1.)
The
first, of five things to be done about education, I would say, is to
communicate a wake up call about the reality of data. What I mean by that is,
inform anyone who is anyone, parents, teachers, students, that data is not
essentially everything, and sometimes cannot prove everything. Ravitch herself
states, “Data are representations of reality, not reality itself” (281). Not
just political figures, but many people in just our general population have
bought into this idea that data, the hard numbers, the test scores truly show
the reality of where education is. I would argue that most people do not
discuss the implications of these tests, whether or not we can accept that they
accurately assess our students’ abilities. I think it may be true, that many parents
and children accept the standardized tests as if they have been created by some
all foreseeing power that is so accurate, precise, and prestigious that one
does not question its accuracy, I think to do so does not even come into play
for a lot of people. However, when given this thought, and being told that it
is okay to question the validity of the standardized tests, what they actually
measure and the potentially negative implications they could have on the
educational process throughout a school year, I think people would absolutely
begin to see what Ravitch is seeing, what I’m seeing, and what other teachers
have grown to see through our teaching. Therefore, what I would do would be to
urge the president to make this known. To communicate the fact that humans make
these tests, and humans are not without error. This wouldn’t be with the
intension of creating a rift, audacity, or blame, but rather an awareness of
reality that many people, I think, may not look into because the state, and the
government are seen as above us. We question laws that we vote on, so we most
certainly should question the tools that are given to assess our students’
learning. I think creating an awareness of this would be the first step in
helping guide people away from this immense focus on data.
2.)
Along
with this I would want to address with the public the idea of authentic
assessments for teachers. Since NCLB was instated there has been full
accountability and responsibility on teachers. NCLB makes it easy for those who
don’t question, and don’t know the potential holes of NCLB to point the finger
at the teacher. It seems to strip all accountability from students and factors
that would potentially influence their performance, which could never be
accurately assessed by NCLB. The reality is that a teacher can be an expert
teacher, doing everything necessary to help a student achieve, but if a student
is dealing with a number of home, family, personal issues that stem from
poverty, abuse, whatever, then that teacher is going to be seen as fully
accountable for the failure of that student, regardless. This is something
people need to be aware of. So a main response from me, to the president, would
be first and foremost to create awareness.
3.)
I
think the next most important thing would be to get rid of assessing teachers
based on student test scores. The standardized tests are completely subjective,
and teachers are being regulated based on a one sided perception or
understanding of success. What needs to be decided first, is who even has the
right, the authority, and the specific professionalism to assess teachers. I
would argue that this would absolutely have to be people with teaching
experience, and reputability. A person without teaching experience, or who does
not understand or know the world of education, cannot be the overseer
determining what is success in this business. Education is a complex business
and must take into account individuality on a multitude of different levels,
therefore no number can ever provide an accurate representation of the reality,
learning, progress, and growth that happens in a classroom, because some of
these dimensions can not be measured by a multiple choice test, and many of the
things we think are measurable by this test, can not always be accurately
measured. The test is not 100 percent reliable for all facets of growth and
intelligence which good education and good teachers foster. True growth and
learning can only be assessed through continuous observation, and analysis of
thinking that students produce, whether it is spoken or written. Students do
not have the opportunity to explain their thinking on a multiple choice test,
so how can we truly evaluate with a bubble test, the complex mental process and
reasoning that a student is making? This all must be understood in order for
the population and political sector to understand that teachers cannot be
effectively and truly valuated by such a process as the one that is currently
instated.
4.)
If
we truly care about education and success, it can’t be a quick process. People
want numbers and hard data from the test because then it is easy to see “who is
learning, who isn’t learning,” and “who is teaching effectively, who isn’t.”
When I’m thinking of the problem with standardized tests, I’m thinking of the
issues specifically related to assessing students’ thinking skills in English.
In an English class, the essay is the most powerful and most telling testing
tool. Any English teacher, I think, would argue that we can evaluate true
student learning by what they produce in writing (or out loud). The goal is to
communicate clearly and effectively, yet STAR never requires them to articulate
any thought whatsoever. I think effective testing for English would then have
to incorporate writing, to be evaluated by professional English teachers. That
being said, perhaps teacher education programs do need to be more rigorous as
far content areas and grading. Every teacher should be able to be considered a
true professional in his or her field and qualified to evaluate the assessments
given to their students. Therefore, the people who I think should be evaluating
student learning, are teachers. Not government officials who interpret a set of
numbers and take them for fact and reality. I don’t know enough about other subject
areas to confidently say that this same system could be implemented for those
disciplines, however I think that it could. We need to see the evolution of
thought that takes place in a students mind, and somehow assess every student
individually, not according to a standard addressed for all students within a
specific age group. That grouping creates numerous issues, due to the fact that
all students are bringing to the classroom a wide variety of circumstances that
can either positively or negatively affect their learning. The reality is that
thee circumstances need to be accounted for and considered.
5.)
My
final suggestions would be to focus on curriculum, as Ravitch has stated a
number of times that there is too heavy a focus on results and not enough on
what we actually want our students to learn. Similarly important, we can’t
ignore that poverty is a major issue and that much of what we see in the
achievement gap can be attributed to poverty and the affects of poverty. I
would suggest that we need an economic turn around, and, as idealistic as it
may sound, some way to rescue our youth from poverty. And charter schools are
not the way to do it. Charter schools promote selection, unintentionally
perhaps, in the fact that its availability and promises couldn’t possibly be
made known to everyone, especially those in intensive need. It seems that we,
as people involved in education, and the government, need to take on a greater
responsibility in providing what students need in order to learn, and quality
of live and family support are those things. The bigger question I would
propose, would be, can we tackle this? Is it within the realm of possibility to
change every child’s circumstance? Are their factors that we have to accept,
but just do our best to fight against? And if those are the questions, then one
would see at the same time, that we certainly can not assess teacher ability by
scores from tests that exclude individuality and personal factors from the
scope of evaluation.
2.) One of the
most meaningful things I learned from Ravitch, which would be something I would
say to the president as well but I chose to save it for this question, would be
her discussion and explanation of private investors and the Billionaire Boys’
Club. This was one of the most meaningful things I learned from her book
because, unlike the problems with NCLB, and problems with skewed data, I had
never before realized or understood what is taking place when people with a lot
of money choose to donate to or fund education. Because it is their money, they
are able to essentially dictate how that money will be spent, and if the
schools want in on the money, they will essentially embrace the ideas of the
donors in order to receive those funds. The problem is, again, we have people
with a lot of money with their own, and often uninformed and biased,
philosophies on education come in with in idealistic solution. There is no way
a lot of the time, for that donor to know or understand the ramifications of
reforms that they think are necessary. However, teachers usually, as the ones
on the frontlines, are the first ones to be able to detect potential problems
and successes of new reforms. However, they’re not the ones with the money and
their voice is essentially lost. So we are left with this problem of people
with money opening small schools, supporting charters, and doing all these
things that they think will help education, but studies and when these ideas
are put into action show failure, problems, and an overall undermining of the
education system. At this point we have people who are not professionals making
major decisions about education, and as Ravitch had said, with no one to hold
them accountable for anything (201). This information was extremely valuable to
me because it was something I was unaware of. I really dislike the idea that
people who are not professionals in the teaching field can have such a huge
weigh in on how to fix education just because they have the money with which to
entice a school or a district.
3.) As a teacher,
and as a citizen, considering the current state of American education, I have
to do whatever it takes to help my students succeed. To me that success is
attributed to personal and mental growth, pushing potential, sparking
creativity, and, dare I say it, how to take a multiple-choice test. The reality
is that there are going to be multiple-choice tests in many of these students’
futures. Whether they decide to take the SATs, go into the education field,
medical field, law enforcement, fire fighting. All of these professions require
testing like this. So, in my opinion, all I can do is support my students to
the best of my ability so that they can achieve success now and in the future.
It is tough, but I don’t think it is impossible to teach students organically,
holistically, and allow room for creativity, while incorporating test taking
strategies, and formative assessments that mirror STAR questions so that
students get used to the format. A strategy that I’ve used in the past that I
actually really loved was to present students with a multiple-choice quiz, only
five questions. However, they had to explain in writing on the test why they
chose each answer. We would then go over the quiz as a class and discuss
everyone’s answers and rationales for choosing what they chose. We would
examine how some answers were “more right” than others, but sometimes, I would
get a student who made a brilliant case for an answer that was said to be
incorrect by the test. In this case I would be honest with my students. I gave
my students credit where credit was due, and let them know that humans make
these tests, not God, not a computer that is perfect and above all flaw, but
someone with a subjective viewpoint, and unfortunately, we as other people are
subjected to those flaws, and we can only do the best we can. I would even tell
my students that it is unfortunate they can’t express their rationale for a
different answer, because their rationales are often brilliant. I think that
what they learned in this lesson, beyond English, was a lesson on life and
reality. Sometimes we are confined and limited momentarily, and we have to play
the game until we can find a way to change it. But I don’t think that dealing
with these circumstances of American education are all bad, we just have to
teach our students to be aware, to be smart, and to always do their best. But I
think letting giving them affirmation for a technically “incorrect” answer,
lets them see and know that there are no limits to what they can do, and one
day they could spark or create change. We have to let them know that there are
flaws in the system and that they are subject to those flaws, we all are. But I
think that is a really powerful lesson for students as far as knowledge,
motivation, and empowerment.
4.) The first
website is: The National Council of Teachers of English. http://www.ncte.org/
On the website
there is an email account you can sign up for to receive newsletters. There is
also a free web seminar about speaking out to support teaching. There are links
for professional development and the NCTE Annual Convention. There are links to
resources, ways to get involved, a link to join, as well as a link to shop for
books, journals, or various memberships. On this page there are also links to a
multitude of English aspects such as poetry, and writing. There is a calendar
on the home page, as well as a list of how to get involved, and specially
featured items for teaching such as books and compilations of lesson plans.
The second
website is: The English Teachers Association. http://www.englishteacher.com.au/
On this website
there are a number of links to all different aspects of teaching English. These
links appear to lead to lesson plans and books on each topic, but one must be a
member in order to access those tools. The association also has a magazine
called , “The Latest mETAphor.” It appears that this association is based in
Australia. However, if one is willing to take the time to match up standards,
or notice similarities between standards, then perhaps some of the tools and
links offered on this website could be beneficial to any English teacher. The
English basics are the same, so I like that it is really easy to search by
English topic on this website. There seems to be easily accessible information
on anything I would need to teach pertaining to English in general.
6.)
Over
the next three years, if I could, I would…
a.)
still
like to see in the Bay Area: how teachers are teaching and incorporating
diversity in places such as San Francisco. I would also like to see as many
cultural exhibits and museums as possible. In conjunction with that I would
like to take my students on field trips to these museums and exhibits and help
integrate understanding and appreciation for cultural diversity through that
active experience. In class, Tanya referenced a theatre company that performs
Shakespeare plays in Indian culture. I would love to see this and use one of
these performances to enhance students understanding of a Shakespeare play, and
how Shakespeare transcends time and cultures. The last thing I would like to
do, and may still try to do this even though it would be challenging, would be
to interview people who direct and/or work at the Latino Community Foundation
in San Francisco. Their goal is to help create a better future for Latino
families in general, and since supporting those families, and creating better
situations for those families could help close the achievement gap (as I have
gleaned in light of some of the empirical research I have done).
b.)
I
would still like to read: The Chicanos
(Paperback) by Gilberto Lopez y
Rivas, Changing Patterns of Family and Ideology among Latino
Cultures in the United States, The Blue Book of Grammar and
Punctuation, Essay Writing for High School Students: A Step-by-Step Guide by Newsweek Education, Writing
Smarter: Over 100 Step-By-Step Lessons With Reproducible Activity Sheets To
Build Writing Proficiency in Grades 7-12.
c.)
I
would still like to investigate:
Nariman-Jahan,
R., & Rahimpour, M. (2011). The Effects of Planning and Proficiency on
Language Production of Writing Task Performance. Educational Research
(2141-5161), 2(9), 1528-1537.
Danzak, R. L.
(2011). The Interface of Language Proficiency and Identity: A Profile Analysis
of Bilingual Adolescents and Their Writing. Language, Speech, And Hearing
Services In Schools, 42(4), 506-519.
d.)
I would still like to attend: A conference with the NCTE: March 13–16, 2013
CCCC
Annual Convention, "The Public Work of Composition,” and Asilomar 61: Why Literature? What
Literature? How?
September 28-30, 2012
Pacific Grove, CA
e.) I would still like to see Cambridge University, Oxford University, the
closing of the achievement gap between white students and black and Latino
students. I would like to see students taking more risks with their writing.
Lastly, I would like to see libraries that contain the hard copies of the
first newspapers and letters in American history. Perhaps copies of these
would suffice. I think it would be really fascinating for students to be
acquainted with and examine how our language has evolved since the birth of
our country.
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Hi Jenna,
ReplyDeleteAfter reading Ravitch, I can see how intricate the problem really is. I said the same thing as you about assessing teachers in a more useful way. A proficiency test in reading and mathematics that is applied across the board is nonsensical. When I first heard about NCLB, it sounded great. The legislature also probably thought it was foolproof. However, instead of filling holes in our system, it only exposed more holes.
I love your idea of old newspapers in school libraries. It makes historical education so much more meaningful when you can actually see samples of artifacts. As an English teacher, I'm obviously biased towards literary artifacts/primary sources like letters, tape transcripts, and old press pieces.
Going off of that, I think that even new papers (current issues) should be available. How great would it be to have the weekend copy of the New York Times in the library every week? There is just NO substitute for seeing several headlines at once. Even if you don't read them all, just seeing snippets of other stories (stories that you did not choose based on your own interests) makes a person more well-rounded.
For example, a person primarily interested in healthcare news would open the features page to read a story on medical insurance, and also catch a glance of an piece on prison issues. Just by taking 30 seconds to scan the headline, sub-headline, and first paragraph, they are at least getting some info outside of their sphere of interest. Then, they might keep seeing articles on the same topic and eventually read one. The hard copy format makes a person more well-rounded and exposes us to new things. Online, we just choose the stories that appeal to us.
Jenna, I like your answer to question #3. You lay out the challenges for teachers and they are wide-ranging and demanding. You are right, though. We need to meet our students' needs and prepare them for further education and for life itself. That is demanding. I hope you keep your high ideals and your lofty ideas of what teaching can be. We can't always meet these ideals, but in trying repeatedly, we reach higher than we ever would otherwise! I believe that.
ReplyDeletePatti