Archives for category: Technology, Computers

In response to President Obama’s proposal to connect every classroom and use software that will enable every teacher to know what every student is thinking at all times, Michael Fiorillo has another idea:

“I applaud President Obama’s desire for oversight of young people’s brains, but his proposal doesn’t go nearly far enough.

“My edu-venture will remedy the shortcomings of bio-exterior technology, and guarantee a miraculous solution to the achievement gap.

“My super-miniaturized wifi receivers, combined with my patented KiddieChipsFirst technology, will allow Pearson to download its tests and product placements directly into the cerebrums of our most valuable assets, and allow our developing human capital to upload their responses, so that remotely-sited “teachers know what is going on in the student’s brains.”

President Obama will unveil his technology plan for American education today in Mooresville, North Carolina.

Joy Resmovits reports on Huffington Post:

“President Barack Obama imagines a country where teachers know what’s happening in their students’ brains.

“He wants “teachers to have an ability to assess learning hour by hour and day by day,” a senior White House official said Wednesday. “That vision … is really not possible with the connectivity we have today.”

“That’s why on Thursday Obama will speak at a school in Mooresville, N.C., to unveil an initiative that aims to give 99 percent of America’s public schools high-speed connectivity over the next five years.”

Mooresville has won national attention because it provided laptop computers to every student in fourth grade and above, and its graduation rate shot up. The superintendent says there were other reasons for the increased graduation rate.

A few things about North Carolina: the Democratic Party held its 2012 National Convention there. It is a right-to-work state. The state spending on public education is 48th in the nation. Teachers’ salaries are 46th in the nation. Legislation introduced this spring by the president pro tem of the state senate would strip teachers of all tenure rights. At the same time that the legislature is attacking the pay and tenure of career educators, it allocated $6 million to hire inexperienced Teach for America teachers. The legislature also plans to expand the number of charters, free of conflict of interest regulations, free of diversity requirements, and free to hire uncertified teachers.

Technology is a wonderful thing, and all schools should be connected to the Internet.

But I would respectfully suggest to President Obama that there are far larger issues he should tackle right now, like defending the very existence of a teaching profession, defending academic freedom of educators, supporting the nation’s public schools, resisting privatization, and helping states provide equality of educational opportunity, with enough resources to meet the essential needs of students.

A 22-year-old man was arrested in The Netherlands in connection with the posting online of a national examination in French.

With the trend towards online national assessments, the temptation for hackers to obtain them, rewrite them, release them, sell them, etc. becomes irresistible.

Teacher educators continue to speak out against edPTA. this is an assessment of teacher performance that will be administered by Pearson.

Here is a critique by Julie Gorlewski, a teacher educator at SUNY, New Paltz, New York.

The edTPA is a standardized assessment of teaching that is being required in many states, including New York State as of May 2014, for teacher certification. The edTPA is being marketed as a way to “professionalize” the field of education, a contention that is deeply insulting to those of us who have dedicated our lives to the art and craft of teaching. The edTPA will be administered during student teaching. It is a high-stakes assessment because certification depends on its successful completion. This assessment has raised concerns of teachers and teacher educators for several reasons:
Although its initial versions were developed at Stanford, the instrument is being sold and administered by Pearson, Inc. It is expected to cost candidates around $300.
Assessments will not be scored by teacher educators; they will be scored by temporary workers paid about $75 per exam. These scorers are not allowed to know the teacher candidates, nor are they to be affiliated with the community in which student teaching occurs. These conditions negate the importance of relationships in the development of teaching, preferring the pretense of objectivity over trust, authenticity, and cultural responsiveness.
The assessment requires that candidates submit videos of themselves in K-12 teaching situations. This means that Pearson will own videos of young people who have student teachers in their classrooms. This is being implemented without widespread knowledge or consent of parents in states where edTPA is being mandated.

Will the edTPA affect the experience of learning to teach? You bet it will. A recent conversation I had with a student in our teacher education program highlights the potential effects of this assessment. Joel, who is enrolled in my undergraduate Introduction to Curriculum and Assessment course approached me after class and asked if I had time to talk. He was excited and concerned. He was excited because the teacher he had been assigned to for Fieldwork I, where students spend 35 hours observing and participating in secondary settings, had invited him to student teach with her. Because he had tremendous respect and admiration for this teacher, Joel was thrilled by the opportunity. But he was also worried, so worried that he hesitated to accept the offer.
Joel was apprehensive about completing the edTPA in this school. It is an urban environment in a community noted for poverty and gang activity. He had forged relationships with the young people in the school, as well as several faculty members there, but the judgment of an objective scorer who might not understand if the classroom was not filled with compliant, well-behaved learners had made my student hesitate. My heart sank.

I encouraged Joel to follow his heart and reassured him that the edTPA scorers would appreciate the diverse experiences of teacher candidates in a range of settings. I reassured Joel because I have faith in him, in his mentor teacher, and in the relationships they will form with their students. I have no such faith in Pearson, and I fear the consequences of its corporate incursions into education. But I will not allow fear to triumph over optimism, nor will I allow anonymity to erase relationships. The possibilities of education are intensely human and cannot be reduced to a number.

Julie A. Gorlewski, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor
Department of Secondary Education
Incoming Co-Editor of English Journal
SUNY New Paltz
800 Hawk Drive
Old Main 321B
New Paltz, NY 12561
845-257-2856
845-257-2854 Fax

Whenever I am going to lecture, someone asks if I plan to use PowerPoint. And I always say “no, I just need a microphone and a glass of water.”

I know that is retrograde, but to date I have found most PowerPoint presentations to be disruptive or simplistic. I hate it when someone puts up a screen and reads what is says, as thought he audience is illiterate. Sometimes the visuals are clever graphics that make you laugh. Sometimes the setup doesn’t work and the presentation is ruined.

I am thinking of using PowerPoint when I talk about my new book because I use a lot of data to say important things. But I will need lessons and help.

This essay on AV was written by Joseph Epstein, a brilliant essayist. Epstein and I worked together at The Néw Leader magazine in the early 1960s. But that’s another story.

Two members of the honor roll–both thoughtful, dedicated educators–disagree about Néw York’s plan to evaluate educators, in this case principals.

Carol Burris, the principal of South Side High School in Rockville Center, was selected by her colleagues as principal of the year in Néw York. Mike McGill is superintendent of schools in Scarsdale, one of the state’s most affluent and excellent districts.

I honored Carol in the past for leading the fight against the state’s ill-considered test-based evaluation plan. I honored Mike for his stalwart opposition to the state’s demand to make testing the centerpiece of its vision and for his vision of what good education is.

Here, Mike takes issue with Carol’s critique of the state plan to evaluate principals. He thinks she didn’t go far enough in resisting a mindless technocratic bureaucracy bent in stamping out the last vestige of professionalism and independent thought.

Mike McGill writes:

Why the New York Value-Added Measure of Principals is Flawed (Part II)

New York Principal of the Year Carol Burris has been pushing back against the misuse of metrics in teacher evaluation. Now, in a letter to the Board of Regents, she’s taken on the Value-added Method (VAM) that’s being used to calculate 25 percent of principals’ performance rating.

I have concerns about the state’s approach as well, but I have to admit that I feel a bit ambivalent about her going public with hers. More on that in a minute.

Ms. Burris is concerned that Albany is going to measure principals on an uneven field. She says their scores will be calculated unfairly: Individuals’ ratings will reflect the performance of very different student populations that take different tests whose rigor differs.

She also worries about unintended consequences. Will schools advise students to avoid more challenging courses so their scores will be better?

Will they drop distinctive local programs so more students can take more state tests, so principals will have a better chance of getting better scores? Will principals in troubled schools leave and go where student populations are more stable, problems are fewer, and results better?

I’m not sure which unhappy outcomes are most likely, but I can’t imagine that the state’s plan will be especially productive in the end.

So why am I ambivalent about Ms. Burris’s message? It’s a matter of being careful about what you wish for.

Having observed the Albany mindset in action over the years, I find my own thoughts eliding quickly to another unintended consequence.

If, as Ms. Burris says, inconsistent measurement is the problem, there’s an easy solution. To be sure all principals are rated the same way, we could just make sure all schools in the state offer exactly the same program so that all kids take exactly the same tests.

Evaluation will drive instruction with even more of a vengeance.

The approach would be a little extreme, and to be fair, even our friends upstate might not want to go that far. Still, the technocratic impulse is to see complex difficulties as technical problems and then to solve them with mechanical fixes. And where schools are concerned, that impulse can lead to places nobody should want to venture, at least if he or she is interested in an innovative and distinctive education. More regimentation isn’t a prescription for excellence.

Okay. My comment about being ambivalent was a little tongue-in-cheek. But my experience here in the self-proclaimed “State of Learning” does give me pause. So just in case it might sound as if there’s a simple technical solution to the problems in Albany’s evaluation plan, let me offer four other reasons there isn’t.

One: VAM is supposed to compensate for the fact that different teachers or principals serve different populations.

So, for example, it compares those who work primarily with English Language Learners with others who do too. But VAM doesn’t distinguish among many other less obvious conditions that influence children’s learning. So in theory, it may level the playing field for people who work with different populations. In the real world, it doesn’t necessarily.

Two: Mathematical models can identify individuals whose students have progressed more or less on state tests. But that doesn’t mean that the student “output” can be attributed primarily to a particular person’s “input” in any particular case. The preponderance of research continues to indicate that statistical bias and random “noise” in the data skew VAM calculations and make them unreliable. We also know from experience that VAM results are unstable; for no evident reason, someone who’s a “high performer” this year may be a “low performer” next.

Three: Principals can’t control students’ or teachers’ actions tightly enough to be directly accountable for state test scores. For example, what if a new principal’s faculty is full of internal tensions, veterans are burned out or a significant number of students see school as irrelevant? She can’t unilaterally change work rules or conditions. She can’t fire tenured people for being apathetic. She has to work with the students she has. Realistically, how accountable can she be for achieving good VAM results, especially if she’s only been in the school for a short time?

Four: Value-added is only part of the state’s evaluation formula. A lot of the rest of a principal’s score depends on observations and other evidence. Supervisors are supposed to use objective criteria to score this evidence. (“The principal can express an educational vision. The principal holds meetings where he shares his vision,” for example.) Unhappily, however, this approach de-emphasizes capacities like the ability to use good judgment or to work well with people. Those qualities elude statistical measurement, must be judged subjectively, and don’t fit the evaluation model very well. Of course, they’re also among the most important things effective leaders do in the real world.

Those are four reasonable concerns about the premises underlying the state’s principal evaluation scheme.

But will anyone in Albany care?
In the world of education today, policy makers and practitioners stare at one another across a broad divide.

Basically, they’re working from different systems of belief. Many out here in the field say the theory that drives current policy is disconnected from reality. Our counterparts in state capitals and Washington tell us they know best and that we’ll just have to stay the course.

The way out of this unproductive tableau is through authentic dialogue. But that means those in the seats of power must want to listen.

The writer of this article, Colin Woodard, recently won the George Polk award, one of the highest honors in journalism.

The article is bout a sordid effort to promote technology as a for-profit enterprise in Maine schools. To introduce a Maine virtual charter school, to require online courses for graduation, and to follow a script written not by educators but by lobbyists.

This is a classic. Don’t miss it.

Having studied the history of education for some decades, I have a built-in resistance to claims about the school of the future, particularly when it involves the end of schooling. Over many years, I have seen predictions about that Great Day when all children are self-motivated, all learning comes naturally, and instruction by adults becomes superfluous. The archetype of this idea was A. S. Neill’s “Summerhill,” which was a huge bestseller in the 1960s. But it was preceded by many other visions of schools without books, without tests, without classes, without teachers, without stress, without walls, without without without.

Here is the latest: a school in the Cloud, with Grannies to answer questions as self-motivated children use the Web to learn at their own speed, as they wish. The man behind this proposal won a $1 million TED prize for this idea.

What do you think?

I posted earlier today about a new Xerox machine that is being marketed to “read” and grade student essays. Not to score bubble tests, but to grade essays. Granted, this is not a new idea. There are now different companies selling machines to grade student writing. I have seen demonstrations of this technology, and I can’t shake the feeling that this is not right.

Why? I am not opposed to technology. But here is the nub of my discomfort. I am a writer. The moment I realized I was a writer was when I discovered many years ago that I write for an audience. I think of my reader(s). If I am writing for a tabloid, I write in a certain style. If I am writing for the New York Times, I write in another way. If I am writing a letter to a family member, another style. If I am writing for a scholarly journal, something else. When I write for this blog, I have a voice different from the voice in my books. I don’t know how to write for a machine.

Robert Shepherd reminded me how important the audience is for a writer when he posted this comment about the Xerox grading machine:

“The slick piece of marketing collateral that Xerox produced for this product features, most prominently, a picture of a smiling teacher bent over to help a smiling student. But the promise of the product is precisely the opposite–that teacher feedback will be eliminated (automated).

“Clearly, it’s a fairly simple matter to create technologies that correct multiple-choice and other so-called “objective” tests. More troubling is the promise that the technology will score “constructed response” items (in non-EduSpeak, writing). Let’s be clear about this. There is no existing system that can read, as that term is understood when it is predicated of a human being. What creators of such software can do is to correlate various features of pieces of writing that can easily be recognized by software to outcomes assigned those pieces of writing by human teachers.

“So, one might come up with some formula involving use in the piece of writing of terms from the writing prompt, average sentence length, average word length, number of spelling errors, number of distinct words used, frequency of words used, etc., that yields a score that is highly correlated with scores given by human readers/graders using a rubric. At a whole other level of sophistication, one might create a system that has a parser and that does rudimentary checking of grammar and punctuation. Some of that is easy–e.g., does each sentence begin with a capital letter? Some of it is rather more difficult (a system that correctly identifies all and only those groups of words that are sentence fragments would have to be a complete model of grammatical patterns for well-formed sentences in English).

“Who knows whether the Xerox system is that sophisticated. One cannot tell whether it is from the marketing literature, which is a concatenation of glittering vagaries. But even if one had a perfect system of this kind that almost perfectly correlated with scoring by human readers, it would still be the case that NO ONE was actually reading the student’s writing and attending to what he or she has to say and how it is said. The whole point of the enterprise of teaching kids how to write is for them to master a form of COMMUNICATION BETWEEN PERSONS, and one cannot eliminate the person who is the audience of the communication and have an authentic interchange.

“Since these writing graders first started appearing, I have read an enormous amount of hogwash about them from people who don’t understand that we don’t yet have artificial intelligences that can read. Instead, we have automated systems for doing various tasks that stand in lieu of anyone doing any reading.”

What will they think of next?

Xerox has a new machine that can grade tests and even essays.

No human judgment necessary. The mechanization of the classroom moves forward.

Will teachers understand what their students know and can do when they no longer read their papers?