Monday, August 17, 2015

What We Know, What We Do -- A Contradiction | Steve Nelson

What We Know, What We Do -- A Contradiction | Steve Nelson:

What We Know, What We Do -- A Contradiction




Most critics of current education reform cite political shenanigans, funding sleight of hand and concerns about privatization. Those concerns are justified, but the deeper problem is educational. Education may be the dimension of contemporary life where "what we do" is most profoundly inconsistent with "what we know." Why aren't we paying attention?
Conventional political wisdom claims that education in America is not going well. That belief is more propaganda than fact. Many researchers and writers have pointed out, with substantial evidence, that the real enemies of education are poverty and racism; that schools and opportunity are inequitable; that America's schools and communities have become increasingly re-segregated; that the charter school/voucher/privatization movement is perpetuating inequality; and that many schools are underfunded because of flawed funding mechanisms and economic injustice.
Despite the intent of reformers, many of whom I assume are sincere, education reform is exacerbating the very problems it claims to address. Eminent historian Diane Ravitch has expertly and thoroughly explicated the failures and perils of the charter school/privatization movement in her book, Reign of Error: The Hoax of the Privatization Movement and the Danger to America's Public Schools. Ravitch and many others have rebutted most of the arguments made by reformers, although she and other critics don't have the financial heft to sway public opinion like the reformers can. Just look at the propaganda, lobbying and political clout used in New York!N.Y.C. Mayor Bill de Blasio took a beating, and it wasn't because he was wrong. It was because there is big money behind the very aggressive reform machine. Money talks. And NY Governor Andrew Cuomo listens.
If not for poverty, racism, re-segregation (and education reform), most indicators suggest that education is doing just fine -- for some children.
Graduation rates and college attendance are at all time highs. Scores on the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP), considered by many to be the "gold standard" of assessment, are similarly healthy. Several decades of education reform have done little or nothing even when measured by the essentially meaningless metrics of standardized assessments.
The practices spawned by the testing and accountability era are harmful to children's cognitive and emotional development, even if scores were rising. But scores are not rising, which makes it a bit like suffering through chemotherapy and finding the cancer unchanged. I've never enjoyed the homily, "no pain, no gain," but it's better than "pain, no gain," which is an apt characterization of the current state of affairs.
Education has always appeared to work reasonably well for children of privilege - at least some children of privilege. Most of the success experienced by students in traditional schools, including many of the most celebrated schools, occurs despite their policies and practices, not because of them. Nearly all schools (including the one I lead) deemed "excellent" are the beneficiaries of either careful selection of students or affluent communities. Folks everywhere believe these communities have "good" schools when in fact these schools have good communities. This is not to suggest that such schools (including the one I lead!) are not doing fine work. It is to admit that kids are not a blank slate and neither success nor failure is primarily a function of what happens in a particular school.
But I write to make a broader argument: Traditional education has never worked well for all children. Never will and can't, because the premises on which traditional What We Know, What We Do -- A Contradiction | Steve Nelson: