the school system and will often gravitate to “social justice” or “social responsibility” themes in curriculum committees or school practice.

    This story comes from pg 34 of the book “Credentialed to Destroy: How and Why Education Became a Weapon by Robin Eubanks.  The book takes on the “intended transformation” of public schools through Common Core Initiatives or other 21st Century Learning efforts.  The PhD story explains the title — credentialed to destroy.  The incremental dumbing-down in schools these past decades is charted and researched in this book.

    The author is a lawyer.  She carefully builds her case and brings forth persuasive exhibits.

    Chapter 1 names key thought leaders of 200 years  — Marx, Dewey, Vygotsky, etc. — who have envisioned education as a political weapon and tool to bring forth a collectivist worldview.

    Chapter 2 takes on the reading wars and explains the intention not to teach reading and why.

    Chapter 3 deals with math and science wars and how the analytical thinker is a threat to constructing a new worldview.

    Chapter 4 deals with “competency” as a term and a notion that is to be embedded in the narratives and curriculum and meant to push aside our insistence on skills (3Rs) and knowledge.

    Social engineering of a sophisticated nature is to be used to change minds, beliefs and feelings.  Social emotional learning  (SEL) is to become a measurable “competency”.   To what end? Why, to develop “citizens” who will be in sync with 21st Century global needs! Creativity, critical thinking, communication and collaboration are the 4 Cs to emphasize. 

    Eubanks sees  these contrived “transformations” as seriously jeopardizing prosperity. She has researched these education initiatives far and wide and searched UN documents and many sources.  I can say right now that in British Columbia this “transformation” is well on it’s way, without real public understanding, with educators amateurishly cutting-and-pasting from international documents, and with core competencies becoming a fixture.

    Eubanks suggests no solutions or approaches but carefully builds our awareness.  Will we be in time to prevent wholesale serfdom and self-subversion?  Exit and Escape may be the only alternative.

     


  2. Indefensible Education Malpractices

    January 9, 2014 by Tunya

    From the book, Educators on Trial, James Leary

    • Giving a learning assignment as punishment
    • Punishing the whole class for the actions of a few
    • Using grades to manipulate or discipline students
    • Grading students on a curve (so many As, Bs, regardless of the achievement of the students
    • Tests that do not cover material taught
    • Advancing students who have not learned the prerequisites
    • Prescribing the same material to all in a wide-ability class
    • Assigning meaningless homework

     


  3. Parent Involvement & The Political Principle

    January 5, 2014 by Tunya

    Book Review:

    Parental Involvement and the Political Principle — Why the Existing Governance Structure of Schools Should be Abolished, Seymour B Sarason, 1995 Jossy-Bass Pub

    Sarason was a psychologist whose many books about education reform leaned heavily on motivations for people's actions.  

    From the cover of the book:  "For school to change, not only must a new school governance replace the old, it must also confront and answer the question: Governance for what educational purpose?"

    Those of us in the trenches of ed reform bemoan, tear our hair out, and wail: the system runs for the conveneince of "the system", for those who run the system and exploit it for their own vested interests.

    In Economics this is various called producer capture, provider capture, or elite capture.

    I will provide a lot more material on the book's important insights later as this site, and the Parent Tribal Memory project gets rolling along.


  4. Education Malpractice On The Horizon

    April 23, 2013 by Tunya

    The Moore case (Canada, 2012) concerning a special needs student (dyslexia) is raising expectations for families frustrated by public education systems that fail to help educable students.  The student was not served by the public school board and went to a private specialized school and is now a journeyman plumber.  The public school board was ordered by the court to pay $100,000 compensation for the fees plus $10,000 for damages and costs.

    A good number of malpractice suits in the past were denied due to the “floodgates” excuse but a current lawyer in this business says that no longer holds.  He says that was a “specious” excuse (bogus, erroneous) and that now the byword is:

    “Fiat justitia, ruat coelom” — Let justice be done, though the heavens fall.

    http://www.rbs2.com/edumal3.pdf

    With a glut of lawyers around and new law schools opening up, we can anticipate that education malpractice will be a budding field.  School boards have deep pockets.

    When I attended classes from Ivan Illich in 1971-72 we talked about iatrogenic disorders caused by professionals — medical diseases, educational failures.  Problems caused by so-called solutions.  He recommended wholesale deschooling.

    In 1981 the book, Educators on Trial – the identification and prevention of classroom malpractice by James Leary, portrayed malpractice as any professional  misconduct or unreasonable skill in performing professional duties.   The 12 cases described serve as an overview of the evolving field — of interest to administrators, teacher unions, school boards, and others involved.  Parents get to know what is not best practice.

    A book review at the time (NAASP 1981) foretold that successful education malpractice lawsuits have the “potential for destroying the educational institution as a public servant.”

    That hasn’t happened yet, but the Moore case certainly interrogates the purpose of public schools.  If they don’t enable the essential fundamentals of learning, the “ramp”, just what are they for, anyway?  The current institutional model, the top-down bureaucratic structure, the entanglements with unions and university training institutions, is not an efficient or effective model for the 21st C for the students meant to be served.

    Will it take  a court case to expose all this baggage that prevents proper education of the young?   It might be the only thing that will reveal this pretext for what it is — a colossal consumer fraud on a massive scale!


  5. Still in the Wilderness — Parents & Public Schools

    April 11, 2013 by Tunya

     

    Parents and Schools: The 150-year struggle for control in American education, William W. Cutler III, 1992, University of Chicago Press
     
    Synopsis
     
     
    The Journey
     
    The Status