As
the current education reform movement took shape in the 1990s, public schools
were in the crosshairs. Then teachers. Then their unions. And though teacher
education programs have long been a target of criticism, now they are in the
center of the scope. A recent report from the National Council of Teacher
Quality, a group advocating for alternative ways to train teachers, calls
teacher education programs “an industry of mediocrity,” and opinion page
writers gleefully assail them. The former executive editor of the New York Times,
Bill Keller, began his recent demolition with the old chestnut “Those who can,
do. Those who can’t, teach. And those who can’t teach, teach teaching.” If you
worked in an ed school, you knew you’d better take cover.
Teacher
education programs are widely varied by size, region, student body, nature and
focus of curriculum, talent of instructional staff, status within home
institution, balance of coursework and practice, relation with local district,
and more. Some are excellent, some are good and experimenting with ways to get
better, some are weak in some ways but decent in others, some are marginal and
poorly run. The language of the criticism, at least the most public language,
doesn’t allow for this variability. Nor does the dismissive rhetorical stance
of the critic, that is the tone and attitude running through the language.
Reading
these reports, I thought of the concerns about such language and stance I
expressed in Possible Lives, a documentary of good teaching across the
United States and a defense of public education. In essence, the assault
further contributes to the problem it addresses by reducing the nature of the
problem and providing one-dimensional solutions to it.
I
reprint below a few paragraphs from the preface and introduction to Possible
Lives. Whenever I write “public schools” or “public education” substitute
“teacher ed programs,” and you’ll have an elaboration of my concerns:
“During the 1980s
and ‘90s, a trend was developing in the national discussion of public
education, a tendency to condemn it as a failure and, in some cases, to seek
private, market-based alternatives to it. This tendency blended with broad
claims about the schools’ responsibility for our economic woes and social
problems. One result was despair and retreat from the public school. Another
was the search for large-scale, single-shot solutions like vouchers, or charter
schools, or high-stakes testing. This way of thinking about public schools and
their problems has intensified, heard in legislative debate on educational
issues, on talk radio, in newspaper and magazine commentaries. “We can all
agree,” writes a contributing editor for The
Weekly Standard, “that American public schools are a joke.” This is our new
common sense.
Now, God knows,
there is a lot wrong with our schools. This book is not a defense of the status
quo. The reader will gain sharp perspective on the ills of public education
from the teachers and students in the classrooms we visit. It is necessary for
a citizenry to assess the performance of its public institutions. But the
quality and language of that evaluation matter. For that fact, before we can
evaluate, we need to be clear about what it is we’re evaluating, what the
nature of the thing is: its variables and intricacies, its goals and purpose.
We would also want to ask why we’re evaluating. To what end?
The sweeping
rhetoric of public school failure does not help us here. It excludes the
important, challenging work done in schools daily across the country, thereby
limiting the educational vocabulary and imagery available to us. It constrains
the way we frame problems and blinkers our imagination. The classrooms in Possible Lives, replete with details of
teaching and learning, are offered to spark our imagination and enrich our
assessment.
A question that
runs through Possible Lives is how we
might develop a critique approach to public education. How to craft an approach
and language that is critical without being reductive, that honors the best in
our schools and draws from it broader lessons about ability, learning, and
opportunity, that scrutinizes public institutions while affirming them.”
I’ll have more to
say about teacher education in a future blog.
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