(link to article at alfiekohn.org)
1chance2learn.net is in no way affiliated with Alfie Kohn or the American School Board Journal. In fact, we doubt they even know we exist. Please click the link above to view the article at alfiekohn.com.
AMERICAN SCHOOL BOARD JOURNAL
April 2011
“Well, Duh!” -- Ten Obvious Truths That We Shouldn’t Be Ignoring
The field of education bubbles over with controversies. It’s
not unusual for intelligent people of good will to disagree passionately about
what should happen in schools. But there are certain precepts that aren’t
debatable, that just about anyone would have to acknowledge are true.
While many such statements are banal, some are worth
noticing because in our school practices and policies we tend to ignore the
implications that follow from them. It’s both intellectually interesting and
practically important to explore such contradictions: If we all agree that
a given principle is true, then why in the world do our schools still
function as if it weren’t?
Here are 10 examples.
1. Much of the material students are required to memorize
is soon forgotten
The truth of this statement will be conceded (either willingly
or reluctantly) by just about everyone who has spent time in school -- in
other words, all of us. A few months, or sometimes even just a few days,
after having committed a list of facts, dates, or definitions to memory, we couldn’t
recall most of them if our lives depended on it. Everyone knows this, yet a
substantial part of schooling – particularly in the most traditional schools –
continues to consist of stuffing facts into students’ short-term memories.
The more closely we inspect this model of teaching and
testing, the more problematic it reveals itself to be. First, there’s the
question of what students are made to learn, which often is more
oriented to factual material than to a deep understanding of ideas. (See item
2, below.) Second, there’s the question of how students are
taught, with a focus on passive absorption: listening to lectures, reading summaries
in textbooks, and rehearsing material immediately before being required to
cough it back up. Third, there’s the question of why a student has
learned something: Knowledge is less likely to be retained if it has been acquired
so that one will perform well on a test, as opposed to learning in the context
of pursuing projects and solving problems that are personally meaningful.
Even without these layers of deficiencies with the
status quo, and even if we grant that remembering some things can be useful, the
fundamental question echoes like a shout down an endless school corridor: Why
are kids still being forced to memorize so much stuff that we know they won’t
remember?
Corollary 1A: Since this appears to be true for adults,
too, why do most professional development events for teachers resemble the least
impressive classrooms, with experts disgorging facts about how to educate?
2. Just knowing a lot of facts doesn’t mean you’re smart
Even students who do manage to remember some of the
material they were taught are not necessarily able to make sense of those
bits of knowledge, to understand connections among them, or to apply them in
inventive and persuasive ways to real-life problems.
In fact, the cognitive scientist Lauren Resnick goes
even further: It’s not just that knowing (or having been taught) facts
doesn’t in itself make you smart. A mostly fact-oriented education may
actually interfere with your becoming smart. “Thinking skills tend to
be driven out of the curriculum by ever-growing demands for teaching larger
and larger bodies of knowledge,” she writes. Yet schools continue to treat
students as empty glasses into which information can be poured -- and public
officials continue to judge schools on the basis of how efficiently and
determinedly they pour.
3. Students are more likely to learn what they find
interesting
There’s no shortage of evidence for this claim if you
really need it. One of many examples: A group of researchers found
that children’s level of interest in a passage they were reading was 30 times
more useful than its difficulty level for predicting how much of it they
would later remember. But this should be obvious, if only because of what we
know about ourselves. It’s the tasks that intrigue us, that tap our curiosity
and connect to the things we care about, that we tend to keep doing -- and get
better at doing. So, too, for kids.
Conversely, students are less likely to benefit from doing
what they hate. Psychology has come a long way from the days when theorists tried
to reduce everything to simple stimulus-response pairings. We know now that
people aren’t machines, such that an input (listening to a lecture, reading a
textbook, filling out a worksheet) will reliably yield an output (learning). What
matters is how people experience what they do, what meaning they ascribe to
it, what their attitudes and goals are.
Thus, if students find an academic task stressful or boring,
they’re far less likely to understand, or even remember, the content. And if
they’re uninterested in a whole category of academic tasks -- say, those
they’re assigned to do when they get home after having just spent a whole day
at school -- then they aren’t likely to benefit much from doing them. No
wonder research finds little, if any, advantage to assigning
homework,
particularly in elementary or middle school.
4. Students are less interested in whatever they’re
forced to do and more enthusiastic when they have some say
Once again, studies confirm what we already know from
experience. The nearly universal negative reaction to compulsion, like the
positive response to choice, is a function of our psychological makeup.
Now combine this point with the preceding one: If choice
is related to interest, and interest is related to achievement, then it’s not
much of a stretch to suggest that the learning environments in which kids get
to make decisions about what they’re doing are likely to be the most
effective, all else being equal. Yet such learning environments continue to
be vastly outnumbered by those where kids spend most of their time just
following directions.
5. Just because doing x raises standardized
test scores doesn’t mean x should be done
At the very least, we would need evidence that the test
in question is a source of useful information about whether our teaching and
learning goals are being met. Many educators have argued that the tests being
used in our schools are unsatisfactory for several reasons.
First, there are numerous limitations with specific tests.
Second, most tests share certain problematic features,
such as being timed (which places more of a premium on speed than on
thoughtfulness), norm-referenced (which means the tests are designed to tell
us who’s beating whom, not how well students have learned or teachers have
taught), and consisting largely of multiple-choice questions (which don’t
permit students to generate or even explain their answers).
The third reason is the problems inherent to all tests
that are standardized and created by people far away from the classroom -- as
opposed to assessing the actual learning taking place there on an on-going
basis.
This is not the place to explain in detail why
standardized
tests measure what matters least. Here, I want only to make the simpler --
and, once again, I think, indisputable -- point that anyone who regards high
or rising test scores as good news has an obligation to show that the tests themselves
are good. If a test result can’t be convincingly shown to be both valid and
meaningful, then whatever we did to achieve that result -- say, a new
curriculum or instructional strategy -- may well have no merit whatsoever. It
may even prove to be destructive when assessed by better criteria. Indeed,
a school or district might be getting worse even as its test scores rise.
So how is it that articles in newspapers and education
journals, as well as pronouncements by public officials and think tanks, seem
to accept on faith that better scores on any test necessarily constitute good
news, and that whatever produced those scores can be described as
“effective”? Parents should be encouraged to ask, “How much time was
sacrificed from real learning just so our kids could get better at taking the
[name of test]?”
6. Students are more likely to succeed in a place
where they feel known and cared about
I realize there are people whose impulse is to sneer when
talk turns to how kids feel, and who dismiss as “soft” or “faddish” anything
other than old-fashioned instruction of academic skills. But even these
hard-liners, when pressed, are unable to deny the relationship between
feeling and thinking, between a child’s comfort level and his or her capacity
to learn.
Here, too, there are loads of supporting data. As one
group of researchers put it, “In order to promote students’ academic
performance in the classroom, educators should also promote their social and
emotional adjustment.” And yet, broadly speaking, we don’t. Teachers and schools
are evaluated almost exclusively on academic achievement measures (which, to
make matters worse, mostly consist of standardized test scores).
If we took seriously the need for kids to feel known and
cared about, our discussions about the distinguishing features of a “good
school” would sound very different. Likewise, our view of
discipline and classroom management would be turned inside-out, seeing as how the primary
goals of most such strategies are obedience and order, often with the result
that kids feel less cared about -- or even bullied -- by adults.
7. We want children to develop in many ways, not just
academically
Even mainstream education groups have embraced the idea
of teaching the “whole child.” It’s a safe position, really, because just
about every parent or educator will tell you that we should be supporting children’s
physical, emotional, social, moral, and artistic growth as well as their
intellectual growth. Moreover, it’s obvious to most people that the schools
can and should play a key role in promoting many different forms of
development.
If we acknowledge that academics is just one facet of a
good education, why do so few conversations about improving our schools deal
with -- and why are so few resources devoted to -- non-academic issues? And why
do we assign children still more academic tasks after the school day is over,
even when those tasks cut into the time children have to pursue interests
that will help them develop in other ways?
Corollary 7a: Students “learn best when they are happy,”
as educator Nel Noddings reminded us, but that doesn’t mean they’re especially
likely to be happy (or psychologically healthy) just because they’re
academically successful. And millions aren’t. Imagine how high schools would
have to be changed if we were to take this realization seriously.
8. Just because a lesson (or book, or class, or test)
is harder doesn't mean it's better
First, if it’s pointless to give students things to do
that are too easy, it’s also counterproductive to give them things that they
experience as too hard. Second, and more important,
this criterion overlooks
a variety of considerations other than difficulty level by which educational
quality might be evaluated.
We know this, yet we continue to worship at the altar of
“rigor.” I’ve seen lessons that aren’t unduly challenging yet are deeply
engaging and intellectually valuable. Conversely, I’ve seen courses -- and
whole schools -- that are indisputably rigorous . . . and appallingly bad.
9. Kids aren’t just short adults
Over the past hundred years, developmental psychologists
have labored to describe what makes children distinctive and what they can
understand at certain ages. There are limits, after all, to what even a precocious
younger child can grasp (e.g., the way metaphors function, the significance
of making a promise) or do (e.g., keep still for an extended period).
Likewise, there are certain things children require for
optimal development, including opportunities to play and explore, alone and
with others. Research fills in -- and keeps fine-tuning -- the details, but
the fundamental implication isn’t hard to grasp: How we educate kids should
follow from what defines them as kids.
Somehow, though, developmentally inappropriate
education has become the norm, as kindergarten (literally, the “children’s
garden”) now tends to resemble a first- or second-grade classroom -- in fact,
a bad first- or second-grade classroom, where discovery, creativity,
and social interaction are replaced by a repetitive regimen focused on narrowly
defined academic skills.
More generally, premature exposure to sit-still-and-listen
instruction, homework, grades, tests, and competition -- practices that are
clearly a bad match for younger children and of questionable value at any age
-- is rationalized by invoking a notion I’ve called
BGUTI: Better Get Used To It. The logic here is that we have to prepare you for the bad things that are
going to be done to you later . . . by doing them to you now. When articulated
explicitly, that principle sounds exactly as ridiculous as it is. Nevertheless,
it’s the engine that continues to drive an awful lot of nonsense.
The obvious premise that we should respect what makes
children children can be amended to include a related principle that is less obvious
to some people: Learning something earlier isn’t necessarily better. Deborah
Meier, whose experience as a celebrated educator ranges from kindergarten to
high school, put it bluntly: "The earlier [that schools try] to
inculcate so-called 'academic' skills, the deeper the damage and the more
permanent the 'achievement' gap." That is exactly what a passel of
ambitious research projects has found: A traditional skills-based approach to
teaching young children -- particularly those from low-income families -- not
only offers no lasting benefits but appears to be harmful.
Corollary 9A: Kids aren’t just future adults. They
are that, of course, but they aren’t only that, because children’s needs and perspectives
are worth attending to in their own right. We violate this precept -- and do
a disservice to children -- whenever we
talk about schooling in economic terms, treating students mostly as future employees.
10. Substance matters more than labels
A skunk cabbage by any other name would smell just as
putrid. But in education, as in other domains, we’re often seduced by
appealing names when we should be demanding to know exactly what lies behind them.
Most of us, for example, favor a sense of community, prefer that a job be
done by professionals, and want to promote learning. So should we sign on to
the work being done in the name of
“Professional Learning Communities”? Not
if it turns out that PLCs have less to do with helping children to think
deeply about questions that matter than with boosting standardized test
scores.
The same caution is appropriate when it comes to
“Positive Behavior Support,” a jaunty moniker for a program of crude Skinnerian
manipulation in which students are essentially bribed to do whatever they’re
told. More broadly, even the label “school reform” doesn’t necessarily signify
improvement; these days, it’s more likely to mean “something that skillful
and caring teachers wouldn’t be inclined to do unless coerced,” as educational
psychologist Bruce Marlowe put it.
In fact, the corporate-style version of
“school reform”
that’s uncritically endorsed these days by politicians, journalists, and
billionaires consists of a series of debatable tactics -- many of them
amounting to bribes and threats to force educators to jack up test scores. Just
as worrisome, though, is that these reformers often overlook, or simply
violate, a number of propositions that aren’t debatable, including many
of those listed here.
_________________________________________
This essay is an abridged version of the introduction
to Feel-Bad Education…And Other Contrarian Essays on Children and
Schooling (Beacon Press, 2011)
In response to #5
ReplyDeleteQuantifiable data is easy to print, analyze and translate. This is the basis for a "business" approach to education. When students are reduced down to a number there is very little we can deduce about what kind of meaningful learning took place. Quantity vs. Quality. It looks great to have a large percentage of students passing a standardized test but, as Alfie Kohn argues, at what expense. I have never been shocked at the results of any school based on their test scores. It is easy to predict what their scores will look like if you survey the neighborhood that immediately surrounds the school. Though, there’s this counterfeit claim that we need to utilize standardized testing to determine which schools need help. We already know which ones need help. The results though, are not more resources but a withholding of funds and potential sanctions against the administration, teachers and students of the school.
Remember, when test scores go up, real learning goes down.
I have never been a fan of standardized testing. My experience is that it just caters to the lowest common denominators.
DeleteIn my educational philosophy, grammar school is for socialization: how not to hit the person next to you.
High school is NOT for learning facts. It is to teach you where and how to look up facts when you need them.
College should be about learning how to think, to reason.
Too many schools throw money at useless, fact-filled babysitting.