This is the only post today. Read as much of it as you have time for. The report is a valuable reminder that Ed-tech is oversold and even dangerous. It has its uses, for sure. But it should never replace teachers or parents.
UNESCO released a major blockbuster report warning about the dangers of relying too much on education technology. The author of the report was Mark West. The title of the report is An Ed-Tech Tragedy? Educational Technologies and School Closures in the Time of COVID-19.
An alternate link: https://teachertaskforce.org/sites/default/files/2023-09/2023_UNESCO_An-ed-tech-tragedy_Educational-technologies-and-school-closures-in-the-time-of-COVID19_EN_.pdf
The puzzle at the heart of the document is the clash between learned experience and the imperatives of greed. We learned during the pandemic about the risks of becoming dependent on ed-technology as the main driver of instruction. As we reflect on the period from March 2020 to now, we can discern the damage that occurred to students when their teachers were replaced by virtual instruction: boredom, learning loss, mental health issues, loneliness, lack of socialization with their peers, lack of personal interaction with teachers.
Yet with most people believing that the pandemic (or the worst of it) lies in the past, ed-tech corporations are focused on selling more of what has already failed. Why would we want to expand what has demonstrably proved inadequate and harmful to students?
You probably will take a long while to read the full report, but do read the summary and conclusions to whet your appetite. The overview concludes that the global reliance on ed-tech was necessary in the circumstances, but was a tragedy. Children need human teachers. They need people who look them in the eye and encourage them. Education is not a mechanical process; people are not widgets.
The UNESCO report reviews the global evidence of the harm caused by dependence on ed-tech:
[The report] exposes the ways unprecedented educational dependence on technology often resulted in unchecked exclusion, staggering inequality, inadvertent harm and the elevation of learning models that place machines and profit before people.
The summary says:
An Ed-Tech Tragedy? documents how widespread school closures and the hard pivot to remote learning with connected technology during the COVID-19 pandemic resulted in numerous unintended and undesirable consequences.
Although connected technology supported the continuation of education for many learners, many more were left behind. Exclusion soared and inequities widened. Achievement levels fell, even for those with access to distance learning. Educational experiences narrowed. Physical and mental health declined. Privatization accelerated, threatening education’s unique standing as a public good and human right. Invasive surveillance endangered the free and open exchange of ideas and undermined trust. Automation replaced human interactions with machine-mediated experiences. And technology production and disposal placed new strains on the environment.
Visions that technology could form the backbone of education and supplant school-based learning – in wide circulation at the outset of the health crisis – had promised better outcomes. Ed-tech proponents held that the immense challenges of school closures could be met with technology and that deeper technology integration would transform education for the better. But these high hopes and expectations unraveled when ed-tech was hurriedly deployed to maintain formal education as COVID-19 tore across countries.
An Ed-Tech Tragedy? recounts this tumultuous period, documenting the actions and decisions taken by governments, schools and technology companies. The publication contrasts the promises of ed-tech with the realities of what ed-tech delivered as a response to school closures that impacted over 1.6 billion learners and stretched intermittently from the beginning of 2020 to the end of 2022. The evidence and analysis highlight trends observed across countries and zoom in on the specificities of local experiences, creating a global mosaic of what students, teachers and families experienced when connected technology was elevated as a singular portal to teaching and learning.
Aimed at general and specialist audiences alike, this publication shows how the abrupt and deep changes brought about by the recourse to remote digital learning during the pandemic continue to ripple through the education sector even as schools have fully reopened. It questions whether more and faster integration of technology is desirable for learners, teachers and schools and if ed-tech is, as it is often billed, a key ingredient of educational resilience.
An Ed-Tech Tragedy? posits that new principles are needed to forge more humanistic directions for ed-tech development and use. In-person schooling and teaching should be guaranteed even as technologies improve and connectivity becomes more ubiquitous. Governments need to anchor this guarantee in the legal architecture upholding the right to education, especially for young learners. Moreover, future applications of ed-tech must show greater concern for holistic student well-being. While academic learning is central to education, it is not the only component. Ed-tech needs to support the multiple individual and collective purposes of education, from socio-emotional and personal development, to learning to live together, with the planet, as well as with technology.
In detailing what happened when ed-tech was deployed in response to pandemic school closures, as well as questioning why ed-tech was often elevated as a singular solution, this publication clarifies how the education community can move beyond merely reacting to technological change and instead play a more assertive role steering the digitalization of education towards the more holistic goals of education to shape inclusive, just and sustainable futures.
The future of education needs to be a humanistic one. The lessons extracted from what is premised here as an ed-tech tragedy illuminate the ways technology can better foster education that teaches and revitalizes human values, strengthens human relationships and upholds human rights.…
Ed-tech was supposed to solve a problem but it created other problems.
An Ed-Tech Tragedy? examines the many ways that the hurried embrace of technology solutionism steered responses to a global education challenge directly towards ed-tech. Along the way, the logic of technology solutionism changed understandings of educational problems to be solved. The analysis presented here helps reveal, for example, how technological solutions deployed during school closures took a narrow view of education and focused almost exclusively on furthering the academic progress of students in pared-down curricular subjects. This meant that little attention was paid to other education goals, such as fostering curiosity and inquiry and supporting physical health, mental well-being and social and emotional learning. This analysis also shows how ed-tech, originally cast as a solution to maintain learning continuity in the face of widespread disruptions to schooling, has more recently been positioned as a tool to help reverse learning loss. This ‘loss’, however, grew out of the deficiencies of technology-dependent remote learning to preserve the pace of academic learning that would have been typical without school closures stemming from the pandemic. The problem that ed-tech initially set out to solve morphed from assuring the continuity of learning to remedying lost learning. The way the problem was reframed while maintaining connected technology as the centrepiece of the solution is an example of technology solutionism at work.…
Recognizing the chaotic pivot from in-school learning to technology-facilitated distance learning as having a tragic arc provides a forceful rebuttal to a growing consensus that the education sector somehow ‘advanced’, ‘leapfrogged’, ‘catapulted’ or ‘disrupted’ itself to a better future when it deployed technology on a massive scale as an interim measure to confront a crisis. The evidence overwhelmingly points in the opposite direction: education became less accessible, less effective and less engaging when it pivoted away from physical schools and teachers and towards technology exclusively. ‘Tragedy’ in this sense signals regression – a denigration of the status quo,rather than a desired evolution. The narrative that ed-tech should be or must be a central component of ‘building education back better’ warrants new scrutiny after a careful examination of the experiences during the pandemic.
The invocation of tragedy also facilitates awareness that connected technologies, despite their growing reach, power and potential, remain tools in a repertoire of many others to construct stronger, more agile and more flexible education systems that can respond and adapt to disruption. Other tools include strengthened teacher training and support; enhanced school leadership and pedagogical management of schools; curricular renewal; smaller class sizes; and improved physical resources and infrastructure for schools and classrooms. Crises that necessitate the prolonged closure of schools and demand heavy or total reliance on technology have been exceedingly rare historically. Future crises may present entirely different challenges. The trauma of the pandemic has, in many circles, functioned to elevate technology as an almost singular solution to assure educational resilience by providing flexibility in times of disruption. Investments to protect education wrongly shifted away from people and towards machines, digital connections and platforms. This elevation of the technical over the human is contradictory to education’s aim to further human development and cultivate humanistic values. It is human capacity, rather than technological capacity, that is central to ensuring greater resilience of education systems to withstand shocks and manage crises.
Overall, the pandemic is a case study in how technology in its current iterations is not yet a suitable foundation for actualizing the diverse goals that communities assign to education. Expectations that technology may, in time, help further increase the reach, improve the quality and strengthen the agility of education are valid. For now, though, the experiences since early 2020 have shown it to be an alarmingly brittle solution – one incapable of effectively responding to widespread and extended school shutdowns. For far too many students, it was a solution that either never started in earnest or quickly broke down. The sudden shift to ed-tech also accelerated a concerning transfer of authority away from teachers, schools and communities and towards private, for-profit interests. Additionally, the censorship, data extraction, advertising, top-down control, intimidation and surveillance that so often characterize current models of digital transformation have made education less free and, arguably, less capable of facilitating critiques of and positive changes to the status quo. [emphasis added by DR.]
Countries made massive investments to digitalize education through much of the COVID-19 pandemic. But it remains far from clear whether these investments will improve education over the longer term and make it an engine of just, inclusive and sustainable development, especially when compared with conventional school-based and teacher-facilitated education. The digital transformation of education may yet be a force for beneficial change. But the logic of technological solutionism and its associated business models currently steering this transformation, led largely by the commercial technology entities that are remaking so many aspects of society, tend to treat education and knowledge as private commodities and not as global public goods that provide collective as well as individual benefits.
It is hoped that this analysis and its use of tragedy as a metaphor might moderate the discourse and popular view that the pandemic has ‘unshackled’ education systems and ‘launched’ them into desirable futures characterized by greater technology use. Documenting the severity and scope of the many negative consequences of ed-tech responses during the health crisis inverts the triumphalist narratives that accompany many descriptions of technology deployments to address the educational disruption caused by school closures. A critical examination of the assumptions of technology solutionism and a review of the existing evidence provide a corrective and a counterargument to notions that more, deeper and accelerated use of technology is uniformly positive for education…
Throughout the review that follows, considerable evidence illustrates how the rush to distance and remote learning with ed-tech accelerated the privatization of education in many contexts. While some countries and localities managed a shift to digital learning with limited privatization of the educational experience, a defining characteristic of the technology-centric response to the educational disruptions of the pandemic tended to be the elevation of for-profit, private ed-tech companies. In addition to considering the ways reliance on ed-tech impacted educational inclusion, equity and quality, this publication also explores the complex and often symbiotic links between ed-tech and the privatization of education during the pandemic.The rush to distance and remote learning with ed-tech accelerated the privatization of education.
Most such reports tend to summarize the status quo. This one challenges it. It’s time to take stock before the Ed-tech industry takes control of our most precious asset: our children.

The link took me to a UNESCO page with a link to the document. However, this wouldn’t load for me. I found the doc at an alternate site, and it loaded quickly. Here it is:
Click to access 2023_UNESCO_An-ed-tech-tragedy_Educational-technologies-and-school-closures-in-the-time-of-COVID19_EN_.pdf
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Thanks for the link, Bob.
I have to go sub this morning but I took a quick look through the beginning pages.
This fact was staggering:
“At the peak of global school closures in April 2020, formal learning either stopped completely or was severely interrupted for approximately 90 per cent of the world’s students – 1.6 billion students in over 190 countries”
How long will it take the world to recover from all the impacts of COVID-19?
And, this latest plague of demagogues in the U.S. and elsewhere, too? (Both will be forever intertwined.)
There will be a day, but probably long after I leave the face of the earth.
A very important document.
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p.165 “The pedagogical choices of teachers were often dictated by digital
systems. Digital learning applications tended to employ behaviourist
pedagogies that could accommodate huge numbers of students without
reliance on teachers, and this stripped education of its human touch.”
Among all the flaws of ed. tech. in the report this is one of the most revealing. Too much reliance on technology is dehumanizing and ineffective. It undermines real, thought provoking learning, and narrow curricula to a series of stimulus/response gestures that are void of human engagement.
Technology is a useful tool when in the hands of competent teachers. Assuming that technology can supplant teachers is a mistake. In the US the wholesale adoptive of standardized, canned instruction under the guise of personalized learning is neither personal nor effective. Pandemic learning taught us this valuable lesson. The adoption of such ineffective materials is generally more of a political and economic decision than an academic one. Young people learn best in a social setting with professional educators, a comprehensive curricula and interaction with peers. The model, demonized by technology moguls looking to cash in on cyber instruction, have declared it antiquated, but its results are far superior in educating the whole student. Traditional instruction also prepares young people to fully participate in our democratic system of governance.
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Well observed, RT! And yet the deformers call this “personalized education.” LOL. The nasty old Behaviorist vinegar in new wine bottles. Why do they call it this? Solely based on the program’s algorithm dropping the student down at a particular place in an invariant, predetermined schedule of lessons based on a supposed diagnostic test that has been subject to no third-party validation. It’s marketing smoke and mirrors. It’s pseudoscience. It’s up there with selling horse tranquilizer as a Covid remedy.
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The essence of it all, IMO:
“This elevation of the technical over the human is contradictory to education’s aim to further human development and cultivate humanistic values.”
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The principle fallacy of the Ed Tech movement is the supposition that input equals output. This bias is based on the idea that the human brain is merely a biological representation of a CPU. What contemporary brain science tells us is that the mass in our cranium is just a portion of the brain that is our entire body. We cannot simply plug information into our brain matter and get a preferred result. We are sentient beings. We have touch, feel, smell, hearing, and voice to interpret and act on various stimuli in our environment. We have to be in proximity to one another and various environments to adapt to the intellectual requirements needed to interact with everything around us. The various media that make up our technological tools create an incomplete data source that inhibits the developing mind if we ignore the emotional and physical aspects of intellect that bring about motivation and creativity. What we should have learned through the pandemic is that presence in a school community is critical for learning. Technological and digital tools are no substitute for human interaction.
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Beautifully said, Paul. And profound.
And this is what the likes of Bill Gates and Elon Musk do not, perhaps cannot, understand.
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I think they very well understand….. they just don’t care! It’s ALL about the $$$$ for them. $ell shiny new things to people to make a quick buck and then change the “technology” so that people have to repurchase or upgrade at more $$$. They have no soul!
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When I disagree with you, Lisa, I always hesitate and think it over because you are often insightful, and you write, often, from personal experience. I think that in both cases we are talking about people on the spectrum who don’t fully grok how humans work emotionally. But yeah, there are billions of reasons ($$$$$$. . . .) for them to ignore any evidence that doesn’t suit their business models.
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Ordinarily, this was call for kindness, compassion, and accommodation, but not for people who set themselves up as Masters of the Universe and Deciders for Lower Life Forms (like every other human on the planet).
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In other words, I learn from you and find it worthwhile to read carefully what you say.
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Bob, I don’t think they are on the spectrum. Look around in the world and you will see that lots of folks now have given themselves a “medical/psychological excuse” to cover for their bad behavior (autism/ADHD/cluster B personality disorders etc).
These guys are drug dealers!…..dealing in DIGITAL NARCOTICS. They know it. They wouldn’t let their own children use the same technology that gets pushed onto the market. They are no different than the guy selling heroin on the street corner.
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They wouldn’t let their own children use the same technology that gets pushed onto the market.
That point is very well made. But they are both on the spectrum.
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https://www.axios.com/2022/04/15/elon-musk-aspergers-syndrome
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https://www.appliedbehavioranalysisprograms.com/historys-30-most-inspiring-people-on-the-autism-spectrum/
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I have a child on the autistic spectrum, so I have to be careful when I say this. The tech oligarchs that seem top be a danger to our world are definitely toward the five range and have no clue what effects the lives of most of us.
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Ed tech is the widget model applied to education. I remember DeVos claiming that public schools were the “factory model” of learning. No way! Learning from a detached bot is the factory model of education.
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That’s right, pabonner. It is the ultimate hubris of humankind to think that computer models could ever come close to mimicking the mind that took millions of years to evolve. Bill Gates seemed always to think he was God. Nope!
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Well said, Paul Bonner!
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Michael Cardona said the following, “You need an educator at the helm not a donor.” He may have meant DeVos but, it also applies to the tech-mad Bill Gates.
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In other news, the Norwegian head of the three-person Commission of Inquiry (COI) created by the U.N. Human rights Council to investigate war crimes in Ukraine committed by Russia said in a speech today that Russia’s state-controlled news is making statements that “may constitute incitement to genocide.”
That’s soft-pedaling it a bit. There is no reason for the “may.” Clearly, a) Russia has committed genocide in Ukraine and b) Russian state media continually stokes approval of genocide against Ukrainians. And, ofc, the head of the Russian Mafia state is under indictment by the U.N. for war crimes in Ukraine.
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Personalized learning is not personalized and is not learning, never has been and never will be because it’s a wrongheaded idea in the first place. Period. It didn’t work because it doesn’t work.
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The bizarre thing about this, LCT, from my POV, is that we keep not learning that this crap doesn’t work. The Behaviorist Programmed Learning model was a HUGE FLOP again and again in the past. It was a failure when Sidney L. Pressey introduced it in 1926. It was a failure when the Department of War (later the Defense Department) adopted its techniques mid-century. It was a failure when B.F. Skinner resurrected it. It was a failure when it was instituted as language labs. And now it is a failure when the old Behaviorist Programmed Learning model is married to graphical user interfaces and extrinsic reward and avatar systems that make kids want to barf, that are, like the programmed nonlearning itself, extremely demotivating.
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They just call the same failed idea “2.0” or “next generation” and push it farther down our throats. The scary thing is how many people fall for that so easily. Being a student remains an isolated video game experience, well after reopening, in too many of my colleagues’ classes. It. Did. Not. Work. It is the same thing now that it was when it. Did. Not. Work.
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I thought when they ripped out all the learning labs back at the beginning of the 1980s that this was the end of this programmed learning crap. Nope. Why? The hype machine can always generate enough enthusiasm for people to make money before the next instantiation is shown to be an utter failure.
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When will they ever learn?
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I think my daughter’s experience points to related problems with tech ed.
She needed to take a couple of classes at the community college to get ready for her college major, so we automatically assumed her required economics and government course would meet in her free period. Not to happen. It is only offered on-line, not in fourth period. So why was this required course not offered fourth period?
Various reasons exist, the most popular of which is the idea of collaborative planning time. The idea is to get all the teachers together to philosophize about how to make the lessons. So all the economics people are planning fourth period. Sounds like a good idea, but the irony here is that my daughter gets to fight with an inferior platform to learn important ideas from a machine that is clearly the worst way to teach.
The point is that the school does it this way because the administration sees tech ed as an option that allows them to schedule this way. Because it is tech, it gets a bye when it comes to criticism. Imagine what a principal would do if a teacher met a class by putting the children to work on computers and read the paper until somebody had trouble with the program. That teacher would get an evaluation that would rival any ever done, but it gets approval since it is tech.
This is a similar problem to one aspect of test-driven instruction. We often choose to ask a question of a student in a way similar to the presentation of that subject on a test. The idea is that you practice like you play. But if we expect a computer to grade a test, as many teachers do today, it exaggerates the tendency of the teacher to use multiple choice tests instead of something more appropriate to the subject. The technological aspects of teaching do affect the way we induce the students to approach the material. If we do not proceed through this process with a discerning eye, we will awaken to find that our subject matter has been compromised by our technological reality.
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It doesn’t get much better when you $pend lots of $$$$ to send your kid to live at a 4 yr university. Mine is a sophomore and he still has online classes! He hates having to take classes that way. Also, the Profs are allowed to use AI to grade writing assignments yet the students are not allowed to use AI to write those assignments…….his feeling is that it isn’t fair (my feeling is that AI shouldn’t be used period!).
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LisaM,
Agreed!
AI should not be used for writing or grading.
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As an administrator I found collaborative planning time to be useful. However, If online instruction is the option to make that happen, then it seems to me it defeats the purpose of professional collaboration since a computer doesn’t plan. Many in the tech world seem to see AI as some unlimited form of intelligence when it is just instant access to unlimited data that does cannot consider possibilities beyond the bias provided through a given program. My latest experience with this is the algorithms used to judge resumes based on codewords rather than an actual deep dive into what a resume actually says about a candidate. I’m no expert here, but it seems to me we would have never gotten to Einstein’s Theory of Relativity if we were left to the conclusions from machine intelligence. I don’t think computers day dream.
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Thanks, Diane, for calling this to my attention (during a period of late night insomnia on 10/3/23, 2:25 AM PDT over a week after the original post unfortunately).
While I agree with many of the comments above, this is a complicated subject, and I can not make a substantive comment without first reading the report. Unfortunately (and with all of the other items currently on my plate), by the time this happens, this blog post will be long buried in your archives and no one will see it (this note is probably too late as well!).
I will, however, make a note from my recent personal experience.
I am completely retired now, but while teaching, I was not a fan of video games and saw many examples of their negative impact on the education of students who were addicted to them. To me they were clearly a complete waste of time.
This past winter when California was hit by severe storms, I was having a very hard time getting outside to exercise (primarily to cycle), so I finally decided to give Zwift a try (www.zwift.com).
Zwift is a virtual reality indoor cycling application that has been available for quite some time, but my bias against video games (due to my educational experience plus the thought that sitting in a garage could never compare to being outside) kept me from trying it for years.
Needless to say, using the application together with a “smart bike” quickly got me into some of the best shape of my life (I am 70 now and have been a fervent cyclist since grade school as well as a member of a local bicycle racing club since 2005).
For the first time ever I did not gain weight during the winter!!! I can not say enough good things about this “video game” which astounds me considering my earlier opinions.
I also continue to use the app even during good weather as it allows me to race safely without danger of a crash and therefore exercise at a much higher intensity than I can in “real life!” I have been recommending Zwift to everyone I meet who likes cycling!
While I completely agree that human interaction and encouragement are critical and irreplaceable in education, I am also painfully aware from my time in the classroom of the high degree of technophobia that still exists among a portion of the teaching staff. It was completely foreseeable that rolling out technology under the time constraints imposed by the pandemic would lead to tremendous problems, not to mention the problems of having to quickly provide hardware and network access to students coming from a wide variety of backgrounds.
I will be interested to see if this report provides new perspectives with supporting data. Thanks again for this post!!!
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David,
Thank you for responding to the UNESCO report about Ed-tech. It’s quite clear that technology has its uses. We could not communicate without it. The report specifically criticizes the avaricious Ed-tech corporations that are claiming that their products are the answer to learning loss after COVID.
I look forward to reading your comments after you have had time to read the report. I am actually a tech addict. I’m on my cellphone internet several hours daily. I write all my posts and comments online. I couldn’t live without my cellphone and internet. But I want my grandchildren to be taught by humans.
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I agree with your comments above, Diane. The amount of information (and unfortunately misinformation) that we can find on any topic now is astounding compared to when I was in school. Making sense of it requires critical thinking skills, though, probably to a greater extent and by more people than in years past.
And I agree completely about grandchildren – I am spending several hours each week educating my oldest (1st grade)!
It will probably be a few months before I can finish reading the report and compose a response. I’ll probably post it on my blog and send you a link. I’ve been taking a sabbatical from the education battles for the last year to deal with the stacked up chores of everyday life and improve my health/fitness. I worked a year longer than planned because I had my most outstanding student of the last decade who I just had to see through to graduation, but this made my to-do list even longer.
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