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One Size Doesn’t Fit All…. Policy Shifts of NCLB & RTTT. Dr. John McKenna Dr . Walter Polka. NOT ALL PARADIGM SHIFTS ARE VALUABLE. Lucy sets the stage---again!. Shift to Standardization in Education. Child Centered Approach : Individualized Zone of Proximal Development Scaffold/Support
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One Size Doesn’t Fit All… Policy Shifts of NCLB & RTTT Dr. John McKenna Dr. Walter Polka
NOT ALL PARADIGM SHIFTS ARE VALUABLE Lucysets the stage---again!
Shift to Standardization in Education • Child Centered Approach: • Individualized • Zone of Proximal Development • Scaffold/Support • Move at own Pace • Pedagogical Reform Model (Dewey) • Standardization Approach: • One size Fits All • Zone of Frustration • Race • Measure & Rank Order • Corporate Reform Model (Taylor)
Animal School Metaphor by Reavis (1937) over seventy-five years ago!
“Everybody is a genius, but if you judge a fish by it’s ability to climb a tree, it will live it’s whole life believing it is stupid.” Albert Einstein
Research Proven Theories on Child Development and Learning • Dewey • Montessori • Piaget • Erickson • Vygotsky
John Dewey “ The child’s own instinct and powers furnish the material and give the starting point for all education” 1897
Theories of Childhood and Learning : Montessori Montessori – Emphasized the importance of exploration and constructive play in learning. Every child learns in their own way. Multiple intelligence should be valued and fostered. “Our care of the child should be governed not by the desire to make him learn things, but by the endeavor always to keep within him that light which is called intelligence”
Theories of Childhood and Learning : Piaget • Piaget – Stages of Cognitive Development
Poverty and Social Conditions • POVERTY # 1 effect on test scores ( Berliner 2013) School factors account for about 20% of student achievement 0 to 20% poverty USA scores highest in world. • 91-9 Rule (Procaccini 2013) Percentage of time children from birth to 18 spend in school. • Wisconsin Study : Poverty Influences Brain Development Parietal and frontal regions/less gray matter. • Effects from poor nutrition and sleep….. • Lack of books, technology, desks, shelter, clothing….
FREDRICK TAYLORSCIENTIFIC MANAGEMENT Taylor, F. (1911) The principles of scientific management. enforcedstandardization of methods. enforced adaption of working conditions. enforcedcooperation. “The duty of enforcing . . .rests with management alone.“ Top Down/Autocratic Management based on Rules, Regulations and Policies
SCHOOLS AND THE EARLY 20TH CENTURY ECONOMY Callahan, R. E. (1964). Education and the cult of efficiency: A study of social forces that have shaped the administration of public schools. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press. We need workers. . . Who work without questioning authority. Who work well ALONE. Who are ON TIME. Who have a high tolerance for boredom. Who fear being fired
SCIENTIFIC MANAGEMENT Scientific Management Learning Organizations 1. Management 1. Learning 2. Flexibility/SDM 2. Hierarchy 3. Managers standardize practice 3. Teams seek options
SCIENTIFIC MANAGEMENT Scientific Management Learning Organizations 4. Student needs & Abilities 4. Job descriptions & policy/Regulations 5. Creativity 5. Conformity 6. Asynchronous – “individualized” 6. Synchronicity –”one size for all”
Scientific Management Learning Organizations 7. Careful scrutiny and evaluation 7. Freedom and choice 8. Required teaming 8. Required isolation 9. Info controlled 9. Open information 10. Specific materials & structure 10. Great thinking and innovation
Common Core/Regents Reform Agenda : Coleman • Standardized High Stakes Testing system/ One size For All • Common Core Standards/ One Size for All • Strict Teacher Evaluation system Tied to Testing Results/ VAM • Constant Ongoing Administrative Evaluations • Standardized Metrics to Quantify Student Learning and Teacher Effectiveness. Students and Teachers are now #’s • Standardized Curriculum Modules/ Frustrational Content • Focus on Expository/Informational Text • Focused Writing Based on Text Details / No Narrative or Creative Writing • SLO’s ( State Approved Vendors) • Start Standardized Process of College and Career Readiness in Pre K
CCLS/Regents Reform Agenda • Changes to GED and EDTPA impacts opportunities • All Teachers must be “Teachers of the Core” • All Children must be “Children of the Core”
Are You Smarter than a 5th Grader?? 3 roads. B is three times longer than A. C is twice as long as B. Draw the roads. What fraction of the total length of the roads is the length of A? If Road B is 7 miles longer than Road A., what is the length of Road C?
b. After using some of the honey she collected for baking, Lila found that she only had gallon of honey left. How much honey did she use for baking? Explain your answer using a diagram, numbers, and words. • c. With the remaining gallon of honey, Lila decided to bake some loaves of bread and several batches of cookies for her school bake sale. The bread needed gallon of honey and the cookies needed gallon. How much honey was left over? Explain your answer using a diagram, numbers, and words. • d. Lila decided to make more baked goods for the bake sale. She used lb less flour to make bread than to make cookies. She used lb more flour to make cookies than to make brownies. If she used lb of flour to make the bread, how much flour did she use to make the brownies? Explain your answer using a diagram, numbers, and words.
By the end of this Domain, the students will be able to: • Describe the basic principles of Hinduism and Buddhism • Identify the holy texts of Hinduism and Buddhism • Describe the teachings of Confucius • Describe the city-state Sparta and the Spartan way of life • Explain what the Parthenon was • Explain the significance of the battles of Marathon and Thermopylae
Explain the significance of the Emancipation Proclamation • Describe the significant contributions of Anton van Leeuwenhoek • Identify important components of the excretory system and their functions • Explain the importance of the success of the Montgomery Bus Boycott • Describe the similarities among the methods of protest used by Susan B. Anthony, Eleanor Roosevelt, Mary McLeod Bethune, Jackie Robinson, Rosa Parks , Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., and Cesar Chavez
Effects and Concerns from Testing and Standardization (cont.) • These practices resulted in massive failures, state-wide. • About 70% of all students, state-wide, scored below proficiency level on the 2013 Math and ELA Assessment Exams in Spring 2013 • 95% of Special Needs students below • 85% of minorities below • 97% of ESL students below • 90% of students in poverty below • No opportunity for thorough item analysis to inform our instructional practices • Intellectual Discrimination/ Multiple Intelligence Discarded
“Practicing for the test was stressful….I was afraid that I would get a lot of answers wrong and be embarrassed…..When the teacher put the test in front of me and said, “You may begin,” I was stressed out, my stomach was jumping and I wanted to tear the test in half and run out of the room….. …The people who made me take the test only got a little bit of information about me. I am more than a test score. All kids have special abilities and they should be shared. Teachers should know kids’ abilities, not just their test scores. I am a great writer, poet, and illustrator. I love learning. The tests don’t describe me. I am more than my test scores.” Elizabeth Brantley, Age 9
Inconvenient Truth about High-stakes Testing (HST) Accountability We need smart accountability but not HST-driven …. Does it meet the standards of professional practice? No, it is not fully ready. Does it pass the test of efficacy (test score gains)? No, it is not very effective. Do high-performing nations rely more on it? No, it is not the reason for their high performance. Does it promote standards-based education reform? No, it rather undermines standards-based reform by narrowing the curriculum and teaching to the test.
Who Benefits from Standardization ? VENDORS Corporate Reform Agenda Government Empowered/Loss of Local Control Privateers
Work Smarter, Not Harder • The 4 Cornerstones • Smarter Assessments • Smarter Evaluation • Smarter Professional Development • Smarter Data
SMART WAYS To Widen the Road For ALL • Return to NYS Multiple Diplomas and Certifications of Achievement • Smaller Class Sizes • Pre-School Education for ALL---3 year olds! • Provide $ for Enrichment Activities, After-School Programs, and Summer Schools • Return Funding to Schools- No Gap Elimination Adjustment • Scholarships for Advanced Vocational Training and Higher Education based on talent.
“I believe in standardizing automobiles. I do not believe in standardizing human beings. Standardization is a great peril which threatens American culture”. --Albert Einstein Saturday Evening Post October 26, 1929
The Road to Learning Should be Filled with Adventure and Wonder and a Return to a Love For School.