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Monday, February 29, 2016

More Bad Journalism about Bad Edu-Books (and Why the New Media Can Rock) – the becoming radical

More Bad Journalism about Bad Edu-Books (and Why the New Media Can Rock) – the becoming radical:
More Bad Journalism about Bad Edu-Books (and Why the New Media Can Rock)



 So Ed Boland wrote a really bad edu-book that all the mainstream media adores because, well, you know, nobody gives a crap what a teacher thinks, but let ANYbody dip a toe in education who isn’t an educator and then everyone is all gaga.

Like our old reliable bad journalism source, The New York TimesThe Myth of the Hero Teacher (note the very serious and pensive opening photo).
But this will be a short post, one that simply notes that I have told you so, again and again—mainstream journalism about education is godawful.
I also want to turn your eyes to the promise of the New Media, where two posts have addressed the bad journalism and bad edu-book very well, I think:
My fear is that this will book will be used as another weapon in assaults on public schools and teacher certification programs. I have no question there are public schools that are not functioning and should be closed, although it would not be fair to make a judgment based on Boland’s report. Boland says he is in no way blaming the students, they are the victims of poverty. He claims the book is about his personal catharsis and is an indictment of the conditions that produce this kind of student behavior. But that is not how it comes across in interviews or what sells books. The focus in “The Battle for Room 314” is on the horrors Boland feels he experienced because of the students and he offers a detailed description of their behavior, at least as he understood it.