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Friday, May 3, 2019

Challenging the “Grammar of Instruction” (Part 1) | Larry Cuban on School Reform and Classroom Practice

Challenging the “Grammar of Instruction” (Part 1) | Larry Cuban on School Reform and Classroom Practice

Challenging the “Grammar of Instruction” (Part 1)

The old classroom model simply doesn’t fit our changing needs….It’s a fundamentally passive way of learning, while the world requires more and more active processing of information.Salman Khan, The One World Classroom (2012)
From Francis Parker to John Dewey to Ella Flagg Young, to Vito Perrone to Deborah Meier to Theodore Sizer, complaints about the “old classroom model” have echoed through university lecture halls, academic monographs, oodles of conferences and, now, in education blogs. Criticism of existing public schools has spawned generation after generation of reformers looking for ways to alter the dominant “factory model,” “assembly line,” or “batch processing” way of schooling over the past 150 years.
Their target has been the historic structure of the age-graded public school with its  buildings divided into hallways lined with box-like classrooms where teachers distribute slices of curriculum grade-by-grade using whole and small-group instruction, homework, and tests. The regime of standardization ends in June with either students being promoted to the next grade or being retained in the grade for another year.
Imported from Prussia in the late 1840s, that generation of reformers touted it as an innovation that was superior to the one-room schoolhouse. And it was. Between the mid-19th and early 20th centuries, the age-graded public school took in millions of immigrants from western, eastern, and southern Europe. These immigrants became Americanized through schooling and the workplace.
But there were critics of the age-graded school then and now. In 1902, John Dewey warned educators that “the manner in which the machinery of instruction CONTINUE READING: Challenging the “Grammar of Instruction” (Part 1) | Larry Cuban on School Reform and Classroom Practice