Sunday, January 30, 2011

Education Week 1/126/2011 Reflection

"'No Pass, No Drive' Laws Popular, Not Proven" is one of those articles that I feel like I need to listen to the Alfie Cone cd from last semester again before reading.  I find myself very conflicted because I still don't have a very good idea of how many and what kind of rewards and punishments I want/need (need is a very relative term) to use in my classroom.  There is a comment on the article that criticizes one of the people listed in the article who doesn't think its a good program, saying that getting kids into the building is better than not having them in the building at all.  After reading the comment, I largely agreed with the person who made it.  But then again, there are days where I come to school and I don't feel like I learn very much of anything.  There are definitely times where I question whether I should be in the program or not, and then I think to myself about the multiple thousands of dollars a year raise I get for having a Master's in the Arts of Teaching and I'm able to make it through class knowing that I am certainly in there for at LEAST one reason.  One could argue that I shouldn't go to class at all and forget about getting a Masters degree if that is the reason I am doing it.  Obviously I am doing it for a lot of reasons.  In the same way, I honestly don't think that the kids who are affected by these law are not going to school solely for the purpose of getting and keeping their licenses.  There are a lot of reasons to go to school.  School is where a lot of their friends are etc etc etc.  The same person who didn't think that the program is a good idea said that there were other things that he would rather the district be doing instead.  My question to him is, why cant we do this program and do more of his ideas? Does this program really hurt?  Again, you'd have to refer back to the Alfie cd from last semester before you can answer with an informed decision.

Quick hit:  I have a question for the atheist father of the girl in Illinois who doesn't want a "moment of silence" in school.  Is it the fact that it probably is specifically for prayer and that they are trying to use the moment of silence to give people the opportunity to pray to start the day?  From my perspective, a moment of silence is perfectly fine with me.  But then again, I'm a Christian person.  The atheist guy probably doesn't like this veiled attempt at keeping prayer in schools.

Education Week 1/19/2011 Reflection

To start, the "Teacher-led school innovates with student regrouping" felt like a very disjointed article that was trying to do too much at once.  This could have easily been two separate articles.  The school being teacher-led is not surprising considering the economic climate that our country is currently in.  It comes as no surprise to me that schools are trying to cut down on the costs of running operations by having fewer people perform more duties.  However, it kind of makes me think that the schools are ignoring the students that those teachers have to teach.  The article mentioned that the new teacher/administrators have a lot of extra work to do on top of their teaching.  It also mentions that the teachers have to take on a lot more students because of the class schedule system that they have put in place.  In addition, what about those teachers who are interested in coaching students in sports.  In addition to more administrative duties, more students, more meetings, how on earth would they be able to take all of that on?  To me, it simply seems like they are trying to have the teachers take too much responsibility.  Don't they have enough to do as it is?  Yeah, money is probably tight, and more creative ways of getting the job done are necessary, but this doesn't seem like a viable long term option.  I imagine that those teacher/administrators are going to get burned out at a much faster pace than they would if they were simply teaching.
It's funny because my first thought reading about the new scheduling system that the school put in place was "this sounds an awful lot like tracking" so I am very glad they at least addressed tracking in the article.  One of the main things that people knock tracking for is the fact that students cannot readily get out of the track that they have been "assigned."  This system seems to alleviate concerns that a child would get stuck in a single track, but it develops a whole new case of problems.  The biggest one that comes to mind is attendance.  How are teachers supposed to keep track of who is in their classrooms when there are kids coming and going on a monthly, weekly and even daily basis.  It also seems like that would generate a whole lot of paper waste to confirm that such and such student is in this class this week and this class another week.  It also brings to mind the issue of how their credits are measured and how many they should receive for doing such an amount in one aspect of a course and a different amount for another aspect.  I don't necessarily think this is a terrible idea, but it just seems like, based on the limited amount of information provided by this article, that this system places a huge burden on teachers.  I would hope that the students show a marked improvement, because, otherwise this system is probably not worth it.

Saturday, January 29, 2011

Quality Counts: Education Week 1/13/2011 Reflection

Definitely the most interesting portion of the article was the state report card.  My main focuses were Washington state and Oregon, because Washington is where I'm from and would like to teach (Oregon obviously because it's where we are learning and getting certified).  How is it that we are only getting a C- here in Oregon.  I do not see how strongly each of these portions are weighted but I thought it was interesting that the college readiness of Oregon was at 50%, which is absolutely awful!  Are we not preparing students here in Oregon for college very well.  Do we have any idea what is causing that?  Is it possible that it is directly related to the we got an F (a 58.8) on accountability for quality?  What this says to me is that students are falling through the cracks and teachers are simply passing them so that they don't look bad for having to fail students.  I've seen it happen that ninth grade students have third grade reading levels.  How on earth does that happen?  It's ridiculous!  What does it mean that our spending is at 59.9%?  Do we waste money?  I would like to see something that says why Oregon got that F.  There isn't a single state that got an A on this list.  Not even the very best of the states (which appears to be Maryland...who knew?) got an A.  Either we are grading on a very hard curve, which means that Maryland is full of absolutely awesome teachers, or we all kind of suck.  As a student, I'm not happy with a C.  Most of the time, I'm not even happy with a B.  I don't get the impression that very many states are happy with their C's.  When I look at a map like this, my first thought is how do we even get started at fixing and/or improving the situation?  It's such a daunting task.  My first step would be to look at everything that Maryland and a few other states at the top of the list are doing and start doing exactly what they are doing... Another thing to notice the West Coast is subpar compared to the east coast.  Do we not do things as well over here?  Do we not get the same amount of money?  Pretty much anything East of the Appalachians has a good chance of having a B grade.  Perhaps there is an East Coast bias in the grading of education just like there is in College Football...except on this map the Atlantic Coast Conference dominates pretty much every single conference...(laughable in college football)

Education Week 1/12/2011 Reflection

Reading "Simulations Helping Novices Hone Skills" was an eye-opening experience.  I had no idea that something like this was even being done.  It makes perfect sense, but I am still very skeptical about it.  The idea of a computer program that can simulate classroom conditions seems really farfetched to me.  Don't get me wrong, we should do anything we can to try to help prepare teachers and to try and make educating teachers more effective.  Computer simulations don't carry a whole lot of weight in my book when regarding students because you can honestly never know how all of those students are going to react.  Do the programs take into account everything that could be happening in an individual child's life and influence his/her actions in the simulation.  Can it even do that?  Can legitimately do that for five students in the one program and up to 18 in the other?  I highly doubt that.  I don't think it's possible.  Who can say how people are going to act?  The decisions we make are influenced by so many factors and I don't necessarily think that these simulations are good indicators of how students actually act.  It also is interesting for one of the programs to use actors, which I think lends some degree of realism to decision making skills.  But the flaw in that system is that they are connected by microphone and situated across campus at the university (Central Florida).  I think that this completely shatters any sense of realism that the simulation generates.  The article is correct that it will work out for student teachers who are trying to work on a limited skillset, but overall, I do not think that it is very indicative of a general classroom setting.  The other point I have with this article is the fact that they simply label the children in the simulations as "urban."  last I checked there were as many "urban" students who could act like and be like suburban or rural students.  This was one of the things that led me to believe that a program like this is not very effective.  The program is putting these kids and their profiles in a metaphorical box.  It almost seems like it is trying to stereotype kids and in doing so, they have severely limited the effectiveness of the program.  There is no doubt in my mind though that I would participate in these studies and try out the simulations for myself.  Some practice is better than no practice at all, even if some of that practice may not be entirely accurate or realistic.  That's probably what they are going for anyways.

Friday, January 28, 2011

Education Week December 8 Reflection

The main article I read was the "Digital Transformational Key to K-12 Success."  I thought that there was a substantial amount of negativity from this article concerning the difficulties that states would encounter when trying to implement new policies concerning digital education.  The man mentions that “What we put down [in writing] today, in a year, technology can rapidly make obsolete" and he is right to say that it at least makes a roadmap.  I think it's important to get stuff down.  Policy is no different from the technology itself.  In a few years, the stuff you bought/wrote is going to be outdated.  While you can't continually update the technology, since it gets ridiculously expensive, you have to buy something sometime.  Otherwise, you will continually use the excuse that it will be outdated soon and never buy anything.  The same goes with the policies that surround technology.  you can't be paralyzed by the fear of it becoming outdated, otherwise you are never going to get it done and written down.
I was actually really surprised to read about the Florida Virtual school that serves 97,000 students.  That number just blows my mind.  I don't at all agree with the fact that High School should be a completely online experience because there is so much more to a high school education that simply learning all of the facts in math class etc.  There is a great degree of socialization and other skills that you learn while attending a physical high school.  I'm sure that even Barry Jahn would agree with me that it is a terrible idea to do a completely online high school.  Teachers cant be replaced.  I'm sure he completely agrees with the Michigan school districts decision to make sure that every student takes at least one online course to graduate from high school.  That is a great idea.  With the proliferation of technology, I think it is imperative that student's familiarize themselves with taking classes online and be able to function in an online educational setting.  Back to the online high school thought though, how do they fund the online school?  Do they simply appropriate the funds that would have been spent on the students had they gone to a regular public school to the resources needed for the online school?  How does that affect the schools who no longer have those 97,000 students and the money that is given to the schools that those 97,000 students provide?  I'd like to see how those numbers affect those schools and what that does to the money available to those schools and teachers in those districts...

December 1 Education Week Reflection

The New Vigor Propelling Training was the first article I read from this issue, and the very first paragraph jumped out at me: "preservice preparation could be the next stop on the teacher-quality continuum to receive a similarly high level of scrutiny."  My very first thought was hey that sounds an awful lot like what we are doing!  Because it pretty much is.  It got me to thinking about Willamette's program as opposed to other Masters Programs.  Our student teaching session is in our fourth semester, but they mentioned in the article that year long residencie's may become the new big thing.  It seemed like an awful lot to me, but then again, as someone who is feeling a little burned out on schooling after three and a half years of undergrad and jumping right into part time graduate school, it makes sense that I may grimace at the idea of a year long residency.  It also goes into the fact that teachers aren't prepared well, or prepared well enough.  First and second year teachers are going to struggle.  That is obvious.  I can't help but think to myself that that is just what happens.  Does that necessarily mean they aren't well prepared.  Perhaps.  I honestly think that it has more to do with the fact that you don't get good at something if you don't practice it with real world application.  Would a year long residency help?  Yeah it probably would a little bit no matter what.  Would it help the people who were going to stay at that same school district or same school when they are done with their residency?  Definitely!  The people who move away from the area are going to struggle regardless because they are having to get used to a new school, a new peergroup, new curricula, everything new.  Lesson plans are going to change according to different textbooks they have to use.  New schedules are going to dictate how much time they have to teach students different subjects.  I noticed in the article that Oregon was listed as one of the 8 states holding meetings over these reform recommendations.  Is WU's program technically ahead of the curve, even though ours is only a semester long?  if they adopted reforms, would we switch to a year long residency described in the article?  Until more states do this, do we are WU student's look more appealing to school districts because we have had this training?  let's hope so!