|
BOOK REVIEWS: The "Crits" Capture Presidential Power
By Nathan Glazer
Top Education researchers denounce scientific research
Education Research in the Public Interest:
Social Justice, Action, and Policy
By Gloria Ladson-Billings and William F.
Tate (editors)
Teachers College Press, 2006, $27.95; 274
pages.
As reviewed by Nathan Glazer
There is not much research to be found or
reported on in Education Research in
the Public Interest: the interests of
the editors and contributors are mostly elsewhere, this despite the
fact that one editor is the past president of the American
Educational Research Association (AERA) and the other is the
president-elect. The main title, “Education Research in the
Public Interest,” was also the theme for the last annual
convention of this important professional association, which
publishes a half-dozen journals, has 20,000 members, and attracts
thousands to its annual conventions. Oddly, the AERA affiliations
of the two editors are not stressed in the book, although the
Ladson-Billings presidency is referred to in the biographical note.
This is not an “official” publication of the AERA, but
does it reflect the views of its members?
Thirteen contributors were asked to respond to
a prospectus that several refer to but unfortunately is not
reproduced in the volume. Apparently the prospectus defined
research in the public interest as “those decisions and
actions that further democracy, democratic practices, equity, and
social justice.”
Clearly, the editors are impelled to undertake
this project by the steady and depressing reality of the great gaps
in educational achievement between the poor and the well-to-do, the
black
and the white, and similar issues, and the
contributors are motivated by the same concerns. But they are also
almost uniformly suspicious of scientifically based research and
scientifically based assessments as the means for dealing with these
large problems of unequal achievement. They are hostile to the No Child Left Behind legislation (NCLB), which
calls for a great deal of scientifically based testing and assessment.
They are equally critical of what they call “neoliberal”
and “neoconservative” approaches to educational problems:
The first appeals to the market and market-based approaches (as in
vouchers and charter schools), the second to more traditional
approaches to subject matter and teaching (as in E. D. Hirsch’s
core knowledge curriculum). Neither finds favor in their eyes.
But if we are to discard scientifically based
testing and assessment, how are we to estimate the scale and
character of the problem we are trying to address, or judge the
success of various approaches to dealing with them? There is no
answer evident here.
One contributor (Thomas S. Popkewitz) takes
the extreme standpoint of contemporary “critical
theory,” which is suspicious of mainline science in almost
all fields. Following Foucault, he views established science as an
expression of power relations. He attacks what he calls the
“censorship” in NCLB. Censorship? “That
censorship lies in the federal mandate that the methods for
studying the effects of school reform be evidence-based and
scientifically based inquiry. At first
glance, the phrase is seductive. Who could be
against evidence or science to understand school reforms? But …
the practices to establish what counts as ‘data’ carries
[sic] a strong threat to the public spaces in which the issues of and
interests in a democracy are clarified.”
In a long article I find no clarification of
just how this threat against “public spaces” in the
research called for in NCLB operates, and nothing that sustains the
charge of “censorship.”
If one is against “evidence-based and
scientifically based inquiry,” what research model is one
for? Three of the contributors to this volume (William Ayers, Tom
Barone, and Donald Blumenfeld-Jones) advocate the use of the
humanities and the arts as guides to research, or substitutes for
it, or as inspirers of themes for research. There can be no
argument with the notion that research should be broadly based, and
that suggestions derived from literature, the arts, and the
humanities as to what to look for, and what might be important,
should not be neglected.
But “arts-based research”? Could a
poem on the circumstances of deprived children or a documentary
movie on the condition of homeless youths in New Orleans qualify as
research in support of one or another education program?
Blumenfeld-Jones, who is taken by a film on homeless youths, Street Rat, writes,
“I am obliged to report that I have, up to this point in the
relatively short history of the genre, not been privy to a
completely unblemished work of arts-based research, one
sufficiently powerful, by itself, to redirect the educational
conversation….”
One criticism found in a number of the
contributions is that research must take a wider perspective than
the school
and the classroom: it must be research on the
society and its iniquities, for these
clearly lie at the basis of differential achievement in education. So
Jean Anyon tells us to “document and describe oppression,”
“study the powerful,” and concentrate on social movements,
all worthy subjects of research. But is not one directed to them in the
first place by the assessments and tests that demonstrate the great
inequalities in achievement?
Since the contributors to this collection are
so uniformly hostile to current reform initiatives, from testing
and accountability to charters and vouchers and more traditional
curricular emphases, it is fair to ask, what education model are
they for? The only possible answer one finds in this volume is the
system we already have, which largely fails to educate poor and
black children. The contributors are suspicious of charters and
vouchers because they undermine, as they see it, the existing
public schools. None of the contributors are, as far as one can see
from their affiliations, representatives of unionized public school
teachers and administrators, but what they have written is in full
support of the status quo: they seem to prefer it to any alternate
proposals.
There are alternatives that could have been
discussed: Some education reformers insist that student portfolios
are a better basis for assessing student learning than standardized
tests, and researchers using ethnographic methods sometimes come up
with insights that we do not find in standard statistically based
research. It would have been worth evaluating these.
This book could have gone deeper into the kind
of research that NCLB and other
legislation require, how the legislative
language on required research and assessment was derived, how it is
being interpreted and specified by the federal agencies, and the
specific weaknesses in the research that passes administrative
muster. Catherine Cornbleth lists the recent legislative provisions
that call for scientific evaluation and assessment. But this line
is not pursued further, by her or by any other contributor. A book
on the dependence in reform legislation on specified research
models could have been helpful; unfortunately, the hostility among
the contributors to both current scientific research and current
policy proposals prevents this from being that book.
One wonders how widespread this suspicion of
research of high scientific standards is among the members of AERA.
Not very, one thinks: otherwise, they couldn’t fill their
journals. And yet this volume and its publication by Teachers
College Press suggest that the wave of “critical
theory,” which breeds an unhealthy disrespect for the best in
scientific research and has for some decades now infected to
various degrees all academic fields, is well established in the
world of education.
Nathan Glazer is professor of education
and sociology emeritus at Harvard University.
|