In case you hadn’t noticed, corporate reform has failed. It is dying. Only money keeps it going. Its true believers know it is dead but they are paid handsomely to pretend there is still a pulse. If they flat out admitted that test-and-punish reform had failed, that privatization was a flop, the money train would go away.
John Thompson, teacher and historian in Oklahoma, reviews what reformers say to keep their spirits alive and their coffers overflowing.
“It has been fun reading reformers’ post-mortems on corporate school reform, as well as watching some of them twisting themselves into pretzels in order to deny that test-driven, choice-driven reform has failed. To take just one example, the pro-reform Fordham Institute has published analyses such as “Reformer, Heal Theyself. You’ve Ruined High School,” “Three Mistakes that Undermine Education Reform,” and “NAEP 2017: America’s ‘Lost Decade’ of Educational Progress.”
https://edexcellence.net/articles/reformer-heal-thyself-youve-ruined-high-school
https://edexcellence.net/articles/three-mistakes-that-undermine-education-reform
https://edexcellence.net/articles/naep-2017-americas-lost-decade-of-educational-progress
“When No Child Left Behind largely failed to raise student performance, reformers often responded with the intellectually dishonest claim that the NAEP increases that preceded NCLB should be attributed to the accountability regime that was subsequently imposed. But it’s become more common for reformers, such as those at Fordham who have documented the disappointing outcomes of the Bush-Obama era, to admit:
“Most of the gains occurred in the 1990s and early 2000s, and researchers have concluded that few are attributable to the federal No Child Left Behind legislation that ushered in the current era of high-stakes testing. Math scores did rise significantly between 1998 and 2009 but have been largely flat ever since- and reading scores have been stagnant since 1998.
https://edexcellence.net/articles/three-mistakes-that-undermine-education-reform
http://www.nber.org/papers/w15531
“I have a long history of being too optimistic, grasping at straws in the hope that the Billionaires Boys Club will face the facts – which have been obvious for years – that document the failure of accountability-driven, charter-driven mandates. Even so, I must ask whether edu-philanthropists will finally listen to the conclusion of co-editors of Failure Up Close: What Happens, Why It Happens, and What We Can Learn from It, co-edited by Jay Greene and Michael McShane.
“Greene and McShane introduce Failure Up Close with the admonition:
”American education is littered with failed reforms. Across the country, we see charter schools that have been shuttered, federal funding streams that have run dry, philanthropic initiatives that never panned out, and brand-new teacher evaluation systems that have already been marked for the junkyard.”
”Greene and McShane allude to what I would call the hubris of reformers who were in too much of a hurry to properly study the complexities of school improvement. And they note the pattern where these rushed policies are imposed because “somebody — e.g., a state official, the federal government, the head of a large philanthropic organization — has put their thumb on the scale, using their influence to favor one approach at the expense of another.”
Greene and McShane articulate three lessons of Failure Up Close:
Lesson #1: Be humble
Lesson #2: You can’t make an end run around democracy
Lesson #3: You can’t hide behind technocracy
“I’ve also tried to explain to micromanaging true believers that teaching is a political process; success comes from trusting, loving relationships. So I’m happy to read Greene’s and McShane’s conclusion,
“After years of treating school reform as a competition among theoretical perspectives and technical strategies, the time has come for all of us to recognize that education is an inherently political enterprise.”
They add:
”The world of education reform needs to get more comfortable with complexity. More often than not, contextual factors affect the implementation of policies and even the definition of success and failure. This is not a bad thing. We live in a big, diverse, pluralistic nation that draws tremendous strength from the wide spectrum of ideas and opinions that our citizens possess.
“But, I wonder how many reformers will abandon their simplistic worldview. At this point in the discussion, it looks like the Billionaires Boys Club will stick with the spin personified by the Education Post’s Peter Cunningham. He blames the decline in NAEP gains on a lack of courage, “whining” by conservatives, and the “hysterical” responses of teachers and unions to bubble-in accountability.
http://educationpost.org/beware-of-naep-theories-and-look-for-courage-in-american-education/
“The best way to guess what reformers are really thinking is to pay more attention to their private discussions, as opposed to public spin. I communicate with a lot of reformers and I’ve seen a way where they inadvertently echo one aspect of the reform era. Over the years, I listened to thousands of teachers and students, but I can’t recall a single one who thought the test-driven, choice-driven mandates were a good idea. Now, the reformers who I know seem united in at least admitting quietly that they are disappointed in the results they’ve produced. A few, led by Rick Hess, are reviewing the earlier warning signs of their socio-engineering failures.
“Another candid discussion of reformers’ tactics can be found in the recently leaked memo, funded by the Walton Foundation, explaining their defeat in the Massachusetts campaign to lift the cap on charter schools. Even though charter supporters outspent their opponents by $10,000,000, they lost because, “Personal conversations with friends, family, and neighbors who were teachers ultimately convinced many voters to oppose Question 2 because it would harm traditional public schools and leave students behind.”
”The memo didn’t embrace a transparent approach to politics. It recommended relationship-building with legislative leaders, (without suggesting conversations with practitioners opposed to them.) It advised, “Advocates should test owning the progressive mantle on education reform and charters: this is about social justice, civil rights, and giving kids a chance.” (emphasis added) The implication is that the progressive spin is reserved for liberal states.
”Neither did it hide its contempt for teachers unions. It recommended a “full assessment of the opposition,” in a way that implies that the goal would be to do opposition research in order to rebrand opponents like union president, Barbara Madeloni, as “Occupy Wall Street.” It seems to recommend that she should be characterized as “a rabble rousing, outsider, activist, leftist … a very ideological and uncompromising person.”
The memo recommended, “Seek out opportunities to appease opponents.” In contrast to the reward and punish corporate reform agenda of the last generation, “a win-win situation” should be created by, “Giving unions and traditional public schools additional funding—either legislatively or as part of a ballot initiative.”
Click to access WaltonQuestion2Full.pdf
“As Jeff Bryant explains, too many Democrats have “spent most of their political capital on pressing an agenda of ‘school reform’ and ‘choice’ rather than pressing for increased funding and support that schools and teachers need.” So, if they would support more money for the classroom, in return for labeling education supporters as aggressors that must be appeased, would that be a step forward?
“Seriously, I don’t know which is more fun – reading conservative reformers’ cases against high-stakes testing or the counter-arguments that testing must remain an essential element of some brand new form of accountability that is yet to be discovered. I doubt this sort of debate can help improve schools, but I bet it could coin a wittier, insulting label for the teachers that they will next pretend to love and admire.
”I enjoy the way that some reformers grasp at straws in order to explain how charter openings have dropped by 2/3rds, but that they could reverse the trend by opening charters in affluent communities – as they search for new ways to present themselves as civil rights crusaders. And if the Walton memo is correct in implying that edu-philanthropists don’t know their ways around state legislatures, I bet someone can coach them on making their money talk …”
https://edexcellence.net/articles/we-should-irrigate-charter-school-deserts-heres-how

“Most of the gains occurred in the 1990s and early 2000s, and researchers have concluded that few are attributable to the federal No Child Left Behind legislation that ushered in the current era of high-stakes testing. Math scores did rise significantly between 1998 and 2009 but have been largely flat ever since- and reading scores have been stagnant since 1998.”
I feel like it’s always doomed though, as far as honest analysis, because there are so many factors.
They don’t know why scores increased in the 1990s and 2000s. One could make a perfectly reasonable argument that scores stopped increasing right at the point income inequality really sky-rocketed, which is late 1990s to 2000.
I have read “analysis” from ed reformers where they attribute all gains in PUBLIC schools to charters and vouchers. The theory is the public school wouldn’t have “gotten better” without the charter school opening across the street.
But they have no idea why those public schools improved. They don’t even look, because they don’t study public schools. It could have been the magical effects of charters and vouchers but it also could have been something the public school did that has no connection to ed reform.
If I had to pick one improvement our public school is doing is they are focusing on attendance. It’s working. Ed reform had nothing to do with that. Federal and state ed reformers pay absolutely no attention to public schools other than testing our kids or selling us ed tech crap – they’ll never know why my public school got “better”.
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Can’t be the competition that raised scores, because as numbers of choice schools grew, scores went flat
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In California, the 1990’s saw class size reductions and classroom integration strategies, what many call differentiation. When the NCLB came out, the emphasis on classroom integration started to wane. By the 2010’s, class size had ballooned and integration had been trashed. Segregation doesn’t work. Online education doesn’t work. Test prep doesn’t work.
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Here is an excellent analysis by Natalie Wexler (part of the 4/16 article at the 2nd link):
“Standardized tests are important in illuminating broad trends and inequities between demographic groups, but they shouldn’t be used to guide reading instruction. Reading tests purport to test reading comprehension “skills” such as “making inferences” and “finding the main idea.” So that’s what teachers spend many hours a day trying to teach, especially in schools with low test scores, throughout elementary and sometimes middle school. Reading and math have taken over the curriculum in many schools, to the exclusion of subjects like history and science.
“Herein lies much of the explanation for the lack of progress at the high school level: If students have learned nothing about history or science before they arrive, they’re hardly going to be equipped to do high school level work.”
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to add to your last note: And if our poorest high schools continue to eliminate courses such as civics, geography, government, business and even history in the name of “fixing” test scores in math and English…
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“Standardized tests are important in illuminating broad trends and inequities between demographic groups,”
No, they aren’t important in doing that. Aside from the sloppy language used, how can something-standardized test results-that are completely invalid be important in illuminating anything. Crap in, crap out is the saying and it definitely holds true for standardized testing.
Invalidities tell us nothing whatsoever.
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And no, just because damn near everyone thinks that “standardized tests tell us something” doesn’t mean that it is true or that we should use that malpractice as any sort of guide for the teaching and learning process.
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The BEST thing the “so-called” ed reformers could do is SUPPORT and TRUST Teachers. Good GAWD. REAL-LIVE CERTIFIED TEACHERS is what matters. Teachers have the real-time information and can respond appropriately (in many different ways) to students..
Has this country GONE DAFT? Answer: YUP … and FOR MONEY and POWER, not for the general health and welfare of this country. How did we stray so FAR? OH … GREED and POWER from the FEW who found an income stream for themselves off public dollars. Good job. DEFORMERS. You will get your just rewards sooner or later. I hope it comes sooner rather than later.
So much stupidity is everywhere … like building home on an ACTIVE volcano.
https://www.cnn.com/2018/05/08/us/hawaii-kilauea-volcano/index.html
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Yuh. I was thinking exactly the amethi g reading one of the links – first they put down the ed-reform idea that the most important factor in ed is the quality of teacher (& measuring that by studentscores)– then they comeright back & say the best way to get hi-qual teaching is provide them w/hi-qual instructional matls & train them in their use. Go away, ed-reform apologists & let teachers teach.
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They would never “trust teachers” or anyone else for that matter.
People like Gates and the Walton’s and Michelle Rhee and Arne Duncan and David Coleman are all about controlling the lives of others.
That’s how they get their jollies, knowing that “lesser beings” like teachers have to bow to their superior wisdom and do what they say without question.
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Thank you. What u wrote is so true. Agree! This stood out: ““Bipartisan” doesn’t mean “good” and it doesn’t mean “smart” and it doesn’t mean “diverse”
Bipartisan has become to mean, “SELL OUT THE CITIZENS!”
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Of course, the deformers would never trust Teachers. We are to them JUST IN THE WAY of THEM HAVING TOTAL CONTROL and an ENDLESS SUPPLY of SLAVES!
You’re right.
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Like!
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One of the reasons that “reform” has lost momentum is that it was never an authentic movement led by stakeholders. “Reform” has always been a top down autocratically imposed propaganda campaign led by the wealthy that has been based on misinformation and lies. All the data driven “accountability” was never intended to improve public education. It was intended to end it so that the valuable public asset of public education can be moved from working people to those already wealthy.
The main difference today is that so-called reform has not improved anything, and it has undermined public schools. All the civil rights banter has been revealed to be a separate and unequal system for minority students. Many supporters of “reform” have been shown to be interested in gaining access to public funds, not improving outcomes for students. The difference today is that the public has caught on to the lies. I don’t know if education is a political endeavor. I see it more as a social-emotional, cognitive endeavor. The misinformation campaign of deformers never captured most people because their own experience with public education has been positive. They do not view their schools a “factories of failure.”
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“The main difference today is that so-called reform has not improved anything, and it has undermined public schools.”
Yup, for example, this…
“The difference today is that the public has caught on to the lies.”
Oh, how I wish that were the case in Atlanta, the birth place of MLK Jr., no less.
“I don’t know if education is a political endeavor. I see it more as a social-emotional, cognitive endeavor.”
Yup, for example, Mission Hill K-8 Public School à la Deborah Meier with Ayla Givens as principal.
https://youtu.be/VlXAcaahg0k (7:21)
http://ayearatmissionhill.com/ (ten 4-7 minute themed segments)
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“I don’t know if education is a political endeavor. I see it more as a social-emotional, cognitive endeavor.”
The different realms do not have to be mutually exclusive. Public education is definitely a political endeavor while at the same time not only a social-emotional and cognitive endeavor but a community function and many other things.
It seems to me that one of the conceptual misgivings in the past was the attempt to take the political out of the public schools when schools are deeply embedded in the political as mandated by the state constitutions.
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retired teacher,
BINGO! “All the data driven “accountability” was never intended to improve public education. It was intended to end it so that the valuable public asset of public education can be moved from working people to those already wealthy.”
THANK YOU.
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This is really what’s wrong with ed reform although they will never, ever admit it.
It’s an echo chamber.
This is a typical ed reform piece that is supposedly “diverse opinion” because one of the ed reformers has a D after his name and the other has an R after hers:
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/education/wp/2018/05/09/what-ails-education-an-absence-of-vision-a-failure-of-will-and-politics/?noredirect=on&utm_term=.b3786d3ce02f
There’s no daylight between these two opinions. The prescriptions for education are identical.
It’s the same 150 people over and over and over. They move in and out of the public sector – to think tanks or lobbying shops or universities but it is LOCK STEP.
I wasn’t at all surprised when I found out Arne Duncan consulted Jeb Bush on public schools. They’re identical.
“Bipartisan” doesn’t mean “good” and it doesn’t mean “smart” and it doesn’t mean “diverse”
It is just as likely it’s not good and not smart and not diverse opinion at all. More likely, really, because there is no meaningful dissent.
Ed reform is an elite consensus. The problem is a lot of really bad ideas were also elite consensus ideas- the Iraq War and deregulating financial markets are two recent examples. Everyone agreed! But everyone was wrong.
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All of these groups are on the outside trying to impose the will of special interest groups on public education to harm, not help it. In what way does subtracting money from a public institution help to make it better or stronger? That is all “reform” has done to public education by actively working to diminish funding and help it collapse. The so-called “free market” solution comparing education to buying pizza has fallen flat. It is a house of cards built on lies.
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“The so-called ‘free market’ solution comparing education to buying pizza has fallen flat.”
Or comparing education to buying a McDonald’s Happy Meal…
https://www.ajc.com/news/local-education/atlanta-superintendent-school-choice-american-the-happy-meal/
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Not to mention the fact that there never has been nor ever will be a free market of any sort.
The fundamental onto-epistemological mistake in believing that a “free market” does anything at all is at the heart of most of our socio-economic ills.
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A free market is not funded by the government.
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Exactly!
Just one of many reasons why there has never been one.
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“A free market is not funded by the government.” — How Wal-Mart would deliver the goods if not for the federal highway system?
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The government doesn’t fund Walmart. A free market means that Walmart must sell goods to consumers, who are free to shop elsewhere.
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The lessons to be learned are not for the Deformers.
The lessons are for teachers and parents and anyone else who cares about education.
Keep the Deformers as far away from schools and school children as is possible.
Inform the general public of what they did so that these people are never again even given a chance to make decisions about education.
In a fair world, they would be held accountable for the damage they have done, but since that will never happen at the very least they should be ostracized and forced to wander the wilderness for the rest of their lives.
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And no, I don’t believe in giving these people a “second chance”. Many of them have done what they did with full knowledge of the likely outcome, but as with the law, even ignorance is no excuse.
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Reformsters need some sort of 12 step program to break their addiction — greeeed.
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I think a “12 year” program — of hard labor –might be more effective.
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I don’t think the public can really complain about the ed reform theory that now utterly dominates all discussion.
They said it. Right from the start. The key tenets of this religion are 1. choice and 2. accountability
It’s in every document, opinion piece and political campaign these people have churned out for the last 30 years and that’s ALL that’s there.
Are public school families really surprised their schools are utterly ignored unless someone from The Movement is parachuting in with a test? They told you! 1. choice 2. accountability
You’re number two on a list of two. You get tests and that’s ALL you get. And that’s all you’ve gotten.
If you keep hiring them you’ll keep getting 1. choice and 2. accountability because that’s the whole theory. All the rest is politicking on how to get 1. choice and 2. accountability.
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Now that charters have established a beachhead, vouchers have spawned from this ugly charade. They have absolutely no basis in fact. They provide worse education. Their only goal is to appease right wing special interest groups. As we have seen in Florida, they will invent any crazy scheme to move public funds into private pockets.
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Liars, hustlers, thieves, profiteers, arrogant know-nothings and frequent child abusers: and so-called reformers wonder why it’s failed? When it was never, ever about anything other than “Move Fast and Break Things?”
It was born in bad faith, deception and lust for power/money; now it’s time for its Ivy League carnival barkers to find their next hustle…
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Michael, right on!
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For many of them, it actually HASN’T failed.
For many of them, it was — and continues to be — a very lucrative gig.
Even for folks like Gates, it was not a complete loss because he got to take his “donations” as a tax write-off. In other words, if he had not spent it on stuff like Common Core, he would have simply “lost” much of it to taxes and would have had no say in how it was spent. This way he maintained control, which is what it is all about for Gates, at any rate: control.
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And Common Core is still in effect for millions of school children, even in states that supposedly dropped it.
It was effectively a coup by Gates.
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“Built-in Failure”
Built-in failure is really success
Shuttering schools is opening chests
Buildings filled with public jewels
For which the Wall Street vulture drools
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Thompson has given us more than one great summary of the issues involving our profession. Thanks so much, and thank you for posting his writing.
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From the referenced Kaplan article:
“Of course, failure isn’t necessarily a bad thing — when pursuing a goal as urgent and complex as school improvement, some amount of failure will be inevitable. The problem, though, is that policy makers, foundation officials, and pundits have strong incentives to deny that their favored initiatives have gone badly, and they rarely acknowledge and learn from those failures before moving on to the next reform. As a result, they tend to repeat their mistakes and make much less progress than they should.”
Rewritten:
“Of course, failure isn’t necessarily a bad thing FOR US BUT IT IS DEVASTATING FOR THE PEONS’ KIDS— when pursuing a goal as urgent and complex as school improvement WHICH WE DON’T KNOW JACKSHIT ABOUT, some amount of failure will be inevitable BECAUSE, WELL SHIT HAPPENS. The problem, though, is that policy makers, foundation officials, and pundits have $UPER $trong in$entive$ to deny that their favored initiatives have gone badly, RUINING PUBLIC EDUCATION FOR ALL STUDENTS and they NEVER acknowledge NOR learn from those failures before moving on to the next DEFORM. As a result, they ALWAYS repeat their SHITHEADED mistakes and DON’T make ANY progress AT ALL, HARMING THE MOST INNOCENT OF SOCIETY-THE CHILDREN.”
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It’s funny how the people who claim that “failure isn’t necessarily a bad thing” are always the ones who have suffered no consequences and in many cases have actually benefitted from the “failures”
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Failure is good for other people.
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It only took Greene and McShane (by the way two quite nice gentlemen but very misguided at that) a year to come up with a way to sugarcoat, market, put lipstick on the sow that was what the edudeformer participants had to say in the libertarian Show Me Institute sponsored “Failure to Fixes” conference in Kansas City last May.
If I may remind all here that of the dozen+ participants there was a total of 7 1/2 years K-12 teaching experience, 4 for Greene and 3 1/2 for the KC superintendent (How one becomes a supe adminimal with that little teaching experience is for another discussion).
So it was interesting to sit and watch all of these non-experienced edudeformers, non-K-12 teachers pontificating on the “failures”, mainly of implementation of their K-12 deforms, and what THEY needed to do to “fix” those “failures”. Hubris and arrogance thy name is edudeformer.
Spoke with more than one of them-Hess, Greene, McShane and others. Sent them an electronic and hard copy of my book. Nada, nothing, zilch in response-not so much as an effin thank you. Can’t be having the rabble and riff-raff in the discussion now can we? Shows this Show Me Stater the intellectual lightheadedness of these deformers.
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Lesson #4 SHOULD have been: “Actually talk to, and especially listen to, actual teachers working in the field. Many of them. Especially we veterans, who know a scam when we see one.
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Forget charter schools but not test scores.
Here is where a big pot of money is going next.
“Forget crumbling schools” and “decades old teaching materials.”
That is the wisdom coming from Bob Hughes education leader for the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and Jim Shelton leader of the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative in education collaborators on a new project: Advanced Research and Development on three areas of interest.
Citing the mediocre NAEP tests scores in math and ELA, these hired hands of billionaires say they want to “meaningfully put more students on paths to success after high school. The truth is that we need to dramatically accelerate learning, and to do that, we need to understand it more deeply in order to design teaching environments and support systems that can deliver much better outcomes”
In addition to completely ignoring the crumbling schools and decades old instructional materials to say nothing of pre-judging teachers are too lethargic and muddled in getting students ready for “success” after high school, these two Quick Draw McGraw data-hungry fans of computers and artificial intelligence want to invest in proofs of the efficacy of their interests in 1. Mathematics, 2. Nonfiction writing, and
3. Executive function (the skill set concerning memory, self-control, attention, and flexible thinking). In the press release and invitation to researchers, each of these topics is presented with a brief rationale for inquiry along with the specific interests of these funders—interests that researchers should address.
The program called: Improving Writing: Developing the Requisite Habits, Skills and Strategies is introduced with some moaning about the low “proficiency” scores in writing on NAEP tests presented in a graph with breakouts for sub-groups. That graph is followed by a 2004 claim from a College Board Report that American companies spend about $3.1 billion annually for “writing remediation.” So, the education funders begin with a misunderstanding of “proficient” on NAEP tests, plus an outdated quote about the cost to businesses of remedial writing. That claim also comes from a dubious source of information, the College Board. Apparently a good reason to teach writing faster and better is to save money for business.
The brief rationale ends with a list of ten topics of interest for funding. Researchers are to address one or more of them. Here are a few:
—-“Support for writing planning – Efficient, technology-enhanced approaches to guide the planning of writing projects, for both teachers and students.”
—-“Intelligent tutoring systems for writing – Support processes (including teacher involvement) to develop narrative, descriptive, expository, and/or persuasive writing models that meet or exceed the impact of 1:1 human tutors.”
—-“Artificial Intelligence – Writing-focused AI that can provide analytics and feedback to teachers and students for context, syntax, sentiment or other analytics to improve writing skills.”
—-“’Learning Engineered’ professional development – Professional development and support for writing instruction that is grounded in evidence-based principles of human learning and motivation. “
—-“Writing mindset and motivation – Developing and measuring positive mindsets and motivation around writing capabilities.”
I conclude that tech-oriented proposals are of great interest and viewed as potentially more perfect, precise, intelligent and efficient (time and cost) than human teachers.
For “Improving Mathematical Understanding, Application, and Related Mindsets” the draft proposal begins in the same way, bemoaning NAEP scores but with the expectation that rapid improvement can be gained by computer-assisted approaches that would scale up practices of the “best 1:1 tutors.”
Ten topics of interest for research are outlined, all reeking with jargon about personalized, actionable, and scalable this and that.
—-“Performance-based measures and analytics – New and novel methods for measuring mastery, both procedural and conceptual, and providing immediate, actionable feedback for students and teachers.”
—-“Intelligent tutoring systems – Highly personalized, engaging math tutoring systems that take a whole-student approach and provide actionable information to students and teachers.”
—-“Artificial intelligence – Includes algorithms to improve personalization and/or real-time feedback to the student, virtual assistant technologies to improve engagement and interactivity with students, and support tools for teachers.”
—-“Technology-enhanced content – Innovative and engaging content to integrate in an intelligent tutoring system including, but not limited to, Augmented Reality, (AR), Virtual Reality (VR), games, comics, lecture, laboratories, etc., together with tools to connect teachers into these activities and student progress within them.”
—-“Neuroscience-based measures – Scalable technologies to provide measures of engagement, attention, and comprehension, delivering actionable information to students and teachers while safeguarding student privacy. “
I judge that the funders intend to pursue biometric monitoring of students with devices that give real-time, immediate, actionable feedback to students and teachers. See for example https://www.edsurge.com/news/2017-10-26-this-company-wants-to-gather-student-brainwave-data-to-measure-engagement
The final area of interest is Measuring and Improving Executive Function (EF). Because there are no NAEP or other test scores for EF, the funders include references for three studies is support of their desire to improve the development of the executive function (EF) in children, students, teachers and other adults. The funders cite some research to claim that skills for EF—working memory, cognitive flexibility, and inhibitory control—if strong in childhood, “predict higher socio-economic status, better physical health, and fewer drug-related problems and criminal convictions in adulthood.”
In my opinion, the research citations (three) allow the funders to sidestep the profound influence of poverty on outcomes, shifting attention instead to initiatives that are “scalable, precise, and effective ways to track progress or kinds of interventions to improve EF; ” and to “affordable cost to implement (solutions)- below current market pricing for existing solutions and attainable at a variety of per-student funding levels.” Should we be surprised that the billionaires want low cost and precise interventions at several tiers of per-student funding?
The specific areas of interest for proposals are presented as
—“Tracking progress of student executive function, PreK-12,” especially with unobtrustive, real-time measures of performance;
—“Student-facing interventions/programs/practices/tools to support EF development and use,” including “Technology-enhanced programs in or outside of school: Games, simulations, or other engaging content paired with teacher and family supports…”
—”Measures of educator EF and environmental EF supports,” including…”scalable, valid and reliable, repeatable, pragmatic measures of … (an) educator’s own EF within student learning contexts;” “Adult capacity to support EF growth in students, and technology-enhanced programs for these.”
—-“Critical field-building research topics, including, EF precursor skills”…such as “autonomy, supportive teaching and caregiving;” neuroscience connections such as “neural underpinnings of EF intervention effects, neural developmental progressions, compensatory pathways vs. EF improvement in the brain” and interactions between EF and other factors (e.g., stress, biology, motivation) toward academic and nonacademic outcomes/behaviors.” WHEW.
I conclude that this last area of interest is intended to increase the use of surveillance systems in classrooms with these devices targeted to capture student behavior and teacher behavior without them being aware of the data-gathering. There is clearly a desire to get data and issue judgments about teachers and adults as more or less competent that technologies in supporting improved EF. Surveillance systems are built into games and mobile technologies. These are also of interest as sources of data for improving EF—self control, delayed gratification, and cognitive flexibility. In addition, the funders have an interest in neurology— a medical understanding of EF and intervention effects, captured with biometric monitoring.
It is worth noting that all of these research interests call for a data-gathering on individual students (and teachers). All three initiatives ask researchers to “ identify ”possible privacy implications and strategies for ensuring the privacy and security of information.” Meanwhile Gates is among many others who are marketing tech-centric personalized learning and leading initiatives to get rid of FERPA constraints for any research intended to improve student outcomes.
Welcome to the brave new world of tech-mediated interventions and hope for “precise” solutions to accelerated learning of the kind these billionaires want to invest in.
Click to access FERPA%20Exceptions_HANDOUT_horizontal_0_0.pdf
http://k12education.gatesfoundation.org/researchanddevelopment/
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They NEVER explain the failure of reform. It’s “OOps, we’re sorry, we made a mistake, we are human. We will now pile on some more crap to right our wrongs and you will shut up and take what we are doing for you.” That’s ALL that I ever hear.
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From the first link: “Make classes optional after tenth grade and grant diplomas to anyone whom a local employer certifies shows up steadily and performs adequately. … Additional investments in early education seems to be a more promising long-term strategy than forcing far-academically-behind seventeen- and eighteen-year-olds to stay sitting in rows of desks.”
From the second link: “It’s hardly a “victory” to graduate students who are functionally illiterate, as has been happening in D.C. and elsewhere.” And this is despite that “reading and math have taken over the curriculum in many schools, to the exclusion of subjects like history and science.”
Totally agrees with how I see things. I would say, let them go after middle school if they want to, with a chainsaw or a hammer or a sickle in their young hands. Sadly, their early graduation will not improve teaching of foreign languages or physics in high school.
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By coincidence, this article by Arne Duncan and Margaret Spellings appeared yesterday in the Washington Post: https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/education/wp/2018/05/09/what-ails-education-an-absence-of-vision-a-failure-of-will-and-politics/?noredirect=on&utm_term=.828212993942
To put it as charitably as possible, they did not get the memo about the failure of reform….
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I love how Duncan and Spellings imply that the “stagnant progress” on NAEP of the past decade is due to a lack of national leadership — presumably over the year since Betsy DeVos took over!!
Are these two really this dumb?
Or do they just think the rest of us are?
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One last thought from a post I wrote in response this as one who lived in Philadelphia when the Rocky movies came out:
In the Rocky movies, Sly Stallone inevitably finds himself teetering on the brink of defeat after surprisingly setting his heavy-hitting opponent on his heels. When he wobbles back to the corner at the end of the 14th round, his “corner men” work to stem the bleeding in his facial cuts and encourage him to not give up. As he rises unsteadily on his feet, he looks at his faithful and beloved wife, Adrian, in the first row and is determined to finish the fight with a flourish.
In this metaphor, Arne Duncan and Margaret Spellings are the corner men for the “reform movement” that emerged from “A Nation at Risk” and the profiteers who support “reform” are Adrian… urging “reform” to stay on its feet and deliver the knockout punch.
Let’s hope Apollo Creed is the victor….
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Maybe Rahmbo will come in with machine guns blazing to save the day.
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