|
CORRESPONDENCE: Readers Respond
Catholic schools; teacher dispositions; private placements; teacher certification
Catholic Education
Peter Meyer
(“Can Catholic Schools Be Saved?” features, Spring 2007) left us with plenty of challenging questions
about the future of Catholic schools. At their peak in 1964, Catholic
schools enrolled approximately 5 million students and served about 52
percent of Catholic school-age children. Currently, about 2.5 million are
enrolled, including less than 18 percent of Catholic school-age children.
Private education enrollment as a whole increased by 18 percent from 1988
to 2001 and is predicted to grow another 7 percent by 2013. Public school
enrollment increased by 19 percent during the same period and will rise
another 4 percent by 2013. Just what are most Catholic families telling us?
Should we accept the “simple” answer that
it is all about the cost? Consider that in 1960 Catholic elementary schools
enrolled 89 percent of the private school students in the United States. By
2000 that number had slipped to 49 percent! By contrast, comparably priced
conservative Christian schools had a 46 percent increase in enrollment
between 1989 and 2003. This represents 75 percent of the total private
school increase during that period. Why are Christian-school parents making
this commitment for their children while most Catholic parents are not?
What are our prospects? Catholic school tuition rates
skyrocket, aging buildings require major repair, and parish subsidies
shrink (from 63 percent in 1969 to 28 percent in 1994). Meanwhile,
Catholics migrate farther from the city and build their new
“villages” complete with well-resourced but free public
schools. We need to collaborate on a bold transition to more affordable and
better resourced Catholic schools supported in large part by those who have
benefited from their own Catholic-school experience.
We are running out of time for many Catholic schools.
Judging by the past 40 years, we can realistically conclude that Catholic
schools in the United States are indeed reaching their
“twilight” as Andrew Greeley said a decade ago. Can the Church
agree on a more-focused mission and collaborative strategy for Catholic
schools especially regarding whom we wish to serve? Unless we do, Catholic
schools are destined to complete their journey to a slow death.
Theodore J. Wallace
Career educator and Catholic schools consultant
Peter
Meyer’s article invoked vivid memories of my own high school days in
northern Michigan, where I attended a very small K–12 Catholic
school. After a recent teachers’ meeting on how the new student
handbook should address plagiarism and cheating, I was reminded that
“back in the day” there were few problems with this issue.
Administrators and school boards were adamant: “You cheat,
you’re done!”
Another reason there was little “copying”
was the ever-vigilant eyes of the nuns, who seemed to be right there,
always, looking for cheaters and sinners. They really did have rulers and
other weapons of mass humiliation tucked under the folds of their black
habits, believe me. If a student’s eyes roamed for any reason away
from the paper being used, one of the weapons was smacked firmly on the
desk as a reminder and, if a second reminder was needed, squarely on the
hand.
The other deterrent to cheating was the demerit card.
Roughly the size of a credit card, it had numbers up to 50 on one side and
rules and demeritable offenses on the other. Tardy to class, 3 demerits;
not having your homework, 5 demerits; not wearing the proper attire, 3
demerits; swearing (depending on the choice word or phrase), 5 to 7
demerits; teasing classmates, 2 demerits; pranks, 7 to 15 demerits
(depending if they were meant to hurt someone or not); and cheating, 10 to
50 demerits. Accumulating 51 demerits meant you were expelled, no questions
asked.
A few years ago I wrote to my English instructor,
Sister Joan (now retired), that I too had become an English teacher, and
although I might have complained and was probably a pain in the neck, I
really had a marvelous language arts background due to the days spent in
her class. She wrote back a couple of days later: “Dear Richard: God
does have a sense of humor, doesn’t he? God bless you.”
Rick Fowler
Harbor Springs, Michigan
Teacher Dispositions
Laurie Moses Hines
(“Return of the Thought Police?” research, Spring 2007) is surely right: present-day
“dispositions” standards have their roots in much earlier
efforts to measure and mold the “personality” of the American
teacher. But Hines’s otherwise superb analysis misses one very
important difference between the two campaigns. During the Cold War period,
personality testing aimed quite explicitly at locating and even at
cultivating Americans who stood near the “average” in every
respect, especially in their politics. Social critic William H. Whyte
captured this cautious, middle-of-the-road spirit in his 1956 classic, The Organization Man, which
contained a semisatirical set of instructions for “How to Cheat on a
Personality Test.” When in doubt, Whyte advised, test-takers should
say or write, “I like things pretty well the way they are.” And
whenever a political question arose, they should seek to sound
“conservative,” but not too much so. “To go to either
extreme earns you a bad score,” Whyte cautioned, “but in most
situations you should resolve any doubts…by deciding in favor of the
accepted.”
Fast-forward to our current emphasis upon
“dispositions,” and you’ll see how much things have
changed. As Hines deftly shows, we continue to focus on the psychic
interior of the prospective teacher. But the traits that we expect, indeed,
that we demand, are completely different. Whereas the midcentury teacher
was asked to hew closely to a happily patriotic version of America, the
present-day instructor must critique its “racism, sexism, homophobia,
and classism,” to quote one ed school web site. And if you think the
students aren’t listening, come visit during my office hours one day.
A few years ago, a student strolled in and asked, quite casually, if I
“buy” the “NYU line on bilingual education.”
Unaware that universities took official stances on contentious political
questions, I asked what that “line” might be. But we both knew.
“Bilingual education is a good thing,” the student said,
smiling. “And people who oppose it are racists.” During the
Cold War, especially, we promoted a bland, flag-waving nationalism; today,
we emphasize “power” and “privilege” and
“oppression.” But it’s still indoctrination, not
education, because we continue to judge students based on how well they
echo our own political
dispositions. Talk about an abuse of power and privilege!
Jonathan Zimmerman
Professor of education and history
New York University
In her excellent
essay, Laurie Moses Hines raises some provocative questions about the
current use of disposition assessments in schools of education. Yet despite
Hines’s careful attention to historical antecedents, her examination
of origins remains incomplete.
First, Hines locates the origins of personality testing
in the immediate post–World War II era. While it is true that Life magazine declared the
1950s the “age of psychology,” the genesis of mass
psychological testing dated back to World War I and the 1920s. The main
driver behind the spread of personality tests was bureaucratization: of
American business firms; of the modern military; and, most germane to this
discussion, of the American public school. Like business and military
leaders, school officials turned to the new science of psychology to bring
order to their rapidly expanding institutions. Testing teachers and
students using psychological tools proved indispensable in an
organizational culture that no longer lent itself to face-to-face contact
and interactions.
Hines also argues that it was the ideology of
educational progressivism that fueled the spread of personality assessments
throughout the education profession. But to suggest that “the
policing of teacher personality” stemmed solely from educational
progressivism is to obscure the more complex origins and outcomes of
personality testing in modern American life. Personality assessments have
been, and continue to be, administered to millions of Americans each year.
Future doctors, lawyers, firefighters, service industry employees, Catholic
priests, and even professional athletes are routinely subjected to
personality tests as a condition of their employment. To capture the
historical significance of disposition assessment requires a broader
worldview.
Over the course of the 20th century, some of the most
persistent challenges in public education—from the dropout problem in
the 1950s, to educational disadvantage in the 1960s, to school discipline
in recent years—have been reframed in psychological terms. The
current trend of reducing the complex inner lives of potential teachers to
a number, a score, indeed a “disposition,” perhaps demands the
strictest scrutiny of all.
Catherine Gavin Loss
Charlottesville, Virginia
Laurie Moses
Hines explores one of the most sensitive issues facing teacher educators
today. She is absolutely right: “those committed to academic freedom
[and I assume that this includes both conservatives and liberals] in higher
education should be concerned when professional socialization trumps
freedom of conscience in teacher education programs.” At a time when
civil liberties are too easily trampled, educators need to be vigilant.
While I applaud her for wading in where others have not, I want to ask her
some questions:
Why is an emphasis on “social
justice” evidence of a left-leaning perspective? I have assumed that
my conservative colleagues are equally concerned about justice; we simply
disagree about the best way to achieve justice in today’s complex
world.
Does Hines really want future teachers to be
judged only on
the basis of skill and mastery of content knowledge? Can we ethically give
our support to someone who may have great skill and knowledge but who
believes that, based on their race or gender, some children are inferior?
Hines says that she wants to be sure that we do not support teachers who
will do harm to children but she lists drug dealers and child abusers and
not people who fundamentally dislike children or do not expect them to
succeed.
Why can’t Hines embrace Susan
Fuhrman’s belief that “responsiveness to the diversity of
students’ backgrounds and previous experiences” is essential?
Skill and content knowledge without this responsiveness is destructive.
This is quite a different matter from judging future teachers by whether
they agree or disagree with us regarding a particular multicultural
curriculum or progressivism in education.
In the end, we teacher educators must balance a deep
commitment to the academic freedom of our students, especially students
with whom we may profoundly disagree, with an equally deep commitment that
those whom we certify will, at minimum, “do no harm.” Perhaps
this is a topic where nuance is better than absolutism.
James W. Fraser
Steinhardt School of Education
New York University
Hines responds:
As Professor Loss notes, broader psychological
contexts exist and testing predated 1940. My intention, however, was a
comparison with current dispositions practice. In the post-1940 era,
teacher education attempted to use psychological assessments to police
teacher personality and to substitute those for local school
administrators’ judgments about teacher selection and behavior.
Teacher education cannot preserve freedom of conscience
and speech while at the same time assessing students on their beliefs. As
ugly as some beliefs are, in this country individuals have a right to hold
them. Because teacher education is not an unbiased adjudicator, it should
not police beliefs or behaviors. Character is certainly important, and
local school administrators can consider it when making decisions about
teacher employment; unlike teacher education faculty, they are accountable
to a local community.
I agree with Professor Fraser that liberals and
conservatives are “equally concerned” but “simply
disagree about the best way to achieve justice.” For this reason,
teacher education should abandon dispositions assessment.
As to “Why can’t [I] embrace Susan
Fuhrman’s belief,” I do embrace diversity, including diversity
of belief. I don’t embrace institutional demands on students to
adhere to ideological positions or control mechanisms that are no guarantee
of teacher quality, are not openly or fairly adjudicated, and do not
reflect moral consensus.
Private Placements
The authors of
“Debunking a Special Education Myth” (check the facts, Spring 2007) appear
to misinterpret what school officials and education policymakers are saying
about the cost of educating all children. Without question, school districts are
committed to providing appropriate educational services to all children,
including private placements when services cannot be provided by the local
schools.
Local school officials aren’t blaming students
with disabilities for the need to provide appropriate educational services.
They are simply advocating that the real costs of educating all children far exceed the
funding that is made available to most local school districts, forcing
school officials to make difficult and sometimes unfair choices. After all,
it is not unusual for some private placements to cost $100,000 or more. For
most any local school district, that’s significant.
At the local level, gaps between what resources are
needed and what resources are available are real, and the only options for
local school officials are to reduce needed educational programs or needed
staff or both. However, given the bittersweet fact that parents of students
with disabilities have access to the courts should appropriate educational
services not be
offered, it seems fairly easy to understand why so many school officials
are frustrated and often feel abandoned.
If there is any blame, it is typically directed toward
the federal government for reneging on its promises to fund 40 percent of
the cost of the average per pupil expenditure; such failed federal promises
now total more than $40 billion over the past six years.
Imagine what additional improvements could be made in
closing the achievement gap if Congress would close the significant federal
funding gap that has existed far too long. We agree that the overall cost
of private placement, on average, nationwide constitutes a tiny proportion
of the overall cost of public school spending, but that’s not the
point.
National School Boards Association
Alexandria, VA
Greene and Winters respond:
The National School Boards Association (NSBA) begins
its letter by denying that school officials blame special education and
private placement for draining resources from general education and then
proceed to repeat the very argument that they deny making. The NSBA letter
emphasizes that the cost of special education forces “difficult
choices” and compels districts to “reduce needed educational
programs.” But the authors provide no data to refute our findings
that private placement imposes a trivial financial burden on public schools
or that the overall financial burden of special education has not increased
over the last three decades. The best they can do is to make the
unsubstantiated claim that it is “not unusual for some private
placements to cost $100,000 or more” and to blame the federal
government for not providing as large a subsidy as they would like. As we
documented, expensive private placements are extremely
“unusual.” And an increase in the federal subsidy cannot be
supported by claiming that special education places a greater financial
strain on schools, as the percentage of school revenue devoted to special
education has not increased in the last three decades.
Regulating Software
The marketing and
procurement practices Todd Oppenheimer describes (“Selling
Software,” features, Spring 2007) were in place decades before NCLB. Even 10 years
ago, the largest school contracts were with multinational publishers for
textbooks. States either made approval a political process or delegated the
function to districts. The discretion that legislation granted to districts
for purchasing reflected beliefs that administrators would honor their
fiduciary obligations to students and that educators were the real experts
on curriculum. Student outcomes did not matter quite enough to districts
that providers had to demonstrate results.
Now that educational outcomes matter, procurement
decisions are critical to school success. Unfortunately, the market is
unprepared. Market leaders’ programs lack evidence of efficacy.
Administrators lack the capacity to deal with the vast array of providers,
products, and services now available. State and local agency heads have not
kept up with the state of the art of education science. Evaluation
methodology has not advanced far beyond considering whether an intervention
will have some effect on some students. Above all, the federal government
has neither defined nor enforced NCLB’s requirements that federal
funds only be used to purchase programs proven effective through
scientifically based research.
But there is good news. Several hundred firms and
nonprofits grew up in the last decade because entrepreneurs and venture
investors believed that the standards and accountability movement would
apply to products and services as well as teachers and administrators.
Research and evaluation is built into their offerings. But if they are to
compete with entrenched multinational publishers, these emerging school
improvement providers will need institutional capital. These funds will
flow only when investors see movement to a regulatory environment that
rewards program efficacy.
When educators demand better products the market will
respond, but government must help. Federal policymakers need to establish a
regulatory regime that sets a standard for quality, encourages innovative
firms to compete against the historic market leaders, and gives
administrators leeway to determine programmatic fit. The secretary of
education has the authority to approve the clear, workable definition for
scientifically based research that is needed. The real question raised by
the Oppenheimer article is why she hasn’t already acted.
Marc Dean Millot
Editor
New Education Economy
Preschool Curriculum
While Dr. Pianta makes some excellent points
(“Preschool Is School, Sometimes,” features, Winter 2007), especially related to teacher training and
classroom behaviors, I am concerned by his lack of focus on curriculum
development and planning. Many excellent teachers have found it difficult
to find appropriate materials to teach four-year-olds. I have used a
comprehensive planning template to develop most of the materials I use with
my four-year-old students from low socioeconomic backgrounds because there
are limited “appropriate and challenging” materials available,
especially in math, science, and social studies.
While there are a growing number of
“comprehensive” curricula, they are often adapted from
kindergarten curricula or are built by pulling together components from
various companies. According to the National Association for the Education
of Young Children, “The National Research Council (2001) warns that
such a piecemeal approach can result in a disconnected conglomeration of
activities and teaching methods, lacking focus, coherence, or
comprehensiveness.” An appropriate planning template can help ensure
that preschool curricula align with and are conceptually consistent with
other aspects of the program. The template would ensure that the curricula
address the needs of individual students by providing a challenging
curriculum that encourages creativity and higher-order thinking skills.
While, as Pianta writes, “the science of early
education holds considerable promise for further development and scaling up
of effective approaches and training and supporting the teachers of our
youngest,” curriculum development should not be left out of the
discussion. Appropriate planning can enable programs to offer a wide
variety of activities that incorporate all the learning domains and take
into account appropriate learning theories.
Peter Weilenmann
National Board certified teacher
and early childhood generalist
Arlington, Virginia
Teacher Preparation
Authors Kane, Rockoff, and Staiger (“Photo
Finish,” research, Winter 2007) did not account for the difference that
high-quality teacher preparation makes in teacher performance. They found
that alternatively certified and uncertified teachers did less well in
producing student achievement initially than did certified teachers, but
that most of the differences disappeared by the third year of teaching. As
a result, the authors conclude that teacher preparation does not matter.
However, most of those uncertified teachers who made it to year three had
by then completed their training in a master’s degree program. The
authors do not account for the teachers receiving and benefiting from this
education and ongoing mentoring. Most of the uncertified teachers in the
study who did not enroll in the master’s degree program left after
the first or second year of teaching; indeed, only 18 percent remained by
year five.
More fine-grained research on the effects of teacher
education and certification needs to be conducted. However, there is no
evidence to suggest that teachers do not need to be prepared to teach
before they begin to teach. Students deserve teachers who know content, how
to teach it using different strategies for
different learners, and how to use assessment to improve instruction and
learning. All of these skills cannot be sufficiently learned in a crash
course offered a few weeks before school starts. Furthermore, millions of
dollars are wasted in recruiting and orienting new teachers each year, not
to mention the tragic effects on students taught by those who do not know
how to teach. The United States can take a page from other industrialized
nations, where teacher preparation is required and funded adequately.
Arthur E. Wise
President
National Council for Accreditation of Teacher
Education
|