Sunday, June 2, 2019

Why Teachers Need Their Freedom (Ashley Lamb-Sinclair) | Larry Cuban on School Reform and Classroom Practice

Why Teachers Need Their Freedom (Ashley Lamb-Sinclair) | Larry Cuban on School Reform and Classroom Practice

Why Teachers Need Their Freedom (Ashley Lamb-Sinclair)



This article appeared in The Atlantic September 10, 2017.
Ashley Lamb-Sinclair “is a high-school instructional coach. She is the 2016 Kentucky Teacher of the Year and the founder and CEO of Curio Learning.”
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My co-teacher and I met in the parking lot before school and stared into my car trunk at the costumes and props we had gathered over the weekend. We were giddy with excitement and nervous because neither of us had tried anything like this before. We also taught in the kind of school where one wrong move in the classroom could lead to disastrous results because of our students’ intense behavioral and learning needs.
The co-teacher, Alice Gnau, had found a book called Teaching Content Outrageously by Stanley Pogrow, which explained how secondary classrooms can incorporate drama into any content to engage students in learning—incorporating the element of surprise, for example, or developing role-play or simulation experiences to teach content and standards. The book inspired us to change how we taught our seventh-grade language-arts students in a high-poverty school that struggled with test scores, especially reading and math.
The sense of urgency in the building was palpable, and the pressure on teachers to increase student achievement was often overwhelming. The district required us to teach a curriculum rigidly aligned with a 15-year-old reading textbook containing outdated articles about Ricky Martin, ice fishing, and cartography in an attempt to provide relevant, entry-level reading for students. I refused to teach from this text on the grounds that it was both condescending and uninteresting. But district personnel insisted that teachers use the textbook, citing evidence that it brought up test scores.
Alice and I decided to take the risk and apply Pogrow’s advice. The mandated CONTINUE READING: Why Teachers Need Their Freedom (Ashley Lamb-Sinclair) | Larry Cuban on School Reform and Classroom Practice