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WHAT DOES IT MEAN TO BE WELL EDUCATED? Dr. Len Elovitz Chapter 2 in Hoy & Miskel.

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Presentation on theme: "WHAT DOES IT MEAN TO BE WELL EDUCATED? Dr. Len Elovitz Chapter 2 in Hoy & Miskel."— Presentation transcript:

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2 WHAT DOES IT MEAN TO BE WELL EDUCATED? Dr. Len Elovitz Chapter 2 in Hoy & Miskel

3 “ … THE EDUCATIONAL FOUNDATIONS OF OUR SOCIETY ARE PRESENTLY BEING ERODED BY A RISING TIDE OF MEDIOCRITY THAT THREATENS OUR VERY FUTURE AS A NATION AND A PEOPLE. WHAT WAS UNIMAGINABLE A GENERATION AGO HAS BEGUN TO HAPPEN – OTHERS ARE MATCHING AND SURPASSING OUR EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENTS. IF AN UNFRIENDLY POWER HAD ATTEMPTED TO IMPOSE ON AMERICA THE MEDIOCRE EDUCATIONAL PERFORMANCE THAT EXISTS TODAY, WE MIGHT WELL HAVE VIEWED IT AS AN ACT OF WAR. AS IT STANDS, WE HAVE ALLOWED THIS TO HAPPEN TO OURSELVES.”

4 1. DO YOU RECOGNIZE THIS STATEMENT? 2. WHERE IS IT FROM? – National Commission on Excellence in Education. A Nation at Risk: The Imperative for Educational Reform. ( 1983) 3. HOW DO YOU REACT TO THE ABOVE STATEMENT? Do You Believe That Schools Should be Restructured? How? What Should They Be Like?

5 DO WE NEED TO CHANGE? Did You Know?

6 Age of Information

7 Infoglut infowhelm 540,000 words today 5 X more than Shakespeare’s time

8 Age of Information New York Times gives more information to most people than a person in 1900 knew in a lifetime. 1.5 exabytes of new information a year (1 plus 18 zeros)

9 Who was John Paul Jones? The Maryland Colony What should kids know and be able to do?

10 Cultural Literacy: What every American Needs to Know by E.D. Hirsch (1987) What Do Our 17-Yearolds Know? A Report on the First National Assessment of History and Literature by Diane Ravitch & Chester Finn 1987

11 Age of Information George Gilder said we are in the age of disposable information - in a 4 year program by the beginning of the third year, information learned as a freshman is either wrong or outdated.

12 Age of Information “The educational models of the past operate on the assumption that content was king. In fact, content is free and overwhelming in size. In a world of rapid information growth, it is context that matters. Context is king. This means that learners at all ages need to master two very important skills: 1 – the ability to locate information specifically related to the question they are exploring; and 2 – to establish the veracity and utility of this information.” David D. Thornburg, The Future Isn’t What it Used to Be (1997)

13 “This is the first time in history that the student, teacher, and content do not have to be in the same place at the same time.” David D. Thornburg, The Future Isn’t What it Used to Be (1997)

14 New Jersey Core Curriculum Content Standards “First adopted by the State Board of Education in 1996. The standards describe what students should know and be able to do upon completion of a thirteen-year public education and provide local school districts with clear and specific benchmarks for student achievement in nine content areas.

15 Common Core Standards Math & Language Arts –What’s needed for college –What’s needed for work –What’s used around the world 46 States National Assessment?

16 Common Core State Standards initiative Standards for Mathematics and Language Arts Literacy are part of the Coordinated by the Council of Chief States School Officers (CCSSO) and the National Governor’s Association (NGA) in partnership with other national organizations. New Jersey is one of 44 states, Washington, DC and the U.S. Virgin Islands to join the state-led Common Core State Standards initiative.

17 Common Core State Standards CCSS Standards

18 Will the CCSS lead to a national curriculum? Should the USA have a national curriculum? What does the US Constitution say about education?

19 State of New Jersey N.J. CONSTITUTION SINCE 1875 CONTAINS CLAUSE – “ THE LEGISLATURE SHALL PROVIDE FOR A THOROUGH AND EFFICIENT SYSTEM OF FREE PUBLIC SCHOOLS FOR ALL CHILDREN IN THE STATE BETWEEN THE AGES OF FIVE AND EIGHTEEN YEARS.”

20 II.FEDERAL CONSTITUTION NO MENTION OF EDUCATION 10TH AMENDMENT “THE POWERS NOT DELEGATED TO THE UNITED STATES BY THE CONSTITUTION, NOR PROHIBITED BY IT TO THE STATES, ARE RESERVED TO THE STATES RESPECTIVELY, OR TO THE PEOPLE.”

21 PARCC Partnership for Assessment of Readiness for College and Careers NJDOE & PARCC Is this a good idea?

22 A Short History of American Education

23 Compulsory Education Massachusetts act of 1642 –Required parents and masters to tend to the educational requirements of the colony’s sons. –“The child is to be educated, not to advance his personal interest, but because the state will suffer if he is not educated.” –Selectmen were to ascertain if parents and masters were attending to “training in learning and labor and other employment”

24 –_All between 10 and 16 had to be schooled in “ye exercise of arms as small guns, halfe pikes, bows and arrows” –Girls stayed at home and learned household tasks and embroidery –Fines could be imposed –Law failed after 5 years

25 Formalized, legislated commitment to providing education to citizens –Massachusetts’ Ye Olde Deluder Satan Act (1647) Settlement of > 50 required to hire a reading and writing teacher and pay him what compensation the citizens deemed appropriate Settlement of > 100 required to establish and support a grammar school

26 Old Graduation Requirements 4 years of English 2 years of US History 1 year of Phys. Ed. For each year in HS

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28 Code Requires Technology 21 st Century Themes Project Based Learning Customized Learning (learning Plan)

29 Early Childhood Longitudinal Study ECLS

30 What Matters 1.The child has highly educated parents 2.The child's family is intact. 3.The child's parents recently moved into a better neighborhood 4.The child's parents have high socioeconomic status. 5.The child's mother didn't work between birth and kindergarten 6.The child's mother was thirty or older at the time of her child's birth. 7.The child attended head start 8. The child had low birthweight. 9.The child's parents speak English in the home 10. The child's parents regularly take him to the museum 11. The child is regularly spanked 12. The child is adopted. 13. The child frequently watches television 14. The child's parents are involved in the PTA 15. The child has many book in his home 16. The child's parents read to him nearly every day

31 What Matters? The child has highly educated parents The child's family is intact A family with a lot of schooling values education

32 What Matters? The child's parents recently moved into a better neighborhood The child's parents have high socioeconomic status Successful parents are more likely to have successful kids

33 What Matters? The child's mother didn't work between birth and kindergarten The child's mother was thirty or older at the time of her child's birth Women are more likely to be established - Education or job and likely to want the child more than a teenage mother

34 What Matters? The child attended head start The child had low birthweight. Poor prenatal care is a good predictor of poor parenting Head start and High Scope

35 What Matters? The child's parents speak English in the home The child's parents regularly take him to the museum Culture cramming doesn’t work

36 What Matters? The child is regularly spanked The child is adopted. Child’s academic ability is more linked to biological parents’ IQ than to the adoptive parents’.

37 What Matters? The child frequently watches television The child's parents are involved in the PTA PTA parent likely to have a strong relationship with Education

38 What Matters? The child has many book in his home The child's parents read to him nearly every day Parents with a lot of books in the home are likely to be better off financially and value education more

39 IS EDUCATION A PUBLIC GOOD OR A PRIVATE GOOD? PRIVATE ABILITY TO EARN MORE MONEY, ENJOY A HIGHER STANDARD OF LIVING AND BETTER QUALITY OF LIFE MORE INTERESTING JOBS POSSIBILITY OF MORE SCHOOLING UNEMPLOYMENT LESS LIKELY MORE OPTIONS FOR USE OF LEISURE TIME INFORMED CONSUMERS – MAKE BETTER USE OF RESOURCES BETTER DIET AND HEALTH HABITS = LONGER HEALTHIER LIFE

40 PUBLIC ENLIGHTENED CITIZENRY THAT IS NECESSARY FOR DEMOCRACY MORE PRODUCTIVE CITIZENS EARN MORE AND PRODUCE MORE RESULTING IN HIGHER TAX YIELDS AND INCREASED PRODUCTION THAT CONTRIBUTES TO AN IMPROVED QUALITY OF LIFE FOR ALL REDUCTION IN CRIME RATE

41 IS EDUCATION MORE OF A PUBLIC GOOD OR A PRIVATE GOOD? THEN WHO SHOULD PAY FOR IT? ARE THERE PUBLIC BENEFITS TO PRIVATE EDUCATION? IS THERE A DOWNSIDE?

42 If you could change (improve) one thing in public education to increase student achievement, what would it be?

43 Do These Inputs Matter? Books in the Library Teacher salary Number of computer stations Class Size Racial mix

44 Which hypothesis is correct? There is a strong positive relationship between school quality and student achievement Or There is a very weak relationship between school characteristics and student outcomes »Sadovnik

45 Equality Of Educational Opportunity The Coleman Report -1966 570,000 students, 60,000 teachers, 4,000 public schools SES mattered most Peer group associations matter Other inputs were weak

46 Top New Jersey High Schools 2008: By Rank http://njmonthly.com/articles/towns_and _schools/highschoolrankings/top-new- jersey-high-schools-by-rank.htmlhttp://njmonthly.com/articles/towns_and _schools/highschoolrankings/top-new- jersey-high-schools-by-rank.html

47 NJ Monthly -All High Schools.84

48 NJ Monthly -Minus Magnets.89

49 Coleman report also said ”… improving the school of a minority pupil may increase his achievement more than would improving the school of a white child increase his. Similarly, the average minority pupil's achievement may suffer more in a school of low quality than might the average white pupil's. In short, whites and, to a lesser extent, Oriental-Americans are less affected one way or the other by the quality of their schools than are minority pupils. This indicates that it is for the most disadvantaged children that improvements in school quality will make the most difference in achievement.”

50 DO SCHOOLS MATTER? 1. EDMUNDS (1979) A. EFFECTIVE SCHOOLS RESEARCH B. CORRELATES 2. LAZOTTE

51 EFFECTIVE SCHOOLS RESEARCH SAFE ORDERLY ENVIRONMENT A CLEAR SCHOOL MISSION STRONG PRINCIPAL – INSTRUCTIONAL LEADERSHIP CLIMATE OF HIGH EXPECTATIONS A CONCENTRATION ON INSTRUCTIONAL TASKS MONITORING OF STUDENT PROGRESS POSITIVE HOME SCHOOL RELATIONS

52 RECENT RESEARCH - ACHIEVEMENT GOES UP A. STUDENTS COMPELLED TO TAKE ACADEMIC COURSES B. CONSISTENT DISCIPLINE C. ACADEMIC LEARNING TIME D. Reduced Total Student Load (TSL)

53 Why do we want to raise student achievement? Individuals –Increased lifetime salary –Improved health –If you don’t have a Bachelor’s degree, you are worse off than in 1975 if you do you are better off

54 Why do we want to raise student achievement? Society –Lower criminal justice costs –Lower health care costs –Increased economic growth

55 What’s the solution? Is it Structural? –Small schools –K-8 schools –Class size (about a 4% increase in achievement for a 50% cut in class size) –Class grouping

56 What’s the solution? Is it Alignment? –Curriculum reform –Textbook replacement Is it governance? –Charter schools –Vouchers Is it Technology?

57 IT’S THE TEACHER

58 Effect of Teacher Effectiveness on Student Achievement 3 rd graders placed with 3 high performing teachers in a row averaged 96 th percentile at end of 5 th grade in math 3 rd graders placed with 3 low performing teachers in a row averaged 44 th percentile at end of 5 th grade in math Tennessee’s State Math Test

59 “The results of this study well document that the most important factor affecting student learning is the teacher…more can be done to improve education by improving the effectiveness of teachers than by any other single factor. Effective teachers appear to be effective with students of all achievement levels, regardless of the level of heterogeneity in the classroom.” William Sanders

60 The effects on achievement of both strong and weak teachers persisted over 3 years

61 Dallas Study 1st graders placed with 3 high performing teachers in a row increased from 63 rd percentile to 87 th on ITBS math 1st graders placed with 3 low performing teachers in a row decreased from 58th percentile to 40 th on ITBS math The difference in reading was 42 points

62 Dallas Study The negative effect of poor-performing teachers persisted through three years of high-performing teachers - it took 3 yrs. For the kids to catch up. Lower achieving students are more likely to be put with less effective teachers

63 “Highly Effective teachers are able to produce much greater gains than their less effective counterparts.” “…not only does teacher quality matter when it comes to how much students learn, but also that, for better or worse, a teacher’s effectiveness stays with students for years to come.” Tucker & Stronge In Linking Teacher Evaluation and Student Learning

64 How do we get better teachers? Replace existing teachers with better ones –Increase pay No evidence that increased pay brings better teachers –Change certification standards No evidence that there are better teachers out there deterred by certification requirements “Love the one your with” (CSN&Y) Improve the effectiveness of existing teachers

65 The Five Minute University


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