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Modern School

(794 posts)
Wed May 9, 2012, 09:44 PM May 2012

The Pendulum of Stupidity: All Reforms Lead to Broken Schools

I’ve written a lot about the Common Core Standards movement recently and its corporate benefactors (click here, here and here). Anthony Cody just published a wonderful interview with Yong Zhao (Presidential Chair and Associate Dean for Global Education, College of Education at the University of Oregon) on the topic. Rather than republish the entire interview (you can click here http://blogs.edweek.org/teachers/living-in-dialogue/2012/05/yong_zhao_common_core.html to read it) I’d just like to reprint two choice quotes:

What will be different five years from now if the current plans go forward?

Yong Zhao: It's always dangerous to predict the future. But if history is any indication, judging from the accomplishment of NCLB and Race-to-the Top, I would say that five years from now, American education will still be said to be broken and obsolete. We will find out that the Common Core Standards, after billions of dollars, millions of hours of teacher time, and numerous PD sessions, alignment task forces, is not the cure to American's education ill. Worse yet, we will likely have most of nation's schools teaching to the common tests aligned with the Common Core. As a result, we will see a further narrowing of the curriculum and educational experiences. Whatever innovative teaching that has not been completely lost in the schools may finally be gone. And then we will have a nation of students, teachers, and schools who are compliant with the Common Core Standards, but we may not have much else left.

Some argue that without a single high bar, we will continue to leave poor and minority students behind. How would you respond?

Yong Zhao: The lack of a "single bar" is never the cause of the problem in the first place. There is plenty of evidence to show that our poor and minority students have been left behind is because they are poor and minority--a social justice and racial issue that must be addressed by the whole society and government at all levels. For example, we know the early years matter a lot but our poor and minority children are not in schools until they are five or six years old. That is, even if a "single bar" mattered, it would be too late. After they begin school, they spend most of their time outside school, in impoverished homes and neighborhoods. More importantly, past experiences show that state level standards and assessment have not improved the educational outcomes of poor and minority students.

Modern School
http://modeducation.blogspot.com/2012/05/pendulum-of-stupidity-all-reforms-lead.html

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The Pendulum of Stupidity: All Reforms Lead to Broken Schools (Original Post) Modern School May 2012 OP
To Much Time Spent Testing and Setting Goals rsmith6621 May 2012 #1
Let's Fix Education! SZaccheo May 2012 #2
Despite all of the disparate views on how to fix education... Brooklyn Dame May 2012 #3
Real REform Starts with the Wealth Gap Modern School May 2012 #4
 

SZaccheo

(11 posts)
2. Let's Fix Education!
Sat May 12, 2012, 02:39 PM
May 2012

Let's fix education! Help stop the circus!


Make a difference at www.ThisBudgetBlows.com for a better tomorrow.

Brooklyn Dame

(169 posts)
3. Despite all of the disparate views on how to fix education...
Sat May 12, 2012, 03:49 PM
May 2012

...I truly believe that if the political will was there, we'd find a way. Some interests are against teachers, the foundation of the system, unions and even the students to the point that real reform seems impossible. It's truly sad; one way or the other, the nation will pay for its lack of focus on education.

http://borderlessnewsandviews.com/2012/05/stumped-part-one-whats-the-real-crisis-in-american-education/

http://borderlessnewsandviews.com/2012/05/stumped-part-two-born-into-this/

http://borderlessnewsandviews.com/2012/04/rethinking-the-four-year-degree/

Modern School

(794 posts)
4. Real REform Starts with the Wealth Gap
Mon May 14, 2012, 10:12 PM
May 2012

I'm sorry, but as much as everyone loves to rag on the dismal state of our schools, the biggest influence on the achievement gap, low graduation rates and test scores is income. As long as we continue to accept a huge wealth gap, poverty, homelessness, hunger, economic insecurity, there is no education reform that will make much of a difference.

Of course schools could be better run, teachers could always improve on their curriculum and pedagogy and better funding could help. But none of these can erase the effects of a lifetime of poverty, particularly when much of the damage occurs in utero and in early childhood, well before kids even start school.

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