As New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg moves toward near certain reelection, an interesting article appeared in the New York Times last week, looking at his stewardship of the public school system: http://www.nytimes.com/2009/08/04/nyregion/04scores.html?_r=1&ref=education. The numbers look impressive. This year, 82 percent of city students passed statewide tests in math and 69 percent in English, up from 42 and 38 percent, respectively, in 2002. Staten Island and Queens have seen dramatic rises in comparison to other New York counties, and even the lowly Bronx is improving. And the racial gap has declined when measured by the number of students passing.
Yet the numbers are deceiving when one delves deeper. For one thing, it appears that the increase in passing rates relates more to making the tests easier rather than any real improvement in student performance. For another, the actual racial gap in scores has not changed much. This was made clear when looking at the 2007 National Assessment of Educational Progress, which showed that eighth graders showed little improvement in reading or math. So what’s the story? As with many neoliberal reforms, testing justifies a shift to a curriculum based on testing, narrowed away from a broader, more holistic approach. Yet the tests don’t really measure student performance or what they’re learning in a real sense. The push to hold schools accountable leads state leaders to simply cook the books and make sure they are showing improvement – even if it means little. The improvements then legitimates the very system the tests themselves are undermining.
So what is lost in the process? Art and music have fallen by the wayside. Culturally-relevant, engaging curriculum is sidelined (and in New York City, Bloomberg has instituted using the same textbooks and curriculum throughout the entire system). Progressive approaches to pedagogy are eliminated, as the lowest performing students are simply taught to take and pass the tests, by any means possible. Gone is civics education or broadening the mind. And in a period when obesity and Type II diabetes are on the rise, physical education is seriously curtailed. In the end, the neoliberal push for accountability ensures that all that is taught are basic skills and “core competencies,” leaving little room to address student’s social, emotional, physical and intellectual growth. Little time is left to bring joy and passion into the educational process. And even less is allotted to ensure that youth develop real critical thinking skills that can serve themselves and society in making the world a better place.
The push toward accountability and statistical success has essentially undermined the original goals of public schooling – to create an educated, informed public that can actively participate in society and democracy and to serve as the great equalizer that will make America a true meritocracy. In the process, NYC becomes a perfect exemplar of the old adage by Benjamin Disrael that there are lies, damn lies and statistics.
About Me
- my profiLe
- I still as a graduate student at the private university in Malang, And I wiLL try to do best in whereever n whenever I am,..
Blog Archive
-
▼
2009
(88)
-
▼
August
(16)
- Incompetence as a Signalling Device: Academia in I...
- Teach for America vs. National Board Certification
- Education: LISTEN TO THIS MAN!
- Childhood Food Insecurity / 10% of US Population N...
- More from the Textbook Wars
- Race and Diversity in the Age of Obama
- NYT: Do Teachers Need Education Degrees?
- How can we use bad measures in decisionmaking?
- Testing and the False Promise of Educational Impro...
- Reforming Juvenile Justice
- Your Brain on Chaos
- A teacher explains why she is leaving
- I Learned it at the Movies
- Stick-to-it-tiveness
- From the AACTE Weekly Briefs
- Good news for EPB!
-
▼
August
(16)
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Category
- :) (1)
- "critical pedagogy" (1)
- "critical thinking" (2)
- "purpose of education" (1)
- "social justice" (1)
- 1960s (1)
- accountability (3)
- achievement (3)
- activism (1)
- administrators (1)
- Advanced Placement (1)
- Alinsky (1)
- all about eve (1)
- Anthony Mullen (1)
- Ariel Sacks (1)
- Arne Duncan Joel Klein (1)
- Barack Obama (1)
- Barnett Berry (1)
- bias (1)
- Broad Foundation (1)
- capitalism (3)
- charter schools (1)
- children (1)
- Christian vs. Muslim (1)
- citizenship (1)
- civic education (2)
- civil rights movement (1)
- cognitive (1)
- community empowerment (5)
- community engagement (2)
- community organizing (29)
- community school engagement (2)
- conservative (1)
- constitution (1)
- corporate vouchers (1)
- corporate welfare (1)
- corporations (1)
- culture (1)
- curriculum (1)
- Darling-Hammond (1)
- democracy (5)
- democratic education (2)
- Dewey (2)
- Diane Ravitch (3)
- Doug Christensen (1)
- Ed in '08 (1)
- Ed Royce (1)
- education (17)
- Education Nation (1)
- education organizing (4)
- education policy (3)
- education president (1)
- education reform (1)
- education reporting (1)
- educational equity (1)
- empirical (1)
- endowments (1)
- enlightenment (1)
- enviromental education (1)
- EPI Briefing Paper (1)
- ESEA (2)
- fear (1)
- federal policy (1)
- film (1)
- Finland (1)
- Finnish Schools (1)
- Fiscal Fairness Act (1)
- Fordham (1)
- foundations (2)
- foundations of education (1)
- funding (3)
- games (1)
- Gates Foundation (1)
- gender (1)
- George Will (1)
- GI Bill (1)
- global poverty (1)
- global warming (1)
- high scoring nations (1)
- high-stakes testing (3)
- Highly Effective Teachers (1)
- ideology (1)
- In the Trenches with School Reform (1)
- income gap (1)
- inequality (11)
- international conference (1)
- international development (1)
- international education (1)
- jessica (1)
- John Edwards - education proposal (1)
- John Holland (1)
- Jolynn Tarwater (1)
- Jose Vilson (1)
- Katherine Cox (1)
- Katy Farber (1)
- KIPP (2)
- labor (1)
- laptops (1)
- learning (1)
- learning theory (1)
- left-wing (1)
- liberal (2)
- Marion Brady (1)
- Mayoral Control (1)
- meliorism (1)
- militarization of schools (1)
- monthly forum (9)
- multiculturalism (1)
- multiple personalities (1)
- National Board Certification (2)
- NBC (1)
- NBPTS (1)
- NCLB (11)
- NCLB Effect (1)
- NEA (1)
- Nieman Foundation (1)
- nonprofits (1)
- NTOY (1)
- Ogbu (1)
- one laptop per child (1)
- one-to-one (1)
- Opportunity to Learn (1)
- parents (4)
- Pasi Sahlberg (1)
- performance pay (1)
- philanthropy (1)
- PISA (1)
- policy makers (1)
- politics (1)
- post-fordism (1)
- poverty (9)
- President Obama (1)
- progressive education (1)
- progressivism (1)
- ptsd (1)
- public and private (1)
- public education (1)
- public scholarship (1)
- questions (1)
- race (5)
- Race to the Top (1)
- rational (2)
- Renee Moore (1)
- Rep. Chaka Fattah (1)
- research (1)
- revolutions (1)
- Richard Rothstein (1)
- Robert Compton (1)
- Save Our Schools March and National Call to Action (2)
- school boards (1)
- school vouchers (2)
- schools (15)
- Schott Foundation (1)
- science (1)
- science and education (1)
- SDS (1)
- segregation (3)
- service learning (3)
- Shannon C'de Baca (1)
- simulations (1)
- single-sex education (1)
- sncc (1)
- social action (26)
- social class (13)
- social foundations (1)
- social justice (2)
- social movements (1)
- social science (1)
- stereotype threat (1)
- Student Bill of Rights (1)
- student test scores (1)
- students (1)
- teacher evaluation (1)
- Teacher Town Hall (1)
- teacher tr (1)
- teacherpreneurs (1)
- teachers (12)
- teaching (5)
- technology (2)
- testing (2)
- The Finland Phenomenon (1)
- think tanks (2)
- thinking (1)
- Title I (1)
- trauma (1)
- unions (5)
- urban (2)
- urban education (10)
- value-added assessment (1)
- vision (1)
- Westboro Baptist Church (1)
- Will Richardson (1)
- William Ayers (1)
- Wisconsin (1)
- xo (1)
No comments:
Post a Comment