Showing posts with label education. Show all posts
Showing posts with label education. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 17, 2013

The Best Idea For Fixing Public Schools

Always been a big Tom Peters fan.  While he's drifted off the 'A' list of management authors, there's one line of his which has stuck with me all these years:
 
"It is easier to replace than reform"
 
One of my current favorite writers on K-12 education is Jay Greene, who today posted an provocative piece; “Fix Schools by Not Fixing Schools.”   While the title may be at first perplexing, the thrust of his argument meshes with Peters' theorem of it being easier to replace than reform.
 
For Greene, we must first understand the forces defending the Status Quo:

The main reason we should stop focusing on fixing traditional public schools is that, for the most part, they don’t want to be fixed.  The people who make their living off of those schools have reasons for wanting schools to be as they are and have enormous political resources to fend off efforts to fundamentally change things.  Trying to impose reforms...is largely a futile exercise.


Greene's solution is to embrace diversity by the process of creating alternatives:

We can fix schools...by going around them.  We can expand access to other educational options, including charter schools, voucher schools, tax-credit schools. ESAs, digital schooling, home-schooling, and hybrid schools.  Reformers should concentrate their energy on all of these non-traditional-school efforts and stop trying so hard to fix traditional public schools.

Like water, we should be seeking the path of least resistance.  After decades of encountering entrenched interests willing to go to war to defend an ossified system, let us take our energies to work around them, to offer true alternatives, and to empower parents to decide which ones work best for their children

Monday, October 24, 2011

Our children are grossly unprepared...

President Obama calls for more kids going to college.  While education is a great thing, perhaps we should put more energy into replacing our K-12 system.  With 1/3rd of our kids needing remedial work when they ge tot college, no sense pushing more into higher education.

The truly sad part is that over half the kids in college needing at least one remedial class wind up never getting a degree....so they have the worst of both worlds: lots of student loan debt to be paid off with high school level wages.


College Readiness Today

Created by Knewton and Column Five Media

Monday, September 26, 2011

Cheating is becoming the norm in school

Am not exactly sure how to think about this.  It's easy to point at kids today and say they lack basic virtue,  but considering the frequent scandals among the adults  in our school system, should we be surprised?

Thursday, September 01, 2011

Observations for kids going back to school

Walter Russell Mead has a thought-provoking take:


1.  The real world does not work like school.
2.  Most of your elders know very little about the world into which you are headed.
3.  You are going to have to work much, much harder than you probably expect.
4. Choosing the right courses is more important than choosing the right college.
5.  Get a traditional liberal education; it is the only thing that will do you any good.
6.  Character counts; so do good habits.
7.  Relax.