Peter Greene begins with a tweet by Jose Luis Vilson and then proceeds to address the question that is the title of this post.
High expectations are free. So are hopes and dreams. But are they enough?
He writes:
It was a tweet by Jose Luis Vilson that drew my attention to the quote:
“It doesn’t cost one penny more to have higher expectations for kids, to actually believe that kids–low-income kids, kids of color, English-language learners–can succeed,” he says.
The speaker is TNTP CEO Dan Weisberg, speaking about TNTP’s latest “report.” I’ve addressed that report elsewhere, but this particular idea is worth a closer look because it has been so persistent. Arne Duncan was a big believer in the magic of expectations, and Reformsters have often touted its powers– perhaps precisely because it is a “reform” they can have for free.
But are expectations free?
I suppose expectations themselves are free, just as wishes and dreams are free. But creating the conditions and providing the tools that allow those expectations to be met– that’s not so free. And without support, some expectations are just cruel.
I mean, I can expect someone who is confined to a wheelchair to live a full and active life– but somebody needs to provide that person with the actual wheelchair as well as appropriate physical therapy. Stephen Hawking’s super-cool chair, computer interface, and voice synthesizer were not free.
And when we talk about education, there’s a problem with free if by “expectation” we mean that a teacher should expect a child who is hungry, who lives with poverty every day, who lacks support for education at home, who lives with fear and instability in her world– well, if we’re just supposed to “expect” that child to handle school as if she lived a comfortable, stable, well-fed existence, that’s just wrong.
It is also wrong to “expect” that students who go to school where there are not enough books, not enough desks, not enough supplies, but plenty of mold and decaying corners of the building– to expect those students to approach school as if it were well-supported, well-funded, shiny and clean. Too often this business about the soft bigotry of low expectations is another way to say, “No, we’re not going to fully fund this school, nor are we going to address the systemic racism and poverty that surrounds it– just get in there an expect harder.”
There is, of course, a solid core of truth to this talk about expectations. Every decent teacher understands that expectations are important in a classroom, that if you approach students with an attitude of “Well, these are just the dumb kids, so let’s not expect much, try much, or do much” you are failing those students.
But. But but but.
Read the rest. You know how good Peter Greene is when he begins to eviscerate foolishness. How many TFA teachers have been told that high expectations are enough, then run into the harsh reality that students are hungry or need a winter coat or are worried about an ill parent?
Beware, he writes: Expectations are just a form of faith, and even the Bible tells us that faith without works is dead. Expectations matter, but expectations are only a foundation and no, you can’t build the house for free. “Teachers should just expect harder,” is just an excuse for politicians and policy wonks to avoid the issue of giving underserved, underfunded schools the resources they need, the kind of resources and funding that politicians and policy wonks would give them if those guys really, truly believed in the success of those students.
A corollary: Teachers should have high expectations, and teachers should have the resources and supports they need, and states should raise taxes to pay for the schools that students and teachers need. If they are not willing to pay for good education, they won’t have the schools and teachers that students deserve.

The assumption that high expectations are enough to get poor students to achieve is one of the key fallacies of “reform.” This is a naive assumption. Young people do not come to school as a “tabula rasa.”Poverty is a complex issue, and the stress and dysfunction that many poor children face leaves its mark on them. A recent study found that the brain imagining of poor students is somewhat different from similar brain images of middle class students, particularly in the areas of “memory, language processing, and decision-making and self-control.” As an ESL teacher that has worked with students that have witnessed extreme violence in their home countries, I know this to be true. The good news is that with time and the right type of supports these students can improve and develop into competent students. These students require patience, understanding and lots of resources in order to overcome their difficulties. http://behavioralscientist.org/can-neuroscientists-help-us-understand-fight-effects-childhood-poverty/
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It’s just so awful that the US Department of Education sounds exactly like the Walton Foundation, which sounds exactly like the Gates Foundation, which sounds exactly like XQ…
It isn’t a mystery why this is, either. They are the exact same people. They go from brief stints in government to the ed reform foundations and then back to government again- some of them take a detour thru academia and stay there.
Sometimes on ed reform their sites they’ll have “debates” between two ed reformers. There’s no debate at all. They just amplify and validate each others opinions. Oh, sure, sometimes there’s tiny differences, usually having to do with how quickly schools should be privatized and whether or not they need consent of the locals before plowing under their existing public schools, but there’s no dissent at all.
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Time to reread Mike Rose”s Lives Across the Boundary. It’s the best book I now on class and school and the power of relationships, of joining, connecting across boundaries.
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There is an old adage that says, “You can lead a horse to water but you can’t make it drink”
We can offer children a high quality education but we can’t force them to learn and no matter how many high-stakes rank and punish tests we force these children to take and how many teachers are fired and public schools closed, that will not force children to learn.
A report out of Stanford in 2013 makes this perfectly clear:
https://news.stanford.edu/news/2013/january/test-scores-ranking-011513.html
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The achievement gap is a feature of standardized tests. It can never close. By design. There will always be a top half and a bottom half.
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True. Even if all children were avid readers reading on grade level, these flawed tests would still rank them as a failure or a success.
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and, with the nation’s growing focus on testing=identity, an endlessly invaded and carefully selected out bottom 20%
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” “Teachers should just expect harder,” is just an excuse for politicians and policy wonks to avoid the issue of giving underserved, underfunded schools the resources they need, the kind of resources and funding that politicians and policy wonks would give them if those guys really, truly believed in the success of those students.”
Amen! Thank you Peter Greene.
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This tiresome narrative is oft repeated by the reform crowd…as if your local public school teacher is simply guilty of low expectations. The truth is that it is hard work to get low performers to improve. – and working methodically from the bottom up is more effective than setting out an expectation that is at present too hard to reach. ZPD works. zone of proximal development.
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