Astrophysicist and author Ethan Siegel writes in Forbes magazine about the way that federal policies have disrespected and demoralized passionate teachers. No Child Left Behind, Race to the Top, and the Every Student Succeeds Act have been disasters for teaching and learning.
Every sentence in this short article is priceless, and I hate to abridge it. You will have to open the link and read it yourself in its entirety.
He writes:
The ultimate dream of public education is incredibly simple. Students, ideally, would go to a classroom, receive top-notch instruction from a passionate, well-informed teacher, would work hard in their class, and would come away with a new set of skills, talents, interests, and capabilities. Over the past few decades in the United States, a number of education reforms have been enacted, designed to measure and improve student learning outcomes, holding teachers accountable for their students’ performances. Despite these well-intentioned programs, including No Child Left Behind, Race To The Top, and the Every Student Succeeds Act, public education is more broken than ever. The reason, as much as we hate to admit it, is that we’ve disobeyed the cardinal rule of success in any industry: treating your workers like professionals.
Everyone who’s been through school has had experiences with a wide variety of teachers, ranging from the colossally bad to the spectacularly good. There are a few qualities universally ascribed to the best teachers, and the lists almost always include the following traits:
*a passion for their chosen subject,
*a deep, expert-level knowledge of the subject matter they’re teaching,
*a willingness to cater to a variety of learning styles and to employ a variety of educational techniques,
*and a vision for what a class of properly educated students would be able to know and demonstrate at the end of the academic year.
Yet despite knowing what a spectacular teacher looks like, the educational models we have in place actively discourage every one of these.
The first and largest problem is that every educational program we’ve had in place since 2002 — the first year that No Child Left Behind took effect — prioritizes student performance on standardized tests above all else. Test performance is now tied to both school funding, and the evaluation of teachers and administrators. In many cases, there exists no empirical evidence to back up the validity of this approach, yet it’s universally accepted as the way things ought to be…
If your goal was to achieve the greatest learning outcome possible for each of your students, what would you need to be successful? You’d need the freedom to decide what to teach, how to teach it, how to evaluate and assess your students, and how to structure your classroom and curriculum. You’d need the freedom to make individualized plans or separate plans for students who were achieving at different levels. You’d need the resources — financial, time, and support resources — to maximize the return on your efforts. In short, you’d need the same thing that any employee in any role needs: the freedom and flexibility to assess your own situation, and make empowered decisions…
Like any job involving an interaction with other people, teaching is as much of an art as it is a science. By taking away the freedom to innovate, we aren’t improving the outcomes of the worst teachers or even average teachers; we’re simply telling the good ones that their skills and talents aren’t needed here. By refusing to treat teachers like professionals — by failing to empower them to teach students in the best way that they see fit — we demonstrate the simple fact that we don’t trust them to do a good job, or even to understand what doing a good job looks like. Until we abandon the failed education model we’ve adopted since the start of the 21st century, public education will continue to be broken. As long as we insist on telling teachers what to teach and how to teach it, we’ll continue to fail our children.

Reblogged this on Crazy Normal – the Classroom Exposé and commented:
Discover how the corporate, get-rich frauds behind the fake, top-down reforms of community-based, democratic, transparent, non-profit, unionized public education are destroying what was once the envy of the world.
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Another one worth forwarding to friends who need to understand what’s at stake. Thanks so much for bringing to our attention!! Need to put him on the radar screen for the Honor Roll.
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Timely for me, particularly because every morning as I am preparing to leave for my job in a public high school in Lower Manhattan, I consider calling in and saying I won’t be back–ever.
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yes yes yes!!!!
We need to adopt in our schools something like the ka sei system used in businesses in Japan. The company is divided into departments, the departments into relatively autonomous, relatively self-governing units, and proposals generally originate at this lowest level. So, while there is great respect for hierarchy in Japan, there’s also a built-in bottom-up approach to the functioning of the organization.
This is much the way it was when I taught thirty years ago, at the beginning of my career. The various departments in the high-school (English, foreign languages, social studies, art) met regularly to discuss and decide upon curricula and pedagogy, to choose their texts, to reflect and socialize, and so on. Administrators were generally hands off with regard to curricula and pedagogy and texts because they considered the teachers the experts in their fields. The administrators concentrated on facilities and discipline and HR. Kids learned a lot more. Teachers were passionate and loved their jobs.
Now, a department meeting is nothing more than an occasion for the department chairperson to read off the latest list of administrative mandates. Teachers have no autonomy but, rather, are continually micromanaged by administrators whose main objective is to get them to do as much test prep as possible. Teachers live in a world of data chats and data walls and trainings and reporting and receive twenty emails a day from administrators, all marked URGENT!!! and each containing some new petty mandate. And, ofc, the top-down micromanagement begins at the state level with ignorant, destructive testing mandates based upon extraordinarily poorly conceived “standards.”
I remember when the big debate in K-12 education was whether we should have district or site-based management of schools. Well, now, EVERYTHING is decided at the top, and teachers are supposed to behave as mindless implements in their superiors’ hands.
Manufacturing businesses around the globe learned a long time ago that quality flows from the bottom up. You know what flows from the top down, don’t you?
Exactly.
The destructive testing and standards regime has pretty much turned K-12 education in the U.S. into trivial, mind-numbing test prep all year long, and teachers now almost universally hate their jobs. Imagine what would happen if you hired a cleaning person and then stood over him or her all the time, saying, “No. Move the cloth in smaller circles. No. Use a lighter spray. Start at the center and work outward. You do have a copy of the table-wiping manual, don’t you? And make sure to update your data chart. I’ll be writing up this infraction.” No self-respecting person would stay in such a job. But that’s exactly what teaching is like now. Bright, capable, intrinsically motivated, learned, self-respecting people wouldn’t do this crap for really good pay, much less for what teachers are now being paid. And those are some of the reasons why almost all such people who stumble into a teaching job, these days, soon start looking for anything else that they might do to earn a living.
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When I first started teaching ESL in a high school many years ago, few people even knew what it was. I had one traditional grammar book, and no materials other than papers and pencils. I invented the materials and curriculum. I used newspapers, magazines and other assorted realia. It was extremely time consuming, but it worked. I had autonomy, and I designed my own assessments. It was a totally rewarding experience.
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“Now, a department meeting is nothing more than an occasion for the department chairperson to read off the latest list of administrative mandates.”
Yes. It’s worst in ELA and math, but even history/social studies is subject to unappealable decisions from above. Currently CA is rolling out new social studies “frameworks”. Not quite new standards, but approaches to teaching the standards. We go to workshops where we’re apprised of the “shifts” (hate that term) we’re expected to make in how we teach. Um. What if we don’t want to “shift” the way we teach? What if we think the new frameworks are garbage? What if I think the “inquiry” lessons you hold up as exemplars are dull, confusing, stultifying and ineffective? “Who gives a sh** what you, individual teacher, thinks?” I feel impotent and subject to forces beyond my control. The standards themselves are an infringement on our freedom as teachers, but these frameworks are a second layer of infringement –telling us not just what to teach, but how to teach it. Who thought frameworks were a good idea?
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Who? Someone else who presumes to know more about your subject and about teaching it than you do. Not an acceptable situation, but almost universal now. So sorry that someone of your ability has to put up with this crap, Ponderosa.
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You are so right. I hesitate to say we need to return to the good old days because that just provides more ammunition for the deformers to claim that everything is outmoded. Instead, let me say we need to return to the intelligent old days.
Forbes article read, greatly appreciated (Wow, Forbes!), and forwarded.
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Great comment, InService. Indeed.
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Reblogged this on David R. Taylor-Thoughts on Education.
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In past decade teachers have been treated like enemy combatants or sometimes children. The media and various public leaders that never spent a day as a teacher have been undermining public education and overtly hostile to teachers. The main reason for this disabuse stems from the decision to monetize the nation’s schools and children. In order for corporations to gain access to all the sweet public money, they decided to declare war on teachers and the teaching profession, and they enlisted the support of the government to assist them. Tenure, job security and defined pensions have all been on the chopping block, and enrollments in teacher education programs are at an all time low. None of this happened by accident. This has been a well executed, well financed manipulation by corporations and the 1% to move the public service and asset of education into private pockets. Teachers are collateral damage.
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The current push for personalized [sic], worksheet-on-a-screen education, driven by the greed of silicon valley titans, is, ofc, an attempt to eliminate the teacher altogether because the goal is complete command and control, and dealing with actual humans is too messy because they do their best work under conditions of autonomy.
But some people, like the author of the lovely article posted above, understand that education is a transaction between people, in which older people transmit to younger ones that which is most interesting and useful and life-enhancing from the cultural heritage bequeathed to them. It’s a profoundly and essentially humane activity and not something that can or should be mechanized and standardized.
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How would the pillars of our business community feel if a bunch of teachers tried to go into their companies and tell them how to run their businesses? That’s what I think too. What special insight do they possess to run a school? Probably none.
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No need for the “probably” in your last statement.
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Read this last week. I immediately shared it with multiple colleagues. The philosophy about trusting professionals to do their work was the part that resonated the strongest. Instead, I’m engaged in so many forms and procedures to have a record of doing my job that it absorbs far too much time and stress.
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Each year Ted Talks forwards “31 days of Ideas” during December. Today’s selection, and the one that plays automatically next, are worthy of a few minutes of your readers’ time. Both speakers are excellent representatives of the topic you share here. BTW … They represent many of the teachers/principals I see every day. May it always be so. Keep up the good work, Diane. Happy holidays. Jim Welling
Sent from my iPhone
>
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Link is not working for me.
Even so, this is a remarkable commentary to appear in Forbes—Except that it is also possible for people who read it to say, well, of course, government cannot do anything right and this is why customer choice, vouchers, the Trump/DeVos/ market-based solution is certain to be better.
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I’ve been an ardently pro-government liberal Democrat my whole life, but ed reform is the first thing that has made me question that ardor.
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I don’t mean to imply that I support privatization. Just that even Democratic-controled governments are badly botching education –e.g. Democratic CA’s failure to dispatch the curriculum-ruining Common Core standards and SBAC/CAASP tests.
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I think if you live in Ohio and pay attention to public education you really can’t avoid the conclusion that ed reform hasn’t done anything positive for existing public schools.
Maybe they’ve improved public education somewhere, but not in this state.
Our schools have less funding, more mandates, and they offer less now than they did when this “movement” launched.
In return for that public school students and parents get a glossy 6 page “report card” on their schools every year.
Not a good deal for students. They lost so much and all they got was a stupid brochure. They were robbed.
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I heard on local radio this morning that Fordham, the charter lobbying shop, is ONCE AGAIN lobbying to change the metrics on how public schools are measured.
Does anyone in Columbus offer ANYTHING to public school families other than these dumb report cards? Is there an adult who can say “no” down there?
My son is a freshman in high school. His entire public school experience has been hijacked by 150 “experts” who don’t support public schools.
How did this happen? How did lawmakers allow this? They handed our schools over to people who DON’T attend them and don’t support them.
It never stops. Every single year they convene and generate work for themselves. There’s no value added at all. They have done nothing in this rural working class district other than measure us, over and over and over. Enough. if you can’t support public schools than at least leave us be.
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It was inevitable, too. Ed reformers themselves say their “movement” is about 1. choice and 2. accountability.
It was absolutely predictable that all they would do for public schools is measure them.
It’s all they got. Charters, vouchers, and elaborate schemes of measurement. Guess what public school families got? That’s right- the measurement. There is nothing else.
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Q As long as we insist on telling teachers what to teach and how to teach it, we’ll continue to fail our children. END Q
I do not understand. If the publicly-operated schools are truly run by the public, then should not the public direct the curriculum? There was a lot of resistance to bringing in a computer science program into the public high school, that I attended. The school establishment was against it.
I once worked for Lucent technologies in New Jersey, and our firm offered to wire the entire school for the internet, at no charge, and the school principal refused our offer.
And since teachers are public employees, should not the public be the “boss”, and direct the methodology of the teaching?
Am I missing something?
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Should civilians tell the military how to fight? We have civilian control over the military, not civilian micromanagement. Shouldn’t it be the same for public education? I know how to get my students to learn history well. The prescriptions from above are unproven and, in my professional judgment, ineffective. For the most part I’m OK with their prescriptions for what to teach; I’m not OK with their prescriptions how to teach.
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I work at the Pentagon, on military projects. Civilians do almost all of the planning, and direction of our military forces.
Publicly-operated schools, are run by the government. The government, is a government, of the people, by the people, and for the people. Anyone who is in government service, whether an engineer at the Pentagon, or a teacher in a public school, works for the people.
If you are not willing to submit to the control, of the people who pay your salary, you should leave government service. And that applies to engineers, and teachers.
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OK Charles. Please tell me how I should teach. I’m sure you know better than I do. I was deluded when I thought my education and experience gave me some special insight.
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I am an engineer, not an education specialist. The public schools are public enterprises, and public has the first word and the last word, on how public schools are run.
The depth and intensity, of the public’s control, varies of course.
Of course, the public should get advice and guidance from professional educators. But, the specifics of curriculum and methodology of teaching, are still subject to public control.
Since the graduates of our nation’s schools, are going to be the workers of tomorrow, should it not be reasonable, that industries and corporations at least have some input in designing the curriculum.
“War is too important to be left to the generals” – George Clemenceau, French statesman.
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Charles,
Even if your premise is true (that the public should have the first and last word on what is taught to our children), don’t you think it’s just a little bit naive?
Who IS the “public”, anyway? Bill Gates and David Coleman? Betsy DeVos and Jeb Bush? And many more who have hired their self professed experts (precious few of whom are K-12 educators and child/adolescent psychologists) to “lead the way”?
What method would we use to canvas “the public” to get a bead on what should and should not be taught? And how it should be taught?
The field of education has evolved over the centuries and there IS a method to the madness. Math, Reading, Writing, Critical thinking, Science, Phys Ed, Music and the Arts, etc. It’s not like someone with no knowledge just raised their hand and said, “Here’s what we’re gonna do!”…except in the recent reform movement.
It’s knowledge that’s been passed down and modified, through the ages. And if there are to be changes made to what is taught, at what age it’s taught, and the techniques used to convey that knowledge, don’t you think we should be listening to the voices of the people who are experts in the field? And paying attention to whether those newly conceived methods have been tested and re-tested before passing judgement on whether they should be implemented or not?
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Charles also said that War is too important to leave to the. Generals, but the generals are in charge of the Defense Department now, not civilians. How does the public say “no more wars, please”?
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Charles,
What part of “the public” should tell teachers how to teach? Should the public tell surgeons how to do their job, for which they are professionally trained?
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I work at the Pentagon. I just had lunch with a one-star general. The Defense Department is under solid civilian control. The US government crafts our foreign and military policy. (I worked for the State Dept. from 1983-1988). The diplomats implement our foreign policy, and the military implements our military policy. The people are sovereign under our Constitution, the government serves the people.
Every military officer, I have ever had the privilege of working for, is a “soldier for peace” first. Can you not see, that having a military force, that is second to none, is the only pathway to peace?
If you truly want no more wars (a laudable goal), then you should support a strong military force, to keep the peace.
The public has every right to say “No more wars, please”. We just commemorated the attack on Pearl Harbor, Dec. 7 1941. The public was opposed to getting involved in WW2, up until the Japanese destroyed the Pacific Fleet.
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Q What part of “the public” should tell teachers how to teach? Should the public tell surgeons how to do their job, for which they are professionally trained? END Q
Again, your analogy is false and pejorative. The public schools are public enterprises. The public pays the bills, and the public sends their children to the public schools, and the public has to live with the graduates of the nation’s public schools. Should not the public, have input into what subjects are taught? And how they are taught?
The public (the citizens) must become involved in the public’s schools. The public must demand that appropriate subjects are taught. Of course, the citizenry must rely on the professionals, to develop the methodology, and the means to deliver the education to the students. But the “what” of what is taught, is equally important with the “how”.
Comparisons to surgery, are ludicrous. Patients do not tell their doctors, how to do brain surgery.
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People like you, Charles, should not tell teachers how to teach
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Q People like you, Charles, should not tell teachers how to teach END Q
I am truly sorry that you feel this way. But, as long as my tax dollars, are going to the public school system and the University of Virginia, these entities are going be receiving my input.
As a citizen, the public enterprises which I fund, are under my control (along with the remainder of the citizenry).
You are always (correctly) touting democracy. As long as this nation is a democracy/republic, the government is going to be receiving my input.
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Sorry, Charles, but no teachers should or will listen to your input.
When your surgeon listens, let me know.
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Amen to everything above. Our schools are slipping downward every day and the fault is with the “Know it all” government and the “experts” who wrote the standards.
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@writerjoney: I cannot believe that professional educators, do not want input from the public, who pay their salaries. The public set up the schools, the public pays for the operation of the schools. The employees and staff, need to remember who is the “boss”.
Our society cannot afford to trust the future of our children (which is also our own future) to government bureaucrats and professional educators.
“Government is like fire, a dangerous servant, and a terrible master” -George Washington
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Our society cannot afford to entrust the education of our children to stupid people who don’t know how to educate anyone.
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How can you express such contempt for “people”, when you claim to champion democracy? (BTW- “Demos” is Greek for “People”)
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Sorry, Charles, I don’t tell surgeons how to do surgery, and you shouldn’t tell them how to teach.
Democracy is not rule by the dumbest. Although it may seem that way today.
We vote on our leaders. We don’t vote on how professionals should do their work. That is why they are professionals.
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When the politicians and the generals got our nation involved in the Vietnam conflict, it was the people, who demanded an end to the conflict.
This was a case of ordinary people, mostly kids, none of which were expert in geopolitics nor military tactics, telling the politicians and generals how to run a military conflict.
Does your contempt for “people” extend to this type of involvement?
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Bad analogy, Charles.
Voting against war by protesting is a valuable expression of democracy.
That is not analogous to having uninformed people tell professionals how to do their duty.
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Q When your surgeon listens, let me know. END Q
I had a medical issue a couple of years ago. My doctor (surgeon) recommended immediate surgery. I consulted another doctor, for a second opinion. He suggested that I begin taking a combination of drugs, and see if I could get relief. The drugs worked (and they continue to work). I cancelled the surgery.
I value experience, and academics, as much as anyone. But, I have found that it is not always the best course to trust anyone entirely.
The captain of the Titanic, had more experience than any ship’s captain in the entire White Star Lines. His bones are at the bottom of the Atlantic.
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I noticed you got a second opinion from another surgeon. Why didn’t you consult a plumber or a teacher or a man in the street?
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Charles,
A piece of advice:
When you are in a hole, stop digging.
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Q Democracy is not rule by the dumbest END Q I concur. Democracy is the rule of the people. (Except for our ludicrous electoral college, which selects losers to be president).
There is no I.Q. test for citizenship. Every person over the age of majority gets to vote. Morons and Ph.Ds are equal in the voting booth (unless you consider the electoral college).
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Exactly right. We all get one vote and only one vote. Except for the 1%, who subvert the process by buying political advertising.
But there is no democracy inside any professions, where experts rule, not voters.
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Q I noticed you got a second opinion from another surgeon. Why didn’t you consult a plumber or a teacher or a man in the street? END Q
I sought out the medical advice, from a medical professional, for my medical condition. Obviously, a doctor, is more qualified than a plumber/man on the street.
I chose not to seek advice from a plumber/man on the street, because such people are not qualified, for medical advice.
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Q We all get one vote and only one vote. Except for the 1%, who subvert the process by buying political advertising. END Q
I disagree. In the US Senate, the influence of Wyoming, is exactly equal with the influence of California. Therefore, the votes of Wyoming residents have more push (per-capita), than Californians.
And I do not believe that wealthy people have more political power than the 99%. Free speech, is the same for all of us. Of course, wealthy people can purchase more media exposure, etc.
“all animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others”- Orwell
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Not to nitpick, but I discovered a small error in the article, that we should “evaluate [teachers] across a variety of objective and subjective metrics, with any standardized testing components making up only a small part of an evaluation.” That should read, “…standardized testing components making up only NO part of an evaluation.”
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agree. Two-thirds–at least–of student test performance is affected by out of school factors.
In school factors include the teacher, the principal, school climate, the prior year’s teacher, etc.
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This article is so important. I am sending it to my administrators. I so hope that many do the same and it circulates all the way up to leadership in Washington. An educational revival is needed to change the minds of people making decisions who are completely disregarding all research and common sense that spells out clearly and conclusively what effective education is.
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“By taking away the freedom to innovate, we aren’t improving the outcomes of the worst teachers or even average teachers; we’re simply telling the good ones that their skills and talents aren’t needed here.”
Bingo!
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Being a satisfied employee/worker means having the autonomy to do the best one can to do the job that is expected of them, regardless of profession. Wonderful story in today’s Cleveland Plain Dealer about one of Michael Symon’s restaurants (one of the best things about living in NE Ohio in the past two decades has been to watch and experience the rise of Michael Symon as one of the great chefs in the U.S.). A poor family from East Cleveland was invited to dine and given a tour at his BBQ restaurant, Mabel’s, in downtown Cleveland. The two young sons, one of whom aspires to be chef, asked a number of questions of the head chef (answers in parentheses). This one stuck out and fits the tone of this post:
“‘So what does Michael Symon do when he comes here? Does he taste the food?’ (He tastes things. But he trusts us to do our job, and we’re grateful for that.)”
Since Symon left for stardom in NYC, the quality of his restaurants has not gone down one bit. He knows how to teach his chefs and staff and they respond with constant excellence. In his own way, he is a great educator.
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This article reflects the views of W. Edwards Deming, who said that workers want to do a good job and it is up to the leadership to create a system in which workers can do their best.
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If you are truly interested in the issues of war and peace, and how to prevent war, you need to read “The worth of War”, by Ginsberg, available from Amazon.
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