Veteran educator Arnold Dodge is one of the leading voices for good education on Long Island,Néw York, where he has been a teacher, principal, superintendent, and now teacher educator.
In this article, he reminds us why what is now called “reform” is a fraud and a cruel hoax.
He writes:
“Wealth stays with us a little moment if at all: only our characters are steadfast, not our gold.” — Euripides
“Many of our schools have become dry, lifeless places. Joy and spirited emotions have been replaced by fear, generated by masters from afar. These remote overseers — politicians, policy makers, test prep executives — have decided that tests and numbers and drills and worksheets and threats and ultimatums will somehow improve the learning process. The engine that fuels this nefarious agenda is the imposition of mandatory testing, an initiative that insults teachers and students, and sucks the life out of our schools.
“What’s more, this system of tests is invalid on its face.
“When a student does well on a reading test, the results tell us nothing about how well she will use reading as a tool to learn larger topics, nor does it tell us that she will be interested in reading at all. What it tells us is that she is good at taking a reading test. Nevertheless, the insistence that students take these tests has become the sine qua non of a movement started with No Child Left Behind, and taken up a notch by its cousin, Race to the Top. With the battle cry “College and Career Ready,” the champions of standardization are determined to drum out every last bit of creativity, unpredictability, humor, improvisation and genuine emotion from the education process in the name of useful “outcomes.”
“No more coloring in school — time only for black and white answers to life’s complex questions.
“The self-righteous, powerful and moneyed, if they have their way, will eliminate from schools kids who have character — or kids who are characters, for that matter. But who are we to challenge the likes of governors and commissioners, and heads of global conglomerates who remind us regularly that the gold ring of success will be awarded to those who follow rules, no matter the cost to verve and spontaneity?
“Euripides was a lightweight compared to the genius of the political/business corpus.
“But there is another way. If we believe that children are imaginative creatures by nature with vast amounts of talent waiting to be mined, and if we believe that opening children’s minds and hearts to the thrill of learning — without competition and ranking — is a healthy approach to child development, then we are off to a good start.”
There is more, much more. Open the link and read it.

To that may I add: HABITS OF MIND from Ted Sizer’s, Horace’s School
TEACHERS SHOULD BE SPENDING 100% OF THEIR TIME
HELPING STUDENTS OF ALL AGES DEVELOP THESE.
The habit of perspective: organizing an argument, read or heard or seen, into its various parts, and sorting out the major from the minor matter within it. Separating opinion from fact and appreciating the value of each.
The habit of analysis: Pondering each of these arguments in a reflective way, using such logical, mathematical, and artistic tools as may be required to render evidence. Knowing the limits as well as the importance of such analysis.
The habit of imagination: Being disposed to evolve one’s own view of a matter, searching for both new and old patterns that serve well one’s own and other’s current and future purposes.
The habit of empathy: Sensing other reasonable views of a common predicament, respecting all, and honoring the most persuasive among them.
The habit of communication: Accepting the duty to explain the necessary in ways that are clear and respectful both to those hearing or seeing and to the ideas being communicated. Being a good listener.
The habit of commitment: Recognizing the need to act when action is called for; stepping forward in response. Persisting, patiently, as the situation may require.
The habit of humility: Knowing one’s right, ones debts, and one’s limitations, and those of others. Knowing what one knows and what one does not know. Being disposed and able to gain the needed knowledge, and having the confidence to do so.
The habit of joy: Sensing the wonder and proportion in worthy things and responding to these delights.
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Heck, I’d like the Reformers to learn these.
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I posted the original article by DodgeSubmitted on Monday, Mar 9, 2015 at 1:11:08 PM :
http://www.opednews.com/Quicklink/Needed-in-School-140-Char-in-Best_Web_OpEds-Character_Children_Education_Insults-150309-911.html#comment536537
and added this, with embedded links to this site.
From the Ravitch blog
which informs me daily of the nonsense going on out there, “John Kuhn, Texas superintendent, who is a brilliant orator and writer…. In this article, skewers the cheerleaders for high-stakes testing in Texas by showing how they cherry pick data to buttress their case for testing kids more and more instead of providing adequate resources for them to learn”.
“He begins by demonstrating how they situate their love of testing as a civil rights issue. They cite the Brown decision and in other ways claim that they love the children who are poor and needy and want the best for them. But what they never do is to advocate that the Legislature restore the billions of dollars that were cut from the schools attended by the children they claim to love.”
See how it’s done as Kuhn analyzes the snake-oil salesmen.This is how charlatans confuse th public with high-minded heroic and buzzwords, as they lead the reader to conclusion stat work for the privateers for whom they work and who they leave out of their bio.
I In “The Big Idea of School Accountability,” their slick apologia for high stakes testing and punitive accountability, both of which have dominated American education politics and pedagogy since the 1980s, Bill McKenzie and Sandy Kress start out on the high road.
“McKenzie is a high-ranking opinion-shaper at the George W. Bush Institute and a former editorialist for the Dallas Morning News. Kress was an architect of Bush’s No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 and, though he leaves this out of his bio attached to the essay, a long-time lobbyist for Pearson, the world’s leading vendor of K-12 standardized tests.”
“These two edu-lobbyists begin their essay by mentioning historical moments in education policymaking and politics that would seem to appeal to a wide audience. They condemn segregation and celebrate Brown v. Board of Education. They praise the Elementary and Secondary School Act of 1965 (later renamed ESEA) and they celebrate its noble intention that “schools in disadvantaged communities would receive the resources to provide their students a decent education.”
Then they sock it to the reader…
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The joy of learning complements the joy of teaching. Unfortunately, we now lack both. And they will blame that on teachers, too.
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During the first fifteen years of my teaching, I was free to teach! My students and I had a ball! My Reading class read E.B. White’s “The Trumpet of the Swan”, and we had so much fun planning Louis and Serena’s wedding! I incorporated all of our subjects into this fun thematic unit! We researched trumpeter swans, created speeches for the wedding, calculated ingredients for their wedding cake, baked their wedding cake, designed wedding invitations, made orange beaks to wear, created a newspaper article about the wedding, and the list goes on! At 2:00 PM on the Friday of that week, we invited parents to Louis and Serena’s wedding! Our principal was the minister! My students and I were very proud of the special event at our school. Learning was through the roof! We even made the front page of our newspaper!
During conferences this year, one of my parents (who I had in school) remembered how much fun we had with E.B. White’s “The Trumpet of the Swan.” She thought it was so sad how teachers no longer had time to do special projects with their students. She said that she had never forgotten about Louis and Serena’s wedding and that it had been 25 years ago. I am so grateful for those first fifteen years of teaching when teachers were given a course of study, but they were trusted to carry it out with what best met the interests and needs of their students. We actually had time to learn and have lots of fun along the way! I am very grateful for those memories. That is why I became a teacher.
I have no problem with an end of the year test like our past Ohio Achievement Assessment. Our old Ohio curriculum was developmentally appropriate, and I had the time to teach and prepare my students. I think the most ironic thing about the PARCC is that by schools using PARCC and the new common core, our students will not be college or career ready. PARCC and the new common core will do just the opposite. Our kids will continue to fall behind. I do not want to see where the PARCC and the new common core takes us. It will be ugly.
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I put your comment in y file THE VOICE OF THE TEACHER. When the classroomprofessional had the autonomy to create learning magic, using one’s uiue talent, education and experience, I also created units that I loved. I ,too, shoe books that I loved, where the characters, the lyrical writing, or the theme offered teachable moments for emergent learners about to enter the adult world.
I loved Animal Farm, The Yearling, and The Scarlet Pimpernel, Bradbury’s The Fog, The Necklace, The gift of the Magi, and I was able to intro due irony, or show the kids how language can use telling details to show human behavior.
I heard (in an interview by Rob Kall) John Taylor Gatto describe ‘our time” as teachers, as one when we could look for the genius in each kid.
They have taken all of us out.
For goodness sake, I have been writing about this for a decade. They did it… took out over a hundred thousand veteran PROFESSIONALS like us WHO KNEW WHAT LEARNING LOOKED LIKE and ENABLED& FACILITATED LEARNING
http://www.speakingasateacher.com/SPEAKING_AS_A_TEACHER/The_Insane_War_on_Teachers_and_Democracy.html
http://www.perdaily.com/2011/01/lausd-et-al-a-national-scandal-of-enormous-proportions-by-susan-lee-schwartz-part-1.html
Gates and the PARCC could not work if you and I were in the schools. We would never replace tried and true lessons with common core crap.
Don’g get me started.
http://www.opednews.com/author/author40790.html
My old site, where I wrote as the assault on my practice began and I was clueless ! processs.
http://www.speakingasateacher.com/
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Not only Euripides. Can those “geniuses” who are reforming education name one of humankind’s greatest minds who would put ultimate value on “paper and pencil” written tests.
Good, Truth, Beauty. Who are we as HUMAN beings? The purpose of life? Why are we here? Where are we going?
Eternal questions NEVER examined in the race to the bottom
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One comment in Dodge’s article stood out for an odd reason, at least to me, and in particular the last phrase.
“The engine that fuels this nefarious agenda is the imposition of mandatory testing, an initiative that insults teachers and students, and sucks the life out of our schools.”
That description reminded me J.K. Rowling’s “Dementors”:
“soulless creatures … among the foulest beings on Earth”: a phantom species who, as their name suggests, gradually deprive human minds of happiness and intelligence; soul-sucking wraiths that live off of people’s worst fears. Nightmarish in appearance and capable of reducing a human being to an empty shell … ”
In addition to describing mandatory testing, I would suggest that it aptly describes the current wave of business/corporate/political reformers.
Anyone have a magic wand or know a wizard?
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GE2L2R
Wonderfully apt leap into literature for your post.
JK Rowling’s speech to students graduating from Harvard is one of many worth listening to. She speaks of the power of imagination.
Another is that of Steve Jobs, extolling the virtues of learning about calligraphy.
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Laura H. Chapman
Sort of as an aside, what makes Job’s interest in calligraphy, hence the varied Apple fonts, intriguing, is that he was left-handed.
Attempting calligraphy if your are left-handed (and I prefer that being left-handed suggests brilliance rather than brain damage . . . ) presents the added challenge of not dragging one’s writing hand through what one has just written. It represents an interesting use of the computer to accomplish what one might not otherwise be able to to do. And that brings it back to J.K. Rowling’s “power of imagination”.
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I do not think pedagogy even interests the “reformers” and charter school movement backers, it is the money, and the opportunity to build a ruling class. The strategy to mislead poor parents is a move, it is not the war. This is ideology. Backed into the brain in a very deep ideological confidence that some lives and works are worthwhile and others are not.. Example: Why would Isis destroy the history of their fabulous past?
Maybe we should be comparing the charter school reformers to the destruction of conquering invaders!! Find riches, steal, poison people and leave.
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Perhaps we could enlist Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker to help since he already has the necessary experience.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/answer-sheet/wp/2015/02/27/yes-scott-walker-really-did-link-terrorists-with-protesting-teachers-and-other-unionists/
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