Laura Chapman reviewed the Gates-Zuckerberg alliance and their thoughts about next steps for reformers:
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 So, the education funders begin with a misunderstanding of “proficient” on NAEP tests, plus an outdated quote about the cost to businesses of remedial writing.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/

I’m so sad to read the constant attacks on Gates and Zuckerberg. It seems educators on this site believe only “they” have the right answers and the secret sauce. Sadly, increased wages, no testing, more money and archaic tenor simply doesn’t work well. Why can’t a few of you believe perhaps, just perhaps, there might be a better way? Can’t you open your minds a bit instead of the constant name calling of a few wealthy people who are sincerely trying to improve the situation.
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Yes, teachers with classroom experience and experts who study education such as Dr Ravitch DO have the right answers, not billionaires.
There is no indication that wealthy people are sincerely trying to improve education.
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The Captain of the Titanic had more experience than any other Captain in the entire White Star Line. The Titanic is sitting on the bottom of the Atlantic.
It is time to bring in some new thinking, and new ideas, and processes, from outside the academic world.
“We live in a world in which the only constant is change” – Heraclitus, Greek philosopher.
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Yes, we definitely want our airplanes to be piloted by inexperienced pilots.
Why not get Mark Zuckerberg to take over your next flight as the captain? He has fresh ideas and no experience.
And we want surgeons who are actually have no medical experience. Zuckerberg could do that too.
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Hubris played a lead role in the Titanic’s fate.
I wonder if the ancient Greeks were trying to tell us something.
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“Greek Wisdom”
The only thing constant is Gates
Determining all of our fates
With Hubris and glee
The billionaires pee
On all of the schools in our states
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Two thumbs up! I have spent many years working for the US government, and many (not all) people feel that government is the answer to all of our problems.
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If you want smaller government, I can suggest one step: quit your job working for the government.
Don’t you see the irony of complaining about the gubmint when your whole existence depends on it?
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I never said I want smaller government. I do not work for the government. I am a private contractor, on federal projects. I can provide engineering services, at a much lower cost, than a tenured civil service employee. I am proud of the work that I have done, and the work that I am now doing. I served for ten(10) years in Iraq/Afghanistan in the Global War on Terror.
“If all men were angels, there would be no need for government” – James Madison.
There are many bad people and bad governments in this world. Therefore we must have a government to provide for the common defense. (See the preamble to the constitution).
My whole existence does not depend on the government. I am a telecommunications engineer, and I could make at least as much as I do now, in the private sector.
Our society needs government. But we need a smart, and modern government, that can perform functions that we cannot perform for ourselves. We need an FBI and a Centers for Disease Control.
Our federal government is not above criticism. There are many tasks performed by government, that could be performed much more economically and properly by private firms. Canada has privatized their air-traffic control system, and it works extremely well. You never hear of air crashes in Canada, they have a lower accident rate (per mile flown) than the USA.
Governments foul up! The federal government has a string of terrible mistakes. Consider the illegal detention of American citizens of Japanese descent, during WW2. The extermination of the Native Americans. The disaster of prohibition. The list goes on and on.
We must keep vigilant and keep our government controlled.
“Government is like fire. A dangerous servant, and a terrible master” – George Washington.
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Oh for pity’s sake. Have you not noticed that Gates and Zuckerberg have the reverse Midas touch? Every single thing they touch turns to _____ (something Diane won’t let me print on this blog).
Is that okay with you? Even if we assume good intentions (for which there is scant evidence, incidentally), it’s not okay to experiment with children’s education this way. If they truly had good intentions and wanted to do good, they would start small with willing pilot groups and they would work with the people who do education every day of their lives. They don’t do that. What does that tell you?
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If Gates and Zuckerberg were simply wealthy people ‘sincerely trying to improve’ education, we’d see grants and fellowships eliciting new ideas from people in that field of study. They are not. They sell digital products, and every single one of their ideas promotes the development, marketing and sales of digital products.
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Since educators are NEVER, YES NEVER, invited to the table to be a part of the problems solving how can we accept that there is a better way.
Sure there might be a better way and an educator is most likely the one with the “better way”.
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Tbrown,
The problem is that we HAVE tried Gates’ new idea: it’s called constant testing and Common Core. And it’s failed. Today I heard a veteran colleague declare that “school sucks” these days. I think most of our staff and students feel the same way. The new style of school is mutant education. It’s dry, tedious tasks all day every day. Little juicy content. Little joy. It’s the bane of our, and our students’, existence. If only we could do what we know to be good teaching! Traditional education is far better; too bad we’re not allowed to do it.
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Tbrown says “I’m so sad to read the constant attacks on Gates and Zuckerberg”
Gates never got permission from parents, teachers or community representatives to experiment on millions of children and schools.
Teachers and parents never asked for his crackpot ideas (Common Core, standardized testing on steroids and VAM), all of which have been disastrous, by the way.
Poor Bill Gates. Being “attacked” for his very own actions. What an unfair thing to do. Whaahhh. Whaahh. Cry me a river.
It’s very “interesting” that people who support “accountability” for schools, students and teachers simply give people like Gates a pass.
As someone who appears to be defending Gates, maybe “tbrown” can explain why that is. What is the “logic” there? It must be the same “logic” that Gates (a college droput) relies on.
PS in case it is not obvious, I don’t give a rat’s pitooti about Bill Gates. He made his bed and now he has to lie in it.
His legacy is sealed:
“Legacies”
The legacy of Carnegie
Is libraries inspiring
But legacy of Gates, we see
Is testing, VAMs and firing
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Short version: people who became obscenely wealthy via computer software want to create more software and sell it to every child in the country.
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Right on.
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Don’t forget that they also want to monetize the kids’ data they get from the software they sell…
It’s a perpetual motion machine of ignorance – neither of these characters have taught day in their lives – arrogance, greed and power lust.
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Debbie
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These perverse tormentors of students and teachers apparently will not give up deranging public education, will not embrace obligatory humility their many failures require, until either their vast money stream expires or until teachers, students and parents walk out en masse against them and their tech-obsessed re-tooling of that great human hands-on face-to-face experience called teaching and learning. As I understand it, executive function matures late and unevenly among the young, emerging finally in the early 20s for most, earlier for some, later for others. This is why teenagers are especially prone to high-risk behaviors b/c they inadequately judge consequences of adventures and tend to make choices from incomplete cognition. Teachers especially have the power to finally put Gates, Zuck, and their ilk in their place if they recognized and embraced the power already in their hands, walked out until the house of education is free of these ugly, super-rich invaders, too rich to pay for their mistakes, too rich to admit error, too rich for the smart people around them to tell them how wrong they are and the nation will be much happier if only they would F…. Off.
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What GALLS me is that these same people who are the DESTrOYERS of all that is “good,” now have the GALL and the $$$$$$ to market their tawdry solutions, which they are “banking on” making them even more $$$$$$$$. SICK.
You are RIGHT, Ira. I also see OBSESSIVE COMPULSIVE BEHAVIOR re: that SCREEN, not to mention more VIOLENCE and IRRITABILITY and patience is becoming a thing of the past. I worry for this country and the world. And I worry that many are unconsciously modeling that dump. Scary stuff.
Honestly, public school teachers are one of our hopes.
I agree with Ira: “Teachers especially have the power to finally put Gates, Zuck, and their ilk in their place if they recognized and embraced the power already in their hands, walked out until the house of education is free of these ugly, super-rich invaders, too rich to pay for their mistakes, too rich to admit error, too rich for the smart people around them to tell them how wrong they are and the nation will be much happier if only they would F…. Off.” AMEN.
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Sadly, all these “reforms” assume that the major (or only) role of the school is to prepare young people for a job. But schools must also prepare young people for citizenship, socialization (getting along with others, etc.), and life appreciation, as in the arts. The reformers are now ignoring the centuries of wisdom–and modern research–regarding how people learn, i.e., the role of practice, motivations (positive works better than negative) group theory and group learning, etc. Educators and parents must rise up against these oligarchs, or we will simply become more of their machinery.
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That’s the trouble with #45 and his cabinet. Most of them attended private school and never learned to accept different types of people. They never learned how to get along with others. They are used to being the center of the universe.
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AMEN! That is WHY PUBLIC SCHOOLS & PUBLIC SCHOOL TEACHER MATTER. Anyone who disagrees is a FOOL.
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For the fundamental, the most basic purpose of public education one must look to the states’ constitutions wherein the authorization for public education is found. To come up with a common purpose I examined all 50 state constitutions and here is what I came up with-a succinct summary and combination of the rationales given:
“The purpose of public education is to promote the welfare of the individual so that each person may savor the right to life, liberty, the pursuit of happiness, and the fruits of their own industry.”
(from pg 14, Ch. 1 “The Purpose of Public Education” in my book “Infidelity to Truth: Educational Malpractices in American Public Education”)
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Duane,
There you go again, going back to first principles.
Have you ever considered being a scientist as a retirement career?
You have certainly got what it takes — quite unlike all the Deformer types who draw their conclusions at the very start based on unsupported (usually bogus) assumptions and never EVER ask fundamental questions like “what is the purpose of education?”
Of course, that’s not surprising because their answer is “$$$$” and they don’t want anyone to know tgat., Even though their actions make that blatantly obvious.
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I’m sure that the Koch brothers and all the other cruel, serial lying, manipulating, misleading autocratic members of ALEC and the GOP are well aware that the U.S. Constitution does not guarantee “the right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.”
Those words come from a well-known phrase in the United States Declaration of Independence that isn’t the law of the land.
Too bad those words were not added to the U.S. Constitution.
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Lloyd, isnt Duane talking about state constitutions? — which actually would be legally binding, though not as a single law of the land.
But when it comes right down to it I don’t think people like the Koch’s even care one whit about the laws (states or national)
When you have the money they do, you can pretty much have any law ignored.
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Yes, I am referencing state constitutions as that is where the authorization for public education is located. It’s not a federal function. Until other federal civil rights are violated.
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Education was not originally in the US Constitution, true. But some functions of education become part of the Federal Government’s concerns once the Department of Education was established, legislatively. Besides that, for those states carved out of the Northwest Ordinance, there is a mandate for encouraging education in that founding document, as well. We had/have a marvelously complex system today, wherein all levels of government, down to the local school boards, have some responsibility for seeing to an educational system for all children. All this complexity adds to our difficulties, but is also a strength. Also having a role, of course, are parents and the teachers. In my earlier comment I pointed out that teachers have the professional preparation to understand how young people learn and how to help them. And students certainly need to learn much more than just how to find and do a job.
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I wonder how many states copied the preamble from the Declaration of Independence into their constitutions …
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Duane
I like your approach because it forces people to go back to the origins and examine the most basic assumptions.
It prevents one from going down the rabbit hole and getting into absurd debates that really have nothing to do with the actual issues.
If standardized testing does not “measure” or even properly define learning”, there is no point in arguing about the details of this or that test.
If education is actually intended by states to “promote the welfare of the individual so that each person may savor the right to life, liberty, the pursuit of happiness, and the fruits of their own industry, there is no point in debating about the details of any use of education that does not do that. If it does not it should simply be rejected, period.
This is similar to the approach scientists take in the natural sciences.
If something goes against basic physical principles (energy conservation, for example) there is no point in debating whether this or that detail is correct because it can’t be.
This approach is very powerful because it cuts out the BS.
If only more people would take it.
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Thanks SDP for the kind words. I hadn’t really thought about “my” way of thinking in those terms other than I’ve “labeled” myself as a free thinking skeptical rationo-logical thinker. Which when I think about that description is what scientific thinking is all about, isn’t it!
And you are correct to surmise that going against certain fundamental truths are, as I am wont to say “mental masturbation” and not even worth considering.
And I find you and a few others that have the same “let’s get to the basics” of the matter and go from there. Without the true “starting point” we are left with a lot of nothing, literally nothing.
Thanks, especially for your ability to use that type of thinking and so humorously get the points across. I’ve seen no equal anywhere. Really, I hope you consider putting all your poems into a book. Again thanks for commentary that is unsurpassed.
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Parents should go ballistic over this “Brave New World” form of serveillance. Like Facebook the technocrats will ignore privacy issues until they get caught. Parents that value their childrens’ privacy should refuse to allow their children to be used a guinea pigs for Gates and Zuckerberg. Why should public schools serve up their students to make more money for billionaires when there is no legitimate educational reason to do so?
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and imagine the “chill” factor for teachers knowing that their every idea, move, action and reaction is being watched
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Exactly. Happening BIG TIME in China.
https://www.engadget.com/2018/02/22/china-xinjiang-surveillance-tech-spread/
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Some parents know this awfulness from this “Awful Surveillance World,” BUT and this is a huge BUT … many don’t. Many don’t even protect themselves from online and camera surveillance. It’s scary. When I think of the personal information gathered online and everywhere, it makes me shudder. How do we protect ourselves?
Look at what China is doing. Holy cow. Diane posted about this one.
I don’t mean to be an alarmist, however this should SCARE everyone:
https://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2018/02/china-surveillance/552203/
https://www.rfa.org/english/news/china/surveillance-03302018111415.html
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The Gates/Zuckerberg view of how education should work is perverse and completely ignores human nature – we need contact with others for a plethora of reasons.
Their approach is cold and emotionless. It appears to me that their goal is to create a nation of unthinking robots ready to serve their own selfish needs. If you read between the lines, their main goals are economic, not humanistic. They would be the winners (deservedly so in their “superior” minds) and the rest of us losers serving at their discretion.
Calculating. Self-serving. Cold-blooded.
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“cold and emotionless”
They should partner up with Eva Moskowitz and Success Academy Charter Schools. A partnership for the ages.
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Don’t forget Michelle Rhee and her broomstick — and flying monkeys.
“I’ll get you, my kiddies — and your little dog too!”
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You are correct.
Shall we throw some water on them? Maybe send them down a water slide.
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We could call it the Gates Bucket challenge.
You get to throw a bucket of water on one or more of Gates, Moskowitch and Rhee.
All proceeds go to fund public schools in needy districts (whatever they choose to spend the money on)
Just think of the tens of millions of dollars that teachers alone would donate to soak those three clowns.. And if you inlcuded Arne Dunkin, you could probably easily double if not triple the donations.
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I love it. We could create a nice long list to make it even more fun. Scott Walker, kasixh
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Don’t forget the Clayton Christensen Institute for Disruptive Innovation, recently proposing that schools or proxies for schools be reimbursed on the basis of the performance of students, meaning competencies competed, badges awarded.
A student who scored with a 30% competency rating would bring in less money to the school or proxy for school than a student with a 100% competency score.
That is supposed to be a perfect solution for what the disrupters call “patient capital.” Just withdraw support from the neediest kids and let the money follow the best students. This perverse idea is supposed to be the incentive that makes every school or proxy for school better and every kid a winner because competences are not designed to have any bearing on ages or grades or seat time or whether there is even a school.
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That is some supurb absurd thinking. So basically the poor schools that are suffering now will continue and it will get worse. Nice
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The total dystopian world of tech-mediated interventions and hope for “precise” solutions to accelerated learning of the kind these billionaires want to invest in is total BS created by autocratic idiots that are totally emersed in being impressed by themselves that they wouldn’t know reality if it smacked them in the face with a ton of pig poop.
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Amen!
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Good writing requires content. This common core testing regime has virtually eliminated the study of content. Young children have very little concept of what it means to write and they have very little knowledge from which to draw. Yet they are asking for them to write informational, narrative and opinion texts. Most are still working on the basics of understanding letters, phonics, words and sentences. They are not ready for this. Most have a difficult time composing one coherent sentence on their own, let alone a paragraph. Most of our writing is done whole group. Here’s a great example. Topic. What is your favorite animal? Student answer- cats. (One word sentence) Me ” good, can you tell me why?” Student “they are cute and I love them.” Me trying to get more information, “what makes them cute? Why do you love them.” Student “I don’t know.” This was after brainstorming ideas about pets. At least I got two sentences. You would need a doctorate in hyrogliophics to decipher some of these. They leave out spaces, vowels and punctuation. Letter formation is poor. I am not against working on writing but make is developmentally appropriate.
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I know it is a brave, new, tech world but the mere thought that these billionaires basically would prefer increased computer time and less human interaction makes me sick to my stomach and glad I will retire soon.
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