Where others see conspiracy theories, I see badly thought-out plans. The Law of Unintended Consequences is, after all, a modern restatement of the old proverb, “The Road to Hell is paved with good intentions”.
This is especially applicable to US Education
policy.
About a decade ago, the powers that be
finally realized that their comfortable lives relied on technology, which in
turn relied on a large contingent of well-educated people to create and
maintain it. It also became clear that we were not training enough of those
individuals, and had imported those brains for decades. They decided that we
should produce more, and like Captain Picard on the bridge of the Enterprise,
said, “Make it so”.
Departments of Education throughout the
country increased the number of Mathematics and Science courses which students
had to pass to graduate from high school. People became aware that there was a
lot of scholarship money in the STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and
Mathematics) disciplines, and also that those majors got productive jobs, while
the Liberal Arts majors all too often moved back home after graduation. The
diligent middle-class parents forced their children to take even more material,
and do better at it, just like the armies of tots forced into gymnastics after
each Olympics.
In turn, this meant that teachers in public
and private education were faced with legions of students with neither talent
nor motivation. Yet, they were expected to succeed in teaching them. The result
could have been easily predicted. There was massive grade inflation and a
lowering of standards, plus extra punitive measures against teachers.
We in higher education in those STEM
disciplines are now faced with two large groups of ‘problem’ students.
The first have been told that they have
mastered material which they have not, and deeply resent us for dropping them
into lower-level courses. They then spend years repeating courses, until they
run out of student loans, or finally pass.
The second have a great deal of talent, but
have not been stretched to their capacity. They were the success stories, who
expect A’s on everything. It is really sad, but many cannot emotionally handle
their first failure (or even a C). We see eating disorders, suicides, and too
many drop-outs from this group. The knee-jerk reaction in the popular media is
that these students are too stressed from the expectations placed on them. I
claim that it is because they have been given unrealistic feedback, and this is
strongly supported by international studies on such things.
Of course, some universities and colleges
have lowered their standards, and Mathematics and Science departments in those
which have not are now being referred to as ‘roadblocks’. Any guesses as to
what will happen next?
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4 comments:
"I claim that it is because they have been given unrealistic feedback"
Where does this feedback first occur? I sometimes wonder if it begins early with parents and primary school education.
Absolutely. Didn't you know that 'every child is special'. That's why we have 'participation trophies' and 'almost winners'. We also can't group by ability, because it is shown to make the lower performers feel bad. Plus, studies show that lower performers don't do worse when grouped with higher performers (although they never state what happens to the higher performers). We also have made a mockery of 'gifted' programs, since parents will go so far as to sue to get their children in.
I think this is a pertinent link.
I have seen the dumbing-down for myself in both what my children have studied for their GCSEs and also with regard to the surprising gaps in knowledge amongst recent Computer Science graduates with good degrees.
Why I am not a Professor.
Thank you for the link.
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