Go
to YouTube and type in “Harriet Ball.”
You’ll find three or four short clips on this wonderful Houston teacher,
including a tribute (she died in 2011) from KIPP charter school founders Mike
Feinberg and Dave Levin. It seems that
in 1992 when the young Feinberg and Levin—fresh Teach For America recruits—landed
in Houston, ready, in Feinberg’s words, “to change the world by lunchtime,”
they didn’t have an easy go of it. As
Feinberg put it, he lost control of his class by lunchtime and didn’t regain it
until Christmas.
Harriet
Ball was teaching down the hall, and Feinberg and Levin found her, and had the
good sense to latch on to her. Of Levin,
Ms. Ball says, “he was hungry.” This
short film is a sweet tribute, clearly heart-felt. “She was one of the most remarkable teachers
I ever met,” observes Levin. The duo
named the charter school they went on to found, the Knowledge Is Power Program,
drawing on a line from one of her chants about the power of reading. Today KIPP is the nation’s largest network of
charter schools.
This
tribute sparks for me so many issues related to contemporary school reform:
from the nature of teaching and the many qualities it takes to do it well to
the incessant drumbeat of criticism directed at teachers and the institutions
that educate them. Harriet Ball is
remembered for inspiring Feinberg and Levin to start KIPP, and for the songs
and chants she devised to help her students learn the metric system, state
capitals, and a lot else. But if you
view those clips of Ms. Ball and read what you can find written about her when
she died, you get the sense of so much more: of someone with a keen
intelligence about children, pedagogical creativity, humor, an in-her-bones
understanding of race and social class, a deep commitment to those students in
her charge and belief in their ability, and the kind of authority that emerges
from all the above. In general,
education policy and mainstream reform do not address these qualities. This is an unfortunate irony, given KIPP’s
iconic status in school reform circles.
One
of the themes you will hear from various mainstream education reformers is that
there is a “talent gap” in the teaching profession, that we need a better
quality of students to go into teaching, and that education programs need to be
more selective. Of course I, and
everybody I know in education, wants to recruit talented, hard-working young
people into the profession, and I certainly have a list of things I’d like to
see happen in teacher education—and in some education programs these are
happening: a better blending of research and practice on how people learn, for
example, or better methods of guidance and supervision as novice teachers move
into classrooms.
What
is worrisome is that in the drive for improvement, reformers can narrowly
define “quality” as, for example, the pedigree of a prospective teacher’s
undergraduate institution, or the selectivity of that teacher’s education
program. We need to throw a wide net in
recruiting teachers, tapping a range of backgrounds and talents. Those who advocate alternative teacher
recruitment and training programs also want to cast a wide net, though their
goal is often to recruit people from other professions and from business and
management backgrounds. This is
certainly worth doing, but if you also want to draw in young people from
low-income households, or who are the first in their families to attend college,
or who represent a broad range of cultural and linguistic backgrounds, then you
need to draw from a broad range of institutions.
Which
takes me back to Harriet Ball. The
obituaries mention that she got her degree from Huston-Tillotson University, a
small Historically Black College in Austin, Texas. The website for Huston-Tillotson notes that
in 2010, the university had a 90% acceptance rate—the lack of selectivity bemoaned
by critics of our teaching force and of the schools that produce them. But in fact a lot of very good teachers come
from such institutions. A while back, I
went through two books that profile first-rate teaching: my Possible Lives and Karen Chenowith’s How It’s Being Done. I also looked at the Council of Chief State
School Officer’s National Teacher of the Year Program. Only a handful of these top-flight teachers
got their bachelors degrees from elite private institutions or from flagship
public universities. A number hailed
from state universities. And a
considerable number came from small, local colleges with teacher education
programs. More recently, David Kirp
found a similar pattern in the admirable district he chronicles in Improbable Scholars.
One of the things that I
witnessed as I travelled across the country to write Possible Lives was the significant role played by local small
colleges in semi-rural and rural areas—in some cases, the colleges were tiny
satellite campuses of a state college or university hundreds of miles
away. These schools had to be open to
their communities to survive. In turn,
these institutions were often the only avenue available for locals to attend
college and enter teaching. Finances,
family obligations, cultural norms—all sorts of factors made it nearly
impossible for them to go away to college.
Similar factors sometimes come into play in urban settings where more
choice appears possible, but might in fact not be.
Recently,
the National Council on Teacher Quality—an organization critical of teacher
education programs—issued a report that, as its president said, was produced to
reveal the “widespread malpractice” of such programs. In a nutshell, the Council’s analysts relied
primarily on syllabi, course descriptions, and other program materials from
1200 undergraduate and graduate programs and rated these programs on a scale of
0 to 4. The analysis, therefore, was
built mostly on one kind of information—that which could be gleaned from
documents—and was further limited by the fact that many schools chose not to
participate, given the Center’s anti-ed school orientation. So the analysts, I presume, had to use what
they could find on the Internet and other sources. In the end, they were not able to rate a number
of programs on all their categories, but did issue only four top ratings out of
the 1200 and, on the other end, gave over 150 programs a zero rating and marked
them with a “consumer alert” warning.
This alert, according to the Council president, would caution
prospective students about attending these programs and warn district
administrators about hiring the programs’ graduates. The programs, therefore, would have to change
or be driven out of business.
There
is so much to say about the conceptual and methodological problems with this
report, and fortunately a lot of it is being said, as an Internet search
reveals. Of course, if a program is
terrible, it should be put on notice, but one thing I kept thinking about as I
read through the report was the arrogance in assuming that some analyst in
Washington, D.C.—the location of the Center—could pass damning judgment on a
program in, for example, East Tennessee or Central Oklahoma or Northern
California without ever visiting it, interviewing faculty, students, and
district administrators, or observing graduates of its program as they teach.
Among
its many flaws, the Center’s report represents the kind of narrowness in
defining teaching and teacher education that concerned me earlier.
How
about this? What if all the philanthropies that supported the questionable
report from the Council on Teacher Quality contributed an equal amount to a
less partisan organization to study excellent teachers who come from modest
backgrounds and attend their local (often less selective) colleges? How did they get so good? What did they bring with them and what did
their programs nurture? How can we
recruit more like them? And while we’re
at it, let’s throw a few bucks of that philanthropic funding their way, for many
find it hard to make ends meet, yet regularly spend their own money to make
wondrous things happen in their classrooms.
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