The One about "Global Competitiveness" and What we
Truly Want for our Children By: Dr. Mitchell
Robinson
Education reformers have been very clear about their goals
for American schools and students. Authors like C. M. Rubin have called for
parents to vote for the presidential candidate "who has the most impactful
21st-century vision for education, because addressing our issues now is
essential for the U.S. to maintain its prosperity and global leadership in the
next decades." Neera Tanden and Matt James raise the specter of 200
million Chinese college grads by 2030 competing in the global marketplace, and
compare education to Olympic medal counts in their analysis of global education
trends. But few of these pundits ever ask parents what they want for their
children, so as the father of 2 school age boys I'm taking the liberty to share
my thoughts on the subject.
Here is what I don't want with respect to my kids'
education:
I don't want my children to be "globally
competitive"--that's nothing more than Cold War fear mongering. Having
recently returned from Shanghai, I can report that the Chinese educators I had
the pleasure of working with were very interested in American educational
strategies and ideas, and not for reasons of "global
competitiveness." They seemed honestly interested in how what we do as
teachers was the same or different from their approaches to teaching and
learning, wanted to know how US teachers were prepared in colleges and
universities, and were eager to share their traditions and ideas with us.
I'm not interested in an educational approach that is
targeted on producing "college and career ready" graduates. My boys
are 12 and 14. We hope they attend college, choose a major they are passionate
about, and find a way to apply their talents and abilities in jobs that they
enjoy and that make a strong contribution to their community and society in
general. But that's not the purpose of education. Education is not "job
training". Its so much more, and limiting the creativity and wonder of
learning to college and career readiness is a perversion of the true purpose
and value of education. The reformers have a very narrow, impoverished notion
of education as nothing more than a banking transaction, in which teachers make
deposits and students withdrawals. Its little wonder that their approach to
schooling is erasing the joy of learning for students and teachers in far too
many of our schools today.
And, I don't want an increasing bevy of tests consuming ever
larger swaths of time and energy in my children's education. The truth is that
we are measuring the things that are easy to measure, and ignoring the things
that really matter--relationships between teachers and students, and among
students themselves.
Here's what I do want for my children's education, and for
education in general:
I want my children to read for enjoyment, play an instrument
and sing, draw, dance, play, think, feel and be kind.
I want schools to be richly diverse, noisy, messy places
full of discovery, where instead of worrying about a stifling regimen of tests,
children are encouraged to explore, ponder, experiment and create.
I want rich arts programs, nurses, psychologists, counselors
and librarians in every school, to make sure that no child comes to or leaves
school hungry, and for schools to be places where every child and adult is
treated with dignity and respect.
I want my children's teachers to be free to create their own
lessons, and work collaboratively with their colleagues in a climate of trust
and mutual respect with their administrators, school board members and parents.
I want those teachers to be evaluated based on the work they
do in the classroom with their students, not on standardized test scores in
subjects they don't teach, from students they've never met.
I want those teachers to be well prepared, and fully
certified in their subject area with a semester or more of internship
experience before being entrusted with their own classroom.
I want all children to be taught by persons who care about
their growth and development as full human beings, not about their test scores.
As a parent, I have a message for the reformers: Stay out of
public education and stop obfuscating parents and community members with
distracting propaganda like "global competition" and "college
and career readiness", which is only designed to further the false
rhetoric of "failing schools". The vast majority of public schools
are wonderful, and our children's teachers are doing what can only be described
as heroic work under very difficult conditions.
And let's stop using "competition" as a solution
for the problems that have been caused by..."competition."
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