Over recent years, I have heard many metaphors used to explain what is happening–what is being done to–the nation’s public schools. In New York City, parents often use the phrase “the emperor has no clothes.” Others may have different metaphors to suggest. In this post, reader Joanna Best thinks that the story of Hansel and Gretel best explains what is happening across the nation:
So, as I have worked to compartmentalize all the aspects to Ed Reform (to get a clear understanding of everything), I keep coming back to this being like the opera Hansel and Gretel. Humperdink’s sister adapted the libretto from the Grimms’ tale: the parents have fallen on hard times (like our current generation of working-age Americans)—they are broom makers and they go into the surrounding villages to try and sell brooms (like efforts are being made to get our economy back to a pleasant level); in doing so they leave Hansel and Gretel (the children) doing measurable tasks (a la testing) so that they will be contributing to the welfare in general (working on a broom and fixing a sock); a neighbor gives them some milk which leads Hansel and Gretel to abandon their measurable tasks and frolick as they dream about the milk. When mother discovers they are not working (like those who think the schools must measure and measure), in the shuffle of disgruntlement the milk is spilled (NCLB). So the children are sent into the enchanted forest to find berries (RttT). There are some good breaks for them (the sandman lures them to sleep–they have each other—and they pray quite a bit). Meanwhile mother also prays (those of us in teaching realizing that we have in fact sent our children into the enchanted forest), and realizes she has over-reacted. Father, who has had a good day in the villages, brings home lots of food (those of us finally getting a break in the economy, or finding excitement in how can we better the children’s lives), but it is too late. The children are already out there.
Meanwhile a tasty candy and gingerbread house pops up (a solution to the children’s fear and hunger!!! charters, vouchers, TFA). The children nibble and are then set under the spell of the witch (those who do not have children’s best interest in mind, but just want to plump them up to devour them or line them up in the fence of gingerbread children already captured)!!
For a while, the children are at her mercy. But clever Gretel outsmarts the witch and the children then set all the other captured gingerbread children free—and they become real boys and girls again. The spell is broken. And mother and father appear, after having searched the enchanted forest throughout the night to find them. There is prayer and celebrating and the family is reunited, the witch ousted.
I am sure the analogy doesn’t fit directly, but it is where my musical brain has taken me this week when reading this blog. Here’s hoping all witches with candy houses can be outsmarted by the Gretels of the world—and Hansel can be freed. And the family can get about their business of enjoying what father and mother are able to provide from their business and the children can frolick and be children, as they learn.

I have to respond to this for several reasons. First, by background, instinct and training (college major among other things) I am a musician. Second, years ago my then girl-friend (now wife) and I took a post-Christmas trip through parts of Europe. One of our stops was in Munich, where we went to the opera to see – wait for it – Hansel und Gretel. It is a magical opera, with the most magical moment being when the gingerbread children come alive at the end of the opera.
We have in recent months begun to see school children coming alive on their own behalf. It might be the students in Providence getting state legislators to sit for the state tests publicly. It can be those who write and blog like Nikhil Goyal. Sometimes it may come to our attention, sometimes it is only within the one school, or the local community.
As an educator/teacher, I know that I am only as successful as I can work WITH my students. Teaching involves relationship. The responsibility has to be shared. Which means students have to be empowered.
Perhaps that is why this particular blog post spoke so powerfully to me?
Peace.
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In the original German version of this story, the children end up in the oven.
Kind of like the reality of privatization.
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wonderful, Joanna!
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KrazyMathLady: I fear you are guilty of ignoring the POV of the witch. Remember: “It’s all about the kid$!”
🙂
Speaking of story lines…
I fear the edupreneurs and their educrat allies may have taken the wrong, er, moral out of a season 3, episode 24, offering of Rod Serling’s old Twilight Zone series. The Kanamits, 9-foot tall aliens, come to Earth promising peace and offering to share their technology. Some savvy earthlings finally manage to translate their Book of Holy EduMetrics [ok, I made that up]. But right at the end of the episode they do, in fact, figure out that their most sacred text is entitled “To Serve Man.”
A cookbook. Rheally!
🙂
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This may actually be a pretty important question, how to describe this issue to people who aren’t already educators or activists. As someone who’s neither, I would say that framing it in terms of “privatization,” “neo-liberalism,” and “fascism” is very likely to make these people tune out, or even to take the other side by reflex. I think better mainstream themes are (1) fraud and gross mismanagement enabled lack of oversight; and maybe (2) the destruction of parochial and other low-cost private schools that can’t compete against charter schools that are subsidized by the government. On the other hand, firing up the base may be enough, particularly when your base includes a large, motivated, and educated workforce. My two cents.
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sorry, “enabled BY lack of oversight.”
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Thank you Diane. I had actually forgotten I wrote that before the school year ended.
When I covered this opera with all 5 grade levels (pulling out the appropriate parts per grade level) I offered each k-2 student a crayon in the shape of a gingerbread man that was made from crayons that would have been tossed from restaurants (one night when my three children and another family left 24 brand new Crayola crayons on the table be tossed. . . that is about $2.50 retail in the best crayons you can buy), I also started my personal crusade to not waste crayons as our schools suffer). That particular restaurant (I know the owners) agreed to begin saving the crayons (an old family if NC Democrats); and the Biltmore House saves theirs too. Red Lobster told me no, but that they would order me a case–they missed the point completely, and besides their crayons are those cheap waxy things that break).
Anyway, I am aware that the music room at our elementary school is a place where magic can still happen. The boys and girls were delighted with their crayons (“can we keep them?” “Yes! They are for you.”) and for various games the older students could choose from assorted candy and cookie erasers I bought in clearance from Fancy Flours.
Children delight in the things we show them when we delight in them. Aside from my disgruntlement at having to wear lederhosen when I sang Hansel in college, the story struck me as magical. Curious George even has an episode on Hansel and Gretel!
So maybe I can answer my own pressing question: if not NCLB (making the children do measurable tasks), mother would have been more compassionate and shielded the children from the urgency of their economic situation. Like Life is Beautiful. That is what can balance preparing children for “career” and “college.” Life will beat them up. Why not show them beauty? And wonder? And upcycled gingerbread shaped crayons?
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The Place Where Three Wars Meet
Education is a vital organ of a sustainable civilization. It takes a deep and well-distributed wisdom to sustain a civilization, and history is littered with societies that failed in the end to maintain what they so gloriously built in the beginning. It takes a society that is democratic, educated, and evolving, based on scientific knowledge about the world as it really exists, unbiased truth about human history, and humane wisdom about the depths of the human heart.
But we cannot let ourselves become too myopic about one organ, as if it could survive in isolation from the rest. The disease that now threatens the life of our society is advancing on many fronts at once, and that is why I continue to emphasize the bigger picture, of which the attack on public education is just one piece.
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Perhaps Mozart’s “The Marriage of Figaro” would provide some much needed humor as an appropriate
metaphor.
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To much like Don Giovanni for yucks …
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My suggestion: Smash and Grab.
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Joanna, that was a brilliant metaphor! And I too felt the most joy reading about the children becoming alive again! I also felt hope reading Kenneth’s comment about kids coming alive again on their own behalf. As I continue my job search, that will be the quest I have in mind… how to help wake up, or how to continue encouraging children to be alive with their voices. Thank you for sharing!
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Another: (In Louisiana) reform is happening so quickly, it is as though they are trying to build an airplane while it is leaving the runway.
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That is one of the more creative and funny explanations I have seen. Enjoyed reading it.
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Having begun in aerospace at the Skunk Works under Kelly Johnson on the SR-71 when it was still top secret and having worked on many first article and other projects and being specially certified in repairs I can tell you this. You do not learn how to build an airplane in 5 weeks much less become a competent engineer. No profession can be learned in 5 weeks especially one as complex in variables as teaching.
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A metaphor for education reform – “slash and burn”.
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This IS a provocative question. But I’m at a loss for a suggestion. The best thing that comes to mind is Dave Barry’s immortal line: “You can’t make this up!”
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