Archives for the month of: September, 2012

Michael Klonsky in Chicago disagrees with Pedro Noguera’s views in the Nation about the Chicago teachers’ strike. Here Klonsky sets the record straight:

Pedro Noguera claims that the CTU, “has not been willing to acknowledge that more learning time and a clear and fair basis for judging teacher effectiveness are legitimate issues that must be addressed.”

I’m a big fan of Pedro but his latest criticism of the union is not only ill-timed, but dead wrong as well. The union doesn’t oppose “more learning time” for students as Pedro Claims. From the start, they supported the idea of a longer, better school day (see the Ward Room (http://www.nbcchicago.com/blogs/ward-room/CTU-Contract-Longer-School-Day-163588976.html) including more art, music, physical education and recess, similar to the school day at the private school where Rahm and board member Penny Pritzker send their children.

The union’s approach to a longer school day moves well beyond and improves upon the mayor’s top-down imposition of more seat time on teachers, students and parents. It is true that union has opposed the idea of a longer school day and year without any added compensation for teachers as mandated by the board.

Pedro’s other poke at the CTU for supposedly not offering an alternative approach to improving “teacher effectiveness” is also misleading. The union, with research support coming from the CReATE group of researchers, has put forth important ideas for transforming the current inadequate evaluation system (See CReATE member Isabel Nunez’ commentary in the Sept. 12 Sun-Times http://www.suntimes.com/news/otherviews/15107882-452/standardized-test-scores-are-worst-way-to-evaluate-teachers.html).

What makes Pedro’s criticism so unfair, particularly at this time, is that the union has taken on both the more-seat-time issues as well as new approaches to teacher evaluation at great risk during the current contract negotiations. Perhaps he isn’t aware that since the passage of Sen. Bill 7, Chicago teachers are legally barred from negotiating over anything except wage/benefit issues.

Pedro would do well to read the union’s excellent document, “The Schools Chicago’s Students Deserve” to better understand where the CTU is coming from. The report can be found at http://www.ctunet.com/blog/text/SCSD_Report-02-16-2012-1.pdf

Alex Kotlowitz asks this important question in the New York Times on Sunday.

The question is important for several reasons.

First, because the self-proclaimed reformers assert that great teachers can and do overcome poverty. You might say that this slogan is their anti-poverty program. Wendy Kopp, Bill Gates, and Arne Duncan have all said on many occasions that if there is a “great” teacher in every classroom, that will take care of poverty. Or, in a variation, fix the schools first, then fix poverty.

They never explain how a great teacher overcomes homelessness, hunger, poor health, and other conditions associated with poverty. Lyndon B. Johnson said in 1965 that you can’t put two people in a race at the same starting line and assume it’s a fair race if one of them is shackled. LBJ knew then what the reformers today never learned.*

Second, it’s heartening to see this article in the New York Times because the Times has been hostile to teachers and their unions on the editorial page. The Times is no friend of public education. Its editorial writer thinks that teachers need carrots and sticks to raise test scores, indifferent to the consistent failure of such policies.

How nice to see Alex Kotlowitz in the pages of the Times.

*At Howard University, President Lyndon B. Johnson said, “Imagine a hundred-yard dash in which one of the two runners has his legs shackled together. He has progressed ten yards, while the unshackled runner has gone fifty yards. At that point the judges decide that the race is unfair. How do they rectify the situation? Do they merely remove the shackles and allow the race to proceed? Then they could say that “equal opportunity” now prevailed. But one of the runners would still be forty yards ahead of the other. Would it not be the better part of justice to allow the previously shackled runner to make up the forty-yard gap, or to start the race all over again? That would be affirmative action toward equality.”
Commencement Address at Howard University (June 4, 1965)

Pedro Noguera knows that closing public schools and shifting kids to charter schools is not a remedy to the huge economic and social problems of Chicago.

What else is needed?

Jan Carr is a NYC public school parent and a children’s book author. I have met her at parent events in NYC.

Last week she posted about the harm done by standardized testing and other of the “reforms” of our time, and especially about the inability of teachers to focus on critical thinking.

At my invitation, Mike Petrilli responded.

That led to a good discussion.

Jan responded too. Here is what ahe said:

Diane, thanks for sending out my blog post. It’s interesting for me to read Mr. Petrilli’s response as well as the other responses posted. While it is certainly true that I cannot discern with certainty the motivations of the men I mentioned, I have to wonder about those motivations because their actions are so destructive. The endless testing is a scourge in so many ways. Here are some anecdotal accounts of experiences I have had:

• THE TESTS ARE FALLIBLE. Often, throughout my son’s public school career, he’s come home with practice tests in which he doesn’t understand why a question required a certain answer. Because I’m a professional writer and editor, I take a look to try to help figure out where he went wrong. Often, I find that I, TOO, would have chosen the “wrong” answer! And when I ask my son why he chose it, he has a very strong and articulate and defensible argument. So we’re “right,” the test is “wrong?” And I am put in the surreal position of having to teach my son how to suss out the right “wrong” answer so he will get a better score on the test!

• KIDS FEEL THAT THEY’RE DEFINED BY A MEANINGLESS NUMBER. Once, during the first week of school, I was standing outside my son’s school for pick up. That day, the kids had gotten scores for tests they had taken the previous spring. While I waited for my son to emerge, this is what I heard from the other kids: “I’m a 3.” “I’m a 2.” “I’m a 4.” In other words, DURING THE FIRST WEEK OF SCHOOL, WHEN THEY SHOULD BE EXCITED ABOUT THE CLASSES AND LEARNING THEY WOULD EXPERIENCE IN THE COMING YEAR, they were deadened by thinking that they were reduced to a number. Truly, it broke my heart. These were high stakes test scores that would determine which high schools they would eligible for. What a way to start the year!

• THE TESTS ARE DEADENING. Many teachers have told me that on test days, the kids have a flattened affect. I’ve definitely seen that in my son. His interest in learning flattens out the more tests that are piled on. He is an excellent student and has a curious intellect, but there’s only so much one can take.

• TEACHERS HAVE TO RESTRICT DISCUSSION IN ORDER TO GET THROUGH THE REQUIRED MATERIAL. My son has often reported that teachers had to cut off discussion in order to move on so that they could cover everything that was going to be on a test. As a teacher, does one want to dig in deeply, or cover a lot of surface ground? Does one want to encourage kids to think and discuss and provide supports for their answers, or does one want to teach kids to spit out a pat answer? I’m sure that teachers in the private schools attended by the kids of the men I cited are encouraged to have a deep and meaningful curriculum.

In my experience as a former teacher, I think the real key to keeping up the quality of the classroom is in the teachers.
• Provide the teachers with lots of staff development, so they, too, are constantly thinking and exploring and creating.
• Recruit smart, good teachers who will stick with the profession and pay them well so they stay. And of course the union is key to this.
• Have experienced teachers mentoring new teachers, which helps both, keeping the older teachers fresh as well as providing support for the newer teachers.
• And keep class size LOW so teachers can actually track and interact meaningfully with individual students. If a writing teacher is responsible for hundreds of students, how is s/he supposed to give meaningful feedback on papers?

All of these supports for teachers and the classroom are ones that that stem from educators themselves, not the business community. Whatever the motivation, an emphasis on data and accountability and testing is wrong-headed, completely missing the point.

Amanda Ripley, who usually writes pro-corporate reform articles in TIME, has an article in the Wall Street Journal about how teachers in other nations embrace “reform.”

Her first example is Finland.

That is a curious example for a devotee of today’s carrot-and-stick reforms because Finland would never permit a teacher with five weeks of training to teach. As she notes, they must complete a rigorous four-year college program PLUS a master’s degree. There is no “Teach for Finland.”

Furthermore, there is NO standardized testing in Finland. Ripley doesn’t mention that.

And teachers are not evaluated by the test scores of their students, because there are no student scores.

Also, as I saw when I visited several schools in Finland, the classes are small. About 15-19 in elementary schools, in the low-to-mid 20s in the other grades. And the elementary schools are saturated with services for children that need extra help.

What’s the lesson? How can we get to be more like Finland? After all, Finland borrowed most of its pedagogical philosophy from John Dewey.

LIFE & CULTURE
September 14, 2012, 6:29 p.m. ET
Training Teachers to Embrace Reform

Chicago-style war with unions is the past. Here’s how Finland and Ontario found a new way forward

By AMANDA RIPLEY

Making sense of the Chicago teachers’ strike (where the two sides were reportedly moving toward resolution on Friday) is like trying to understand the failure of a friend’s marriage. You can’t help speculating about who’s to blame, but you’ll never really know. In truth, it doesn’t matter. Many countries have revolutionized their education systems in recent years, but not one of them has done it through strikes, walkouts or righteous indignation.

Just about every country in the developed world has a teachers’ union, so the mere presence of a union doesn’t determine the quality of a country’s schools. There is, however, a significant relationship between the professionalism of the union and the health of an education system. The all-important issue is not how easy it is to fire the worst teachers; it’s how to elevate the entire craft without going to war with teachers.

Striking Chicago public school teachers on Friday picket outside Whitney M. Young Magnet High School in Chicago.
That’s where other countries can show us a better way. Working with unions doesn’t mean turning into Mexico, where the education system has been gifted to the union in exchange for political favors—and teenagers perform at the bottom of the world in math and reading. In a few countries, politicians and union leaders have managed not only to raise expectations but to get teachers to drink from the same punch bowl as reformers.

In Finland in the 1970s, teachers had to use special diaries to record what they taught each hour. Government inspectors made sure that a rigorous national curriculum was being followed. Teachers and principals weren’t trusted to act on their own.

At the same time, however, the government began to inject professionalism into the system. The Finns shut down the middling teacher-training schools that dotted the rural landscape and moved teacher preparation into the elite universities, where only the top echelon of high-school graduates could study (something the U.S. has never attempted). Opponents said the changes were elitist, but the reformers insisted that the country had to invest in education to survive economically. Once teachers-to-be got into the universities, they were required to master their subject matter and to spend long stretches practicing in high-performing public schools.

In the 1980s and ’90s, with higher standards and more rigorous teacher training in place, the reformers injected trust. They lifted mandates and asked the teachers themselves to design a new, smarter national curriculum. Today, Finland’s teenagers score at the top of the world on international tests.

If Finland feels too remote to serve as a model for the U.S., consider Ontario, Canada. After years of labor strife in the 1990s, a new provincial premier was elected in 2003. Dalton McGuinty chose Gerard Kennedy, a critic of the old regime, as his education minister. He spent months in school cafeterias, principals’ offices and parent meetings before the negotiations began. “You couldn’t wait until you were at the bargaining table,” explains Benjamin Levin, the former deputy minister. When it came time to negotiate a new teachers’ contract in 2005, Mr. Kennedy harangued the bargainers and kept them at the table all night on more than one occasion—deflecting the distractions that normally dominate such talks—until he finally got an agreement.

The plan that emerged put pressure on Ontario’s schools to improve results and also offered more help to educators. This worked in part because Canada already had fairly rigorous and selective education colleges, so teachers had the skills to adapt to these changes. And by giving in to teachers’ requests for smaller elementary-class sizes, politicians bought themselves enormous good will.

The system in Ontario became “a virtuous circle,” says Marc Tucker, author of “Surpassing Shanghai,” a book about top-performing education systems. “When the young people came out of their training programs, they were damn good teachers. Because of that, they were able to raise public and political confidence—and when that happened, it made it possible for them to get higher salaries and even higher quality recruits into teaching.”

For the past decade, there has been a détente in labor relations in Ontario. Despite a diverse population of students, a quarter of whom were immigrants, the province’s high-school graduation rate rose from 68% to 82%. Teacher turnover also declined dramatically. In 2009, Ontario was one of the few places in the world (aside from Finland) where 15-year-olds scored very high on international tests regardless of their socioeconomic background.

Interestingly, Ontario had its own labor flare-up this week—over a proposed wage freeze and a law that could limit strikes. But coming after years of relative harmony, the response has been reasonable so far. The union urged members to temporarily stop coaching sports and limit other voluntary activities. The situation could deteriorate, but for now, the tone in Ontario is revealing.

What happened in Chicago is about more than just Chicago. It’s about the deeper problem of transforming America’s schools. For too long our education reformers have tried to create a professional teaching corps from the top down, and union leaders have fought to maintain an untenable system. Both sides need to enter the 21st century.

—Ms. Ripley is an Emerson Fellow at the New America Foundation and the author of a forthcoming book about life in the smartest countries in the world.

Joanne Barkan just published an insightful article about Chicago, in which she asks “Who Is Really Victimizing the Kids?”

One of the most startling facts that she reports is that the proportion of African-American teachers was 45% in 1995, when Mayor Richard Daley took control of the schools. Today it is 19%.

Can any of the multiple defenders of the “reformers” in Chicago explain the disappearance of black teachers in CPS? The Chicago Tribune editorial board? Mayor Emanuel? Penny Pritzker? Nick Kristof?

Just received in the email an interesting commentary:

If you’ve been trying to talk politics with teachers lately, you know that many seemingly neutral statements have become political land mines.

In spite of a few divisive issues, however, teachers still share a lot of common ground that can lead to productive discussions.

Below you will find five statements almost all teachers agree with. They are also addressed in this 11-minute, TED-style talk about “The Myth of the Super Teacher.”

https://vimeo.com/43565010

1. Teachers are human. Teacher time and energy are limited resources. We should act accordingly and make sure these resources are spent in the right places.

2. Teaching conditions matter. Teachers want to work under the conditions that allow us to give kids the best possible education.

3. New prescriptions introduce the risk of new side effects. There is lots of talk about problems with the “status quo” in education. For teachers, however, constant and sometimes chaotic change *is* part of the status quo. Teachers are wary of people claiming guaranteed fixes for hard-to-solve problems.

4. Teacher movies are less inspiring when the non-Hollywood, unscripted version is playing live in your classroom. This has always been true. Now, a new wave of education-related movies aims to purposely sway public opinion about complex education issues. This can explain why an innocent comment about a movie you enjoyed inspires a 40-minute rant from your teacher friends.

5. Being a teacher is hard. Being a new teacher is harder. Beginners have to lay the tracks as they drive the train, and they spend much of the year feeling like they’re about to crash. Unlike movie teachers, the real-world great teachers of the future know they’re not great yet. Unfortunately, many won’t stick around long enough to become great. Half of all teachers leave the profession by the end of their fifth year. Half of all inner-city teachers leave by the end of year three. Students at low-income schools are twice as likely to have a beginning teacher at the front of the classroom, which means our support of new teachers must be as practical and honest as possible.

Feel free to pass this along. For more information on teacher support and retention, visit www.seemeafterclass.net or contact me at the email address below.

Roxanna Elden, NBCT

Author

“See Me After Class: Advice for Teachers by Teachers”

In a recent interview, I predicted that what is now called (self-proclaimed) as “reform” would come tumbling down like a house of cards as the public realized the damage to children and to the quality of education.

This reader in Illinois picks up that theme, saying that the foundation of VAM (value-added assessment) rests on the standardized tests, and they are a weak foundation indeed. When the house of cards comes tumbling down, it will be apparent that they rested on a method of assessment that is flawed at its core. She responds here to the comment of another reader:

You nailed it in your next-to-last paragraph–“if my students understood pineapples and hare races a little better…”–it isn’t simply the VAMs that are junk, it’s the very TESTS that all this is based upon
that are junk! As a special ed. teacher who administered these tests for years (and IL uses Pearson), I was able to look at the tests (because we read the math and science from scripts), and I can tell you that there have been NUMEROUS faulty questions and answers (more than one correct answer, NO correct answer) over numerous years. This holds true for all the prep garbage we buy, as well. Last but not least, people who score the written portions of tests (extended response on Reading Comprehension selections) are often people not competent to do so–such as ESL adults, who did not understand the nuances of the English language.
(As I have before, I must reference Todd Farley’s must-read 2009 book,”Making the Grades: My Misadventures in the Standardized Testing Industry,” which will explain in detail).
Farley also wrote a Huffington Post article this year about COMPUTERS scoring written essays (another must-read).

When you factor this together–along with all the score-juking that goes on (again, read the book!), WHAT “valid,
reliable” basis is there upon which to base a VAM?

It is all a house of cards–just like the wall that Diane predicts will
collapse. This bodes well for us–public schools and teachers–as this is the basis of our fight. Lawyers, ready yourselves!

Gary Rubinstein is an extraordinary math teacher who has a terrific blog.

His analysis of New York City’s teacher data reports shows that they are inaccurate, unreliable, and meaningless.

Any district or state official who is considering VAM should read Gary’s six posts.

If you do, you will discover there is no there there.

Please help this post go viral.

Every pundit–from Nick Kristof to David Brooks to the editorial writers–should read this analysis.

Mayor Rahm Emanuel boasts about the “success” of charters in Chicago. He plans to close more neighborhood schools to open another 60 charter schools.

But there is another side to the story.

Karen Lewis tells the other side here.