THE EDUCATION GADFLY
A Weekly Bulletin of News and Analysis from the Thomas B. Fordham Foundation
Volume 6, Number 14. April 6, 2006
From Mike's
Desk : A narrow view of NCLB
History, science, and the arts are being de-emphasized by most schools in order
to make room for teaching basic reading and math skills, according to a new
study <http://www.cep-dc.org/nclb/Year4/Press/>
. Who's to blame for this? Critics of reform point to the No Child Left Behind
law.
And they're right to do so--to a point. NCLB mandates that schools boost
achievement in reading and math--only
reading and math--or face tough consequences. The incentive has worked, to the
surprise of some, but so, too, has the law of unintended consequences.
This is not the only example of that phenomenon. NCLB puts pressure on
educators to get all students to a low level of proficiency, so schools ignore kids at the top of the class. The law leaves
the standards-setting to the states but ties sanctions to the results, so the states ''race to the bottom'' and lower their standards.
And yes, the statute focuses its accountability provisions on reading and math,
so schools ignore everything else. The latter
problem is easily fixed (though the fix is politically unpopular). Congress
should add history testing to the law's requirements, and make the history and
science results count. (Science testing will be required next year, but the
results won't count for accountability purposes, unless President Bush has his
way <#C3> .) Now that we know that schools will
respond to incentives, we should be clear about our aims.
But tweaking the law's carrots and sticks is not enough, and NCLB is not
completely to blame. We must also address the fact that schools are choosing
the path of least resistance by narrowing the curriculum. After all, pushing
other subjects aside is not the only choice schools face. Great schools beef up
their students' basic skills while also providing them a broad, rich education.
Why don't most? There are two reasons--one ideological, and the other
political.
E.D. Hirsch tackles the ideological problem in his new book, The Knowledge Deficit <http://coreknowledge.org/bookstore/index.php?main_page=product_info&cPath=2%0F%22ucts_id=128> . Hirsch identifies an obvious solution to the challenge
schools face: teach reading through history, science, literature, and the arts.
He argues persuasively that most of the students who have
been ''left behind'' have successfully learned to decode words and sentences,
but can't comprehend much because of their limited vocabulary and knowledge
base. Especially in the upper elementary grades and middle
school--where we see student achievement plateau and then begin its long,
precipitous decline--the best way to teach reading is to teach
content. Instead of ''doubling up'' on rote, mechanical reading
instruction, schools can engage students with compelling
historical accounts, fanciful stories, fascinating science, and riveting poetry.
In fact, it is exactly the kind of rich content that students find in Hirsch's
Core Knowledge schools that account for their strong gains in reading and math
achievement <http://www.coreknowledge.org/CK/about/research/smith_dissertation.htm> .
So why don't schools embrace Core Knowledge or something like it? Hirsch: ''The
reason for this state of affairs--tragic for millions of students as well as
for the nation--is that an army of
American educators and reading experts are fundamentally wrong in their ideas
about education and especially about reading comprehension.'' Still enamored
with romantic beliefs that children can learn to read as naturally as they
learn to talk, disregarding knowledge and content as nothing but ''mere
facts,'' the leaders of the education establishment and their comrades in
schools of education continue to indoctrinate teachers and principals in
self-defeating ideas. The solution to schools' reading woes and their
curricular conundrum is right in front of them, but these misguided ideas get
in the way.
There's another solution to curriculum narrowing: expand the school day.
Excellent charter schools such as KIPP and
So why doesn't every high-poverty public school embrace the KIPP model and
lengthen their day? In this case, the answer is politics: It's not allowed
under the collective bargaining agreement. As Frederick M. Hess and Martin R.
West make painfully clear in their manifesto, A Better Bargain: Overhauling Teacher Collective Bargaining for the
21st Century, teacher
union contracts dictate every facet of school life. Consider the contract from
Eau Clare, Wisconsin, which Hess and West quote at length: ''A standard day
shall be defined as 435 minutes, excluding lunch but including a morning
homeroom period of 7-15 minutes, e.g., where teachers will supervise students
entering the building, take roll, take lunch count, make announcements, etc.
The teaching day shall not exceed 349 minutes of classroom teaching, thirty (30)
minutes for lunch and thirty (30) minutes of recess...'' The reality in many
big city districts is even worse; a five or six hour school day is not
uncommon. Of course schools cannot fit remediation in reading and math and
broad exposure to the core curriculum into such a crammed schedule. But the
unions are loathe to give up their hard-fought ''gains''--in this case, the
right to be home by 3:00 p.m. School board members, most of whom are elected
with union money and union votes, just sit and watch.
Yes, let's tweak NCLB and undo its perverse incentives. But we must also
address the crazy ideas that still delude the education profession and the
ridiculous union contracts that hamstring common sense reforms. If the
traditional K-12 system is unwilling to be so bold, then we should create an
alternative system of schools that is. Narrow-minded solutions won't produce
the schools our children deserve.
From the Capital to the Classroom: Year
Four of the No Child Left Behind Act, Center on Education Policy, March
2006
''Schools cut back subjects to push reading and math <http://www.nytimes.com/2006/03/26/education/26child.html?_r=1&oref=slogin>
,'' by Sam Dillon, New York Times,
March 26, 2006
The Knowledge Deficit, by E.D. Hirsch, Houghton
Mifflin, 2006
A Better Bargain: Overhauling Teacher
Collective Bargaining for the 21st Century, by Frederick M. Hess and Martin
R. West, Program on Education Policy & Governance, Harvard University,
March 2006
by Michael J. Petrilli <http://www.edexcellence.net/foundation/about/individual_detail.cfm?id=37>
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