Archives for category: Curriculum

The Gates Foundation gave $10 million to the Discovery Institute.

This is a conservative public policy institute that promotes “intelligent design” and is skeptical of evolutionary theory.

It was founded by Bruce Chapman, an official in the Reagan administration.

The purpose of the grant is for research, advocacy, and transportation.

Presumably this mean the Gates Foundation wanted the Discovery Institute to do research about and advocacy for intelligent design. Why they needed so much money for transportation is not all that clear.

If these are concerns of the Gates Foundation, why didn’t they give the money to the American Association for the Advancement of Science, the National Research Council, or some other august scientific group?

I don’t understand the Gates Foundation.

A reader commented on an ongoing discussion of Advanced Placement courses and the rating of high schools according to how many students, ready or not, take them.

She writes:

“The highly publicized rankings based on AP tests taken did a lot of harm in my sons’ high school. AP courses used to attract the students who were genuinely ready for college-level work, but about seven years ago, the school system instituted a policy that required every student who took an AP course to take the AP exam, and also began to push students into AP who did not really need to be there. There were parent meetings about AP and IB and the message was sent that if our kids wanted to be high achievers, they would take these classes. Soon, through school system pressure and peer pressure, a two-tiered system developed where the “smart” kids were in AP, and “everyone else” was in regular classes. The school began to make the “Challenging High Schools” list, but the teachers (who are evaluated by students scores on the tests and not just by how many take them) were now under great pressure to keep their scores up. They could not afford to slow down, or to differentiate for students with learning differences, or do much at all for those who were just not ready for the level of difficulty of the AP courses. It was sink or swim, and a lot of kids sank.

“My older son was a high achiever and a good tester, so he did fine, although we got a rude shock when he got to college and realized that acceptance of AP scores varies HIGHLY from university to university and even from school to school within a university. Almost none of his high scores actually allowed him to skip college courses.

“My younger son has some learning differences, and AP courses were frustrating and overwhelming for him, while at the same time, his non-AP courses were, as he put it, “filled with slackers”. Fortunately we had a very good counselor who was able to transfer him to classes that were a better fit. He has now graduated, but I hear from friends that the school’s policy for next year is NO TRANSFERS OUT of AP, even if the student is failing. So many kids were bailing on AP that it was messing up class sizes.

“I firmly believe that students do better if they are challenged, but AP is not for every student. It is not even for most students.”

A group of distinguished educators addressed a letter to Secretary Arne Duncan that carefully explains how to get excellent teaching. Such an effort would begin by setting a high bar for entry into the profession, continue by establishing an atmosphere of autonomy and professionalism, and grow stronger by enabling teachers to work together and build a vibrant culture of learning and professional development.

The group warned that Race to the Top does not encourage good teaching. It wrote:

“Current education policy, including the Race to the Top law, and especially the practice of evaluating teachers by their students’ performance on high stakes assessments, will likely weaken, rather than strengthen, the teaching profession. Although the current policy may have intuitive appeal, a variety of evidence indicates it will not lead to sustained improvements in teaching and learning over the long term. In fact, it is likely to lead to unproductive teaching practices and poor outcomes, including “narrowing of curricula, teaching to the test, less creative teaching, more superficial and nontransferable learning, more controlling behavior at all levels of power, more withdrawal of effort from at-risk students, and increased dropout rates” (Ryan & Brown, 2005). We are especially concerned that current policy works against the professionalization of teaching, that it reinforces a situation in which teachers do not own or control their profession, that it does not set teaching on a vigorous path of development and sustainable improvement, and that it alienates and demoralizes teachers.”

Read this letter. What it says in plain English is that there is no evidence to support the punitive approach of Race to the Top and evaluating teachers by the tests scores of their students. It says that using extrinsic rewards to elicit changed behavior undermines intrinsic motivation. The education policies of the Bush-Obama era are misguided, ineffectual, and ultimately harmful to teaching and learning,

03 June 2013

Dear Secretary Duncan,

The US National Commission on Mathematics Instruction (USNC/MI) is a committee of the National Academies. Our commission thus advises Congress and the Nation on mathematics teaching, both nationally and internationally. We are writing to you as individuals, whose views reflect our service on the USNC/MI, to share our vision for mathematics teaching and to advocate for policies that will support this vision. We would like mathematics teaching—from PreKindergarten through college and beyond—to become a vigorous, vibrant profession that is designed for continuous improvement.

From our work with educators in other countries we are finding that systems that support teachers’ autonomy and professionalism, set a high bar to entry into the teaching profession, and foster ongoing development within learning communities produce an environment in which teaching and learning thrive. We think that in this country, systems should be developed—or expanded—in which teachers collaborate, examine and discuss their work, use and build on each other’s ideas, and seek to impress their peers with the quality of their methods and ideas. Such an environment could allow for excellence to be achieved and demonstrated in various ways. It would push the teaching field forward, in much the same way as mathematics and science make progress by sharing and building on ideas. It would create vigorous striving in the same way that the sciences do: by the need to impress one’s peers and the possibility of doing so in one’s own way. Of course, the ultimate motivation for teachers is more and deeper learning by students.

We have learned from Chinese teachers that “to learn continually” is a central motto in education, that “superrank” teachers analyze and improve the curriculum, and that testing is viewed as less critical than in the U.S. (U.S. National Commission on Mathematics Instruction, 2010). We have learned from Korean teachers that they have a strong and impressive teacher research culture, and that their system supports and nurtures such a culture.

Evidence in favor of developing systems in which teaching is an autonomous profession with a high bar to entry also comes from Finland, where systemic changes led to improved teaching and learning over the last several decades. While the U.S. has intensified standardized testing and accountability since the 1990s, “Finland at that time emphasized teacher professionalism, school-based curriculum, trust-based educational leadership, and school collaboration through networking.” (Sahlberg, 2011). Indeed, Sahlberg’s main message is that there is another way to improve education systems. This includes improving the teaching force, limiting student testing to a necessary minimum, placing responsibility and trust before accountability, and handing over school- and district-level leadership to education professionals. These are common education policy themes in some of the high performing countries—Finland
among them—in the 2009 International Programme for Student Assessment (PISA) of the OECD… . (Sahlberg, 2011)

Finland’s education system fits with Jal Mehta’s vision, which he contrasts with our own current system:

Teaching requires a professional model, like we have in medicine, law, engineering, accounting, architecture and many other fields. In these professions, consistency of quality is created less by holding individual practitioners accountable and more by building a body of knowledge, carefully training people in that knowledge, requiring them to show expertise before they become licensed, and then using their professions’ standards to guide their work.

By these criteria, American education is a failed profession. There is no widely agreed-upon knowledge base, training is brief or nonexistent, the criteria for passing licensing exams are much lower than in other fields, and there is little continuous professional guidance. (Mehta, 2013)
We believe it is critical for teaching to be a respected profession and we agree with Sahlberg that “[a]s long as the practice of teachers is not trusted and they are not respected as professionals, young talent is unlikely to seek teaching as their lifelong career anywhere. Or if they do, they will leave teaching early because of lack of a respectful professional working environment” (Sahlberg, 2011). We are concerned that—as stated in a teacher’s widely circulated resignation letter—“[w]e have become increasingly evaluation and not knowledge driven” (Strauss, 2013).

The need for professional, collaborative communities of teachers is further supported by findings from research on professional development and school improvement. Research on professional development in the U.S. and internationally indicates that collaborative approaches to professional learning and building strong working relationships among teachers are key components in improving teachers’ practice and student learning (Darling-Hammond et al., 2009, p.5). At the school level, Bryk et al. (2010) found that having a professional community that uses public classroom practice, reflective dialogue, peer collaboration, and collective responsibility for school improvement with a specific focus on student learning is an important indicator for school improvement. Relational trust was found to be essential for organizational change and for sustaining the hard work of school improvement.

Current education policy, including the Race to the Top law, and especially the practice of evaluating teachers by their students’ performance on high stakes assessments, will likely weaken, rather than strengthen, the teaching profession. Although the current policy may have intuitive appeal, a variety of evidence indicates it will not lead to sustained improvements in teaching and learning over the long term. In fact, it is likely to lead to unproductive teaching practices and poor outcomes, including “narrowing of curricula, teaching to the test, less creative teaching, more superficial and nontransferable learning, more controlling behavior at all levels of power, more withdrawal of effort from at-risk students, and increased dropout rates” (Ryan & Brown, 2005). We are especially concerned that current policy works against the professionalization of teaching, that it reinforces a situation in which teachers do not own or control their profession, that it does not set teaching on a vigorous path of development and sustainable improvement, and that it alienates and demoralizes teachers.

Some of the evidence against the practice of evaluating teachers based on high stakes assessments comes from research on motivation. For example:

It is well established that use of salient extrinsic rewards to motivate work behavior can be deleterious to intrinsic motivation and can thus have negative consequences for psychological adjustment, performance on interesting and personally important activities, and citizenship behavior. (Gagne & Deci, 2005)

SDT [self-determination theory] research has found that motivation based on more controlled motives, such as rewards or punishments (external regulations), or self-esteem-based pressures (e.g., ego involvement) is associated with lower quality of learning, lessened persistence, and more negative emotional experience. (Ryan & Brown, 2005)

In their meta-analysis of 128 well-controlled experiments exploring the effects of extrinsic rewards on intrinsic motivation, Deci, Koestner, and Ryan (1999) found a “clear and consistent” picture:
In general, tangible rewards had a significant negative effect on intrinsic motivation for interesting tasks, and this effect showed up with participants ranging from preschool to college, with interesting activities ranging from word games to construction puzzles, and with various rewards ranging from dollar bills to marshmallows. (Deci, Koetsner, & Ryan, 1999)

Teaching is an inherently complex, interesting, and creative activity because it involves knowing ideas and ways of thinking and engaging others with those ideas and ways of thinking. Thus, according to the research on motivation, improving teaching will require work environments that foster intrinsic (or autonomous) motivation. Motivation research further indicates that “the experiences of autonomy, as well as of competence and relatedness, are important for effective performance and psychological health and well-being” (Deci & Ryan, 2008).

We doubt that students’ learning gains will outweigh the negative effects to the teaching profession of test-based accountability. According to the National Research Council’s Committee on Incentives and Test-Based Accountability in Public Education, “the available evidence does not give strong support for the use of test- based incentives to improve education” (National Research Council, 2011, p. 91). Furthermore, The research to date suggests that the benefits of test-based incentive programs over the past two decades have been quite small. Although the available evidence is limited, it is not insignificant. The incentive programs that have been tried have involved a number of different incentive designs and substantial numbers of schools, teachers, and students. We focused on studies that allowed us to draw conclusions about the causal effects of incentive programs and found a significant body of evidence that was carefully constructed. Unfortunately, the guidance offered by this body of evidence is not encouraging about the ability of incentive programs to reliably produce meaningful increases in student achievement—except in mathematics for elementary school students. (National Research Council, 2011)

Looking at the effects of test-based accountability from an international perspective, we also do not find support for such a system:

Are those education systems where competition, choice, and test-based accountability have been the main drivers of educational change showing progress in international comparisons? Using the PISA database to construct such a comparison, a suggestive answer emerges. Most notably, the United States, England, New Zealand, Japan, and some parts of Canada and Australia can be used as benchmarks. … The trend of students’ performance in mathematics in all test-based accountability-policy nations is similar— it is in decline, in cycle after cycle, between 2000 and 2006. (Sahlberg, 2011)

None of the above implies that standardized tests for students are bad or wrong. The issue is how tests are used. Using test results for informational purposes in a trusting, collaborative environment is entirely different from using test results to monitor, evaluate, reward, or punish teachers. In this matter, we would be wise to heed Campbell’s Law and his observations about test scores:
The more any quantitative social indicator is used for social decision-making, the more subject it will be to corruption pressures and the more apt it will be to distort and corrupt the social processes it is intended to monitor. (Campbell, 1976, 2011, p. 34)

… when test scores become the goal of the teaching process, they both lose their value as indicators of educational status and distort the educational process in undesirable ways. (Campbell, 1976, 2011 p. 35)

Near the end of its report, the National Research Council’s Committee on Incentives and Test-Based Accountability in Public Education stated:

Our recommendations, accordingly, call for policy makers to support experimentation with rigorous evaluation and to allow midcourse correction of policies when evaluation suggests such correction is needed. (National Research Council, 2011) We think that the time has come for a midcourse correction. In Singapore, there is the motto “teach less, learn more;” in the U.S., we need to “test less, learn more.” We have argued that test-based accountability stands to have negative effects on teaching as a profession and that there are better ways to improve teaching. We respectfully urge changes in policy to support a strong and vibrant mathematics teaching profession.

Sincerely,

Sybilla Beckmann, University of Georgia

Janine Remillard, University of Pennsylvania Gail Burrill, Michigan State University

James Barta Utah State University

Myong-Hi (Nina) Kim SUNY College at Old Westbury Roger Howe (NAS), Yale University

Bernard Madison, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville Sara Normington, Catlin Gabel School

James Roznowski Delta College

Patrick (Rick) Scott, New Mexico Higher Education Department Padmanabhan Seshaiyer, George Mason University

References

Bryk, A. S., Sebring, P. B., Allensworth, E., Luppescu, S., & Easton, J. Q. (2010). Organizing Schools for Improvement, Lessons from Chicago. Chicago, IL: The University of Chicago Press.

Campbell, D. (1976, 2011). Assessing the Impact of Planned Social Change. Journal of MultiDisciplinary Evaluation, 7(15), 3 – 43.

Darling-Hammond, L., Wei, R. C., Andree, A., Richardson, N., & Orphanos, S. (2009). Professional Learning in the Learning Profession: A Status Report on Teacher Development in the United States and Abroad. Dallas, TX: National Staff Development Council and The School Redesign Network at Stanford University.

Deci, E. L., Koestner, R., & Ryan, R. (1999). A Meta-Analytic Review of Experiments Examining the Effects of Extrinsic Rewards on Intrinsic Motivation. Psychological Bulletin, 125(6), 627 – 668.

Deci, E. L., & Ryan, R. M. (2008). Facilitating Optimal Motivation and Psychological Well-Being Across Life’s Domains. Canadian Psychology, 49(1), 14 – 23.

Gagne, M., & Deci, E. L. (2005). Self-determination theory and work motivation. Journal of Organizational Behavior, 26, 33- – 362.

Mehta, J. (2013, April 12). Teachers: Will We Ever Learn? New York Times. Retrieved from: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/04/13/opinion/teachers-will-we- ever-learn.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0

National Research Council. (2011). Incentives and Test-Based Accountability in Education. Committee on Incentives and Test-Based Accountability in Public Education, M. Hout and S.W. Elliott, Editors. Board on Testing and Assessment, Division of Behavioral and Social Sciences and Education. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press.

Ryan. R. M., & Brown. K. W. (2005). Legislating competence: The motivational impact of high stakes testing as an educational reform. In C. Dweck & A. E. Elliot (Eds.). Handbook of competence (pp. 354-374) New York: Guilford Press.

Sahlberg, P. (2011). Finnish Lessons: What Can the World Learn from Educational Change in Finland? New York: Teachers College Press.

Strauss, V. (2013, April 6). Teacher’s resignation letter: ‘My profession… no longer exists.’ Washington Post. Retrieved from: http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/answer- sheet/wp/2013/04/06/teachers-resignation-letter-my-profession-no- longer-exists/

U.S. National Commission on Mathematics Instruction. (2010). The Teacher Development Continuum in the United States and China: Summary of a Workshop. Ana Ferreras and Steve Olson, Rapporteurs; Ester Sztein, Editor; National Research Council. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press.

Please address correspondence to Sybilla Beckmann, sybilla@math.uga.edu or Department of Mathematics, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia 30602.

John Merrow does not ally himself with most critics of the Common Core.

But he is concerned. He is concerned about whether a school with its own innovative curriculum and methodology will survive. His film crew visited the eighth grade at King Middle School and were impressed by what they found. How will this program fare?

A letter from a reader in Los Angeles:

Hi Diane. I thought your readers would be interested to hear that the light might be shining in Los Angeles.

Could it be that there is some good news on the horizon for Los Angeles public schools? This Tuesday the school board will vote on a resolution to reduce class size. Parents throughout LA are thrilled that such a sound resolution is being proposed. Board member Bennett Kayser is sponsoring the measure with Richard Vladovic and Steve Zimmer co-sponsoring.
The resolution includes a commitment to “creating the most enriching academic environment for all students, which includes a reduction in class-size.

Class size reduction yields:

– Reduction in the achievement gap

– Early identification of learning disabilities

– Improved high school graduation rates

– Increased college entrance rates

– Improved student behavior”

They’re even proposing to bring back librarians. We hope parents, educators and advocates for public schools will contact their school board member and urge the school board to take this first step out of the dark ages of public education. Coming to the board meeting is even better. Tuesday, June 4, 9:00am at LAUSD headquarters.

From a reader:

Diane’s link is to the mobile version, which didn’t work for me. Here’s a YouTube link:

and a link to the slides:

http://www.nctm.org/conferences/content.aspx?id=36436#equity

Uri Treisman of the Dana Center at the University of Texas spoke about mathematics and equity at the annual NCTM meeting in Denver.

But he spoke about much more. He spoke about student performance on international tests; about the effect of poverty on achievement; about opportunity to learn; about the Common Core; about charter schools; about VAM.

Many who saw his speech said it was the best they had ever heard.

Please watch it. You will be glad you did.

Uri Tresiman of the Dana Center at the University of Texas spoke to the annual NCTM conference about the true needs of American education.

This is an important speech in which he shows how shallow current reforms are and how deeply poverty affects children’s performance in school.

I intend to post this speech twice this week. It is that powerful.

I may post it more than twice.

It meant a lot to me because Dr. Treisman agreed with what I have been saying. We will not narrow the achievement gaps unless we act to reduce poverty. He does not say–nor do I–that schools don’t matter. We agree that schools and teachers matter very much. But so does poverty.

A few days ago, I wrote that if we halved the child poverty rate–now a scandalous 23%–then achievement would score. A faithful reader and blogger who works for a conservative think tank wrote offline to disagree with me. He said that we don’t know how to reduce child poverty, and he doubted that it would matter much even if we did. He countered that if we increased the number of charter schools, then achievement would soar.

I challenge him to watch Dr. Treisman’s speech. Pay particular attention to his evidence about the effects of charter schools.

Jeff Larsen writes:

Okay, I’ll bite. There are problems with some AP courses, but I think you’re painting with a broad brush here. My story is obviously anecdotal, but here at Lowell HS (just outside Grand Rapids, MI), our AP teachers aren’t focused on the test, nor do they teach “a mile wide and an inch deep” (that will happen, however, with Common Core). We take all students who want to attempt the course; those who succeed (in class and on the exam) find themselves better prepared for their first year of college than the average student. I’d also suggest that a 2002 study of AP course rigor isn’t relevant; there have been many changes to the courses over the past 11 years.

It doesn’t matter if my AP Lit students are Harvard-bound (where AP credits mean zilch) or heading to Grand Rapids Community College, they come back to tell me and my colleagues that what we put them through was more difficult than their first year of college.

We’re proud of our US News & World Report ranking because we aren’t one of those selective schools at the top, but we are keeping up with the more affluent districts in our region. It’s easy to take shots at the College Board, Jay Matthews, and the charter schools at the top. But it’s not fair to lump all AP teachers, courses, and (especially) students, into that group.

Full disclosure: I’ve taught AP Lit for 14 years, AP Language for 5, and have worked as an AP Lit Exam Reader for 7. While I take a week’s pay from CB, I know that the time I spend working with other teachers and professors is the most valuable professional development I’ve had in almost 20 years of teaching.

High school rankings by popular media usually take into account how many students take AP exams. Some high schools push students to take AP courses whether or not they are prepared, just to satisfy the rankings. But are the AP courses an appropriate measure of high quality?

A few of the nation’s top private and public high schools have dropped the AP courses, on the belief that their teachers created better courses than the AP. See here and here .

A reader responded to an earlier post about the Tucson BASIS charter schools by questioning the value of AP courses and tests:

“Here is the essence of what Tim Steller wrote about BASIS-Tuscon: “the Basis schools require students to take eight AP courses before graduation, take six AP tests and pass at least one…That naturally helps Basis place high in the U.S. News rankings” And, it is ALL about the rankings. And the College Board’s Advanced Placement program (which Diane neglected to mention).

Steller adds this important point in his article about BASIS, made by an education consultant: “AP has pulled the wool over people’s eyes across the nation…”

Actually, it’s the College Board that has “pulled the wool over people’s eyes.” About AP, to be sure. But also about the SAT and PSAT, and Accuplacer, the placement test used by more than 60 percent of community colleges. They’re all mostly worthless, more hype than reality.

Consider the Advanced Placement program, pushed shamelessly buy the College Board, and by Jay Mathews at The Washington Post (Mathews started the Challenge Index, a ranking of high schools based on the number of AP tests they give).

A 2002 National Research Council study of AP courses and tests found them to be a “mile wide and an inch deep” and inconsistent with research-based principles of learning.

A 2004 study by Geiser and Santelices found that “the best predictor of both first- and second-year college grades” is unweighted high school grade point average, and a high school grade point average “weighted with a full bonus point for AP…is invariably the worst predictor of college performance.”

A 2005 study (Klopfenstein and Thomas) found AP students “…generally no more likely than non-AP students to return to school for a second year or to have higher first semester grades.” Moreover, the authors wrote that “close inspection of the [College Board] studies cited reveals that the existing evidence regarding the benefits of AP experience is questionable,” and “AP courses are not a necessary component of a rigorous curriculum.”

A 2006 MIT faculty report noted ““there is ‘a growing body of research’ that students who earn top AP scores and place out of institute introductory courses end up having ‘difficulty’ when taking the next course.”

Two years prior, Harvard “conducted a study that found students who are allowed to skip introductory courses because they have passed a supposedly equivalent AP course do worse in subsequent courses than students who took the introductory courses at Harvard” (Seebach, 2004).

Dartmouth found that high scores on AP psychology tests do NOT translate into college readiness for the next-level course. Indeed, students admit that ““You’re not trying to get educated; you’re trying to look good;” and, “”The focus is on the test and not necessarily on the fundamental knowledge of the material.”

Students know that AP is far more about gaming the college acceptance process than it is learning.

In The ToolBox Revisited (2006), Adelman wrote about those who had misstated his original ToolBox (1999) work: “With the exception of Klopfenstein and Thomas (2005), a spate of recent reports and commentaries on the Advanced Placement program claim that the original ToolBox demonstrated the unique power of AP course work in explaining bachelor’s degree completion. To put it gently, this is a misreading.”

Ademan goes on to say that “Advanced Placement has almost no bearing on entering postsecondary education,” and when examining and statistically quantifying the factors that relate to bachelor’s degree completion, Advanced Placement does NOT “reach the threshold level of significance.”

The 2010 book “AP: A Critical Examination” noted that “Students see AP courses on their transcripts as the ticket ensuring entry into the college of their choice,” yet, “there is a shortage of evidence about the efficacy, cost, and value of these programs.” And this: AP has become “the juggernaut of American high school education,” but “ the research evidence on its value is minimal.”

As Geiser (2007) notes, “systematic differences in student motivation, academic preparation, family background and high-school quality account for much of the observed difference in college outcomes between AP and non-AP students.” College Board-funded studies do not control well for these student characteristics (even the College Board concedes that “interest and motivation” are keys to “success in any course”).

Klopfenstein and Thomas (2010) find that when these demographic characteristics are controlled for, the claims made for AP disappear.

Yet, the myths –– especially about AP, the SAT and PSAT –– endure.

Meanwhile, the College Board is promoting the Common Core and says it has “aligned” (cough, wink) its products with it. And people believe it. Stopping corporate-style “reform and the Common Core is easier said than done. Parents, students and educators are going to have to remove the wool from over their eyes. And that means abandoning blind belief in the College Board and the products it peddles.”