Any questions
about low grade education? - Build Better Teachers
Mona Charen
Townhall
Sept 09, 2014
For the past half-century, and particularly since
the 1983 "Nation at Risk" report, Americans have
been heaving great sacks of money at schools.
Federal spending alone has tripled since the 1970s.
The New York Times calculates that the federal
government now spends $107.6 billion on education
yearly, which is layered over an estimated $524.7
billion spent by states and localities (source:
National Center for Education Statistics).
Reformers have urged -- depending upon where they
stand ideologically -- smaller class sizes, more
accountability, merit pay for teachers and
educational choice. Each year seems to bring a new
fad: child-centered learning, new math, cooperative
learning and so forth. The No Child Left Behind
reform focused on testing. There have been proposals
to repeal teacher tenure and to provide every child
with a laptop. And always there are fights over
curriculum -- the Common Core being the controversy
du jour.
But perhaps the most promising thinking about
education arises from the discovery from economist
Eric Hanushek that the most important factor in
student performance is the quality of the teacher.
Not class size. Not spending per pupil. Not even
curriculum.
Our system produces some great teachers, but only by
luck. Each year, 400,000 new teachers enter American
classrooms, many knowing little about the nuts and
bolts of teaching. As Elizabeth Green argues in her
new book, "Building a Better Teacher: How Teaching
Works (and How to Teach it to Everyone)," our
education schools do not teach the mechanics of
teaching: how to control a classroom, how to engage
students' imaginations, how to check for
understanding. They've been sidetracked by
educational psychology and fads at the expense of
teaching how to teach.
Green cites "education entrepreneurs" including Doug
Lemov, author of "Teach Like a Champion," and
Deborah Loewenberg Ball, now dean of the University
of Michigan's school of education, who focus on
helping ordinary teachers to become great.
Lemov, an education reformer and consultant, was
struck by something he found by poring over
statistics from the state of New York. While the
correlation between zip codes and educational
success was notable, there were always outliers:
schools or classrooms in which even kids from
impoverished backgrounds were doing well. Lemov
zeroed in on those schools and those particular
teachers.
The result is found in the subtitle of "Teach Like a
Champion": "49 Techniques That Put Students on the
Path to College." Some of the techniques are
inspired; others are quotidian but still important
(like how not to waste time pleading for responses).
The point is that teaching is a performance every
day, which is not easy. Teachers must engage the
interest and attention of their students (who bring
all kinds of troubles from home), encourage the weak
ones along with the strong, maintain discipline, and
build a sense of team spirit. Lemov doesn't believe
that anyone can be a great teacher, but he does
think that with coaching and mentoring, good
teachers can become great.
Some of Lemov's proven techniques will not surprise
educational traditionalists. He believes in drill,
though he calls it "muscle memory." A great teacher
will drill arithmetic skills, for example, until
they are second nature, so that students needn't
stumble over the easy stuff when they get to algebra
and geometry. (Education schools had disdained this
as "drill and kill.") Another technique Lemov
suggests is "cold calls" -- that is, having the
teacher choose students randomly rather than just
those who raise their hands. Each child, knowing he
might be called upon, must be ready. (It works in
law schools). A companion technique is "no opt out."
If the child says he doesn't know, the teacher asks
a related question to another student to narrow down
the possible right answer and returns to the first
child for a second chance.
There are broad suggestions about classroom
management and more subtle and difficult challenges
like maintaining "emotional constancy," that is
refraining from showing anger when a child gets the
wrong answer. Anger will teach a child to try to
hide his ignorance rather than accept it as a normal
part of the learning enterprise.
Teaching is a craft. It may be among the hardest to
master. Renewed attention to teaching teaching seems
long overdue.
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