Wednesday, August 19, 2015
Best of Class: Education: A "Public Good"
Best of Class: Education: A "Public Good": “… in short, the period was so far like the present period, that some of its noisiest authorities insisted on its being received, for good ...
Education: A "Public Good"
“…
in short, the period was so far like the present period, that some of its
noisiest authorities insisted on its being received, for good or for evil, in
the superlative degree of comparison only” (A tale of Two Cities,
Charles Dickens, 1859).
Contrasting
extremes is indeed the time in which we find ourselves living. Name a topic or
issue that doesn’t engender polar opposite positions, rhetoric, and “facts”.
The one area that unapologetically should not create controversy or conflict is
education.
The
value proposition of an education is a “public” good. What must not be in
debate are the individual, community, state, region, and
national benefits of an educated citizenry. Though we seem to be
caught up in perpetual national debate of “how” rather than a clearly defined
“what” and “why” of an education.
Where,
when and to what extent we lost sight of this reality is exactly why there is
such conflict and controversy in what should be the obvious – we all benefit
and conversely we all suffer when there is failed learning.
The peripheral or fringe arguments, opinions, and debates
surrounding, for example Common Core, misses the “public good” outcome of
consistent and common standards. Refusing to opine the motivation or agenda of
those that appear to have missed or ignored the reality that it was the
Governors and Chief State officers that recognized the injustice experienced by
learners across the nation by inconsistent standards and therefore took action
for the “public good” of education, I simply ask that we seize the opportunity
to speak to the promises, the benefits, and desired outcomes of an education.
Simply
or maybe not so, is time to move the conversation forward to what matters most.
To do so consider –
•
What
are the promises of an education?
•
What
are the benefits of an education?
•
In
what ways do we as a community, state, region, or nation benefit from an
educated citizenry? (Or do we?)
•
What
do my own children (or yours) lose if all learners experience the promises or
achieve the benefits of an education?
•
Why
is it important that all be educated? (Or is it?)
•
Why
is it important that all citizens benefit from an education? (Or should they?)
I
remain extremely confident and optimistic that if we individually and
collectively wrestle with the aforementioned questions that the “how” will
begin to make more sense raising our national awareness, understanding and
support for innovation, creativity, and the means to meet or exceed our
expectations for, of and by an education.
Friday, August 7, 2015
Best of Class: Equity In Education - The Game Changer
Best of Class: Equity In Education - The Game Changer: In my last post, I posited that educational equity is the first step toward authentic access and opportunity. Educational equity requires t...
Equity In Education - The Game Changer
In my last post, I posited that educational equity is the first step
toward authentic access and opportunity. Educational equity requires taking the
necessary steps to ensure that each learner can and will be successful. Without
equity, we will continue down this road of failed programs, failed practices,
and failed promises for a significant percent of our learners.
My convictions about educational equity are driven by
moral and ethical principles and yes, fairness - the belief that
fairness is predicated on each learner deserving our very best every day
irrespective of ethnicity, language, gender, or social-economics.
Defining “fairness” and "best" has evolved from personal
experiences over time. For example, high poverty and historically marginalized
and under represented learners enrolled and successful in courses and programs
like advance placement, honors, talented and gifted, college/university prep to
name four areas caused me to ponder “fairness” with respect to expectations,
choice, requisite learning, and experience.
Do all learners have "choice" to participate in these
experiences? Are all learners prepared for these experiences? Are there
expectations that each learner should be prepared for access and opportunity to
these programs? What does choice really mean?
Further still, I was forced to rethink “fairness” and "best"
given the high percentage of students identified and placed in special
education as well as remedial courses – not to mention the number of
disciplinary referrals and suspensions that were predominantly our
disadvantaged learners and learners of color.
I witnessed well-intentioned educators, parents, and community members
encourage, incent, and reward learners for their pledges to do “good” in school
and “attend” college. “Going to college” was the oft cited response by learners
when asked, “What are you going to do when you graduate from high school?”
Fairness, however, requires more than aspirations, more than pithy
statements, or programs. Equity is ensuring that each learner, irrespective of
their “zip code”, has the necessary skills, knowledge and experience to have
authentic access and opportunity for full participation in the educational
experience.
A first step for us was shifting our focus to the requisite learning
of essential skills, knowledge and experience - for learners to have authentic
choices about their learning, they had to have a solid foundation. Though this
may seem obvious, we had to ask ourselves if it was “fair” for students not to
demonstrate proficiency let alone mastery of literacy and numeracy before
moving forward? The resounding response was “of course not”. The problem, our
problem was not in the “will” but in the “how” to do this.
With advances in technology, now more than ever we can disrupt failed
learning by aggressively monitoring and reporting leading indicators of
learning in process as well as the progress of learning. That is, we can “peek”
inside the mind of a learner to ascertain how he or she is constructing
meaning, formulating ideas, and making learning choices or decisions in real
time.
Further, technology-based supplemental programming now makes possible
the building, bridging, and reinforcing of skills, knowledge, and experience
making “fair” the access and opportunity of, by and for education – for all.
It became very clear to me that unless we literally and figuratively
“reset” the system by radically shifting from an intervention or treatment
model to “prevention” to intervention, there was not going to be substantive
improvement.
A majority of our learners could not access the full curriculum. They
were denied these opportunities due to the failure to learn attributed to (as
we learned) beginning their formal learning experience with certain gaps, or
inexperience with the antecedents of literacy and numeracy; and the failure to
“catch up” in essential learning once they entered our system. It was not an
intelligence or capability issue; rather, they just didn’t have the experiences
preparing them for formal learning.
Why then, would we expect all learners to learn and progress in the
same way, at the same time, and in same place?
This inexperience resulted in unrealistic expectations for teachers
and learners alike – not to mention actual results. This is where educational
equity assuages the expectations. Placing the resources, tools, time, and
programming to meet the needs of individual learners is paramount. Eradicating
“sameness” with respect to the assumptions that all learners learn in the same
way and at the same time is central to fairness. Similarly, the notion
certain learners lose an advantage or are denied certain resource for the
sake of others is absurd.
The mere cost to remediate, “treat” failed learning is consuming
resources at an exponential rate adversely impacting all learners. Until such
time that we collectively understand and act to prevent failure we will
continue to miss-serve, underserve, or dis-serve learners that have the
greatest dependency on educators for their success.
Let me say this clearly, the cost of failure is too expensive. We
can’t afford it.
Suffice; fairness is intentional – with purpose.
Educational equity is good, right, and true for all. If we are to ensure the
promises of an education including access and opportunity created by it, then
we must rethink “fairness” in light of preventing the failure to learn. In my
experience the path to preventing intervention was providing the tools,
resources, and permission to meet the needs of each learner – not treat each
learner the “same”.
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