Not Just Change. Transformation.

Abandoned School, by Terence Faircloth, 8/7/06

Aban­doned School, by Ter­ence Fair­cloth, 8÷7÷08

Much has been writ­ten about the chang­ing needs of stu­dents in the 21st cen­tury and the trans­for­ma­tion that must take place in our schools to make it hap­pen. Sev­eral things are clear to me as I read them. First, it is going to take a vision­ary admin­is­tra­tion to remake the envi­ron­ment in which our schools oper­ate in order for those changes to be pos­si­ble. Sec­ond, like a mile-​​long freight train being switched onto another track, it will take a very long time for the needed changes to work their way down to the local level.

It took sev­eral years for No Child Left Behind to shift the focus of our schools from stu­dents to test scores, but that shift hap­pened. In the mean­time, the world shifted, too. What we really need now is No School Left Behind. Schools need to become more agile, more proac­tive, more will­ing to look ten or twenty years into the future instead of one or two.

If this web­site is any indi­ca­tion of the admin­is­tra­tion to come—one that not only lis­tens to its con­si­tu­tents, but actively invites their par­tic­i­pa­tion in the government—it has the nec­es­sary vision and deter­mi­na­tion. But even greater than this, it just under­scores how much dif­fer­ent a world tomorrow’s cit­i­zens will inhabit. We truly need to empower our stu­dents with the skills that &id=GDFeJnFlCfUC&dq=Optimizing+student+success+in+schools+with+the+other+three+R%27s:+Reasoning,+resilience,+and+responsibility&printsec=frontcover&source=web&ots=-IEU6TJngr&sig=K28Ul0XaC2mEw4wcP9iIUCSFdQc&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=1&ct=result" target="_blank">Robert Stern­berg calls the “other three R’s”: Rea­son­ing, Resilience, and Responsibility.

None of those are on the PSSA test. But they’re all on the real one: life.

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2 Responses to “Not Just Change. Transformation.”

  1. Wesley Fryer | November 8, 2008 at 10:03 pm #

    I dis­agree that we need a national edu­ca­tional cam­paign for “leave no school behind.” I think the focus should prop­erly move back to stu­dents, not test scores. As Clay­ton Chris­tensen notes, dis­rup­tive tech­nolo­gies are play­ing a piv­otal role in the changes we see in orga­ni­za­tions includ­ing schools. Per­son­al­iza­tion of learn­ing is one of the most basic dis­rup­tive ben­e­fits which new tech­nolo­gies offer us. I think a MAJOR part of the prob­lem with U.S. edu­ca­tional poli­cies to date is stan­dard­iza­tion. Rather than stan­dard­iza­tion, we need dif­fer­en­ti­a­tion. There is NOT just one way to learn how to read, and it is both arro­gant as well as coun­ter­pro­duc­tive for a soci­ety to insist there are a lim­ited and uni­form set of stan­dards by which learn­ing excel­lence should be defined in our schools.

    Thanks for the ref­er­ence to Robert Sternberg’s book, I haven’t read it and have added it to my Ama­zon wish list. :-)

  2. Gerald | November 9, 2008 at 2:06 pm #

    Thanks for your com­ment. Your point is well taken, and I agree with your point about dif­fer­en­ti­a­tion. As a teacher of gifted stu­dents, I see teach­ers wres­tle every day with the nearly impos­si­ble task of dif­fer­en­ti­at­ing within a nar­rowly defined curriculum.

    I think what I was get­ting at was not so much a national cam­paign focus­ing on schools, but more a national agenda ded­i­cated to cre­at­ing an envi­ron­ment that would inspire schools to thrive on inno­va­tion, flex­i­bil­ity, and atten­tion to indi­vid­ual stu­dents. In an attempt to be clever with my words, I com­mu­ni­cated the wrong idea.

    I still think, though, that NCLB has actu­ally done the oppo­site of what it was intended to do. Instead of chal­leng­ing schools to bring all stu­dents up to a level of pro­fi­ciency, what we have now is an envi­ron­ment in which schools are stran­gled into avoid­ing fail­ure. Excel­lence takes risk, and in the cur­rent envi­ron­ment, risk gets punished.

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