Math instruction has been in much the same kind of trouble as reading, and for much the same kind of reasons, for almost as long a time. Tom Lehrer, a math instructor at Harvard with a taste for a bar-room night-life singing his own satirical songs to his own brilliant piano backing, pilloried New Math back in the 1960’s (about the same time that Rudolf Flesch wrote up a not yet surpassed analysis of why Johnny couldn’t read). Andrea Neal’s accusations of malpractice are fair and to the point, in both of these crucial basic skills areas. GS
http://www.indystar.com/articles/7/202195-3507-021.html
December 15, 2004
Remember the old definition
of insanity -- doing the same thing over and over and expecting different
results? The description comes to mind with the release of ISTEP results.
Every year, schools spend
more time and money on test preparation, remediation and analyzing test scores. Then we react with disappointment when scores
fail to rise in proportion to our investment.
ISTEP scores are not going
to shoot up just because state and federal governments have written higher
standards and decided to hold schools accountable for student achievement. They
may go up a percentage point here and a point there, but as a general rule we
can expect only incremental improvement as long as we cling to the same old
ways of doing things.
Whether you love or hate
the federal No Child Left Behind Act, it got one thing
dead right. It said federal grants for education reform should go only to
states and schools that use "proven strategies and proven methods for
student learning, teaching and school management that are based on
scientifically based research and effective practices and have been replicated
successfully in schools."
It's time for
Very few
The best example comes from the world of reading. Over the past decade, a
compelling body of research has concluded that the most successful early
reading programs are those that emphasize phonetic skills in a sequential and
systematic way. Yet in
The
National Council of Teachers of English recently held its annual convention in
Math instruction is no
better. The Nov. 24 issue of Education Week reported on the results of a
federal research review of 44 off-the-shelf mathematics programs used in middle
schools across the country.
The report,
"Curriculum-Based Interventions for Increasing K-12 Math
Achievement-Middle School," found only five math programs had a research
record strong enough to meet U.S. Department of Education evaluation standards.
Of those, just two had studies showing that students learned more with their
programs compared with other programs. The researchers found no acceptable scientific
studies on programs produced by some of the most popular publishers.
Each year, ISTEP statistics
allow us to identify schools that have boosted scores more dramatically than
the average. Typically, these schools attribute the improvement to some change
they have made in the way they teach. In some cases, they have brought in
reading specialists to work with children functioning below grade level. In
other cases, they have implemented reading or math programs that focus on
sequential and systematic learning. State education officials need to hold up
those programs as models.
Why do we let school
systems choose textbooks that have no track record? Why do we let education
schools ignore the evidence about effective instructional programs? To ignore
the science is to commit educational malpractice against our children.
Andrea Neal is a teacher at St. Richard's School in