Introduction
The progression of large-scale
social changes as in natural systems tends to move from the relatively simple
to the complex and disorganized.
With that complexity comes a form of cultural myopia: “…information
entering into the colonized mind is focused solely through a limited worldview,
and anything existing outside of that limited worldview cannot be seen with
clarity.”
In the
case of the 35 years of alleged “corporate reform” of America’s public K-12
schools, this has translated over time into two perceptual tendencies. One has been to accept as given and let
drift into the background the core issues that prompted what was essentially a
revolt against public education as it had evolved through the early 1980s. The second developed systemically with
the increasing participation of those seeking prosecution of our schools, and
in the consequent expansion of issues that are seen as included in that quest
for reform. In short, the
proliferation of isolated or one-note items embroiled in reform quickly drives
out or numerically submerges the core things that originally footed reform.
Today’s
post dives under that barrage of localized or parochial material that has accumulated
documenting the case for school change, as well as the now increasing evidence
of public and system member pushback.
Too much of current rhetoric, by becoming highly relevant to only
subsets of the whole school reform picture, diverts attention from those macro
issues that have driven the attacks on US public schools.
Core
Questions
There
are five questions or footers for virtually all of current detail: (1) Why did “corporate reform” launch,
recognizing the key early players; (2) how did the current cast of reform advocates
develop, and even polar values come to drive present tactics; (3) why
standardized testing fails as the weapon of choice to try to force school change; (4)
how have US public systems overall responded to the attack on their
performance; and (5) how did a very large US human resource sub-population of
teachers (3.1+MM) become the reform targets, versus statutorily accountable
state education departments, public school administrators (215+K), and
somewhere in excess of 80K sworn BOE members?
Why
Reform?
In
practically complete evasion of this most basic question, the apparent answer
is, because the private sector consumers of the human resources being churned
out by our public schools concluded that the public systems were failing their
educational mission.
Retrospectively, there were few particulars offered by the early leaders
of a reform charge, just ramped up presentation of an ideology built around inadequate
education coupled with public systems’ alleged refusal of accountability for learning
deficits. A serious subtext, even
now spoken only in restrained tones, was an alleged belief that our overall
public systems were explicitly advocating extreme liberal values, counter to
many private sector beliefs.
On the
other side of the future skirmish line, our nation’s overall public education
enclaves were doing pretty much all of that. (Parenthetically, the counterpoint is what is occurring
today in a Colorado BOE, where three extreme right wing board members are
dogmatically trying to install an opposite, self-gratuitous political correctness
to an AP curriculum for history; no less egregious than earlier overall public
system attempts to install certain liberal values.) That, in turn, was a legacy of schools of education that had
by that point chosen self-righteousness over the nation’s learning missions. Absorbing
and relaying to nascent teachers contemporary views of learning, and experimentally-derived models of "what works," were suppressed
or ignored; instead those programs continued to float deductive concepts and install a teacher self-image. It surfaces the old anthem, “you gets
what you pays for.”
The initiation
acts of the reformers were detailed in an earlier blog post, but key players
were the Business Roundtable, and a former IBM CEO, with a
selling effort that brought on board the National Governors Association (NGA),
dominated by right wing views, and ALEC, the conservative legislative lobbying
organization creating legislation for conservative state legislatures. Subsequently, the Common Core State
Standards Initiative (CCSSI) issued via the NGA, with an anonymous group of
unknown academic competence creating an alleged “Common Core.” What is now known is that the group
creating those alleged standards was populated with few educators, many
political representatives, and chaired by the present CEO of a testing company. A group supposed to review the “Core”
was identified, and consisted of some of our educational representation at best
riddled with professional mediocrity.
In sum, the nation’s “best and brightest” were not enlisted to either provide
or vet those standards.
Following years of under the
table lobbying, and under the Reagan Administration, that reform agenda finally
issued first as a call to action, “A Nation at Risk” (ANAR); then with the Bush
Administration as the “No Child Left Behind” (NCLB) update of the “Elementary
and Secondary Education Act” (ESEA).
A reading of the original language of NCLB leaves little doubt that the
titling was pure hype and deceptive, and the purpose of the model was creating
failure modes for public schools that would allow conscription of their assets
for conversion into vouchers and charter schools using public tax dollars. NCLB was a highly political act, the
first round in attempts to privatize our public systems.
Even by the middle of last
decade, the public was barely cognizant of what had been imposed on our nation,
and even less celebratory, many of our public schools and their administrations
were in their own parochial and self-righteous zones, totally oblivious to what
was coming at their students and teachers.
Reform Adversaries?
“Corporate reform” started with
the top 100 CEOs in the US, but quickly moved into a political venue, with the
Cheneys prominent in the early attacks. Then advocacy was fully linked politically,
frequently quietly at the time, by the plurality of Republican governors. One example is Ohio, where a back door
into Ohio’s Department of Education was accessible for those pioneering charter
schools, and as early as the 1990s and virtually unseen by most, that format
was being peddled to a gullible Ohio public as “community schools.” Overwhelmingly, these schools were
accompanied by corrupted promotion and payments to “charter consultants.” Some audaciously claimed actual
identification with the ODOE. Many
of these charters are now either failed, or have seen managements prosecuted
for corrupt practices, and most constitute the bottom of the barrel of Ohio
K-12 education performance.
Nationally,
a platoon of opportunists joined the reform bandwagon, including Michelle Rhee,
Jeb Bush, Joel Klein, Wendy Kopp with an allegedly righteous but misdirected “Teach for
America” (TFA), and to America’s misfortune, scion of the “billionaires boys
club,” Bill Gates. It is arguable
that Mr. Gates (who paradoxically never actually finished an education) has operated with the sincere belief that his intrusive intervention and use of wealth -- funding
reform initiatives, standardized testing expansion, VAM attacks on teachers,
the CCSSI “Common Core” installation among the states, and now pushy advocacy of at
best a “CliffsNotes” view of the history of the universe -- were in the nation’s
interest. It is also arguable that
Mr. Gates’ ignorance, arrogance, and misplaced intrusion in public education
has deepened the school-reform divide, and complicated rather than assuaged the
process for constructive US public school change.
Lastly,
the dark underbelly of present reform is the phalanx of private sector textbook
and testing companies. The latter
have been culpable in creating the need for public school reform for at least a
half century, unchecked by any real oversight, institutional or
governmental. This set of players
must be labeled as some of the most destructive corporate entities in our
society. Worse, they have become uninvited
surrogates for legitimate scholarship in defining what is being tested K-12,
and by virtue of that intrusion defining what is considered knowledge. That is outrageous for a society
honoring reason, science, and objectivity of inquiry, threatening America’s
future standing as an educated society.
The
list of destructive players continues, however, and goes bipartisan. Covered in prior posts, Mr. Obama
has been blatantly hypocritical in prescriptions for reform, and has virtually
destroyed the US Department of Education with the continued appointment of Arne
Duncan as its Secretary. (Parenthetically
and ironically, former President Reagan would have been proud of the
service.) It remains something of
a mystery why Obama/Duncan have continued (linking arms with the worst of the
right wing) to prosecute alleged reform, prosecution of NCLB, and a hopelessly
bureaucratic and deceptive “Race to the Top” with billion dollar bribery of our
states to continue to press standardized testing.
Testing,
Testing, Testing?
There
has been so much reported on the standardized testing being employed K-12 that
it likely can’t be embellished. All
of the critique demonstrating that the testing model is either ineffective in
creating higher order learning, or even destructive of it, is
unassailable. The logic for
present testing is simply wrong.
But there are two different negatives operating at the roots of
testing-driven alleged reform.
First,
there is an elephant in the room that is being ignored in all of the minutiae –
the core logic of the entire test motif as the backbone of school
accountability and alleged search for performance. That is: Why is
the entire test logic being employed, presumed the vehicle for accounting for
performance quality, using quality assessment logic that was obsolete decades
ago to achieve quality assurance, and that wouldn’t be employed by any
contemporary US private sector enterprise in this century?
The resultant
hypocrisy of every niche of reform prosecution is mind boggling. Quality assurance in this century is
based on controlling the processes that create entity quality, not on
destructive or post-creation testing of a product long after it is timely or
efficient to catch failures of quality in action. Bottom line, it has never been about testing per se, but
about the intelligence in how testing is employed. Simply, even present formulaic testing is kosher were it
being employed at the locus of learning, designed by those responsible for that
learning, and being employed as a formative device. The ignorance of present
reform leadership is breathtaking and challenges credulity.
The
second testing issue simply destroys what is assumed to be the Administration’s
semi-delusional motivation for reform – trying to in any tactical time frame
erase learning deficits attributable to racial, economic, familial, and
cultural differences among the nation’s children. Multiple studies have demonstrated that especially early
grade standardized testing of children reflects more frequently their incoming and residual backgrounds defined above, versus assessing classroom effects. The result is that effective testing of
children with those differential attributes would need to follow a different
course; one size does not fit all.
Hence,
present undifferentiated standardized testing becomes a counter-productive, if
not destructive monolithic device in trying to boost learning among
disadvantaged students. This is
not a new or original concept; see the extensive work of Harvard
education professor, Howard Gardner, on multiple intelligences, earlier sidetracked
by more educational naivety, but now being revisited in its proper not
revisionist form.
When
what is tested with present modeling, now massively deployed, defines what is
being taught, and that in turn defines what is knowledge in America, the nation
is in far greater trouble than an unfavorable comparison with other nations in
the results of the PISA testing of students. The only good news is that objections to testing overkill are gaining national traction.
Public
School Sponges
A
factor so obvious, but seemingly oblivious to our reform remonstraters, is the
capacity our public systems have demonstrated to go from simply ignoring or
denying that “corporate reform” exists, and that they are still under attack,
to going venal by exhibiting more creativity in devising ways to cheat on that
testing than it would have taken to launch self-reform.
In
this milieu, there are a few exemplary public systems, that with courage and a
‘stick it somewhere’ attitude toward the reform vultures, that have creatively
changed their own classroom models, and advanced critical thinking and
learning. The vast majority of our
public schools have simply hunkered down, some too thick or self-centric to
even acknowledge they’re under attack.
A strategy has been to simply game the testing to make it something
doable without triggering any self-assessment of why they are being bombed with
the testing weapon. The resultant
administrative malfeasance, not primarily our public system teachers, is the
culprit but still unrecognized, or at least only grudgingly acknowledged and
virtually untouched by alleged reform.
Our
overall public K-12 systems precipitated the present reform war, and now are
extending it by reticence or dogmatism.
Their failure overall to get around cultural myopia, and offset a
century of self-righteousness and perceived entitlement, is now the fuel that
is extending reform threats. That
this is happening, while part of our public, increasingly our parents, even
their students, are showing more awareness of the threat to future learning, is
wholesale indictment of much present public school leadership.
Roots of School Dysfunction?
When
you dig for answers to why America’s public schools created the environment for
“corporate reform,” then dig some more, the least referenced causal factor in
this 35 year societal debacle is likely the most important. That factor is our
obsolete and dysfunctional schools of education, not universally, but with only
few exceptions the schools with roots in the original “normal” schools of early
last century, or most states’ university-associated schools of education.
As one
critic put it, our “schools of education think they own America’s public K-12
schools.” In fact, most of our
schools of education should be candidates for dissolution, and a new
start. They have created and
fostered a faulty logic of learning for a century, have both failed to adopt the
results of accumulating neural research to amend flawed deductive methods, and
created faculties not competent to research learning. It takes very little research to find that other nations' educators, for example in the key reform targets of literacy and numeracy, have
gone way beyond the US in developing the underlying theories of human perception
and cognition that foot teaching to achieve those goals.
But
the indictment gets worse. Factually,
our schools of education have consistently attracted the intellectual bottom
one-third of the barrel of college students, pragmatically defining most of our
present teachers. Without almost
immediate change in that teacher recruiting and education system, or some
drastic change in local systems’ further education of their teachers, it will also
define the next generation of US public school teachers.
Having
failed that basic training, along with failure to create preparation for
competent school administration with awareness of contemporary organizational
behavior, they have set up the present mess of public schools being unethically
and ineptly guided. The not
politically correct bottom line; our public schools are staffed with the
intellectually weakest outputs of our colleges. They are being managed by resources
with no better and frequently worse credentials, and who may be motivated by
factors that have nothing to do with most teachers’ still wholly sincere
reasons for choosing the profession.
The
place where public school reform should have begun is with the leadership of
our public systems, the real responsible and accountable for school failure to
educate for this century and beyond.
The proverb, “the fish rots from the head down,” could be applied to a
fair fraction of current public school leadership.
Digging
Very Deep
The
OECD’s PISA international testing of public school secondary students is real
enough, and likely accurately predicts that overall America’s public systems
are turning out products who are now behind some other nations in learning. That was not true historically, and it
may well be that America’s perceived decline is attributable to other nations’
progress as well as need for US absolute improvement. But as both economic and scientific performance world-wide
becomes more homogeneous, it still demands that US schools find paths to create
their own internal improvements in learning.
One
wishes that improvement in America’s capacity to compete and function with
societal excellence was the overriding thrust of present “corporate reform.” Possibly early on in the challenges to
public K-12 it may have been, with the better of our corporate community
initiating the charge. But as the
movement became more politicized in the last and this decade, there is a
suspicion that motivations for reform became blurred.
It is a cynical point of view, but it is also a
credible assessment: That far too much of present public school reform is
being pushed simplistically to try to reassert American exceptionalism in world
testing. To the extent that is
occurring, it is ignorant selfishness. The latter because major gains are
being sought in 'our reformers’ time,' with little or no strategic
awareness of the downstream strategic costs to the nation and its children,
potentially intellectually and professionally depreciated by the present
standardized testing to achieve myopic learning gains.
If there is a kernel of truth in this point of view,
there is even a stronger case to assert that any real public school reform will
need to blossom grass roots, propagated from within our local systems, or at
least be coextensive with different reform modes and from better angels in our
states, in the USDOE, and from our universities.