RSS Feed

‘Obstacles’ Category

  1. Australia & reading wars

    December 13, 2014 by Tunya

    [published in Invisible Serfs Collar on topic — Rejecting Reading to Avoid . . . ]

    Polarization Defines The “Reading Wars”

    It’s a persistent annoyance that educators divide so readily into opposing camps.

    This certainly does not happen in any other field where practitioners call themselves “professional”; Medicine, Engineering, etc. seem to have evolved standard practices, which on the whole govern their behavior with their clients.  Why is Education so different?  Probably, it’s not a real profession?

    At any rate, the Reading Wars are again flaming — this time in Australia.  

    Education was an election issue during the campaign after which a new Coalition government was elected last year, replacing Labor. The National Curriculum was seen by many as having been unduly shaped by Fabianism — an active movement aimed at bringing about socialism through gradualism and permeation.  Julia Gillard, once an Education Minister and then Prime Minister of Australia, was a member of the Fabian Society.   

    The new government launched a Review of the curriculum and produced a Report in August 2014.  Among the headlines were these two:  “Australia to require the phonics method” & “Education minister orders universities to teach phonics or face losing accreditation.”

    It wasn’t long before divisions and cleavages sprang to the  fore from activists within the education field. 

    As one who has long been baffled and exasperated by educator lack of agreement on standard practices and the dumping of methods, which do work, I think a close look at the dynamics as playing out in Australia would be very revealing.  Especially for those of us who see political groups using schools as fronts for their agendas.

    Let’s just look at one example:

    Here is a critique from a prominent teacher educator and a prolific writer of papers and books on Literacy — from a critical theory point of view (ie, leftist) — Direct Instruction is not a solution for Australian schools  http://www.aare.edu.au/blog/?p=439

    Right away the author, Allan Luke, mischaracterizes phonics and direct instruction as “operant conditioning” and “deskilling” of teachers.  It didn’t take long for some commentators to strongly object: 

    –  Having had my mind poisoned against DI during [teacher training] I never considered it until I searched for evidence for what worked with children for whom nothing seemed to work!

    – Direct Instruction does not deskill teachers.

    – . . . mountains of research show DI to be effective when implemented well . . . DI is simply sound instruction.

    – Every year I present lectures to teacher education students and find that they are already indoctrinated with the mantra “constructivism good, direct instruction bad”. When I show them the results of these meta-analyses [Hattie], they are stunned, and they often become angry at having been given an agreed set of truths and commandments against direct instruction.

    – I am sick of DI being labeled as a right-wing conspiracy and watching failing students just getting failure as an education.

    If we could just untangle this enigma — find the real reasons for withholding proven reading methods — then maybe we can get back to teaching children, all children, the basic skills they need for fulfilling educational experiences.

     

     

     

     


  2. Teacher union influence in politics

    December 11, 2014 by Tunya

    [Tom Fletcher, legislative reporter wrote about the dubious value of school boards under influence of teacher unions. http://www.sookenewsmirror.com/opinion/283099621.html   Protest letters cam in from a teacher unionist and trustee, denying this influence.  http://www.surreyleader.com/opinion/letters/284782871.html  I wrote:]

     
     
     
    Teacher Unions In BC Shape Education Politics & Trustee Elections

     

    When Tom Fletcher writes his reports for the Black Press newspapers he does so from a provincial and general perspective. What he says may not ring exactly true in each area the newspaper publishes. What he says about teacher union involvement in trustee elections does generally apply. He says: “This has been going on for so long in B.C. it is seen as normal.”

    One of the worst examples occurred in 2008 when Victoria teacher union actually proceeded to obtain signed pledges in return for financial support. Burnaby teacher union followed suit with a list of 10 pledges they wanted in exchange for their support. Here are some of those “expectations”:

    – work to prevent privatization of education

    – elimination of standardized data collection (FSA)

    – support the Charter for Public Education

    – promote social justice and equity 

    – support teacher professionalism

    – are willing and able to speak out publicly on these issues

    http://blogs.vancouversun.com/2008/10/08/burnaby-teachers-want-a-commitment-updated/

     

     

     

     
     

  3. Education system neuters reforms

    November 16, 2014 by Tunya

    [ Yet another effort is made to teach READING to students for success in school.  The saying goes:  Learn to Read by end of Grade Three — then Read to Learn from Grade Four onward. It is a lamentable frustration to parents that this is not a priority for schools in general.,  This post to Society for Quality Education describes the effort and below is my comment.  http://www.societyforqualityeducation.org/index.php/blog/read/reading-intervention-model ]

    BEWARE:  Education System Swallows Reforms

    This essay is NOT to diminish or dampen enthusiasm for this Reading Intervention initiative in Wisconsin.  Good intentions, good people, good funding, however, do not necessarily result in enduring results over the long haul. 

    The Reading Wars have been around a long time.  So has the mortifying knowledge about the Matthew Effect — illiteracy at an early age has a downward spiraling effect on students whose failures compound toward unfulfilled lives and even criminal records. 

    The Reading Wars are political, not pedagogic, and some time in the future — despite tons of books and articles on the topic — the agenda issues will be revealed.  So far there is no definitive answer as to why this feud continues to spoil good education practice.  This RTI (Response to intervention) research project is favoring phonics as the preferred approach.

    As far as the school to prison pipeline this is also addressed by this project whose funding agency stresses the loss to productivity of illiterate citizens.

    Why do I show concern for this project?  Mainly because it is yet another research project — added to the tons of other previous research efforts — that stands to be neutered or absorbed by a performance-averse education system — a system which cares more for its own survival than what’s good for the children.

    I am hoping that written into the plan— in black and white in a prominent place — are the expectations for this program’s survival and succession once the professional consultants leave.  Thanks for the link http://rti.dpi.wi.gov/ but I see no prospects for long-term commitment.

    By way of cautionary tale, I add this story from the book, “Getting Schooled” by Garret Keizer — {quotes and paraphrasing]  *** The author’s wife, a highly trained special needs teacher, was involved in an enthusiastically supported, well-funded, project to build special facilities for treatment, classes, parent programs, service agencies, and offices for specialized personnel. . . . a ‘one-stop shopping for parents in need of broad-spectrum services, a cafeteria, activity rooms, cushioned playground’ . . . volunteers worked around the clock, community involved . . . ‘reporters came to snap the pictures . . . ‘A new day dawned.  It would be a short one.  You can build a school from the ground up, but the directing destiny will always move from the top down.  You can say ‘the kids come first’ till the cows come home, but in practice the kids come fourth behind the administrators, parents and teachers — or fifth, in a dairy economy, behind the cows. Within the space of about three years a new superintendent relocated his office to the building. The social service agencies vanished . . . at least one treatment room was rededicated as a space for obsolete computer equipment . . . ‘the spacious ‘gross motor room’ was commandeered for district-wide principals’ meetings . . . ‘ [few remembered the original project] ***

    Best wishes and Good Luck with your wonderful research study which promises so much good!

     

     


  4. Parents: 3rd Force in Education

    November 8, 2014 by Tunya

    [Society for Quality Education has been posting excerpts from the book, The Teaching Gap, (Stigler, Hiebert) and below is my comment.]

    Parents:  The THIRD FORCE In Education

    Every time some new eye-opener appears that claims some magic bullet to improve teaching, parents will sigh and exclaim:  “Why don’t they just teach?”  They may even say: “ Why, even Johnny asks why he should go to school because the teachers don’t teach!”

    So much is already proven (evidence-based it’s called) about effective learning and teaching it becomes a huge puzzle why there is so much toying in the education industry.  If styles do differ between cultures but the outcome is there — an “educated” student — why does it matter?  The bottom line is that knowledge can be transferred and skills can be developed and positive social behaviors can be acquired — if the expectation is clear and enforced.  By whom?  By the client, the parents who are the primary pivot in this enterprise. 

    For too long, parents have been seen as the “enemy” of the system.  Please, don’t say this is exaggeration! Just Google “parents enemy schools” and you’ll get 1,000s of entries.

    An active third party is actively resisted by the two main forces in education today — the ruling government and the powerful teacher unions.  Even while there may be appearances of disagreement between the two, let’s not for one moment think their behavior is not mutually beneficial.  Each party benefits from labor peace.  It’s the client — the parents and their children — who are left out of meaningful participation.

    The book, Parents and Schools: The 150-Year Struggle for Control in American Education (Cutler) outlines the struggle parents have had, and always ending in their involvement in terms conducive to the system, not the other way around.  Our democratic beliefs say otherwise, but the system contrives to make convenience for itself as the priority. 

    Parents should and must take a stand so that their children benefit from systems paid for by the public purse in the lifetime of their children — not some utopian distant future when all issues tossed at them (poverty, class size, class differences, racism, etc.) are solved.  It’s the here and now that counts for this developing child.  Don’t listen to system proclamations.

    Read:  Liberals, don’t homeschool your kids (wait several generations for the system to get better )http://www.slate.com/articles/double_x/doublex/2012/02/homeschooling_and_unschooling_among_liberals_and_progressives_.html

    Some say there are no Parent Rights in Education.  There always have been rights, and we codified them in the 70s — what’s known, what’s good practice.  http://www.parentsteachingparents.net/2014/07/parent-rights-their-childrens-education/

    Go to my site http://www.parentsteachingparents.net/ and Search — parent rights.  Lots of articles.

    Australia has just finished a Review of their education system.  Big priority is improving relations with parents and services for parents.  The suggestion is to provide easy guides to what the curriculum is expected to do at each stage. 

    New Zealand has had 20 years of self-governing schools, with majority of parents on each school board.  This experience in self governance is a transferable skill to the rest of society.  NZ is tops of the chart on the CPI, Corruption Perception Index — that is, LEAST corrupt.

    See the Michigan story I posted in SQE on Ontario small communities.  Here is it that parents, who have homeschooled for 20 years, are now able to have co-operative mutual arrangements with public schools.

    It’s in the air.  Parents want IN in their lifetimes and their children’s lifetimes.


  5. 21st Century Gurus — Well-oiled & Organized

    October 2, 2014 by Tunya

    [It's only lately that things are speeding up, but these gurus have been greasing the skids for a long time — embedding their "expertise" and predictions for the future. Two such names, Michael Fullan and Andrew Hargreaves, have just been appointed to a team of 4 to help steer Ontario's education "transformation". This 37 pg Report — Towards a New End: New Pedagogies for Deep Learning (2013) — http://www.newpedagogies.info/wp-content/uploads/2014/01/New_Pedagogies_for_Deep%20Learning_Whitepaper.pdfmay help see the "shift" from basics to "competencies" explained.  Below is a second post I made to Invisible Serfs Collar, a blog alerting the public to global efforts to change society through schools.]

    The 6 Cs, The 3 Es Of 21st C Learning = Welfare Statism

    From Professor Michael Fullan, Special Advisor to the Premier of Ontario, we see the 6Cs outlined : http://www.edu.gov.on.ca/eng/document/reports/FullanReport_EN_07.pdf

    1. Character education
    2. Citizenship
    3. Communication
    4. Critical thinking and problem solving
    5. Collaboration
    6. Creativity and imagination

    From the Wales paper with Andrew Hargreaves involved we get 3Cs: http://www.oecd.org/edu/Improving-schools-in-Wales.pdf 

    1. Engaged thinker
    2. Ethical citizen
    3. Entrepreneurial spirit

    But now,  given the name of yet another related Global Change Agent (GCA), Jal Mehta, we are getting closer to the REAL AGENDA, without all the fancy rhetoric and alphabetic mnemonics.  The latest book by Jal Mehta is — The Allure of Order: High Hopes, Dashed Expectations, and the Troubled Quest to Remake American Schooling.

    From the Amazon.com site, we read Mehta’s intent:

    “The larger problem, Mehta argues, is that reformers have it backwards . . . Our current pattern is to draw less than our most talented people into teaching, equip them with little relevant knowledge, train them minimally, put them in a weak welfare state, and then hold them accountable when they predictably do not achieve what we seek. What we want, Mehta argues, is the opposite approach which characterizes top-performing educational nations: attract strong candidates into teaching, develop relevant and usable knowledge, train teachers extensively in that knowledge, and support these efforts through a strong welfare state.” 

    A strong welfare state — exactly what does that mean?  It means an enforced, delegated, coerced welfare state with compliant residents. Throw “citizenship” as we know it out the window!

    Much as I see the need for improved teacher training, what I see here is intense inculcation of new teachers, not necessarily in the basics but in things like 6Cs and 3Es and other social-emotional learning AND means to police and enforce that transmission both to teachers and to our young people.

     Bye, bye liberty.  Did you read my earlier post about Rip Van Dinkle?