Superintendents in Connecticut (CAPSS) have endorsed the idea of putting children in front of machines and calling it “personalized learning.” As Wendy Lecker shows in this post, this machine work is neither “personalized” nor is it “learning.”
How can a machine be more “personal” than a human?
Lecker writes:
In CAPSS’ incoherent version, schools will no longer be age-graded, students will design their own curricula and progress when they develop “competencies” rather than completing a school year. Rather than being grouped according to age, students will be grouped according to “mastery.” In order to progress to the next level, children will have to undergo four standardized tests a year.
Of course, any system that depends on standardized tests for advancement cannot be “personalized.” In addition, the CAPSS plan institutionalizes tracking; a harmful educational practice rejected by the Connecticut State Board of Education. Worse still, CAPSS’ version of tracking, where there is no age-grading, would humiliate a student who fares poorly on standardized tests by grouping her with children years younger than she.
The CAPSS muddled vision also proposes students not necessarily learn in school, meaning that much learning will be conducted online; a method with little evidence of success.
What should school look like?
If we are concerned with our children’s development into healthy responsible citizens, then personalization should mean that schools should focus on relationships — with humans, not computers. Relationships with teachers and other students are the key to keeping students engaged and in school. A longitudinal study of diverse California high schools confirmed previous research that students who feel connected to their teachers improve academically, engage in less risky behavior, and are more likely to complete high school.
Another recent study comparing “personalized learning” to a control group in traditional schools found that students in the control group “reported greater enjoyment and comfort in school, and felt their out-of-school work was more useful and connected to their in-school learning.” As Harvard economics professor N. Gregory Mankiw recently observed in the New York Times, “after 30 years as an educator, I am convinced that the ideal experience for a student is a small class that fosters personal interaction with a dedicated instructor.”
The need for human interaction to promote effective learning is rooted in brain development. As neuroscience expert Adele Diamond has written, the brain does not recognize a sharp division between cognitive, motor and emotional functioning. Thus, research has shown that feelings of social isolation impair reasoning, decision-making, selective attention in the face of distraction and decreases persistence on difficult problems….
A truly “personalized” education would ensure small classes with supports for every need; and a variety of subjects to develop students’ interests as well as their cognitive, motor and social capabilities….
Our children are complex, multi-dimensional beings who need deep and rich experiences to develop properly. They are not characters in a video game who just need enough points to jump to the next level. Anyone who cares about healthy child development should reject CAPSS’ narrow and de-personalized vision of learning.
“Personalized learning” on a machine is an oxymoron.

Reblogged this on David R. Taylor-Thoughts on Education.
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“Students will design their own learning.” Really? How do you design a learning program when you don’t know what you don’t know? Part of the joy of my classroom (back when teaching actually WAS a joy..) was introducing students to a topic about which they knew little to nothing and watching the sparks ignite, flare, and then, take fire! Students who could have cared less about ancient history suddenly became experts on the gods of ancient civilizations or the art of China or the incredible technology of Roman engineering. Reading one particular book led to a student’s desire to become a doctor or study astrophysics or the law. Education is completely about those synapses between the minds of the teacher and the pupil. Remove the human connection and we are all reduced to robots.
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You cannot believe corporate hype and spin designed to generate interest in their products. More than likely “personalized learning” will bore most of the students to tears and fail like other cyber based products that fail to understand that learning is about engagement and relationships. Many subjects do not lend themselves to cyber based design. Most of the liberal arts require social and cognitive engagement. Maybe this is part of the push to curtain liberal arts!
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It’s just so crazy because they’re presenting this idealized vision of “personalized learning” that has absolutely no connection to reality. Why do they think this magic alchemy will happen on such a large scale? Is it happening anywhere? Why only look at the absolute best case? That’s not “optimism”- it’s delusion.
Why sell this so hard and on such a huge scale? They’re inevitably going to end up in a place where the people who made these decisions to make such a huge single investment will be loathe to admit it was a mistake. They’ll defend it to their deaths.
We just saw that happen in Los Angeles. That tech investment was a horrible decision. It was reckless and irresponsible and wasteful. Instead of admitting that, ed reformers made the person who made that decision into a hero and they are ramping it up nationally.
What would be wrong with adopting the parts that add value slowly and organically? If it has value people will invest in that direction. They don’t need to be harangued into making bad decisions based on fear and ignorance.
I hope public schools resist the hype and make solid decisions that are NOT based on sales pitches and this fake “urgency!” but are instead based on a real evaluation of cost versus value. They have a duty to do their own due diligence and ignore the cheerleaders in government and this industry.
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They continue to promote FAILED policies and FAILED programs.
NCLB: FAILED
Common Core: FAILED
PARCC/SBAC: FAILED
Charters: FAILED
VAM: FAILED
RTTT: FAILED
PL: Future FAIL
ESSA: Future FAIL
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Horrible.
What about interaction? Questions that build knowledge, create understanding, fuel growth, model for others. What about guidance and bridges to learning created by teacher as learning mentor? What about age appropriate social and psychological and physical development?
These ed reformers look crazier and crazier. Do they think little childen are like adults?Because this plan sounds like a learn from home program built for grownups. Phoenix U for tiny tots.
C-R-A-Z-Y!!!
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We are already losing language teachers here. They are being replaced with online programs. When they are replaced we will never get the funding for them back, because it will be allocated elsewhere. We were told this would be ADDED to existing resources and those of us who are older than 12 questioned that, and were ignored.
Is there anyone in ed reform who EVER considers the risk of these experiments? Good intentions are not enough. The people in my statehouse cut education funding every year. They will grab at “education” on the cheap and the people who will suffer because of that are low and middle income. What if it harms our schools? What then? Can we go back to live classes?
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I see a lot of merit to the idea of doing away with age-grouping in schools. But if we simply replace those age-groupings with “mastery” or “ability” groupings, then we are releasing students from a prison cell just to bind them with chains. I see a lot of benefit to be had from allowing students to interact (dare I say it, PLAY) with and learn from others who are older or younger than them, who have different interests and abilities, and who have different strengths and weaknesses. That is how most relationships and activities work in the adult world, after all. (How many people are forced to work only with people the same age as them? The adult world is generally organized around problems to be solved, questions to be answered, projects to be completed, and those are the things the bring people together, not the fact that they are all the same age, or that they all have similar abilities.) Forcing kids to conform to the arbitrary (and since they are assessed by standardized assessments, necessarily reductionist) standards imposed by distant, faceless authorities is the ROOT of the problems facing our schools; doubling down and imposing those standards as the only salient feature of schooling but letting students progress through them “at their own pace” does not solve it.
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My second grade nephew is more academically advanced than most of my seventh grade students. And he’s probably light years ahead of his public school age mates in the low-income city where he lives (he attends a private school there). So the idea of ending age groupings sounds like an experiment worth trying –on a small scale –not for a whole state!
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My 2 year old grandson began to read my primers, and finished all my second grade books by age 3. By 7 he read on a college level, but was quick to point out that “Lemony Snicker was “too dark,” –in his words.
He is 17 now, plays football, won for his academy in the wrestling division, and is looking at a college that fits him. Luckliy his parents are both doctors, and he can go toprovate school.
I cannot imagine him or t his creative ,dynamic sister in public school today.
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I have two questions !
1 . What can be standardized about the four tests per year if the kids are at all different places on their (supposedly) personalized curriculums ?
2. What’s to stop the kids (those not totally alienated) getting together and helping each other to pass the competency tests ?
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My son (and his friends) do online test prep at our house. They’re in 7th grade. The first thing they did when they got the program in 5th grade was try to “beat” it – get around the scoring. If they’re not doing that they’re plugging numbers into boxes, which to them is exactly the same as a worksheet. They are THEMSELVES skeptical of the value of this. Much more than the adults. This isn’t amazing or different to them, the thing itself. They aren’t impressed with the device or program. They were excited about the device at first, but that is gone in 3 weeks.
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I don’t know why brilliant creative kids can’t get something out of public school. Here in my school district we have and have had several such young people that would match pretty much anyone you want to put up.
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I am fully on board with the argument that all schools, no matter location, no matter student population, no matter cultural makeup or facility issues still manage to offer an education to those who look for it. I have seen some truly brilliant students come out of what others would write off as yet another “failed” school.
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My comment was supposed to reply to SLS’s comments about her grandkids. I don’t know how it wound up where it did.
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Cross posted at http://www.opednews.com/Quicklink/Wendy-Lecker-Removing-hum-in-Best_Web_OpEds-Brain_Children_Computers_Education-160223-892.html#comment584797
with this comment:
he corporations privatized our health systems, and now they are squeezing every penny they can out of education, but offering computerized learning as a magic elixir. http://www.opednews.com/articles/Magic-Elixir-No-Evidence-by-Susan-Lee-Schwartz-130312-433.html
Children need teachers not screens. Computers can be used by teachers to offer repetition and review for information they teach, and technology knowledge is crucial, today, but sitting a child in front of a screen is ABSOLUTE NONSENSE.
In LA they filled the schools with iPads that no one used..lots of $$$ to the supplier.
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“Personalized learning” on a machine is an oxymoron.
Great one-liner.
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And as in L. A. where there were few, how many tech experts are needed to keep the computers running? Teachers would be less expensive. Kids pay attention to computer screens for just long enough to get bored and then they play games on their IPhone in their lap). They liked the simplest math games but anything they had to figure out? Forget about it.
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P. S. Didn’t we do this in the 89’s without computers?
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Nearly every child participates in “personalized learning” these days. It’s called video games. The children read the rules themselves, learn how to play the game, and then advance at their own pace. The key is to make the interface accessible and interesting.
Obviously, younger children need to have a lot more interaction with teachers and students. But even for the youngest, selective lessons (especially animated ones) are incredibly effective. My own daughter is engaged by the online learning tool that she can use to advance at her own pace.
The key here is that these personalized learning tools make teachers more productive. The same number of teachers can instruct more kids. The teachers move up the value chain by not having to give out a repetitive lecture (not saying the lecture/intro is bad, but the same material must be presented every year) but rather focusing on the key areas where children are stuck or providing hands-on examples. That means teachers will earn more. I’m not sure why teachers oppose these methods.
The only reason for opposition is because of the unions. Unions not only try to keep wages high but try to constantly increase their numbers. That’s what killed the car manufacturers. Instead of allowing natural attrition to occur and training the workers on higher-end manufacturing (maintaining robots), the unions tried to keep practices manual. That only works via coercion in the short and drives down employment in the long run.
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I left teaching abruptly in January. I advocated for relationships and challenged sterile delivery of instruction. It bafles me that common sense and human development are so far removed from the current delivery models.
I got screwed by my district and nobody can help me. Family attorneys I have spoken to or affiliated with my union so that is a conflict. I had horrible representation . Reading this however, gives.me hope. The knowledge that there are still people like you out there figniting. … is hope.
Thank you.
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