Latest News and Comment from Education

Friday, January 15, 2016

More Lessons on the Journalist/ Educator Divide – the becoming radical

More Lessons on the Journalist/ Educator Divide – the becoming radical:

More Lessons on the Journalist/ Educator Divide



During my recent round of confronting the failures of mainstream media and journalists covering US public education (see herehere, and here), I have had some of my worst fears confirmed, but have also discovered a few new lessons.
I was disappointed to read some Tweets that suggested that the reason journalists do not include more (or usually any) teacher voices is the fault of educators: teachers not willing to go on record, teachers failing to meet the journalist’s deadline.
This deflecting of professional responsibility and blame prove my central point that journalists simply do not understand education well enough to cover it adequately or fairly.
K-12 public school teachers are increasingly losing any semblance of job security—one aspect of which is the traditional charge that teachers not be political, not be advocates in the public realm. Journalists must have a greater sense of awareness and compassion for those conditions, and then seek ways to make it possible for teachers to be a major part of the public discussion about education.
An alternative, however, that I often present is that there is no absence of professors and researchers who are able to speak publicly while also having a much higher level of expertise More Lessons on the Journalist/ Educator Divide – the becoming radical: