How America Is Breaking Public Education
Everyone who's been through school has had experiences with a wide variety of teachers, ranging from the colossally bad to the spectacularly good. There are a few qualities universally ascribed to the best teachers, and the lists almost always include the following traits:
- a passion for their chosen subject,
- a deep, expert-level knowledge of the subject matter they're teaching,
- a willingness to cater to a variety of learning styles and to employ a variety of educational techniques,
- and a vision for what a class of properly educated students would be able to know and demonstrate at the end of the academic year.
Yet despite knowing what a spectacular teacher looks like, the educational models we have in place actively discourage every one of these.
The first and largest problem is that every educational program we've had in place since 2002 — the first year that No Child Left Behind took effect — prioritizes student performance on standardized tests above all else. Test performance is now tied to both school funding, and the evaluation of teachers and administrators. In many cases, there exists no empirical evidence to back up the validity of this approach, yet it's universally accepted as the way things ought to be.
Imagine, for a moment, that this weren't education, but any other job. Imagine how you'd feel if you found yourself employed in such a role.
You have, on any given day, a slew of unique problems to tackle. These include how to reach, motivate, and excite the people whose Continue reading: How America Is Breaking Public Education