Thursday, July 19, 2012

Modern vs Classical education.....could solve some problems but I don't know where the spell check, calculators, or search engines are!!



I Teach Students, Not Subjects:

a written response to Dorthy Sayers's
The Lost Tools of Learning”

     This past school year in the state public schools, we saw a huge epidemic of stressed out administrators, panicked teachers, and frustrated parents and students. In efforts to earn and keep Race to the Top federal funding, Tennessee Department of Education implemented a new and 'improved' teacher evaluation system that had even the most seasoned veterans of education seeking refuge! Teachers were trained on how to teach a standard learning principle by posting the 'wordy' student performance indicator on the board and reference it often during the lesson, so that students could then regurgitate the lesson's goal. Students were forced into seminars instead of nurturing learning environment. As educators our job is to foster life-long learners not learners who are taught to become apathetic.
    I have said on numerous occasions that when we as teachers drill the skill, we kill the thrill of learning. The Mighty Creator gave us minds to learn, think, explore, and evaluate natural concepts or basic skills. Students today who are not classically schooled are lacking in many areas. That's not saying all students aren't capable of learning; students, most average learners, are simply lacking the building blocks of the basic learning process. In 2008, Tennessee revamped their 'standard curriculum forcing many students mid-year to forget about the basic skills but to solely rely on calculators and computerized spell checking programs. For example, a third grade math student was handed a Texas Instrument- 30X and taught how to use the input data to derive at the correct outcome of a simple multiplication fact 3X2=6. The goal of most teachers shifted to teaching the student how to use technology, so that they could successfully solved problems for a high-stakes multiple choice achievement test. What happened if a student mistakenly entered an wrong number? Failure. Because they were not taught the basic multiplication fact, they would score below basic showing they had not mastered the calculator, not the problem. As a result, we will be producing students who have 'lost' a mathematical tool.
    What happens to a student when technological devices fail? Frustrated students will not have the skills to fall back on, and they will soon become discouraged. If a student is discouraged, they will seek relief wherever they can find it. I have seen students cheat, lie, and steal answers and assignments. These behaviors are coping strategies to mask the real problem -deficiency in their learning process. Where are all the teachers in this? Most modern, progressive public educators are trapped between knowing what should be done and what has to be done to keep a job. The pressure they feel has a trickle down effect on their students. A vicious cycle of hurry up memorize this skill and fill in a circle that best completes this sentence.
Middle school Language Arts for example, should be a class in which a student is able to write his or her thoughts down in a logical, well-thought out essay. Instead, they are given a common mistake of the tedious nature to correct by analyzing a multiple choice selection of four very similar sentences except the pesky comma that was misplaced or misspelled word. Spelling, as a content area, has been eliminated from most, if not all classrooms, nationwide. And forget about students written responses! With the extremely high pressure to keep up with the most current technology, students are given remote controls to select the correct answer. Again a reliance on a device instead of a firm foundation of phonemic awareness and basic spelling rules. When a student fails to find comfort from their personal failure and discouragement, they are left to find another resource. If those so called resources have always been provided for them, then they were taught they were entitlement not logical application of basic skills. If their quest for things they feel is owed to them isn't met with what they are accustomed to, then apathy will be rooted. What happens to a society when a mode of communication is eliminated? Failure.
   What caused us to digressively progress into a unmotivated, discouraged, and apathetic learning society? In the early 1980's the word accountability was beginning to be used in the business world and other essential paradigms of our great nation. Holding people responsible for their work process by evaluating their final product in and of itself is not a bad concept for most businesses and their so called bottom line. However, to assume that those same standards of evaluation would hold true in the educational infrastructure is ludicrous. To say a teacher may loose his or her job simply based on the number of students that can pick the correct answer from a multiple choice based assessment is asinine. After all a blind squirrel can find a nut to eat once in a while. Students will guess on those high-stakes test that are use as the basis of whether or not a teacher is effective or not. There are too many outliers that are beyond a teacher's control for the data to prove conclusively if a teacher has been 'effective' or not. Authentic assessments, periodically testing of basic skills, and students who can defend their logic in conjunction with a nurturing learning environment shows that learning has occurred; however, that can only be ascertained over a longer period of time.
   “Give a man a fish, he eats for one day. Teach him to fish, he will never go hungry.” If we as churches, families, and schools could grasp all that this quote is truly saying, we would be more eager to explore and evaluate new discoveries everyday. When reading scripture, it says that our Lord has given us the Holy Spirit as a comfort and teacher. He has prepared great things for us to do as we are called laborers with Christ. He mercies are new every morning, proving we are to be in constant daily communion with the Creator of all things. We have to regain our true focus as humans. We were made to love and live for God. Instead, what we have created is a system overhaul that requires teachers to work harder than the student to give students lessons to sole memorize, or teach them tricks to answering multiple choice high-stakes test.
I teach students not subjects. When a student comes into my class, I want them to know that they are loved and were designed for a specific purpose. God has a plan for each of their lives. As we train up the child, we should be equipping them with the tools necessary for achieving those goals with Christ and for His glory. As parents and educators, we should pray for wisdom and discernment to recognize and call out those undiscovered talents of the child so that he or she can then prepare for the future use of that talent. When teaching the grammar aged child, those basic building blocks are critical for mastery of the latter stages.            Teaching a child to read will then allow that student to read to learn more in the future. Having the basics mastered before demanding that partially mastered skills to be applied in various hypothetical circumstances will build the student's confidence and will not allow the ugly cousins of frustration, discouragement, and apathy to take root! Since each of us, in the body of Christ, have a specialized purpose then we should be taught as an individual. Intervention, prevention, and correction of folly in learning will allow students to master the skills necessary to pursue God given talents and interest for His glory and their satisfaction of learning and service. Then the student can live life abundantly!

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