To get the full feel of US culture, it helps to know a few things. One is Churchill’s correct observation that, “Americans do the right thing, once they have tried everything else.” Another is the cultural preference to make everything a matter of black and white, “If you’re not a winner, you’re a loser.”
This refusal to acknowledge shades of grey
means an awful lot of cognitive dissonance, and bending of the rules. It also
means massive and regular policy shifts. Progress is more a matter of stumbling
onto new ideas in a Drunkard’s Walk than a gradual set of small improvements.
Nowhere are these false dichotomies more
obvious than in Education. For example, when studies indicated that there might
be too much rote learning in the standard curriculum, it was replaced by
“discovery” or “inquiry-based learning”, with absolutely no memorization at
all. For another, the famous No Child Left Behind initiative of President
G.W.Bush requires by law that every single student in the country perform above
benchmarks by 2014. Not surprisingly, this has led to massive cheating, and
very low benchmarks.
On the surface, the US education system
looks free and democratically-driven. Each state has its own Board of
Education, which sets the statewide standards and basic curriculum, from which
each school district generates its own requirements. That is, unless you live
in Ohio, Louisiana, Kentucky, Kansas, or several other states, where the
process has been hijacked by a vocal religious minority, who wish to ignore
centuries of scientific advancement.
When new studies showed that not enough
students were “ready for higher education”, a group of states signed on to the
Common Core, an agreed-upon set of material that every high school graduate should
know. With Teutonic efficiency, school administrators have leapt upon the idea
that this minimum should be the maximum. Not only that, but the results of the
students’ tests will be used to measure teachers, and “eliminate the failing
ones.” This appeals to US conservatives, who rail against public education, and
to corporations such as Pearson publishing, now poised to make billions. One of
their income streams is to provide scripts to teachers, from which they are not
permitted to deviate. Another is to generate the aforementioned assessments.
"One of their income streams is to provide scripts to teachers, from which they are not permitted to deviate."
ReplyDeleteI wonder if this is the foot in the door for much more computer-based education and far fewer teachers?
That is one of the ideas. The fly in the ointment is that computer-based education appears to work even worse.
ReplyDelete