tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9025948832913694345.post5222681552664138504..comments2024-03-22T02:15:56.280-07:00Comments on Jersey Jazzman: More Pointy Heads!Dukehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16535645107179796099noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9025948832913694345.post-86781622241492087452011-04-24T02:04:06.022-07:002011-04-24T02:04:06.022-07:00There are several things wrong with the perspectiv...There are several things wrong with the perspective offered here.<br /><br />First, the idea that 'current school reform' (as if that is one monolithic block of ideas and practices - not) would emphasize teacher quality. If anything, US education values assessment scores more than any other aspect of education, and has thus developed a narrow and even perverse concept of 'teacher quality' as 'the quality to get your students to do well on multiple choice tests' regardless of the 'home address effect'.<br /><br />Second, that 'current school reform' would neglect the 'home address effect' and look only at teachers (or assessment scores). Nonsense. The fact that childrens' backgrounds are the singly most important factor explaining how they do at school, is widely acknowledged. Expecially poverty and a lacking understanding of English account to a relatively large extent for hampering school careers. <br /><br />But that only describes the parameters of the problem, it doesn't in itself offer a solution. If bad teachers are the problem, schools may replace them with better teachers. But if poor backgrounds are the problem, schools cannot replace them with better backgrounds. That's just not the school's potential, let alone responsibility.<br /><br />School reform is about the factors in education that schools *can* change for the benefit of their students. There is a dire need for societal reform, agreed. There is more than enough reason to weed out poverty, to rebuild getto's, to increase the level of societal support for children whose parents have a hard giving their children a good upbringing for whatever reason. <br /><br />But let's not mix up these two issues. It is nonsense that 'school reformers today' would believe that 'quality teaching can correct all learning problems' and that 'if students-at-risk fail, it is their teachers' fault'. Harry Daniels invents his own windmills and then fights them, and I guess he knows his Don Quixote. <br /><br />Getting the best and brightest to serve as our children's teachers is the single best thing that schools can do. There are many more things they can do, but without good teachers education is helpless and hopeless, with all of its 'smart boards', 'hands-on practice', and 'hi-stakes assessements'.Hannes Minkemanoreply@blogger.com