Ethan Siegel, a senior contributor to Forbes, understood what was happening to public education well before the wave of teacher strikes in the spring of 2018. America was literally destroying public education with ill-advised policies and was not reacting to the failure of these policies with common sense. (Please ignore the use of the word “industries” in his article, as he is addressing it to business people.)
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..
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.
Imagine, for a moment, that this weren’t education, but any other job. Imagine how you’d feel if you found yourself employed in such a role…
You have, on any given day, a slew of unique problems to tackle. These include how to reach, motivate, and excite the people whose education and performance you’re responsible for. It includes imparting them with skills that will enable them to succeed in the world, which will be vastly different from state-to-state, county-to-county, and even classroom-to-classroom. Gifted students, average students, special needs students, and students with severe disabilities are all often found in the same class, requiring a deft touch to keep everyone motivated and engaged. Moreover, students often come to class with problems that place them at a competitive disadvantage, such as food insecurity, unaddressed physical, dental, and mental health issues, or home life responsibilities that severely curtail their ability to invest in academics.
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.
In public education, if teachers do that, they are penalized to an extraordinary extent. Passion is disincentivized, as whatever aspects you’re passionate about take a back seat to what will appear on the standardized test. Expert knowledge is thrown to the wayside, as curiosity and engagement are seen as distractions. A vision for what successful students look like is narrowed down to one metric alone: test performance. And a teacher’s evaluation of what skills are important to develop is treated as less than nothing, as anything that fails to raise a student’s test score is something that everyone — the teacher, the school, and the student — are all penalized for.
If this were common practice in any other industry, we’d be outraged. How dare you presume to micromanage the experts, the very people you hired to do a difficult job full of unique challenges to the best of their abilities! Yet in education, we have this unrealistic dream that a scripted, one-sized-fits-all strategy will somehow lead to success for all. That we can somehow, through just the right set of instructions, transform a mediocre teacher into a great one.
This hasn’t worked in any walk of life, and it doesn’t work in education. If we were serious about improving the quality of public education in this country (or any country), we wouldn’t focus on a one-size-fits-all model, whether at the federal or state level. We would fully fund schools everywhere, regardless of test scores, economic concerns, or teacher quality. We would make a concerted effort to pay desirable wages to extremely qualified, expert-knowledge-level educators, and give them the support resources they need to succeed. And we’d evaluate them across a variety of objective and subjective metrics, with any standardized testing components making up only a small part of an evaluation.
I venture a guess: Mr. Siegel is either the son of a teacher, is married to a teacher, or spent some time as a teacher. Glad he is writing for Forbes.
One less person “breaking public education ” is Paul Allen, assuming reports about his death this month are correct. He is one of those listed in Tultican’s, “Layman’s Guide to the ‘destroy the public education movement’ “. He and Bill Gates spent $1/2 million to defeat the reelection of Washington state judges who had made decisions favorable to public schools.
Allen’s inability to further destroy the most unifying foundation for the nation, is welcome. He went to the expensive, highly selective Lakeside with Gates so he lacked any knowledge about the role of public schools in the communities of the 99%. The Rand Corp. found Gates $1 bil. was a failure for students but, he won’t stop as long as the specter of digital schools-in-a-box occupy him and his Impatient Opportunists.
BTW, Allen was part of the Gates “giving” pledge which results in loss of democracy and robs the public of common goods like public education.
Allen was the real technical AND marketing brain behind Microsoft. He not only developed the version of BASIC that put MS on the map as a mildly successful company, but pretty much singlehandely facilitated the deal with IBM (identifying the OS to buy, repackage and sell to IBM) that lauched Microsoft on their flight to the stratusphere.
Gates was orginially not even interested in getting into the OS business but Gates has since built up a mythology about himself.
He even tried to effectively cut Allen out of Microsoft entirely at one point, soon after Allen had been diagnosed with cancer.
I think of the two, Allen is far less egregious. Gates is just a pompous a**.
https://forwardthinking.pcmag.com/software/286148-the-rise-of-dos-how-microsoft-got-the-ibm-pc-os-contract
May we start hearing much, much more about how to vote where judges are concerned. There is so little published about how past judgements have affected education.
This year, I recommend a straight party line vote: Democratic.
I wonder if the future will start putting a D or an R next to our judges…
This year the Republican candidate for senate here in Tennessee is running adds that claim that Arab terrorists are marching in the caravan for the border of Texas. She, not her opponent, will save you as she cooperates with Trump. An iconic photo of an ISIS masked fighter appears in her video along with pictures of her opponent.
I am with Diane on this one. Republicans have all gone fascist.
Roy,
That’s crazy
*America was literally destroying public education with ill-advised policies and was not reacting to the failure of these policies *
I think one can make a pretty convincing argument that the policies not only did not fail, but were successful beyond the wildest dreams of those pushing them (at least from the standpoint of the real goals of those people.
Take Common Core, for example.
While it might seem from the fact that most states who originally signed on dropped out, if one looks at the reality, it is still in place in most of those districts.
The name was changed to protect the guilty and now that the name has changed, the opposition to the policies that still persistence has all but disappeared.
Mission accomplished.
Bill Gates got a very good return on his investment and set the stage for the final frontier: Pearsonalized Learning(TM)
right. At last count, the Common Core/College & Career Standards were still alive in thirty-five states. Since the initial adoptions in 2008-2009, eleven states have revised or re-branded the original standards. Only ten states were still using those daunting and flawed online Common Core tests from the two federally funded consortiums: Partnership for Assessment of Readiness for College and Careers (PARCC) and Smarter Balanced Assessment Consortium (SBAC). States have found alternative tests “aligned” with the Common Core.
The Common Core/College Career standards were also designed to facilitate computer-delivered instruction and adaptive computer testing (in the absence research supporting those formats). These Gates-funded standards are now being recoded for computer-friendly delivery along with tests, types of test items and more. This project is known as the Common Education Data Standard project (CEDS) operated in parallel with the IMS Global Consortium. The B&M Gates Foundation a “platimum level sponsor” of IMS, along with eLumen a full spectrum instructional management system. The IMS Global Consortium is marketing and certifying one-click “plug and play” computer friendly products (interoperable). IMS satands for “Instructional Management Systems.” At least the label is more accurate than “personalized.”
https://ceds.ed.gov/elements.aspx
K-12 DIGITAL LEARNING REVOLUTION PROGRAM: https://www.imsglobal.org/background.html
Pearsonalized Learning, Always Earning…
That’s very good! Did you write that one? It will become a part of my talking points.
Not mine; I have seen protest signs against testing where the L in Pearson Always Learning is marked out 🙂
Many of America’s teachers are demoralized from our current policies and a campaign of teacher bashing for at least the last ten years. During this same period teachers have faced dwindling budgets, larger class sizes, fewer resources and more poor students. Test and punish has made a bad situation worse. The micromanaging and narrowed curricula have caused many teachers to leave, and the poor working conditions and low pay is discouraging young people from entering this challenging career. So called reform has been a total failure, but complicit politicians continue to serve the billionaires and corporations that seek to privatize our public schools.
This is precisely what the deformers wanted.
It perfectly fits their goal of selling hardware and software for Pearsonalized Learning to schools, which not only allows them to produce a single version of the software (the primary goal of the Common Core standards movement), but it also facilitates data collection to the nth degree on every single student. It also produces human bots who don’t ask questions or challenge their working conditions.
For this “final frontier” teachers, parents and the medical community need to unite to work against the tech takeover of education. Anyone that cares about young people cannot believe that sitting in front of a screen all day is a meaningful way to learn all subjects. Nobody knows what the long term impact is on developing brains and eyes. We are also finding that more screen time is related to depression in adolescents. Jumping on this bandwagon could have disastrous consequences.
A minor correction RT:
“Anyone that cares about young people cannot believe that sitting in front of a screen all day is a meaningful way to learn ANY subject.
The deformers understand better than anyone that teachers and parents are pretty much the only ones standing in their way.
That’s why they had to silence teachers with VAM and silence parents with standardized tests that are required of their children to progress from one grade to the next and ultiimately to graduate.
No one should ever make the mistake of assuming that the deformers behind this well thought out and orchestrated plot (dare I say conspiracy?) were well intentioned.
People should have taken Bill Gates at his word in 2009 when he said the goal of Common Core was to create markets out of schools.
That’s it in a nutshell. No need to look at anything else he or anyone else has said since.
Oh, the teacher bashing has gone on FAR longer than 10 years, at least in Utah, where teachers have been denigrated about as far back as I can remember (and possibly before that): nearly 40 years.
Teachers at my school, because of all of the mandates and the rising class sizes (which weren’t small to begin with) are starting to break down mentally and physically.
Any state that has continued to put a dishonest hack like Orrin Hatch in the Senate term after term has deep seated issues.
His ultrapartisan performance in the Kavanaugh nomination hearing was true to form. I have little doubt that if Kavanaugh had actually murdered someone on the front steps of the Capitol with witnesses all around, Hatch would have denied it and still voted for him.
The only good thing about Hatch is that he was never nominated to the Supreme Court, something he is very bitter about.
One other good thing about Hatch. He is retiring.
“In public education, if teachers do that, they are penalized to an extraordinary extent. Passion is disincentivized, as whatever aspects you’re passionate about take a back seat to what will appear on the standardized test”
The more I read this the more it sounded like my first ever blog post in 2012.
https://davidrtayloreducation.wordpress.com/2012/05/10/teachers-the-best-trained-fleas-in-the-state-of-texas/
“As educators we are at a crossroads, we must decide are we going to continue to be trained fleas or are we going to jump out of the jar.”
In the interim it appears that the fleas have cross bred enough so that they can’t even jump anymore.
Thanks for sharing that!
My pleasure
Finally, some sanity on this subject from a leading business publication. The top-down standards-and-testing regime dramatically reduces curricular and pedagogical innovation by prescribing what is to be taught. Make no mistake about it, curriculum developers are taking Coleman’s puerile “standards” as a curriculum outline. This has had a completely CHILLING EFFECT on innovation in US education. Here, a discussion of this in more detail:
https://bobshepherdonline.wordpress.com/2014/04/10/on-developing-curricula-in-the-age-of-the-thought-police/
Yes, and as I am sure you are well aware, Bob, fashioning a curriculum from Common Core was the orginal intention of it’s creators.
identifying common standards is not enough. We’ll know we’ve succeeded when the curriculum and the tests are aligned to these standards.
(The end goal)
– to create just these kinds of tests—next-generation assessments aligned to the common core. When the tests are aligned to the common standards, the curriculum will line up as well—and that will unleash powerful market forces…
// End of Gates quote
Ie, make markets out of schools.
Gates claimed it was in the service of better teaching, but of course, his idea of serving is the same one that the aliens had in the Twilight Zone episode To Serve Man
And as you probably also know, David Coleman was actually not only aware but counting on the fact that the tests would be aligned with the standards and that teachers would teach to the test.
As I said above, people should have listened to folks like Coleman Gates a t the very start because they laid out their game plan at day one.
Well, of course, Coleman always planned to align the SAT to the Common Core.
Representatives of the College Board and ACT were on the committee that wrote the CCSS.
The plan was to align the standards, tests, teacher preparation, teacher tests, curriculum materials, and everything else. He was supposed to be the Emperor and the Czar of American education.
Effectively, he WAS the Emperor and Education Czar and still is.
He has impacted policy over the past ten years more than any other single individual with the possible exception of Bill Gates. Then again, it is hard to separate the two (3 if you include Arne Duncan) given the degree to which they worked together to get CC into the schools
And his is still impacting policy in a profound way through the SAT — and profitting handsomely from it.
Loved that show. Did you know, SomeDAM, that Serling produced prose versions of all these shows? I have a collection. They are wonderful.
Bob, I agree.
Twilight Zone is classic.
There is nothing comparable today in the way of imaginativeness and philosophical depth.
Unlike the idiotic Hollywood directors and writers today who keep recycling the same mindless, hackneyed, commercial crap, assured to put people into a vegetative state, Rod Selling was a true genius who made people think with his productions.
“To Serve Man”
When man is served
On silver plate
A fine hors d’oeuvre
Is human fate
Philanthropy”
They “Love the human kind” —
Of flesh, served on a dish.
The cannibals, you’ll find
Are real philanthropists
“Pale Blue Dot”
A pale blue dot
In blackest void
They want the lot
The greedy boys
“Seneca Versified” (hat tip to KrazyTA, who really knows his or her Greeks)
The nature of greed
Is “more than we need”
And Nature as feed
Is little indeed
“All lives have equal worth” (Gates Foundation motto)
Every life has equal worth
To billionaires like me:
Consumers all, to death from birth
And workers, for low fee.
“Trolling for Dollars”
The trolls are waiting under bridge
To pounce upon the passing kids
Disguised as broads and billy goats
With candy and with diet kochs
From A Damthology of Deform, volumes 1and 2
http://damthology.blogspot.com/
PS I quit compiling my poems after 2 volumes because it was too much DAM work to try to impose coherent order on something as inherently chaotic as Discussed. But I gave it my best shot.
Something as inherently chaotic as Deform, NOT Discussed.
Not incidentally, the same techy types who have imposed their deforms on schools are also responsible for the idiotic self correct that changes so much of what you write in a comment box to incoherent gibberish.
The so called artificial intelligence is a reflection of the people who produced it. I’d sooner trust a monkey at the zoo to edit my posts than a software engineer (and I say that as someone who worked with lots of software engineers for years)
I could have just lumped a jumbled collection of my poems under the heading Disruption (purposeful chaos) the primary means used by Deformers to accomplish their privatization goal — but that would not really have helped people understand what they are doing.
So in the first volume of A Damthology of Deform, I tried to put the poems into meaningful categories.
I abandoned that attempt in the second volume, because, as I said, it’s too much DAM work.
I have a lot of respect for someone like Diane Ravitch who spends so much time trying to make this understandable to people who don’t have the time to look into all the details. These Deformers are very clever in their planned chaos.
Especially Bill Gates, who must stay up late every night coming up with new schemes to throw schools into chaos and at the same time set them up as markets for tech companies like his.
This one is an attempt to encapsulate the process
“Reform School”
Their product is disruption
Their pitch is “failing schools”
With lots of rank corruption
And loads of testing tools
Their goal is liquidation
And everything must go
The essence of the Nation
The public schools we know
Great to hear from the SomeDAMgemtrove!
Thanks, but SomeDAM Goofy Poems might be more apt.
You’re on a roll, SomeDAM Poet. I love your poems … they are spot on.
Bill Gates is a ______, even though he pretends he isn’t.
Wow. I had to read it twice in a row to make sure I wasn’t hallucinating. There are so many well written nuggets to refer to over and over again. For Seinfeld fans out there, “This is gold, Jerry. Gold!”
Here is the link OEN, where I posted this blog,, and with it my comments which tell the real story of the PLOY to end the schools by removing the onions who know what LEARNING LOOKS LIKE in that room with those kids.https://www.opednews.com/Quicklink/Forbes–How-America-Is-Br-in-Best_Web_OpEds-Education-Curriculum_Education-K-12_Educational-Crisis_Learning-181030-14.html#comment715421
I hope that IF YOU ARE READING THIS, and you know who I am, that you actually GO THERE, and read my comments and click on the links that tell the tale of how the destruction of the only road to income equality was so easily accomplished.
I WAS TEACHER! CELEBRATED AND FAMOUS as one of the top educators in the State of NY — When they took out, all of the professionals like me..it was a forgone conclusion that th schools would go down fast!
I have read, for 2 decades all the ‘talk’ about tests, and standards and the reasons the Institution of Public Education was demolished… but in my links at the New site where I am a dedicated writer, IS the story.
I will try to copy the commentary . see my next comment.
My comment at OEN https://www.opednews.com/Quicklink/Forbes–How-America-Is-Br-in-Best_Web_OpEds-Education-Curriculum_Education-K-12_Educational-Crisis_Learning-181030-14.html#comment715421
But then, ending the voice of the professional in the practice was the PLOY in the plot to privatize the schools as the power of MONEY bought access
I have been writing about the removal of the authority of the classroom teacher-practitioner, since the war on teachers began, in the nineties, and I watched millions of experienced, dedicated genuine professional teachers disappear!
The public was bamboozled http://www.opednews.com/articles/BAMBOOZLE-THEM-where-tea-by-Susan-Lee-Schwartz-110524-511.html
as The Educational Industrial Complex did its thing! (EIC) https://greatschoolwars.files.wordpress.com/2015/10/eic-oct_11.pdf
I was the NY State Educator of Excellence in 1998.
http://www.opednews.com/author/author40790.html
My practice was selected as the NYC cohort for the Pew research on the Principle of Learning (Resnick, at Harvard thesis). https://www.newvisions.org/page/-/Prelaunch%20files/PDFs/NV%20Publications/challengestandards.pdf
But, the assault on teachers had begun!, when the Gates curriculum was about to replace those tried and true methods and materials that my 4 decade practice as a teacher-practitioner had proven effective.
I had to be sent packing, and I was —by this method, http://www.perdaily.com/2011/01/lausd-et-al-a-national-scandal-of-enormous-proportions-by-susan-lee-schwartz-part-1.html which the unions allowed. It took out the top experienced practitioners in NYC, the largest system in the 15,880 across the US. You read that right… almost sixteen thousand separate school systems, divided in 50 states, ready for the privatization movement to take out the schools’ with the NCLB nonsense about testing for failure.
NYC was the largest and it did this https://gemnyc.org/2012/05/20/the-inconvenient-truth-behind-waiting-for-superman-now-online/
to our great public school system with authentic sent out of the school, it was easy to mandate methods that caused catastrophic failure. It is ALL about money, and the metaphor for the process around the nation. http://www.perdaily.com/2014/06/lausds-treacherous-road-from-reed-to-vergara–its-never-been-about-students-just-money.html
Then they went after they 2nd largest LAUSD, and the teachers were decimated, as the unions looked the other way, http://www.perdaily.com/2014/07/former-ctc-attorney-kathleen-carroll-lays-out-unholy-alliance-between-union-and-public-education-pri.html and the media, owned completely by the EIC, sold the lie! http://www.perdaily.com/2014/03/have-reporters-become-poli-ticks–the-media-parasites-of-the-body-politic.html
Go to Perdaily.com and read the brilliant chronicle of the destruction of LA’s schools…leading up to this moment when the charter movement is ready to take over!
We all know what happened to health care when the insurance businesses intervened.
We all know what happened to our prison system when businesses stepped in.
The schools were an easy target as no one knows WHAT LEARNING LOOKS LIKE…except the professional practitioner .
Here is the link to the Ravitch search field on “hedge Funds” https://dianeravitch.net/?s=hedge+funds
like this one, https://www.huffingtonpost.com/alan-singer/how-hedge-funds-will-prof_b_13855900.html where Alan Singer reviews the ways that hedge funds will benefit by the privatization of public funding for public schools.. This is a great discussion, https://www.huffingtonpost.com/alan-singer/how-hedge-funds-will-prof_b_13855900.html
in which Amy Goodman of “Democracy Now” interviews Juan Gonzalez of the NY Daily News about the big money pushing charter schools. The discussion is based on this article. http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/education/hedge-fund-execs-money-charter-schools-pay-article-1.2145001
and more from Forbes, as it reported on the investment strategy of billionaire hedge fund manager William Ackman. https://www.forbes.com/sites/laurengensler/2018/10/03/the-easiest-money-bill-ackman-has-made-lately-is-in-a-bunch-of-charter-schools/ He makes money investing in charter schools and thinks he is “doing good” by undermining public education.
Our schools, the ONLY road to income equality for ALL our
people, is now in the hands of the plutocrats who need an ignorant population to believe the endless rants and lies put out ignorer to end our democracy which depends on shared knowledge https://www.aft.org/sites/default/files/periodicals/hirsch.pdf
DON’T MISS THIS easy to grasp, fascinating youtube piece on how wealth inequality has blossomed… and it is not recent, because the middle class has almost evaporated, and will disappear with the teachers who once showed every American how to do work, use real critical thinking skills…not just pass bogus tests…geared to show their school as failing so it can be privatized.
Thanks, Susan. Fascinating math.
Yes. This article reflects the disastrous journey a lot of educators have found themselves on. I refer to Lerone Bennett’s quote, “An educator in a system of oppression is either a revolutionary or an oppressor.” I stand on the side of revolution. https://msvigeljsmith.blog/2015/02/20/high-stakes-standardized-testing-sent-me-to-jail-saved-my-teaching-soul/
As a retired teaching professional, middle school, high school, community college with 37 years of 40 years of teaching experience I watched the Republicans go from a party that welcomed teachers into their ranks to the anti-teacher right wing party it is now. I specifically remember the day that Michigan’s then governor John Engler told me that I “couldn’t be a good teacher and a good Republican!” He was then beginning to lead the infamous teacher accountability drive, which was really an attack on teacher tenure so well paid professionals could be fired and inexperienced new graduates could be hired, only to be fired before they could be granted tenure.
Every year since then the drumbeat of attacks on teachers and our profession has become louder and louder. Every year school funding was secretly cut by keeping it stable while inflation ate away at its actual value. The Republicans keep talking about lazy teachers, incompetent teachers, etc. They say “Those that can do, those that can’t teach!” I have a tee shirt that correctly says “Those that can do, Those that can do better Teach!”
Society has also changed. When I went into teaching in 1966 teaching was one of the few professions that was open to women. The women who were in my Alma Matter generally studied to be nurses, missionaries [it was a private religious college] or teachers, as those were the only professions then open to them. Today all professions are open to women. Given all the slanders made by the Oligarch Educational Reformers like Gates and the DeVos family, why would any of our best students even consider going into the profession? If I was a student today I wouldn’t consider going into teaching on any level.
The current difficulty that our schools are having to find new certified teachers to fill their classrooms will only get worse until we decide to grant our teachers professional autonomy, to provide the supplies and tools the children need to learn, and to pay our teachers a salary that is competitive with other professions that require an MA or higher [to keep your certificate in Michigan you need to continue your education indefinitely as MDs are required to do].
“The current difficulty that our schools are having to find new certified teachers to fill their classrooms will only get worse until we decide to grant our teachers professional autonomy…”
I have often argued this view. We cannot afford the taxes to pay teacher what they are worth (although we could do sight better than we are now). The cheapest way to assure good teachers is to pay them with intellectual independence. Instead we have saddled them with erzatz accountability measures based on bogus testing that claims to measure learning, then surrounded the aura of authority with bogus rubrics of evaluation that make teachers feel like employees.
“The cheapest way to assure good teachers is to pay them with intellectual independence.” Much, much truth in this. The idea used to be, acquire competent people by supplementing their lower salary with better benefits/ job security. Security is now nearly in the wind, & benefits fast being whittled. You can’t eat intellectual independence, but it will at least keep competent people in the field who are teamed up w/higher-paid household partner
“We cannot afford the taxes to pay teacher what they are worth”
Yes we can without costing school districts or local taxpayers one extra dime. Title one teachers are exempted from paying federal taxes after three years of service/tenure. If tghey leave their district they lose their tax free status. This plan would provide a significant raise to teachers working in the neediest schools – and would help limit churn because it incentivizes longevity in one school district. Cost about $8 billion which could be skimmed from the bloated defense budget which is closing in on $700 billion.
We should raise taxes on the highest earners.
I don’t think of myself as the Forbes subscribing type, but if this keeps up, I might have to buy a subscription.
Ethan Siegel makes it clear that he is completely clueless about what is going on with his statements
** 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..**
One of the primary purposes of Deform was to DE professionalize teaching.
Anyone who has actually looked into this stuff as Siegel has done would have to be willfully ignorant NOT to recognize that.
In order to effectvely address what is so wrong with deform, one has to first acknowledge the root problem:it is NOT well intentioned, unless by well intentioned one means in the sense of privatizing and making lots of money off of schools (which might actually be the meaning, given that the article appeared in a business publication)
Siegel also perpetuates the falsehood that education is more broken than ever
While some might say it is good a business publication is at least recognizing part of the problem, I have to disagree.
REAL journalism is about seeking out the truth and publishing it regardless of whether it confirms with the paradigm of the publication in which it is published.
If a journalist waters it down to make it acceptable, he is not a real journalist in my book.
Conforms with, NOT confirms with
Self correct is completely idiotic and so are the so called computer scientists (sic) who produced it.
Computer science is an oxymoron and so are many of the people getting CS degrees. I know this from personal experience working with lots of them.
While one might expect them to be better software engineers than others, the opposite is actually the case. The best programmers I worked with by far came from outside computer science (eg, from math science and even philosophy,which teaches logic, something many CS grads never learned.)
While they generally know how to code(though sometimes not very well), the problem solving ability of many CS grads is attrocious and the way they approach programming is to start coding without even considering what those using the software want and need OR the design/organization of the software.
In a word, many of them are hacks.
It’s all on purpose–“forgetting?” Nope. Evil plot since 1971 (birth of ALEC) &, in reading Nancy McClane’s (sp.-?) “Democracy in Chains” (a Must-read), way before then.
&–referring back to Roy’s 10/30 comment (about the “terrorists” in the caravan) & Diane’s reply up there, last night, Stephen Colbert had a very funny opening film (horror genre) spoof w/old movie clips, titled, “The Caravan.” If anyone has a link, please send.
The perfect Halloween greeting to forward to your friends.
Colbert also has a book for sale (100% to hurricane victims/relief efforts {they list the orgs.,so the DTs can go to Charity Navigator} made up ENTIRELY of “things not to say to disaster victims” that 45 actually DID say, one of them being the title, “Whose Boat is This Boat?”
&–BTW, now–isn’t every day in America some horror show?
In which case we all really need to watch Colbert, John Oliver & Seth Meyers, who can help us w/some desperately needed laughs.
Nancy McLean wrote “Democracy in Chains”
Listen to Ethan talk about his article in Forbes.
#BustEDPencils Episode 47: An Astrophysical Dismantling of Education Reform: Photon Torpedoes Launched! https://bustedpencils.com/episode/episode-47-astrophysical-dismantling-education-reform-photon-torpedoes-launched/