Children Are Like Popcorn?

DSCN0026 Rena
 

This statement was delivered at a recent Washington State School Directors Association conference in Seattle.  Dr. Yong Zhao is a distinguished professor at Michigan State University and recent author of the book Catching Up or Leading the Way:  American Education in the Age of Globalization. Yes, he is comparing students to food.  He went on to say that some pop early, and some pop late.  I was not enamored by this remark and prepared myself to write this piece about this individual and all the things I did not like.    

I visited his web site http://zhao.educ.msu.edu.  Here I found someone that knows of which he speaks.  Dr. Zhao was raised in a village in China by illiterate parents, but he was not educated in the national Chinese school system.  He discredits the notion that the U.S. educational system has or is failing.  He believes that the qualities of American schools are the very qualities that other countries, including China, are trying to emulate.  The United States is at risk of replacing what works in our schools with what does not work in other countries – creativity and application for standardization and rote learning.  

He suggests that through the use of national standards on certain subjects, those subjects become the ones that are emphasized in school.  If you have national standards, you also have to have a way to enforce those standards.  Tests are the way that you enforce standards.  Once standards are enforced, a selection pressure is created.  People try to conform to that.  To prove that their schools and students are doing well. You also then highlight some subjects as more important than other subjects because they carry consequences and others don't. So, you automatically select out those other subjects. This does sound a lot like what our teachers are saying especially about the teaching of Science. 

There is a general notion to try to reduce something as complex as education to something simple like a test score and then use it to rank people.  Then we tend to take that number and attach a lot of meaning to it. For some reason we forget that a test score is a moment in time check of proficiency. Teachers have been expressing these concerns for the past 10 years.  We need to keep saying it until the decision makers listen.  In the meantime, we need to respect the individual differences of our students, provide them with the best quality education we can.  Give them opportunity to learn, time to practice and provide them with authentic feedback and evaluations to allow them to improve and succeed in a diverse and wide curriculum.

4 thoughts on “Children Are Like Popcorn?

  1. B S

    Already happening here in Nashville, Tom. We continue to focus on math and reading because those are the scores that are reported in the media and are part of our new evaluations in our RTTT proposal. Sorry science, SS, music, art, PE and you other subjects that aren’t tested; we don’t have time for you.

  2. Kristin

    I love the studies that compare American students to students in, say, Japan, and then declare that American students are woefully unprepared for anything. They’re such bunk.
    I am looking at 32 15-year olds who are in small groups arguing about the overarching message in Whitman’s Song of Myself. There are 12 countries of origin represented. They think Switzerland’s push to ban the building of Minarets is ridiculous. They texted 90999 to donate to Haiti. They know that wearing a veil doesn’t mean you choose subservience. This mix of attitudes and behaviors is repeated in public schools across our country.
    So when policy makers sit in an office, surrounded by adults and data, and decide that we’re not doing anything meaningful unless students score a certain number on a test, they are wasting everyone’s time. Our students are learning to read, write, investigate the world of science, use numbers despite the deplorable textbooks and ridiculous expectations for how math is taught, and they’re meeting expectations in art, music and P.E. despite the elimination of programs.
    On top of all that, they are learning to navigate a diverse, complex, cultural mix of humanity, and they are doing it well.
    Why don’t policy makers stop trying to make our paper data look like Japan’s? Why don’t they play to the strengths of public education?

  3. Tom

    I can tell you this much, Rena; if someone in Olympia begins to pay us based on how well our students do in reading and math, there’s going to be a lot more reading and math going on and lot less music, drama, social studeis, science…

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