At about the same time that President Obama was reelected,
the Oregonian ran an article where a Beaverton teacher told a reporter that she
had 64 students in her high school biology class. There are endless issues that need to be
pressed as President Obama enters his second term. Some progressives are hopeful because there
is no third term – supposedly no further political ambitions. Considering both history and the associations
that the President chooses – hopefulness from the left doesn’t represent
reality. However, there is both the need
and the responsibility to put pressure on the president for social, political,
and economic justice. One area where the
Obama administration has been especially wanton is public education. Initially taking their cue from Bush’s No
Child Left Behind – they have magnified the push for non-egalitarian; class,
race, and gender biased education via their own program, Race to the Top.
Obama, through his appointment of Arne Duncan as Secretary
of Education, has endorsed the post-neo-con educational reform movement, or
what some critics refer to as the “educational deformers.” Administration policy is akin to
privatization because the deformers view education as a commodity. Bill Ayers elegantly stated the present
educational reality in his recent open letter to the President:
The
landscape of “educational reform” is currently littered with rubble and ruin
and wreckage on all sides. Sadly, your administration has contributed
significantly to the mounting catastrophe. You’re not alone: The toxic
materials have been assembled as a bipartisan endeavor over many years, and the
efforts of the last several administrations are now organized into a coherent
push mobilized and led by a merry band of billionaires including Bill Gates,
Michael Bloomberg, Sam Walton, and Eli Broad.
Unfortunately, Obama
administration educational policy corresponds directly with the President’s
choice of Wall Street over Main Street, in spite of his contradictory
assertions during his battle with Romney.
For school children and teachers, it means that inspiration and
curiosity and breath and depth in learning are often usurped by crowded and
underfunded schools, high stakes testing, zero tolerance and incarceration, and
the demonization of teachers.
In
These Times
recently published an article by Leonie Haimson that is wonderfully titled,
“Educate All Kids Like Sasha and Malia.”
Haimson argues that the current administration is “pauperizing,
standardizing, digitizing and privatizing education” even though the President
would never do the same to his own daughters.
She warns that although Obama has criticized against “teaching to the
test,” his administration has done just that by demanding teacher evaluation
through student test scores. In
addition, Haimson argues that punitive policies like school closings and mass
teacher firings condemn poor children to unequal education.
Barack & Michelle Obama’s
children attend the Friends School and they went to the University of Chicago
Lab School before he became President.
Both of these institutions honors teachers and provide a teaching and
learning environment that includes small classes, abundant resources, and
opportunities for exploration and experimentation by teachers and
students. Standardized testing is not a
religion and teachers are respected rather than demonized.
But the schools that President
Obamas’ children attend are not the model for his Department of Education or
the reformers that they have embraced.
The irony is so great because the president and everyone else
understands that good teaching and student learning have nothing to do with
privatizing schools or high stakes testing or any of the other false measures
that the federal government has foisted upon state legislatures. Government educational policy is economic and
ideological – not evidential, in spite of government and deformer assertions to
the contrary.
So another great article title
helps our understanding – this time it is “How to Destroy Education While
Making a Trillion Dollars” by Robert Freeman.
The author stresses three assertions.
First,
lower the costs so you can jack up the profits. Since the overwhelming cost in
education is the salaries of the teachers, this means firing the experienced
teachers, for they are the most expensive. Replace them with “teachers” who are
young, inexperienced, and inexpensive. Better yet, waive requirements that they
have to have any training, that is to say, that they be credentialed. That way, you can get the absolute cheapest
workers available. Roll them over
frequently so they don’t develop any expectation that they’ll ever make a
career out of it.
Second,
make the curriculum as narrow, rote, and regimented as you can. This makes it
possible for low-skilled “teachers” to “teach.” All they need do is maintain
order while drilling students in mindless memorization and robotic repetition.
By all means avoid messy things like context, nuance, values, complexity,
reflection, depth, ambiguity—all the things that actually make for true
intelligence.
Third, Proliferate
franchised, chartered McSchools with each classroom in each McSchool teaching
the same thing on the same day in exactly the same way. Develop the lesson
literally once, but distribute and reuse it thousands of times with low-cost
proctors doing the supervision.
Thankfully, teachers and their
allies are fighting for smaller class sizes, limited standardized tests,
enhanced arts programs, equitable financing, and strong teacher contracts that
protect intellectual freedom, collegiality and collaboration, as well as bread
and butter issues. And there are
organizations, like the Center for Teaching Quality in Chapel Hill, North
Carolina, that collaborate with thousands of teachers in both the United States
and throughout the World, to help nurture not only voice, but more importantly
power, so that exemplary teachers might become the decision makers in the
education arena. Everyone cites teaching
and learning in Finland because it is a country where teachers are
empowered. But there are great teachers
throughout the United States who are ready to lead based on very different
values and outcomes than the Obama administration supports. Here in Portland people like Bill Bigelow,
Linda Christensen, Jan Zuckerman, and many others teach our children while
simultaneously and selflessly fighting for progressive teaching and learning –
education is not a commodity.
Maybe our protests and our actions should
remain naïve. Maybe we should be
pounding Barack and Michelle Obama, as well as the current administration with Leonie
Haimson’s words:
“Educate All Kids Like Sasha and Malia.”
No comments:
Post a Comment