Archive for the ‘Democratic Education’ Category

It Matters What We Test For

Wednesday, October 7th, 2009

Ever checked out iTunes U?  It’s iTunes’ collection of lectures and talks by people from around the world on a huge variety of topics.  Basically, it’s like being able to sit in the back of a college lecture hall and hear some pretty smart people talk.

StanfordOn a recommendation from a friend, I listened to a recording of a talk from a 2008 Stanford University Ethics in Society conference.  The topic was “Charter Schools Closing the Achievement Gap: Results from New York City and Chicago,” and the lead speaker was Caroline Hoxby, a Stanford University Professor of Economics and a Hoover Institution Senior Fellow.  Hoxby, who recently came out with a new report stemming from similar data, described how the study found that students at charter schools in New York City and Chicago performed better on reading and math scores than students who tried to get into those charter schools but did not get picked in the lottery (most charter schools use lotteries to select from the large pool of students who apply for limited spots).

From a research perspective, what I like about the study is how it controls for family engagement and demographics, since the group selected randomly in the lottery will be similar to the group that was not selected.

However, I was glad to hear my strong concerns about the study reflected by the speaker who was chosen to respond to Hoxby’s talk, Kenneth Strike, a Cultural Foundations of Education Professor at Syracure University.  Strike questioned the tools used to assess the students, saying that although math and reading are foundational skills that support other educational goals, “being foundational doesn’t make them proxies for other [goals]” (my emphasis).  In other words, we must not forget that there are other educational goals in addition to helping young people learn how to read and do math.

Then came the part I really appreciated.  Strike talked about there being both “Cultural Goods” like citizenship and autonomy, as well as “Economic Goods” such as jobs, income, and human capital.  He was expanding the goal and purpose of education beyond the narrow approach that looks at young people solely as future workers and job-holders, which justifies a standardized educational delivery for all young people and the merging of the fields of economics and education (such that one can’t be too surprised by policies such as monetary rewards for students).

Strike then questions the assessments themselves:

The way we use testing and accountability has a very high risk of goal distortion.  In fact, I think it tends to erode the adequacy and reasonableness of these things [current standardized assessments in math and reading] because it generates so much gaming.

By focusing so much attention on a narrow academic (though important) set of skills, the risk is that we lose sight of other essential educational goals, namely becoming a good citizen, developing autonomy, being creative, working well with other people, etc – Strike’s “Cultural Goods.”

Strike later says that we must look at measures for those cultural sets of skills and try to measure them.  They CAN be measured, he says.

They can indeed.  Here are a few research studies that study qualities like citizenship, autonomy, creativity, self-determination, compassion, and other important skills.  (These often focus more on what kinds of educational environments can best support such skills, rather than a high-stakes test that threatens teachers with firing, students with being held back, and in so doing completely distorting the educational process):

  • Self-Determination Theory: hundreds of studies have been carried out researching how people gain and develop self-determination, including the key importance of autonomy-support and internal motivation in learning as well as the negative impact of control and external motivation on learning.
  • The Hope Study: research showing that “motivation to learn increases when schools give students more autonomy, a greater sense of belonging, and more opportunities to pursue individual goals.”
  • Lives of Passion, School of Hope: a new book that surveys hundreds of graduates of an innovative participatory school, showing that graduates take part in society as active and productive citizens and point to the school as a key reason for that.
  • Moral Development in a Democratic School: describes how young people develop moral behavior through being in an environment where they can choose their own activities and where they are involved in decision-making and conflict resolution, providing students with “opportunities for them to develop and deepen understanding of the balance of personal rights and responsibilities within a community.”
  • Comparison of Freedom-Based and Conventional Learning Environments: a small study I did as part of my Masters degree, which establishes a correlation between freedom-based schools and a positive school atmosphere, high levels of perceived autonomy-support, high levels of student intrinsic motivation and self-determination, and strong development of personal qualities such as self-confidence, responsibility, and compassion.  The results also indicate higher levels of each factor for freedom-based schools as compared to a conventional school.

As Strike says, those important democratic and citizenship skills CAN be measured.  We must be wary of the slippery slope potential that measuring could lead to high-stakes assessments in these areas.  However, by measuring for these skills we recognize that they are indeed important, and we start to expand the very purpose of education beyond economic goals and standardized academics to include the cultural and citizenship goals that value development of democratic citizenship, self-determination, autonomy, confidence, and compassion.

Reading Rainbow = Democratic Education?

Wednesday, September 2nd, 2009

Reading RainbowRemember this show?   Watched it, like I did, when you were younger?  Loved the theme music?  Or perhaps you just heard about it last week when it was reported that it is ending its 26-year run.  Regardless, it is indeed a sad day.  I was inspired to write about it here after reading an excellent post about it on the PopTen blog.  Blogger Morgan Holzer does a great job of capturing the joy and spirit of Reading Rainbow, highlighting some of the great books profiled.

I especially want to point out Morgan’s description of how young people were involved in the show:

Reading was an adventure to be had. It took you to new worlds where anything was possible, and to top it off, you (a kid!) got to review the book in the end. And while pundits decry television, movies, and gaming for dumbing down our youth, I have to say, this is a huge blow as well.

I loved how LeVar Burton (yes, like many others out there I think of him even more as Geordie LaForge from Star Trek: The Next Generation, as well as Kunta Kinte from Alex Haley’s Roots) would always bring in the youth-recommendation section by saying, “But. . . you don’t have to take MY word for it.”

Go Reading Rainbow for respecting young people to review and promote books themselves, and to have the adult host of the show defer to young people rather than saying he is the one to trust on reading!  Maybe it was a gimmick to make kids laugh.  But I have a feeling there was someone, or someones, on the team creating that show who realized that young people will often listen more to their peers, and that young people themselves have something important to say – in this case, about books.

That belief in and support in the voices of youth – youth voice – is an essential part of democratic education, of good and meaningful education.  For that reason, and for the many memories I have of LeVar helping me learn how to make pizza and explore strange new worlds of books, I salute Reading Rainbow and thank you for your many years of reading advocacy and youth empowerment.

New Yes! Magazine Issue on Education

Tuesday, August 25th, 2009

Yes magazine coverI just received the newest Yes! Magazine issue in my mailbox today.  I had heard that the fall issue would be focused on education, and I was excitedly awaiting its delivery.  Sure enough, the folks at Yes! did not disappoint.  The cover slogan of the issue is, “Learn as You Go,” and the issue features “13 Radical Acts of Education.”

There are articles by leading educators and thinkers like John Taylor Gatto and Ron Miller, an interview with the ever-inspiring Parker Palmer, an account of the great work of Grace Lee Boggs and the Boggs Center in Detroit, and introductions to a ton of great schools and projects like the Albany Free School (where I had the honor and privilege to teach for a year), Foxfire’s community education project running since 1966, the excellent organization Shikshantar in India, and the Reschool Yourself site that chronicles my friend Melia Dicker’s journey to re-visit and re-think her own schooling.

In short, a great snapshot of what education can and ought to be when it is grounded in our nation’s democratic values – where young people, teachers, and community members are dynamic participants in the creation of their own learning and the building of a more vibrant democratic society.

If you don’t subscribe to this incredible magazine, consider signing up or at the very least getting this issue.  Yes! is one of the very few magazines out there writing powerfully about the ideas of community living, direct participation, sustainability, equity and justice, and, yes, democratic education.

Check it out.

Talk to Arne Duncan and the U.S. Department of Education

Monday, May 11th, 2009

Education Secretary Arne Duncan is traveling around speaking and listening to ideas from the public.  Wisely, he is also engaging with the public online.  Here’s a snippet from his Ed.gov announcement:

I will be going to 15 other places across the country to continue this conversation.

There is one more place I will be going to listen and learn.  Here.

In the coming weeks, I will ask questions here.  Topics will include raising standards, strengthening teacher quality, using data to improve learning, and turning around low-performing schools.

But I will be reading what you say.  So will others here at the U.S. Department of Education.

Today, I want to start with a simple set of questions:

Many states in America are independently considering adopting internationally-benchmarked, college and career-ready standards.  Is raising standards a good idea?  How should we go about it?

I’m real glad to hear that he is going online, though sad that the democratic engagement piece is missing several key online tools that have become the norm, including on Obama’s transition website, tools such as the ranking of comments and commenting on comments, which would greatly encourage a conversation rather than a straight posting of disconnected thoughts.

Nonetheless, I suggest people go to the site and add their comment.  As Duncan wrote, he and members of the U.S. Department of Education will be reading these comments, and I’m taking them at their word. (I surely hope that Obama and his inner circle will be reading them as well, or informed about them from Duncan, so that Obama stays current on the voices of the people on education issues).

Here’s my comment, already posted:

Yes, we should raise standards. But I would differ from your statement about the kinds of standards we should identify and to which we should hold schools accountable. We live in a democratic society grounded in the values of participatory decision-making, individual freedom, personal and community responsibility, and social justice. Therefore, let’s hold schools accountable to practicing those values and nurturing them in young people. Specifically, we might assess the extent to which schools:

- support the voices of students, teachers, parents, and community members in educational decision-making

- provide opportunities for young people to have degrees of control over their own learning

- nurture in students the skills of creativity, curiosity, intellectual development (which is distinct from memorizing academic facts), compassion, cooperation, and self-direction they need to be contributing members of society.

Let us not simply look at young people as adults-in-training to uniformly train into the future workforce. Young people are individuals with unique interests and rights, and the goal of education goes broader than career and workforce. It involves the growth and empowerment of young people to lead successful, happy lives and to be leaders and stewards of the values and rights that form the basis our democratic society.

Ultimately, the over-riding standard for schools in a democracy ought to be that schools are a beacon of democratic values and practice. How can we possibly hope for the strengthening of a more vibrant democratic society without creating spaces for young people to live and learn in democratic environments?

What do you have to say?  Join the conversation.  Here’s the link again.

School Design That Supports Democratic Education

Sunday, May 3rd, 2009

Amidst all the hot topics in education – high-stakes testing, mayoral control, school choice, and more – one essential issue that seems to get lost in the shuffle (including, to my shame, in this blog) is the arena of educational architecture and design.  Yet for me, every now and then, my latent interest in architecture flares up or I discover a new article or website devoted to school architecture, and I am once again reminded that we ignore the topic of physical space and school design to the great detriment of young people.

A few weeks ago, Prakash Nair of the innovative architecture and design company Fielding Nair International, wrote an article for Education Week (PDF link here) on just this topic.  I’ve encountered Nair’s name, as well as his partner Randall Fielding, numerous times over the years, and I am deeply impressed with their ideas and designs.  They are not only incredible architects, but also insightful education planners and thinkers who create their educational designs in such a way that will support self-directed personalized learning, democratic community participation, and sustainable principles.  Nair’s recent article in Ed Week gave recommendations regarding the stimulus money for educational facilities.  Wrote Nair:

“If we simply repair broken structures, we will ignore the real problems with American education while giving renewed life to a model of teaching and learning that has been obsolete since the end of the industrial era.

“Let’s start with the fundamental building block of almost every single school in this country: the classroom. Who seriously believes that locking 25 students in a small room with one adult for several hours each day is the best way for them to be “educated”? In the 21st century, education is about project-based learning, connections with peers around the world, service learning, independent research, design and creativity, and, more than anything else, critical thinking and challenges to old assumptions.”

Sound familiar, democratic and progressive educators?  Aside from the design bent, these words could have been spoken by anyone from John Dewey to Deborah Meier, from Maria Montessori to Matt Hern and Yaacov Hecht (although admittedly, a couple of those folks would have said “20th” instead of “21st” Century!).  Clearly, the democratic education world has allies in the architectural world.

And what does a setting designed to support democratic education look like?  What design elements can better enable students to take ownership over their own learning and foster a strong democratic community that upholds the participation and voice of everyone in the learning process?  Here are a few key aspects from Fielding and Nair’s articles and designs:

  • small schools to insure that every student is known and supported at a personal level
  • multifaceted learning studios and common areas for collaborative and hands on activities
  • small nooks and study spaces for individualized projects and small group work
  • indoor and outdoor spaces to support all kinds of physical activities, including a connection to nature and the environment
  • aesthetics that support learning, including indoor and outdoor windows, plentiful daylight, comfortable seating, and deliberately-designed lighting and acoustics
  • facilities that support music, theater, and visual arts

Take a listen to an interview with Randall Fielding on Phorecast, in which Fielding explores these theories and how they impact the practical design of school and educational settings.  During the interview Fielding mentions the High School for Recording Arts (HSRA) in St. Paul, Minnesota – a school designed by Fielding and Nair’s firm which I had the privilege to visit last year with renowned Minnesota educator and HSRA board member, Wayne Jennings (who Fielding also mentions in the interview).

You can view designs and information about HSRA, as well as Fielding Nair’s other designs, on the Fielding Nair International website.  They also wrote a book on this topic, published in 2005: The Language of School Design: Design Patterns for 21st Century Schools.

Luckily, theirs is not the only innovative educational architecture firm out there.  I recently had the pleasure of visiting the Interdistrict Downtown School (IDDS) in Minneapolis, Minnesota, a school designed with many of the same principles: open windows to the outside and between educational spaces, small and large areas for a variety of collaborative and independent work, and spaces that support physical activity and the arts. IDDS was designed by The Cunningham Group, which also seems to have a solid theoretical stance that supports innovation and personalization in learning.

Another resource to check out, DesignShare is an organization dedicated to supporting many of these same principles in educational design.  Their great website includes links to innovative school designs, articles about architecture and schools, and updated news and events related to educational design.

Last but not least, one of the most vibrant schools I have seen also has a great school design: Hadera Democratic School in Hadera, Israel.  The Hadera school features a circle of buildings, each with a different focus such as the photography lab or the library or the gym or the self-directed learning lab, all of which form a ring around a large open space in the center for outdoor games, a playground, and more.

Know of other schools that have great designs?  Any other resources out there for folks to look into and think about?  Please do share.  And let’s make sure we keep the element of school design and physical setting front and center in the work for democratic educational change.

Where Will YOU Be the Last Week of June?

Wednesday, March 25th, 2009

I know where I’ll NOT be: at any of the following incredible conferences, all of which are booked for around June 25-30, 2009 or thereabouts.  I’ll be (excitedly, I might add) celebrating the wedding of my sister-in-law in California.  So I implore anyone who can to check out these conferences and head to one.  Or head to 2, or even 3!  Although I am an avid workshop-bee (buzzing from one workshop to the next when I go to conferences) it may indeed be somewhat difficult to buzz from one state or city to the next.  Still, here they are, do look them up and consider going:

1. Alternative Education Resource Organization (AERO) annual conference in Albany, NY, June 25-28. Continues to be one of the best places to meet up with non-conventional educators from around the country and even the world.  Keynotes from excellent speakers (Patch Adams and Deborah Meier are among the crew this year), workshops you can buzz to and from, and late night conversations with anyone and everyone. And young people are welcome and part of the organizing efforts.  Also, don’t miss the North American Democratic Education Conference (NADEC) happening at the same site directly before the AERO conference, an experience specifically for those practicing democratic education.

2. Free People, Free Minds: Education Liberation’s conference June 25-28 in Austin, TX.  I’ve been hearing about this exciting conference for a bunch of months now, and now that their website is up and running, I’m even more intrigued (and hope to go to their next conference).  They merge the pedagogical approach of progressive, student-centered learning with a strong social justice bent and focus specifically on low-income youth and youth of color , something those of us working in non-conventional education need to consider if we are to gain traction and serve all young people.  I look forward to hearing how this conference goes.

3. Personal Democracy Forum (PDF) in New York, NY, June 29-30.  I attended this amazing conference last year, and it brought me fully into the world I was just starting to learn about on my own: technology, politics, advocacy, social networking, blogging, internet neutrality, and more.  They bring the top thinkers and doers in this field, including Nate Silver of fivethirtyeight.com, Jeff Jarvis (I’m reading his new book, What Would Google Do?), Beth Noveck (now in the Obama administration working on technology policy), Joe Rospars of the 2008 Obama campaign, and many others.  If you want to learn more about these timely and powerful topics, meet the thousand most “connected” people out there, or if you are involved with social movements or politics, this conference is a mind-blower.

If you are thinking of attending any of these conference, have any thoughts about them, or do attend them, I look forward to hearing from you.  Also, know of other conferences and events coming up that others should know about?  (I keep feeling that there is yet another conference that same week in June, but can’t seem to remember it.  Anyone?)

Herb Kohl and Inspiration

Thursday, March 19th, 2009

I’m feeling inspired lately.  This is partly due to the coming spring, with the growing warmth, the early flower shoots coming up, and the birds starting to migrate back north for the summer.  (Birding is another big interest of mine.  I’ll have to weave together birding and democratic education sometime – an interesting challenge!)  So spring is always an exciting time of year for me.

Yesterday that inspiration grew after seeing educator and prolific education writer Herb Kohl speak at Bank Street College in Manhattan (not to be confused with the current Wisconsin Senator of the same name).  I have several of Kohl’s books on my shelf, collected during my education book buying craze a bunch of years back when I began learning about non-conventional approaches to schooling and learning.  Yet his books were some of those I only skimmed and had not sat down and read.  Until now, that is.

Kohl gave a deeply personal and deeply moving talk, blending stories of his own schooling and teaching experiences with a powerful moral outrage at the current direction of educational practice and policy.  I jotted down this line, which I found particularly stirring:

“NCLB is nothing more than the manifestation of a moral deficiency in our attitude towards children.”

But how can we talk to Obama and others about how misguided we might think their policies are, one audience member asked?

Kohl responded by saying first that we cannot avoid the word accountability, that in fact that word and concept are completely fine and positive.  The question is not whether or not to hold schools and teachers and students accountable, but rather how and for what?

Kohl also emphasized that we have a moral imperative to expose those who are denying young people the opportunity to grow fully as a human being and supporting approaches that shrink children’s souls and minds.   We have the moral responsibility, he said, to point this out to Obama and other policy-makers.

I greatly appreciated that moral perspective, which often gets lost in the nitty-gritty details of talk about testing, standards, curriculum, grades, merit-pay, and other education battle-grounds.  Kohl’s point is that we ought not lose sight of the moral argument, that we are talking about “the lives of children” (the title of my favorite book about education, perhaps my favorite book of any type, by George Dennison), and that the educational approaches we practice will have a profound effect on the minds and emotions and spirits of young people.

Herb Kohl’s poetic stories, passion, and humility resonate with me, and give me great enthusiasm and inspiration to continue “to speak the truth to power with love,” as Cornell West has said and my friend and colleague Scott Nine has reminded me.

So while Herb Kohl’s books have been gathering dust on my shelf for several years, they are now down on my coffee table, their pages are open, and I am ready to sit down and get to know Mr. Kohl a bit better.

News and Notes – Feb. 22, 2009

Sunday, February 22nd, 2009

A few news and notes related to Democratic Education:

  • Parker Palmer, the wise teacher and author of many books on education and living including The Courage to Teach and Let Your Life Speak, was on Bill Moyers Journal this past Friday, February 20.  The conversation is one not to miss, touching on the tension between what is and what might be, the potential for social change movements, and what we can teach to bring about what might be.  You can watch a view of the conversation and read a transcript here on the Bill Moyers’ website.  (Thanks to David Leo-Nyquist for alerting me and others to this interview).
  • The Gotham Schools blog, a prolific blog largely about education in New York City,  reported on a research study that showed that rating a school with a D or F (all schools in NYC are now given such a mark, based largely on test scores) was correlated with fewer projects and essays after the rating was assigned and a greater emphasis on direct instruction.  The scary thing, as Gotham Schools reports, is that the authors of the study support this change.
  • On the Change.org Education Blog, Clay Burrell has written a great deal about Bill Gates’ recent appearance at the TED (Technology, Entertainment, Design) gathering.  Check out the video of Gates’ talk, as well as Clay’s insightful commentary.  His most recent response also discusses how Nicholas Kristof has joined the Gates bandwagon, both talking about the necessity of “good teachers” and asserting that we can improve schools mainly through better teaching.  Clay echoes some of my own thoughts, questioning this notion of “good” in teaching and whether test score results ought to be the determinant of a good teacher (and therefore what is “good” in learning).
  • Finally, the New York City Student Union is holding a Student Government panel this Thursday, February 26 at 5pm at the UFT building (50 Broadway between Exchange and Morris in downtown Manhattan), to “develop connections between existing student governments and collaboratively create a basis of what a successful student government is and how it is run in different institutions.”  This is a great student organization, come and check it out.  Read more here.

Student Action at NYU

Sunday, February 22nd, 2009

Friday afternoon ended what was a nearly 2-day student demonstration at New York University in Manhattan, coming just two months after a similar student action at The New School.  The students involved kept the updates coming on their TakeBackNYU website and on Twitter, attracting both supportive and critical comments from other students and the public near and far.   The TakeBackNYU site gives the history and background to the group, and offers a look into their demands for NYU, including budget transparency, research into socially responsible investing, the right of student workers and TAs to unionize, and financial support for Palestinian students.  The New York Times covered the event, though focusing largely on the eventual suspension of the students involved in the action.

A few thoughts come to mind:

  • Student voice in society – Students are indeed left out of much decision-making and higher-level discussions in educational institutions, both in higher education as well as high schools and K-12 education overall.  This goes along with an overall lack of youth involvement throughout society, which analysts such as Adam Fletcher and organizations like FreeChild and the National Youth Rights Association have discussed in great depth.  Therefore, my eyes are quickly drawn to instances where young people and/or adult allies are reacting to this repression of youth by taking action to ensure that young people’s voices are not ignored.
  • Satyagraha – I’m reminded of the words of a good friend and educator colleague, who says it may be that only a “revolutionary, nation-wide, non-violent, satyagraha-style, youth-led movement” can move our country into a place to rethink our educational practices, how we treat people in a democratic society, and how we respect this world that we live in.  Young people do comprise a huge section of our society, and while adult allies cannot ignore their own role in societal change or romanticize the impact of youth-led movements, young people may be able to draw attention to issues in ways that adults who have worked for years on these same issues cannot.
  • Web 2.0 tools and advocacy – The NYU and The New School student actions have impressed upon me the value of Web 2.0 tools in organizing and advocacy campaigns, both to broadcast to the public in real time the progression of events as well as to enable immediate public comment and dialogue about the situation.  Browsing through the TakeBackNYU blog posts and comments and twitter “tweets” (which you can search on Twitter with a term like “takebackNYU”), you can see how the students themselves used these tools to inform and mobilize supporters, including asking people to write letters and contact NYU officials.  Critics also used these forums to question or denounce the students’ actions, a good sign that the students leading the action practice what they preach in their own demands by welcoming criticism.
  • Means and ends – While at first the NYU students declared a commitment to non-violence and no destruction of property, they later revised the property clause in order to gain access to a balcony in the building they were occupying.  I don’t know enough about the situation to comment or judge.  But it does bring up the crucial conversation about what tactics and means are justified to achieve one’s goals. How people act in their efforts to bring attention to an issue may have an even greater impact on the result as the content of the message.
  • Responding to student action – As mentioned above, NYU’s response to the students’ action was to suspend the students involved and evict them from their dorms.  Meanwhile, representing a very different reaction, the final agreement at The New School included a clause that granted amnesty for all participants involved and serious consideration of and agreement to many of the students’ concerns.  My hope is that the NYU situation is so new that we will hear about forthcoming genuine discussion of the students’ issues as well as the broad concern about student voice in general.  But the immediate administrative response is not very inspiring.  Once again, I cannot judge whether or not the students were justified in all of their actions.  However, a quick dismissal of the students without a process to consider the situation and the history leading up to the recent actions seems unfortunate at best and trampeling on the rights of the students at worst.  Most of all, it would be a shame if NYU ignored the sensible concerns the students raise and continue to deny young people a voice in the educational institution to which they and their families give tens of thousands of dollars to every year.

How to Talk to People about Democratic Education

Sunday, February 15th, 2009

Nicholas Kristof, the New York Times op-ed columnist who has powerfully highlighted lesser-known fights for justice, including the conflicts in Sudan and the trafficking of girls and women around the world, has recently entered the national dialogue on education with some op-eds.  Kristof’s points are important for those in the democratic education world to consider, not only because of the platform he has as a columnist for the Times, but also because the arguments he makes reflect commonly-held assumptions about what is “good” education.  As Melia Dicker has written recently (thanks for the inspiration, Melia), we do our cause a huge disservice by responding with anger or dismissiveness rather than listening and understanding others’ perspectives, followed by responding with empathy, personal stories, and respectful questions and dialogue.

In his most recent column in today’s Times, Kristof speaks about education as the nation’s most crucial issue, and celebrates the influx of education funding that will result from the newly-passed $787 billion stimulus bill, of which $100 billion or more will go to education.  I agree with him that additional funding can do wonders: we need more funding in order to improve the awful conditions in so many schools that Jonathan Kozol and others have unearthed, as well as to prevent the firing of teachers and the increasing of class sizes (not to mention one of the most important funding aid needed in education, that of equitable funding for students in all districts so that communities with lower property tax intake can receive additional support – though that is highly controversial and not part of this spending bill).

But it is Kristof’s suggestions to solve the education crisis that I want to address.  He focuses on the need for better teachers, saying, “good teachers matter more than anything; they are astonishingly important.”  It would be hard for me to disagree, in that it surely matters a great deal what kind of adults are with our young people each day.  And from my own experiences, he does have a point that many of “America’s best teachers overwhelmingly teach America’s most privileged students.”  While I take issue with that generalization and know that many wonderful and committed teachers work with disadvantaged students, I also personally know a great many inspiring, passionate, and dedicated people who either work in private schools or have fled teaching altogether.

However, what Kristof may not have considered is that some of these dedicated educators have fled to less restrictive schools or from the teaching profession completely not because they lack a sense of duty to those less privileged, but because the standardization of the learning process and the high-stakes element of assessment – that is, the anti-learning, anxiety-provoking system of rewards and punishments doled out to teachers, students, and schools based largely on the multiple-choice test scores of students – that are required of public schools drives such creative and inspiring people away.  It seems entirely understandable that “good” teachers, even those deeply committed to social justice, who want to bring in their own personality and passions and to inspire the curiosity and independence of young people, would choose to work in a school that supports such personalization and flexibility in learning.  Or simply leave education.

Which makes me think that perhaps what is needed are not necessarily or only “good” teachers, but also a critical look at the impacts that the standardization and high-stakes testing movement is having on student motivation for learning and teacher motivation to teach.

And going even deeper, I’d like to talk to Kristof about how we determine what is a “good” teacher, or what it means to be a “successful” student or school.  I have seen some amazing teachers.  I think of one great teacher who would always take whatever time was necessary to have extensive conversations with each of her students about the students’ interests and help them determine the next steps they should take to pursue those interests, be they genetic engineering, music composing and performing, or computer programming (her school allowed for such open conversation during the school day).  And I think of an incredibly successful high school where students can teach classes to other students, choose from an exciting array of relevant classes, pursue independent study in topics of interest, take internships with businesses or artists in the neighborhood, and participate equally with teachers in the decision-making processes of the school.  [Some of these schools are listed here, and there are many other great schools and teachers doing similar great work around the country].

So when I think of “good” or “great” in education, I immediately think of such things as support for curiosity and individual interest, deep intellectual engagement, community participation in the governing of the school, and the development of strong relationships among students and adults.  And I find it odd that so many people, including progressive social justice fighters such as Kristof, look immediately for results on multiple-choice test scores to determine “success.”  Where in that determination is the individuality, the heart, the intellectual engagement, and the social sense that we want most for ourselves, for others, and supposedly for our children?

To be clear, I do believe that the development of reading and writing and math and other academic skills are important for success in life.  But, the question I’d like to respectfully ask those who make comments such as those by Kristof is, “At what cost?”  At what cost to young people do we focus on improving test scores?  What is the cost of adding more and more high-stakes tests?  Of longer school days filled with more test prep (such as that at the KIPP schools Kristof and others have been talking about lately)?  Of standardization in learning where individual interest must be put aside in favor of the same curriculum for all students?  Isn’t it possible to build environments that support young people to develop those academic skills while also developing self-determination, compassion for others, and deep critical thinking? At the very least, we need to consider answers to these questions.

Since the overwhelming majority of us went to traditional, conventional schools and currently send our children to such schools, we have long been immersed in the conventional wisdom about education, e.g. that high test scores = “good,” that rewards and punishments are beneficial, that everyone needs to learn the same thing at the same time.  So it is not a surprise to me that most people support such traditional ideas.  In fact, in high school I was as high-achieving, test-cramming of a student as you’d ever meet.  It was not until late college that I heard about other approaches to teaching and learning and realized that perhaps I had been wrong all along: that the stress and pressure from the school and from myself only hurt me and stifled my own sense of discovery about who I was and what I wanted to do with my life.

So my hope now is that we can help people like Nicholas Kristof and the many others out there who believe in freedom, personal responsibility, shared decision-making, and social justice, to bring those deeply-held democratic values into the education sphere and give young people the chance to develop as complete human beings, to find their spark and niche in this world, and to help build a more productive, sustainable, and peaceful society.

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I crafted these thoughts here as a response to Kristof and his op-ed, but I wrote it in part to think about how we talk with others about democratic education, especially those who seem to reflect common assumptions that we find questionable.  In my response here I’ve tried to do follow a few principles:

  • Be empathetic: acknowledge the others’ perspective, let them know you are listening to them
  • Identify points of agreement
  • Bring in one’s own self and personal stories about education
  • Respectfully question and start a dialogue regarding commonly-held assumptions and points of difference. One thing to remember about this is to not dismiss the opinion with which you disagree, but to mention that you understand how and why they may hold such a belief (e.g. they went through conventional schooling themself).   Otherwise you run the risk of coming off as arrogant and may make the other person dislike you or simply stop listening.
  • Frame your position within a larger societal vision and grounded in democratic values. This deeper framework can connect with people when educational terminology such as student-directed learning and democratic decision-making may be too abstract or different from the norm to capture their attention and interest. Plus, it shows that democratic education exists within a long and broad fight for human freedom and that it has great potential to positively impact the direction that our society takes in the future.
  • Humor.  (Actually, I didn’t bring in this element – I focus so much on ideas that I find myself forgetting to bring in humor.  It’s something I want to work on and that I think can be a great part of discussing these often intense issues).

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Well, that’s a start on this topic of how we talk to others about education.  I’ll write more here on this as time goes on, and would love to hear what others think.

…By the way, I want to salute Nicholas Kristof for his own respectful entry into the education arena, acknowledging in an online post his own lack of experience with this topic.  Which brings to mind another key element to bring to the dialogue: humility.  Thanks, Nicholas.