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The world is filled with wonderous things

The world is filled with wonderous things. And some such as K-12 Education in the United States that are not. The focus of public education in the United States. The focus of public education in the United States.

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The world is filled with wonderous things

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  1. The world is filled with wonderous things

  2. And some such as K-12 Education in the United Statesthat are not.

  3. The focus of public education in the United States

  4. The focus of public education in the United States The U.S. education schools focus on “social justice” almost to the exclusion of subject knowledge.

  5. The focus of public education in the United States The U.S. education schools focus on “social justice” almost to the exclusion of subject knowledge. In practice this means the public schools focus on the outcomes for the lowest 20% and are considered successful only if this group’s achievements match those of the remaining students.

  6. The focus of public education in the United States Of course there is a huge issue with how the lowest 20% is determined. But in the U.S. public schools this is almost universally done only using student’s ethnic or racial groups.

  7. The focus of public education in the United States 7 years ago, we started working with an inner city elementary school in San Jose, where 93% of the students came from Spanish speaking families, and the principal told us that “there are no gifted or talented students at Lowell Elementary.” In saying this she had the full approval of the Superintendent’s office!

  8. The focus of public education in the United States Consistent with this perspective, the principal insisted that the school must be strictly bilingual, and students did not move into English speaking classes as they advanced to higher grades.

  9. The focus of public education in the United States Consistent with this perspective, the principal insisted that the school must be strictly bilingual, and students did not move into English speaking classes as they advanced to higher grades. The school was on the state’s watch list and was in real danger of being taken over by the California Department of Education

  10. The focus of public education in the United States With these limitations we could only arrange for the students to take an experimental on-line math program from EPGY at Stanford, Initially the program was strictly after school, But after the first year for any students whose teacher would let them.

  11. In 2008 the school received a special award from the CA Superintendent of Education For its dramatic improvement

  12. The public reason given for the improvement was teacher collaboration, facilitated by a piece of our grant.

  13. But here’s the real data.

  14. And for grades four, five

  15. In 2009, the improvement was even more dramatic

  16. California AYI Scores

  17. And, as we’ve just seen, almost entirely due to improvements in their math outcomes.

  18. But perhaps the most important thing is that by 2009 and 2010, the percentage of students at Lowell who scored at the gifted and talented level was slightly over 20%, exactly what we would expect from a high demographic school.

  19. But perhaps the most important thing is that by 2009 and 2010, the percentage of students at Lowell who scored at the gifted and talented level was slightly over 20%, exactly what we would expect from a high demographic school!

  20. U.S. Public School System Since the measure of success is strictly how well the lowest 20% do when compared with the remaining students, it follows that there is tremendous pressure to dumb down the curriculum to the point where even the weakest student, however defined, will be seen to succeed.

  21. U.S. Public School System This has become more and more the norm in the U.S., and I imagine there are serious pressures to do the same thing in Canada.

  22. Speaking of lowest 20% The students entering the education schools in the U.S., especially in elementary education, are usually in the lowest quartile of their college classes. There is strong evidence that the education schools actually encourage this.

  23. It appears that the education schools discourage brighter students 80 years ago, both my parents entered university intending to become high school math teachers. They each lasted 1 semester in the education schools of that time The reason they gave was because the courses were so bad

  24. It appears that the education schools discourage brighter students Unfortunately, there are strong indications that the situation has not changed The only consistent explanation I can give is that this is deliberate on the part of the education schools in the United States.

  25. Next we have to look at teacher training. The content knowledge that the education schools focus on for elementary teachers is almost exclusively in teaching reading.

  26. Next we have to look at teacher training. Math is an afterthought and many, if not most of the faculty that teach math methods courses assert that math is innate, So teachers do not need to learn math. It is believed that they will understand what they need when they need it. As bad as the preparation is in math it is even worse in science.

  27. Next we have to look at teacher training. One consequence is that math is treated as a sub-topic in reading in our elementary schools. The focus there is for students to be able to "read” numbers written in base 10 place-value shorthand notation. So, for example, when they see 1211 they are expected to respond "twelve hundred, eleven,"

  28. Next we have to look at teacher training. Tests show that even when numbers are written out in the form “3 ones and 7 tens,” almost half of first through third grade students will respond that the number represented is 37, since this is the order in which the digits occur in the question.

  29. Grade 1 As one can see, the percent correct is not always a good measure of what is going on. But the distracters tell us quite a bit.

  30. Moreover, the critical topic of place value is completely mishandled. It is not only bollixed up, these incorrect methods of handling the subject are required in the U.S. textbooks. The following lesson has to be present in U.S. texts or the books will be deemed too weak.

  31. Typical U.S Lesson on Place Value Note Focus on Manipulatives Linear model For 10’s, area for 100’s, volume for 1000’s. This is Illogical and confusing What represents 10,000?

  32. I guess that would be the tesseract! Undoubtedly something every third grader would understand instantly

  33. Let’s compare with the way place value is handled in high achieving countries

  34. Second Grade: Russian Text. Note consistency Of models for higher Places and tight focus

  35. Even 1000’s are Consistent E Consistent models make Comparison easier. Note attention to Comparisons

  36. Compare the two approaches We could guess that U.S. Students have great difficulties understanding the magnitudes of numbers when written in the standard base 10 shorthand notation.

  37. Compare the two approaches We could guess that U.S. Students have great difficulties understanding the magnitudes of numbers when written in the standard base 10 shorthand notation. In fact, this turns out to be exactly the case

  38. Next we have to look at teacher training. Students entering the teacher training programs in the U.S. are subjected to severe pressures to conform.

  39. Next we have to look at teacher training. Michele Kerr is a hard-working educator and Web surfer. As a (second career) student in the Ed School at Stanford, the faculty decided her views and her blogging were inappropriate for a student in their program. They claimed that her “anti-progressive views were disrupting their classes, alienating other students and proving that she and Stanford were a bad fit.” Kerr says they tried to stifle both her opinions and her blog, and threatened to withhold the Masters in Education she was working toward, based on their expressed fear that she was “unsuited for the practice of teaching.”

  40. Next we have to look at teacher training. Stanford’s education school retains the right to decide if a student is suited to teaching, They can deny even a smart and dedicated student, such as Kerr, a chance to work in the public schools. They can force a teacher candidate to stop blogging. In Kerr’s case, they were also careful to share their concerns with Kerr’s potential employers.

  41. Next we have to look at teacher training. In spite of everything Ms. Kerr managed to find a teaching job, but it was certainly not her first choice and quite distant from Palo Alto. I got curious about her and checked her web-site. Her work was precise and well researched, a dramatic contrast to typical papers from the schools of education.

  42. Another severe problem with the education schools is their research and research standards. The published research is of very low quality and even the ed school faculty tend to ignore and not even read it They simply assume that it says what they believe to be true. However, it is also used to support programs being pushed by them.

  43. Another severe problem with the education schools is their research and research standards. The phrase “research shows” is one of the most frequent we hear from ed school faculty And from school administrators It is very effective at silencing objecting parents.

  44. A recent example. A member of the Stanford Ed School faculty recently published a paper claiming that her favorite teaching methods resulted in students at a very low demographics high school outperforming students at two higher demographic schools. Very impressive if true.

  45. And the paper has become very well known and influential The only problem is that the methodology is so poor that (1) the subjects at the two higher demographic schools consisted of students in the 25th – 75th percentiles, while the students at the researcher’s favored school were in the 50th – 100th percentiles

  46. And the paper has become very well known and influential (2) the tests used to measure the students success were self-constructed, filled with mathematical errors, imprecisions, and were at least 2 – 3 years below the expected level for the subjects being tested. (3) When the identities of the schools were determined, it was found that the actual data for the special school was unbelievably low, ranking it among the 16 poorest performing high schools in California.

  47. One exampleProblem #4 Final Post-test A triangle has an area of 62 sq units. If one side is 10 units and one angle measures 40 degrees find possible measurements for the other sides and angles. Draw the triangle and label sides and angles. The difficulty is that for 62 sq units there are two triangles, but for any area > 68.687 there is only 1. So I have no idea what the “correct” response might be. (Also, showing the second triangle even exists involves real effort.)

  48. And the paper has become very well known and influential (3) When the identities of the schools were determined, it was found that the actual data for the “special school” was unbelievably low, ranking it among the 16 weakest high schools in California.

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