So here’s a funny fact: the head of my grad program at Penn is DJ Drama’s mother. She was a 30+ year veteran of the School District of Philadelphia is still one of the coolest ladies ever. Looks like she raised her son right!
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So here’s a funny fact: the head of my grad program at Penn is DJ Drama’s mother. She was a 30+ year veteran of the School District of Philadelphia is still one of the coolest ladies ever. Looks like she raised her son right!
it is preparing some of them for that. Many it is preparing for low wage, low skill jobs by disengaging them and teaching them to not think for themselves. Also by destroying public education, corps are helping to makes sure they have low wage workers to sell too…
it a bad cycle we need to end!
This is happening because of National Education Policies that ignore student original and creative thinking by focusing on standardized testing of a common curriculum for all students.
What are some concrete strategies for teaching original and creative thinking? How do you fairly evaluate a student for originality and creativity? I’m curious!
Tumblr teachers—anyone have any good strategies for helping older students (late high school/early college) deal with severe test anxiety? Reply/reblog/submit if you have advice to share!
Signal Boost.
Stereotype threat was something I came across once in an article about a year ago—if I was still teaching, I think a text on this could be a valuable piece to read in class. I had primarily minority students, but I think this could be a relevant issue to any struggling student.
I do think one of the best ways to proactively lessen test anxiety is to increase the rigor of your day-to-day lessons. I don’t mean teach to the test, necessarily, but if you’re, say, letting kids use their notes all the time in class and on your own tests, they’re obviously going to freak out a bit when they all of a sudden don’t have access to those things on an AP or SAT test.
For the past decade, 15-year-old Finnish students have consistently been at or near the top of all the nations tested in reading, mathematics, and science. And just as consistently, the variance in quality among Finnish schools is the least of all nations tested, meaning that Finnish students can get a good education in virtually any school in the nation. That’s equality of educational opportunity, a good public school in every neighborhood.
What makes the Finnish school system so amazing is that Finnish students never take a standardized test until their last year of high school, when they take a matriculation examination for college admission.
Their own teachers design their tests, so teachers know how their students are doing and what they need. There is a national curriculum — broad guidelines to assure that all students have a full education — but it is not prescriptive. Teachers have extensive responsibility for designing curriculum and pedagogy in their school. They have a large degree of autonomy, because they are professionals.
Admission to teacher education programs at the end of high school is highly competitive; only one in 10 — or even fewer — qualify for teacher preparation programs. All Finnish teachers spend five years in a rigorous program of study, research, and practice, and all of them finish with a masters’ degree. Teachers are prepared for all eventualities, including students with disabilities, students with language difficulties, and students with other kinds of learning issues.
The schools I visited reminded me of our best private progressive schools. They are rich in the arts, in play, and in activity. I saw beautiful campuses, including some with outstanding architecture, filled with light. I saw small classes; although the official class size for elementary school is 24, I never saw a class with more than 19 children (and that one had two assistant teachers to help children with special needs).
Teachers and principals repeatedly told me that the secret of Finnish success is trust. Parents trust teachers because they are professionals. Teachers trust one another and collaborate to solve mutual problems because they are professionals. Teachers and principals trust one another because all the principals have been teachers and have deep experience. When I asked about teacher attrition, I was told that teachers seldom leave teaching; it’s a great job, and they are highly respected.
And by the way, the Finnish teachers I saw — those heaped with laurels as outstanding professionals — didn’t look or act differently from many, many teachers I have seen in the United States, even in so-called “failing schools.”
Finland has one other significant advantage over the United States. The child-poverty rate in Finland is under 4 percent. Here it is 22 percent and rising. It’s a well-known fact that family income is the most reliable predictor of academic performance. Finland has a strong social welfare system; we don’t. It is not a “Socialist” nation, by the way. It is egalitarian and capitalist.
Finland is on the right track by prioritizing teacher quality and development. You can’t have a school without a teacher. In every country, in every era, the one constant in every classroom is that there is a teacher, and there are students. That policymakers would rather find silver-bullet solutions to our growing education crisis through throwing more money at schools, through giving out free iPads, through scripted programs, through thoughtless implementation of merit-based pay, through smaller class sizes, etc. boggles the mind. Not that these ideas are without value—but without an excellent teacher who, say, knows how to use the free iPads and scripted programs in a smart way, those solutions become an empty waste of money. How many times have I seen piles of forgotten technology and discarded teacher’s guides in a school storage area? And it’s not just well-funded schools with these graveyards of resources—my first school, with its missing ceiling tiles and half-lit hallways, had several distant rooms which looked just like this.
So teacher development is the right path. Vehemently believing this is why I left the classroom to become a teacher coach. (I say “left the classroom,” but in reality, that’s probably not so accurate—I’m still in the physical classroom, but these days I spend less time standing in front of it as I do sitting in the back.) I can tell you that so much goes into being an excellent teacher, and those qualities are not always easy to define or measure. That’s one of the biggest struggles of my job.
But another, bigger struggle of my job is that a lot of times I have to share data with teachers which is not always favorable. And that leads me to a question which often goes unasked whenever I read articles on this newly hot topic of teacher development, which is—are our teachers ready to be held to such high standards? Sometimes I have to tell teachers things like this:
Lest you think otherwise, I actually don’t relish these moments in my job, because I’ve been there as a teacher and it’s hard to hear these things. I remember being proud of my classroom management skills and my ability to build rapport as key factors in R. never being disruptive in my class the way he was for other teachers, and then sitting in an IEP meeting with his mother and case worker and hearing the psychologist share that he had only participated 65% of the time when she observed him. Just because he behaved the best for me didn’t mean that I was serving him as best I could.
So I know what it’s like to have people reveal to you that you’re not reaching kids as much as you thought. I realize classrooms don’t exist in a vacuum. That kid who was sleeping? When he’s awake, he’s usually incredibly disruptive and he’s on his way to the disciplinary program in a week anyway. That time you forgot to give a consequence? Sometimes it’s really hard to simultaneously keep track of all of those things and teach a lesson to the kids who want to learn. That other time you told a kid something which was incorrect? Well, you’re a human being, you make mistakes, and the fact is your administration asked you to teach a subject in which you’re not that well-versed, and it’s been hard.
These are common teacher pitfalls, ones which result from inadequate teacher training and certification routes and a system which allows people to teach subjects and students which they probably shouldn’t, at least not yet. It’s going to take a lot more than just more technology, or eradicating all standardized tests, or smaller class sizes or higher salaries to save our schools; it’s going to take a massive overhaul of how we train teachers. In the meantime, we can focus our efforts on more clearly defining the skill set of an excellent teacher, and investing in more appropriate, effective professional development to ensure that our teachers hone that skill set.
However, I think it’s going to require our current and aspiring teachers to have even tougher skins than they already have, and it’s going to take our culture to reconsider the condescending, often degrading view we have of teachers. Not just anyone should get to be a teacher. Certainly not everyone who wants to be a doctor gets to be a doctor. Some don’t do well enough on the MCAT. Some don’t get accepted into medical school. Some fail their tests while in medical school. Some don’t pass board exams, or perform well enough when they’re actually on the job. And even with all those hoops, some doctors still end up losing patients, or engaging in malpractice for whatever more or less ill-intentioned reasons. Doctors are compensated comfortably because, as in education, there will always be a demand for healthcare, but it’s also because you can generally trust that if an individual has gotten to the point where they’re giving you a physical, they’ve probably already undergone some arduous training.
Similarly, Finland seems to have the right idea in that their teachers ostensibly get put through some rigorous training as well. But in Finland, as in South Korea (another country with a very successful, albeit entirely different, type of school system), only the very best and brightest get to be teachers. Whether this is because the structure of their training weeds out less desirable candidates, or if the prestige and challenge of the job attracts the highest performers, is unknown to me. I do wonder, though, that if we had a teacher training system similar to Finland’s, how many of our current teaching force would have ever been given their own classroom?
I think of all the teachers who interview for positions at my school, desiring to become better teachers and receive more intense professional development and more meaningful feedback. But it’s a lot of work. I think my school is an amazing place to be an employee, but it is hard work, often the hardest work some of our teachers have ever had to put into their career, and we are very transparent about that from as early on as the initial interview.
Anyway. I’d be interested in knowing more about Finland’s ongoing teacher evaluation process, and what their professional development programming looks like beyond the initial training program. That might be even more valuable than knowing about the latter. Anyone got any links?
August 2005
Sitting in a district training which is supposed to set me up for success in the classroom. So far we have learned to always have a Do Now, that kids love vocabulary review games, and that it’s imperative to build relationships with your students. Copious time has been set aside for…
I am starting a blog about my time in teaching. I’ve accrued enough emotional distance at this point to write fairly!
The new blog is intended to be more narrative pieces, so I’ll probably keep my occasional soapbox screeds over here. Do not expect Tales From School to be anything more than infrequently updated.
WHO KNOWS MAYBE I WILL GET A BOOK DEAL.
Hey Philadelphia residents,
Turn on NBC at 1pm today—you just might catch a peep of me in the audience :) I will be there with other people from my school. One of them will be on a panel!
The subject of this article is a friend of mine. I’ve been following this whole drama unfold through his posts on Facebook. He quit a job at Goldman Sachs and left his native New York to teach in the Mississippi Delta through Teach For America; he still works with the students in that small town despite his two-year contract being long over. The last time he was in Philly, I asked him what moved him to stay at his placement school; he spoke of his commitment to his community in the Delta, and his desire to remain there and watch it flourish. I understood the feeling; I myself remain rooted to Philadelphia despite the friends who’ve moved away and the family back in Chicago. Maybe you understand the feeling too.
My friend has great attributes; for example, he he can fit his whole hand in his mouth, and he is nice.
I am pretty sure you should follow this blog, regardless of whether or not you teach, like kids, or enjoy reading vocabulary homework.
Last weekend, my friend Wing and I drove down to DC for the Teach For America Alumni Summit. It was massively inspiring and overwhelming and illuminating—John Legend performed several times, and I got to sit in on panels with Michelle Rhee, Joel Klein, Geoffrey Canada, Malcolm Gladwell, Gloria Steinem, John Lewis, James Carville, and Amanda Ripley, among others.
However, I think my proudest moment of the weekend was when Wing and I, while bored en route, took to Twitter to entertain ourselves. It became something of a trending topic amongst summit attendees, and eventually got picked up by Eduwonk. Let it never be said that I never helped publicize “the movement.”
We went to yoga in Ardmore this morning; the class was filled with Main Line matrons. In the post-class scramble for boots and shoes and coats, we found ourselves in conversation with one. She revealed that she had herself formerly worked in education, as an administrator for turnaround schools in Philadelphia. She ultimately left after realizing that the problems in the public schools were far too deeply rooted in the system for her role to be effective. ”I have a great respect for teachers and the people who stay in the profession,” she said as she laced up her boots. ”Some people just get burnt out. The demands on teachers are just so different these days, and people have so many opinions on what kids need to be learning.”
We mentioned it was controversial.
“Oh, it’s very controversial,” she said, lacing up the other boot. ”You know, I think kids need to be educated on systems, and how they work, and how to look at a system analytically and break it down, and then build it back up again. That’s everything about how our world works. And ethics. Kids need to learn ethics—not religion, per se, but ethics. How to make a decision. How to decide what is the right decision in a given circumstance.” She stood up, and added, “I think about 75% of our adults could benefit from a crash course in ethics, if you ask me. I think our world would be significantly different.”
There was more conversation, of course—of the school culture in Lower Merion’s public schools, and how it compared to other schools in the Main Line, and which brands made the best winter boots, and so on. But it’s really only that line which got me thinking about how there are wonderful people everywhere you go, and what a life you would lead if you made an effort to seek them out every day.