Time for Real Reform in Education
by Stuart Singer, The Teacher Leader
In a recent op-ed article in the Washington Post, Robert J. Samuelson documented the failure of educational reform for the past four decades. He presents a compelling collection of data that clearly demonstrates that much of the innovation done in this country has been totally ineffectual. Some of this information included:
The highly reliable National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) testing scores shows an educational system that is flat-lining. In 1971, the first year of this testing, the average reading scores (range 0-500) for seventeen-year-olds was 285. Thirty-seven years later that number was 286. In the same two years math scores moved from 304 to 306. A few quick calculator keystrokes reveal that in nearly four decades reading and math scores for our students have improved by a grand total of 0.3% and 0.6% respectively.
Mr. Samuelson then reveals some surprising statistics. During that same time period the percentage of teachers has increased by almost 800% when compared to the additional number of students (61% more teachers; 8% more students). Not surprisingly student-teacher ratios have plummeted. In 1955 this comparison stood at 27 to 1; in 2007 each teacher on average had fifteen students. Even the image of the underpaid teacher is a tough sell—in 2008 the average teacher earned $53,230. While this wage hardly translates into great wealth it is equally far removed from poverty. Finally, the number of students in preschool has seen a nearly five-fold increase from 11% to 53%.
Mr. Samuelson closes his argument by stating that the ultimate reason for the lack of improvement is a dearth of student motivation. Too many adolescents do little work in high school and a significant number need remedial work in both reading and math when entering either a community college or a four-year institution. And as illustrated by his data, teacher pay, student-teacher ratios, and mandatory standardized tests have scant impact on this shortcoming. But the writer saves his harshest criticism for those in charge of reform:
“Against these realities, school ‘reform’ rhetoric is blissfully evasive. It is often an exercise in extravagant expectations. Even if George W. Bush's No Child Left Behind program had been phenomenally successful (it wasn't), many thousands of children would have been left behind. Now (Secretary of Education Arne) Duncan routinely urges ‘a great teacher’ in every classroom. That would be about 3.7 million "great" teachers -- a feat akin to having every college football team composed of all-Americans. With this sort of intellectual rigor, what school ‘reform’ promises is more disillusion.”
Changes that make a difference
Mel Riddile and I have written at length about our concerns with the current structure of public education in the United States and potential adjustments that could improve the system. As Mr. Samuelson has aptly demonstrated throwing meaningless platitudes and feel-good non-solutions has not made any discernable difference. Significant improvement demands equally significant change. If there is to be any major advancement, here are four places to start:
Lengthen the school year. Learning must become a year-long activity. How many other important, sequential endeavors take a break of thirteen weeks after thirty-nine weeks of work? Will paying teachers for 240 days instead of 190 cost more money? Absolutely, but the educational gains both in student performance and the retention and development of the staff will be more than worth it. How many extra dollars are spent every year due to failure?
Expand the school week. Use Saturdays for remediation and extra contact time. Lengthen the school day to eight or more hours. Remove distractions—athletic programs should become community activities. Get educational institutions out of the sports business. The academic standards currently in place to participate could be maintained but far too much educational time is given to these events. I loved being a long-time football and tennis coach but if we are really serious about improving our students’ academic achievement we must narrow our focus.
Remove poor teachers. The newest fad for removing weak educators is to fire the entire staff of a school. While this may give the appearance of progress, it merely serves to rob districts of their competent teachers as well as their worst. And most of all it does not make anyone better. Schools with great teachers succeed. But acquiring the best teachers is only part of the solution. Other than the recent mass firings, when was the last time you knew a teacher who was terminated for ineptitude? And how long did it take the system to remove that individual from the classroom? In my forty years of teaching I saw two teachers removed for ineffectiveness. And in each case it took more than five years of diligent work to make these changes occur. What is needed is an evaluation system that improves good teachers and dismisses poor ones in an expedient manner. Great teachers make great schools; bad teachers give unmotivated students credibility.
Increase the role of teachers as leaders. Creating school policy should include a significant input from the entire staff. While the roles of department chairs should be strengthened, all staff members should be given an opportunity to have an integral involvement in all components of the school. Collaborative evaluations including other teachers should become common place. A building’s philosophy should bubble up from every part of the culture not trickle down exclusively from the administrative wing.
Learn more about this blog and "head blogger" Mel Riddile...

