Fix Bad Federal Education Policy

Fix Bad Federal Education Policy

Congress is now going through the ritual of tweaking the No Child Left Behind law for the nation’s schools. The law is vigorously opposed by both teacher unions and the TEA party. That should tell you all you need to know about this bad legislation. Of course the reasons for opposition are quite different, but all have a large degree of validity. Teachers don’t like bureaucrats judging them and their schools, and the TEA party thinks we have too much federal government intrusion in general.

The law, however tweaked by revision, is fatally flawed by its basic assumptions. Foremost is the fantasy that government should provide not only equal opportunity but equal outcome. The only way you can get all students to have equal learning is to dumb down the curricula, which is what is done. Schools cater to the lower performing students at the expense of good students. For example, over the last two decades an analysis by the Wall Street Journal revealed that the lowest-performing students have shown clear gains in test scores but little improvement for other students.

A second flaw is that the law ignores the extraordinary range of mental development in children. Some students cannot be salvaged at a given grade level. Moreover, student motivation for learning is a highly mutable, often changing from year to year. Some students cannot be salvaged at any stage, either for reasons of neglect, abuse, bad parenting, or the students’ own negative attitudes. “Do-gooder” focus on these students drags down the whole educational enterprise.

Then there is the problem of misplaced incentives. Where are the incentives for students to do better? In fact, the students are being asked to help make their school and teachers look good.

Finally, this era of No Child Left Behind and high-stakes testing fails to help us understand how to accomplish the basic purpose of assessment: figuring out what students know and need to learn. Multiple-choice tests are certainly not reliable. In fact, these tests mostly measure recognition memory, the least reliable indicator of what has been remembered.

One teacher, Ryan Kinser, endorses the idea of “teaching to the test,” but we need better tests: ones based on “curriculum-embedded performance assessments that are valid, reliable, and accurate measures of what and how students learned.” I would add that testing per se is not the problem. Indeed, research shows that tests reinforce retention of what has been learned. At a local school level, low-stakes benchmark tests should be routine and frequent.

Teachers do need to be held accountable. But not for the weaknesses of the culture of their community, or for bad school administrators and policies, or for the poor educations they get in Colleges of Education, or for the flawed requirements of No Child Left Behind.  Teachers have no control over many of the bad things schools do. The school year is too short, summer vacation is too long, more short holidays are needed, the school day needs to be restructured, most textbooks are just terrible, subjects are taught along academic themes rather than the integrated real world students live in, and the school environment in general just kills the joy of learning.

What should the role of the federal government be in education? It should be in administering meaningful educational research, providing guidance (not mandates) on academic standards, and disseminating “best practices.” No more, no less.

W. R. Klemm
Professor of Neuroscience
Share:

No comments:

Post a Comment

Popular Posts

Labels

Featured post

Take the Stress out of School

Got kids or grandkids in school? Are you in school or college? This blog is for you. I don’t have to tell you that school is stressful, what...

Tag

ADHD Alzheimer's disease Berkeley CREB Dale Carnegie Depression Dept. Education EEG EEG coherence Einstein Erta Finland I IQ Internet learning Kagel Krebs MRI Memory Power 101 Memory improvement NeuroRacer No Child Left Behind Npas4 PTSD Pauling SVO TED talk TV Thielen Trump W. R. Klemm accumens addiction adolescents adrenalin advertising aerobic exercise age agency aggression aging alpha ambiguity amygdala analysis anger anterior cingulate anti-oxidant anti-oxidants anxiety application attention attitude avatar bad memories bariatric surgery behavioral economics belief beta bias blame blueberries body mass index brain brain connectivity brain development brain exercise brain fitness brain research brain scans brain shrinkage brains have owners cell parts child development chocolate choice chunking cingulate cortex classroom environments clutter coffee cognition cognitive development cognitive resources coherence collaborative learning college comedians comedy comparison competence conditioned reflex conditioning consciousness consolidation constructivism context cortisol creativity critical thinking cueing cursive cytokine deception decision-making development diabetes diet discipline dishonesty drawing dream dream sleep dual N back dyslexia education education policy educational TV educational neuroscience educational policy educaton elements of learning emotions empathy encoding environment epigenetics episodic memory evidence excuses executive control executive function exercise expectations expert fMRI false memory family famous active seniors fear memory feed forward feedback flash cards focus forced retrieval forgetting free radicals free will functional connectivity gamma gene activation genes genetics glucocorticoids glucose glutamate government government policy grades grit gym habit habituation hand-eye coordination handwriting happiness hate speech health heart disease high-stakes testing hippocampus home school homework hostility identity politics images improve reading inflammation inheritance insight intelligence interference interference theory interference theory of memory irrational jazz jogging journal joy judgment kindergarten knowledge standards lasting memory learn to learn learning learning and memory learning competencies learning how to learn learning to learn learning to lie lie life span lifestyle location logic logic errors long-term memory love lying lyrics magazine managing information manipulation math melatonin memory memory athlete memory athlete tips memory athletes memory consolidation memory gimmicks memory graphic memory palace memory recall memory rehab memory rehearsal memory research memory tips memory tricks mental activity mental health mental rest method of loci method-of-loci mnemonic mnemonics monkey motivation movement feedback multi-tasking multiple sclerosis music music education myelin myth myths n-back training naps negative attitudes neocortex networks neural circuits neural plasticity neuro-education neurons neuroplasticity neuroscience noise note taking note-taking nurture obesity omega-3 operant conditioning optogenics organization oscillation pain past play politics positive emotions positive reinforcement post-traumatic stress disorder pray pre-K pre-kindergarten prefrontal cortex present primates proactive inhibition problem solving production effect progressive prostate psychology psychotherapy public speaking re-consolidation reading reading aloud reading comprehension reason recall recognition memory rehearsal reinforcement relationships relationships. forgiveness religion research resveratrol retrotransposons reward riots schema school school budgets school choice school policy schools science education selective attention self self-confidence self-efficacy self-esteem self-help self-knowledge self-test self-worth sensation sense of self sleep sleep apnea sleep disorders sleep learning smart smart phones social engagement social interactions space spaced learning stereotype story chains stress students study study habits study intervals synapses synthesis tea teacher accountability teacher education teacher survey teachers teaching technology teenagers television tests therapy theta thinking thinking errors time timing tips training trivia truth tumeric unconscious unconsciousness understanding universities video games vision visual tracking vitamin D vitamin E web portal wine wisdom withdrawal women wonder working memory working memory improvement workplace