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Feldman Module 14-1 Santrock Chapter 16

Feldman Module 14-1 Santrock Chapter 16. The Educational System. Approaches to Learning. Direct instruction Cognitive constructivist - Piaget Social constructivist – Vygotsky U.S. Schools tend to direct instruction/lock step. We Have an Expensive, Poorly-Performing School system.

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Feldman Module 14-1 Santrock Chapter 16

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  1. Feldman Module 14-1Santrock Chapter 16 The Educational System

  2. Approaches to Learning Direct instruction Cognitive constructivist - Piaget Social constructivist – Vygotsky U.S. Schools tend to direct instruction/lock step

  3. We Have an Expensive, Poorly-Performing School system The United States has the second-best funded school system in the world ($7-12K student). It has some of the most poorly-performing students in the industrialized world. We generally come out toward the bottom in international competitions. Employers like Bill Gates argue that they must hire immigrants because of lack of qualified people in the U.S. Last year’s SAT scores were the worst ever.

  4. Accountability: Will testing work? Positives: It is argued that test standards will: improve performance improve confidence Negatives: State-mandated tests drive learning objectives

  5. No Child Left Behind 2002 • State determined standards in math, English/language arts, science • All students must have standard tests in grades 3-8. • Critics say: • Teaching to the test is too narrow • Creativity, social skills, persistence, etc. not measured

  6. Getting around the test Teach to the test Cheat on the test Ignore the test results Lower the test standards

  7. The Problem is Systemic • Schools are too bureaucratically controlled. • No one size fits all • Curricula come from the state, influenced by the federal government • Wrong decisions are quickly disseminated, hard to retract (self-esteem; new math; whole language) • When you pay for ideas, you will ultimately pay for some bad ones

  8. The Problem is Systemic Too much competitive pressure and too little consideration of developmental maturity (brain/body readiness) Developmentally appropriate kindergarten, for example

  9. Child-centered Kindergarten Education of the whole child: physical, cognitive, socio-emotional Emphasis on the process of learning Hands-on vs. paper & pencil tasks Play is important

  10. Study (Hart & others, 2003) Children in developmentally inappropriate classrooms had slower growth in vocabulary, math application, and math computation. Head Start children in developmentally appropriate programs more advanced in letter/word identification and performed better applying problems over time.

  11. Controversy over Early Childhood Education 36 states now have standards specifying what young children should know and be able to do before they enter kindergarten Standards focus too much on language & cognition, too little on physical, motor, socioemotional Too much pressure on young children

  12. Project Head Start Model preschool programs have been linked with long-term effects such as reduced rates of placement in special education, dropout rates, grade retention, delinquency and use of welfare. An estimated 40% of the 1400 Head Start programs are of questionable quality according to the results of one study. Political research arena.

  13. Complaints from Elementary School • Too much pressure to cover the curriculum – related to testing • Ignores the principle that it is better to learn a foundational skill well than repeatedly

  14. Middle or Junior High • 1989 Carnegie Foundation Report • “. . Young adolescents • attend massive impersonal schools; • learn from seemingly irrelevant curricula; • trust few adults in school; • and lack access to health care and counseling.”

  15. Care Has Not Been Taken to Insure the Quality or Accuracy of Curriculum Materials Allowed unqualified textbook authors Allowed apparently biased textbook authors Permitted “revisionist” history Used “artist rendition” examples for evolution Substituted technical proficiency for content in some courses Some schools have overemphasized peripheral subjects

  16. Schools & Moral Development • Hidden curriculum (John Dewey, 1930) • Character education – explicit moral code • Values clarification • Cognitive moral education • Discussion course • Service learning

  17. Schools & Discipline When you eliminate religion from public discourse, you eliminate the foundation for moral authority The principal, unlike the policeman, cannot arrest you and send you to jail.

  18. Schools Have Been Used for Indoctrination Self-esteem movement Political Correctness/tolerance Global Warming Evolution Postmodernism/ whole language Encouragement of group-dependent thinking (No doubt this has caused conflict with “unbelieving” parents. There is an anti-parent sentiment and parent distrust of schools.)

  19. What have been the goals of these programs? Has there been a deliberate “dumbing down” of the curriculum? Has there been a desire to keep people ignorant while they believed they were educated? Has there been a discouragement of independent thinking? Has there been bias - presentation of only one side of controversial issues as the only reasonable conclusion?

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