About the Blog
I will post a new entry every few weeks. Some will be new writing and some will be past work that has relevance today. The writing will deal in some way with the themes that have been part of my teaching and writing life for decades:
•teaching and learning;
•educational opportunity;
•the importance of public education in a democracy;
•definitions of intelligence and the many manifestations of intelligence in school, work, and everyday life; and
•the creation of a robust and humane philosophy of education.
If I had to sum up the philosophical thread that runs through my work, it would be this: A deep belief in the ability of the common person, a commitment to educational, occupational, and cultural opportunity to develop that ability, and an affirmation of public institutions and the public sphere as vehicles for nurturing and expressing that ability.
My hope is that this blog will foster an online community that brings people together to continue the discussion.
•teaching and learning;
•educational opportunity;
•the importance of public education in a democracy;
•definitions of intelligence and the many manifestations of intelligence in school, work, and everyday life; and
•the creation of a robust and humane philosophy of education.
If I had to sum up the philosophical thread that runs through my work, it would be this: A deep belief in the ability of the common person, a commitment to educational, occupational, and cultural opportunity to develop that ability, and an affirmation of public institutions and the public sphere as vehicles for nurturing and expressing that ability.
My hope is that this blog will foster an online community that brings people together to continue the discussion.
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Wednesday, November 30, 2016
Donald Trump, Celebrity Culture, and the White Working Class
Some
friends and readers have been wondering why I haven’t written anything about
the presidential election. The truth is I was numb with disbelief and anger and
felt as hopeless about politics as I can remember feeling. What else was there
to say other than the obvious: so much pain is going to be inflicted on so
many. I also couldn’t get out of my head the fact that if a relatively small
number of people in a handful of districts in a few states had voted or voted
differently, this catastrophe of suffering would have been averted.
One
of the things that has baffled me from the start of Donald Trump’s rise in the
GOP primary is how he could become the darling of so many White working class
voters. I know some segments of this population, particularly the people who
worked in heavy industry in the Northeast, many of them, like me, are the
children or the grandchildren of the Southern and Eastern European immigrants
who came to the United States in huge numbers between 1880 and 1920: Italian,
Polish, Slovakian. Many of my contemporaries’ children also worked in those
industries as they were in decline, or didn’t get to work in them at all, for
by the early 1980s (a decade before NAFTA), the processes of
deindustrialization had begun. If someone like Donald Trump, pampered and
entitled, a braggart, demanding and overbearing… if such a guy happened into
their midst—perhaps his limousine broke down en route from Northeast Ohio to
Western Pennsylvania—if such a thing happened, many of them would certainly not
embrace him, and could well dislike him, for he represents everything contrary
to the codes of behavior they grew up with, the kind of man they respect, the
way you talk about yourself in public.
I
know rural America much less well, though benefited tremendously when I stayed with
local teachers in small towns during my travels for Possible Lives. I
feel comfortable saying that the majority of the people I met in places like
Southwestern Montana or the coal fields of Eastern Kentucky would have the same
reaction to a Trump-like fellow descending into their midst. They would regard
him with suspicion.
So
what gives? Well, as numerous political commentators have noted, especially
after the election, Donald Trump was saying what a lot of people wanted to
hear. The messenger didn't matter.
Trump
said many things, most of them shockingly blatant—no subtle dog whistling,
except, perhaps, with anti-Semitism—assailing Mexicans, Muslims, undocumented
immigrants, women, you know the list. His pocketbook appeal to working-class
voters was his anti-trade message—which got intimately wrapped up in
anti-immigrant, nativist language—and his bold proclamations that he was going
to bring jobs back to economically devastated regions. And though it gets much
less mention than the White working class issue, we should not overlook the
fact that many in the traditional Republican base who are not blue-collar folk
at all—the banker next door to me, the flower shop owner in Omaha, the dentist
in Atlanta—voted in large numbers for Trump even though they might have done so
reluctantly. He would reverse the Obama policies they don’t like, cut taxes and
regulations, put conservatives on the Supreme Court. A lot of White Republican
women voted for Mr. Trump, defying predictions that his loutish behavior would
drive them into the Clinton camp, or at least lead them to not vote on the top
of the ticket. And, Good Lord, Evangelical Christians overwhelmingly supported
our Sinner-in-Chief, justifying their vote with talk of forgiveness and
redemption. Certainly on their minds were social issues and the Supreme Court.
While some high-profile Republicans—foreign policy experts or big players like
Meg Whitman—supported Clinton, most Republicans voted for Trump, with some
opting for third party candidates. What elites wanted in this election—elites
from the Never Trump GOP types to Katy Perry and LeBron James—was rejected in
an angry spasm by those who felt ignored one time too many. In the bitterest of
ironies, they voted for the most elite candidate of the lot, cocooned in a
world of chandeliers and self-absorption.
***
This
was the year of “change,” as we heard from pundits and from voters themselves.
Bernie Sanders’ remarkable campaign revealed the desire for change as did
Trump’s, though in quite different ways, their shared condemnation of trade
agreements not withstanding. For some in the Trump camp, change meant new
faces, not career politicians, and Trump’s gaffes and crude insults signaled
how different he was. What is important to note, though, is that the message of
change played side by side with Trump’s banner message to “Make America Great
Again,” a look backward. Change meant reversal. “Make America Great Again”
resonated deeply with many of Trump’s voters, and part of its effectiveness, I
think, was the fluidity of meanings it had. For the folks I know in the
Industrial Northeast, it meant a resurgence of some kind of manufacturing and a
better quality of life. For those threatened by the speed of change on social
issues, it meant a return to more traditional time—and for gun rights
advocates, a quieting of any talk of regulation. For those whose fears of the
foreign Other have been whipped up by
Right-wing media—even though, given where they live, many have never
encountered an African immigrant or Syrian refugee—for these folks Make America
Great Again meant a return to a time (that might be more imagined than real)
when everyone looked like them. And then there is the issue of race, which
blended, as it often does, with economic issues, with nativism, and with law
and order anxieties. Regardless of whatever progress we as a nation have made
on race relations and racial justice, race remains a massively cofounding issue
in our collective life. Trump’s campaign deserves national condemnation for the
many ways it manipulated race to its advantage, from Trump’s own birther ploy
to delegitimize our first Black president, to invitation of card-carrying White
supremacists into his campaign, to the many ways the campaign wove race
insidiously into other issues.
The
fact that during the campaign Mr. Trump and his circle were still accepted in
New York high society reveals the most craven hypocrisy among monied
elites—something that wouldn’t surprise my Rust Belt brethren. Charges of
racism were countered through a ritual of personal testimony: people came forth
to vouch that Mr. Trump or his advisors like Steve Bannon were not racist or Anti-Semitic
for they hire people of color and Jews. This testimony overrides the public use
of racist and Anti-Semitic language and symbolism for political gain. One of
Trump’s wealthy supporters excused all the racist pyrotechnics by saying it was
part of being a “disruptive” candidate! Disruption.
Silicon Valley business-speak as a synonym for bigotry.
***
As
true and terrible as all this is, however, I think we on the Left side of our
current nightmare need to be cautious about attributing any one motive to the
whole swath of Trump voters, for that broad brush stroke is not only inaccurate
but also will make it impossible to reach some segments of them in future
elections. All the motives I sketched above, and some I didn't have space for
(anti-government ideology, for example) came into play in this election. And I
haven’t mentioned candidate Clinton herself; the intensity of dislike for
her—cranked up by the Right’s Sleaze Machine—among some voters was motive
itself to vote third party or vote for Trump. Trump’s surprising victory was
the result of many forces in the United States coming together in the
proverbial perfect storm. But even though certain of these forces such as race
and nativism carried a lot of weight in this outcome, they do not explain every
vote for Donald Trump.
A
professional lifetime of talking to people and trying to understand how they
see the world cautions me to tease out the strands of motivation, to understand
how people think and what moves them to action. Let me give you one small
personal example, small, but one that reminded me of a powerful truth. During
George W. Bush’s first term as president, I was driving with several of my
relatives into Western Pennsylvania. My Uncle Joe was at the wheel. Joe
Meraglio quit school in the 9th grade but worked his way from the
assembly line at General Motors up to a supervisory position. He was a devout
Catholic and a very by-the-book kind of guy. Somehow we started talking about
immigration—Joe’s parents, my grandparents, both immigrated from Southern
Italy—and I said something to the effect that at least Bush was better on
immigration than some of his hardline Republican colleagues. Joe didn’t miss a
beat. He said he didn’t like George Bush because “he’s against a woman’s right
to choose.” What?! Joe Meraglio who never misses Sunday mass? Then, of course,
it hit me. Joe’s two daughters, both quick, strong women, probably influenced
him over the years. This was a reminder to me of a basic truth: People’s
political beliefs can be complex, ideologically blended, not fixed.
There’s
much talk now among Democratic leaders about the need to reach the White
working class, something Bernie Sanders’ candidacy made abundantly clear.
Democrats have been talking about this need for outreach since they began to
see their blue-collar base turn to Ronald Reagan. But they haven’t been very
successful—though, to be fair, President Obama proposed large infrastructure
projects but hit a stone wall in the Republican Congress. (With a GOP House and
Senate Trump will likely have an early success on this front.) Two quick
thoughts here.
First,
it will be difficult to reach some of these voters, for they are bitter and
distrustful and for decades have been dialed into Right-wing media and now the
Internet echo chamber, developing a coherent worldview that is hostile to many
Democratic causes. Also their economic interests, in some cases, have gotten
interwoven with other political and social issues: gun rights, immigration, abortion.
Winning them over will not be easy and might well involve more than a jobs
program. Still some of these folks did vote for Barack Obama, so the right kind
of economic and educational initiatives could gain traction.
Second,
Democrats need to find the right people to not only deliver the message but
also to learn the details of local conditions—and what is learned needs to have
a fast-track conduit to the top levels of the party. I remember the unease I
felt soon after the 2008 election when I saw either a photograph or video clip
of President Obama talking with what might have been his Council of Economic
Advisors, Austan Goolsbee and people like that. University of Chicago types.
Suits. Something visceral in me registered no.
These people are very smart but light years away from the guy on the forklift,
the woman in a cannery. Find at least a few advisors with that level of
economic expertise who also have an intellectual as well as emotional
connection to the warehouse and the factory floor. In a recent article in the New
Yorker the ever-astute George Packer interviews Larry Summers, Bill
Clinton’s final Secretary of the Treasury, who admits that in all his trips to
review antipoverty programs, he visited Latin America, Africa, and the poor
sections of large American cities but never “Akron, or Flint, or Toledo or
Youngstown.” An honest but stunning admission.
***
As
I’ve been arguing, people voted for Donald Trump for a wide range of reasons.
I’ve been interested in those voters who saw in him an understanding of their
hardship or at least an outsider who would shake things up in their favor: stop
jobs from disappearing, or help restore their blighted neighborhoods, or
control housing or food or health care costs. To comprehend this attachment to
Trump, I don’t think we can underestimate the power of celebrity—and even
though Donald Trump is unique in many ways, his rise to power should prompt a
deep reflection on something we are all susceptible to: the potent celebrity
culture of our time.
And
our time was primed for Trump. Politicians and politics have been degraded and
in the eyes of many hold no virtue. The press is in financial turmoil and has
been effectively maligned by the Right to such a degree that important
investigative stories on Trump’s business dealings, his foundation, and his
behavior were easily dismissed by Trump supporters and replaced with social
media postings, including, we are discovering, fake news. There are certainly
legitimate reasons to criticize our political class and the media—I have done
both—but when major institutions are undermined, the result is not necessarily
liberation, but chaos, generating the conditions for authoritarianism and demagoguery.
Enter Donald Trump, a fabrication of the media he now assaults.
It
is eerily instructive to watch the creation of the man. Take, for example, his
long involvement with WWE, World Wrestling Entertainment—he has been inducted
into the Celebrity Wing of the WWE Hall of Fame. Trump’s blustery rally persona
is not that far from trash-talking pro wrestlers hyping their next battle. Pro
wrestling is all theater, of course, and Trump spent years around it, playing
tough guy without having to take any of the actual life-shortening punishment
of WWE’s leaps, slams, and tumbles.
But
it was The Apprentice that catapulted Trump to big-time national
celebrity. There is much in the on-screen Trump that reflects the man
himself—the arrogance, the narcissism—but what overrides all else is assurance
and bone-crunching power. He can crush (“you’re fired”) and therefore he can
create. The Thor of business. What remains hidden behind the illusions of the
celebrity dream machine is Trump’s pathological dishonesty and long trail of
raw deals: The decades of bankruptcies, legal maneuvers, swindles, exploitation
of contractors and service providers, financial sleight of hand. When the
reality of all this was revealed through investigative journalism, it was
masterfully deflected by Trump and his campaign. The press was part of a
corrupt and rigged system. Facts don’t matter. Nor does history. You can
believe in this man. Welcome to electoral politics in the Age of the
Kardashians.
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Tuesday, October 18, 2016
The Art of Interviewing
National Public
Radio’s Series on Studs Terkel’s Archived Audio Tapes for Working.
If
you are of a certain age, you’re probably familiar with the late Studs Terkel,
particularly with his 1974 bestselling book Working: People Talk About What
They Do All Day and How They Feel About What They Do. Terkel, who died in
2008 at the age of 96, was a journalist, radio host (his interview show on
Chicago’s WFMT lasted over four decades), cultural critic, and oral historian
par excellence. In addition to Working, he published collections of
interviews with mostly common folk about the Great Depression, World War II,
race in America, and a lot else. Studs Terkel was an American original and
treasure. During the last week of September and first few days of October 2016,
NPR played a series of short clips from the original recordings Terkel made for
Working. http://www.npr.org/series/495535719/working-then-and-now
The tapes were stored in his office and recently reviewed and edited by Radio
Diaries and Project&. Thanks to them, we get to hear a telephone operator,
a gravedigger, a female advertising executive, a Black Chicago policeman, a
parking lot attendant, and more. A wonderful bonus is that the producers were
able to track down several of the surviving people Terkel spoke with and have
them reflect back on their earlier interviews. The segment with the Black
Chicago cop, Renault Robinson, is powerfully timely.
For
readers of this blog who are interested in interviewing, these little clips
provide an abbreviated master class in the art of talking with people in order
to learn about their lives. (One reason Working was such a hit was the
depth of reflection and sheer humanity of the interviews.) Terkel will start
with a question (for example, “Can you describe your day?”) then back off, but
not too far, interjecting an affirmation, or a complementary laugh, or a
reiteration of a key phrase the person said. He’ll gently request elaboration
(“Can you say more?”) or ask a new question that shows how carefully he’s been
listening to what’s already been said.
The
NPR hosts’ commentary about the recordings as well as little moments in the
recordings themselves provide some wonderful details about the settings of the
interviews. Terkel conducted them in the early 1970’s—just over 130 interviews
in all—and used a reel-to-reel tape recorder, a fact that is sobering to those
of us using our four-ounce voice recorders or our cell phones. From the clips
on NPR it sounds like he interviewed people at their job sites, when he could.
So we get Studs at a cemetery talking to a gravedigger. Studs on the piano
bench with a pianist in a hotel bar. And, my favorite, Studs in the front seat of an automobile with the parking lot
attendant “One-Swing Al” (named for his finesse in getting a car into a slot),
both men smoking cigars and talking, the bulky recorder probably whirring between
them.
***
I
discovered Working soon after it was published and used some of the
interviews from it in the college writing classes I was teaching. The book
became a touchstone for me in many ways and was one of the early influences on the thinking and writing that would eventually become The Mind at Work.
And as luck would have it, I got to meet Studs Terkel and be interviewed by him
on his WFMT radio show. I cherish the memory; if you’ll indulge me, I would
like to tell you about the interview.
I
was on tour for the release of the paperback of Possible Lives, a book
that chronicles my journey across the United States visiting good public school
classrooms. Chicago was one of the cities on the tour, and the person hired by
the press to accompany me to my interviews told me on the way to WFMT that the
last time she took a guest to the show, Studs Terkel wasn’t doing so well and
was scheduled for open-heart surgery. She hadn’t seen him since and wanted to
warn me that he might not be up to par. After all, he’s 84 with coronary
disease. So we’re sitting in the waiting area outside the recording studio,
kind of expecting the worst. Five minutes. Ten. Then suddenly from around the
corner of the studio, this short man in a bright red sweater under a suit
jacket comes walking toward us at a brisk pace, waving a copy of Possible
Lives over his head, greeting us in a strong, gravelly voice. It was Studs
Terkel. The doctors clearly got his blood pulsing.
What
also struck me once he and I were sitting close to each other in the recording
studio was that he had actually read the book—at least some of it—and had
sections marked and dog-eared. Pieces of paper stuck out from the pages. I
can’t tell you how unusual this is. A small percentage of the interviewers you
hear on radio or television talking with authors have spent any time with their
books. The interviewers’ questions come from their producers’ notes, which
typically originate with the book publishers’ publicity departments. During our
interview, Studs would even refer to page numbers as he flipped through Possible
Lives, finding this event… then this event that he wanted to discuss. And
he wanted to discuss everything, quick comments and associations as he moved
from one of the book’s classrooms to another. His style in his radio
interviews—and, Good Lord, he’s interviewed everyone—is much different from his
approach on the tapes for Working. http://studsterkel.wfmt.com/
Different styles for different purposes. The radio interviews are more rapidly
interactive, almost associative at times, like talking with someone you know
well over a few drinks, a mix of the casual and the intense, curious,
sympathetically probing, locked into good talk. The interview is twenty years
old now and of its time, but if you want to hear it, it’s on my website. http://mikerosebooks.com/Video___Audio.html
Listening
to the NPR clips from the early-70s’ tapes that resulted in Working and
thinking back to my fortunate interview with the man, I’m struck and moved by
Studs Terkel’s commitment over a very long haul to serious, engaged talk, to learning
about other people, to exploring with humane curiosity the nooks and crannies
of the American social landscape. As I inch closer to Terkel’s age when he
interviewed me, I’m also thinking about the importance of talk across
generations, the power and pleasure of it and, sadly, how rare it is. For that
fact, how rare authentic, sustained talk is, period. How seldom it is that we
talk to each other with a true interest in where we came from and who we are.
There’s so much that sits within Terkel’s opening question: “Tell me about your
day,” and especially in the follow-up: “Can you say more?”
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Monday, September 26, 2016
Tips on Thinking and Writing
Seven pieces of advice for students
entering graduate (or undergraduate) study in education—and a lot of other
disciplines too.
Last week I had the honor of addressing
the students entering several of UCLA’s graduate programs in education. I
offered them seven thinking and writing tips that I believe will be helpful as
they pursue their studies. These tips are also relevant to a number of other
areas of study, and could prove useful to undergraduate students as well. With
that, let’s enter the speech right after I made my introductory remarks.
***
You can call these tips habits of mind,
or intellectual strategies, or principles of inquiry, or simply tricks of the
trade that I’ve picked up over the years and am passing along to you to use in
your thinking and your writing as you pursue your studies.
1) Pay attention to your writing. Many
of us in education come out of the psychological or social sciences and never
had the opportunity to focus on our writing and to get detailed feedback on it.
But writing is an exceptionally potent tool for you regardless of the program
you’re in. It will be invaluable in your classwork, and also professionally as
you see things that trouble you and you want to give voice to or—something we
don’t do enough—when you see things that need to be celebrated. Writing will be
part of your intellectual and professional toolbox for the rest of your
careers.
Take advantage of resources. There are
undergraduate and graduate-level writing courses on campus. There’s a Writing
Center. And when you form study groups—and I hope you do—make them writing and study groups.
Trust me on this. Regardless of the type
of work you do and your future goals, the more effectively you can consider
your audience, craft your argument, turn a phrase, the more likely you’ll
achieve those goals.
2) Make your criticisms as even-handed
as you can. You will be called upon while you’re here—and in many cases after
you graduate—to critique a reading, or a policy, or an educational practice.
Don't just be a flamethrower. Before launching into your critique do your best
to present that reading, policy, or practice as fairly as you can, even if it
irritates you to do so. Then develop your critique. Your critique will be all
the more effective if your reader sees you being even-handed. Which doesn’t
mean you’re being wishy washy or can’t take a strong point of view. You can. In
fact, I think the strongest critiques are ones that fairly present elements of
the argument, policy, or practice that you’re questioning—and then
systematically, point-by-point deconstruct them or demonstrate their
inadequacy.
3) Related to #2. Investigate the things
that trouble you. Most of you as part of your program will visit schools or
classrooms or tutoring or counseling sessions or some kind of community meeting
or event. Sometimes you’ll be really impressed by what you see. And sometimes
you’ll have questions. And sometimes what you see and hear seems wrongheaded,
even harmful. Try your best to find out the rationale behind what you saw. Talk
to people. Don't assume, explore. I’m embarrassed to tell you how often in my
life I’ve made a quick judgment about something a teacher or principal or
social worker did only to be humbled later when I learned the full background
for their actions. But, let’s say that what you find out confirms your negative
judgment. That will also happen. Well, then you will have a better
understanding of what you saw, a deeper grasp of the dynamics and background
factors of what troubled you—which puts you in a better position to critique
what you saw in a substantial and principled way.
4) Types of evidence. In a lot of my
work I rely on stories, vignettes, interviews, scenes from
classrooms—qualitative data. But I also draw on numbers, statistical data on
frequencies, percentages, ratios. And there are quotations from authoritative
sources, from scholarly studies, policy reports, historical accounts, and the
like. Unfortunately, some people think that numbers come out of the devil’s
workshop or that stories are enjoyable but unsubstantial. Nothing could be
further from the truth. As a general rule, the more kinds of evidence you have
to support a claim or an argument, the stronger your claim or argument is. A
story or a clip of an interview can be powerful and moving, but it becomes more
convincing, I think, at least in some contexts, if it is paired with a
statistic that demonstrates the story or interview is representative of a
trend, is not an isolated occurrence. Likewise, statistics can be forceful, but
they can gain additional strength to move people to action when they’re
combined with a story that touches the heart. This combination of kinds of
evidence, of statistic and story is often what we see in the successful passage
of public policy.
5) Always remember, human behavior is
complex, and certainly education is complex. There is rarely, if ever, a single
explanation for anything. Think about your own behaviors. Can you explain why
you’re here? Why you care for the people you care for? Your relationship with
your parents? Even your sleeping and eating patterns? Can you explain any of it
with one motive or cause? Probably not.
Because of this rich complexity, be
cautious about attributing a single cause to any educational phenomenon or
explaining it with a single perspective. This is the power, I think, of what
feminist scholars and critical theorists refer to as “intersectionality.” That
is, that social characteristics—race, class, gender, sexual
orientation—intersect and interact. To best understand one, you need to look at
all in context and interaction.
Now, of course, there are times when you
do want to focus on a single phenomenon, a single possible cause because it has
been under-acknowledged or ignored. We might want to shine a light on race or
sexual orientation or, more specifically, we might want to focus on a single
variable in, let’s say, academic achievement, or college-going orientation, or
in the acquisition of language. Fine and good. There’s analytical reasons for
doing this. But remember that the highlighted phenomenon or variable still
plays out in everyday reality in concert with all the other bits and pieces of
our complex lives.
6) Whatever it is you’re interested in
or become interested in as you study here, learn its history.
You may be interested in teaching math
in the primary grades or in diversifying and enriching the literature read in
high school.
Or college affordability might be your
thing.
Or maybe feminist standpoint theory.
Or you’re taken with a particular
approach to student advising.
Or how about advanced statistical
methods like Structural Equation Modeling or Item Response Theory. Maybe these
are what you curl up with at night over a soothing cup of tea… or something
stronger.
All of these have an origin. People have
been working on them for a while, in some cases, a long while. Learning how
something came into being and how it developed can be so useful in the present,
affecting your understanding of it, its mistakes and blind alleys as well as
the missed opportunities that remain to be seized—things you can work on.
Knowing the past makes you a better practitioner in the present.
7) I just asked you to go deep in the
past. Now I’m going to ask you to try to gain a wide, broad view of the present.
It is the nature of graduate study that we specialize, we are trying to get
very good at something that is pretty specific: in your case, in college
advising, or in an area of teaching, or in a research topic. This is what we
do. Every once in a while, though, look up from your specialization and survey
the broad landscape of education and note where your specialization fits in. In
the vast system that extends from pre-school to graduate school and includes
adult school and occupational training, and much more, where does my
contribution belong? How does what
occurs in the rest of the system affect my sphere of work? How does my work
affect the rest of the system? Every so often, you want to ask yourself those
questions.
So those are my seven tips. I hope you
find them useful.
In wrapping up I’d like to offer this
suggestion. A little while ago, I recommended that you always keep in mind the
rich complexity of human life and educational practice and to not limit your
vision to a single way of seeing. Well, speaking of different ways of seeing,
you have here in your entering class a remarkable range of life experience, and
educational and professional experience, and knowledge of disciplines and
educational practices. What a reservoir of resources! Graduate school is immensely stimulating but
also taxing, growth-fostering but difficult. You’ll need good people around you
to help you process it all. Get to know each other, form meaningful
relationships, making sure that some of your new acquaintances have different
backgrounds and interests from yours. You will benefit greatly from this
diversity of background, interest, and knowledge.
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Labels:
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Thursday, August 25, 2016
Who Is Smarter Than Whom?: Status Games in Higher Ed
A
while back I was reading letters of support for an award, and in one of the
letters there was a demeaning characterization of the home academic department
of the candidate. While the letter writer praised the candidate to the skies,
the writer portrayed the candidate’s department—a department of great prestige
outside of the candidate’s university—as being of marginal status in the eyes
of those in other academic disciplines within the university. The letter writer
wanted to assure anonymous evaluators like me that the candidate was of much
higher intellectual quality than the candidate’s discipline would suggest.
Boy,
am I sick of this academic snobbery.
What
I read is not without its irony, however—worthy of the most trenchant
portrayals of academic life (think David Lodge’s Small World or Richard
Russo’s Straight Man). The discipline of the snooty letter writer is one
that I heard routinely ridiculed when I was studying and then teaching in an
English Department.
And
so it goes in the academic status games.
Applied
disciplines (e.g., journalism, nursing, management) have less status than
“pure” ones: philosophy, biology, mathematics. And within disciplines there is
typically a status hierarchy, with “theoretical” pursuits having more dazzle
than applied work. Art history and musicology trump the making of art or music.
The theoretical mathematician has the status edge on the applied statistician.
The literary theorist sits on a higher rung—much higher—than those who teach
writing.
Of
course, these status dynamics are not absolute, are ignored, even subverted by
some faculty, and an institution’s history and current reality come into play
as well. And in our era of the “entrepreneurial university” and economic
accountability, traditional academic status markers might lessen in importance;
what will count will be enrollment numbers and the employability prospects of a
given major.
Still,
as someone who has spent decades at a research university running a tutorial center
and a freshman composition program and then residing in a school of
education—all quite low in that disciplinary hierarchy—I can tell you that judgments
of intellectual virtue based on disciplinary affiliation are alive and well and
factor into all sorts of behaviors and decisions, from departmental funding ,
to faculty promotion, to the letters written for honors and awards—like the one
I read.
We
have not even considered the more pronounced status differentials among various
units at the college or university: for example student services versus
academic departments. And then there are the loaded status distinctions made
among the different kinds of institutions that comprise higher education in the
United States: the community college versus the state college or university
versus the research university—with research universities scrambling to climb
to the top of their own heap.
All
professions generate status distinctions, so why should the field of higher
education be any different? Fair enough; I take the point. But the thing that
gets to me in all this is that the distinctions are made through narrow and
self-interested attributions of intelligence that hardly reflect the variety of
ways people use their minds to apply knowledge, solve problems, reason and make
decisions, and so on. Furthermore, intelligence doesn’t reside inert in a
discipline or a kind of work or in one segment of a system rather than another;
intelligence emerges in activity and in context. The attributions of intelligence
I’m concerned with have much more to do with the preservation of power and
prestige and turf rather than helping us all—faculty, staff, and
students—improve on what we do. Faculty don’t get better at teaching by
luxuriating in their bona fides or looking down on the department across the
quad.
This
last point about getting better at educating is at the center of a new book by
my UCLA colleague, Alexander Astin, an expert on higher education in the United
States. In Are You Smart Enough?, Astin argues that colleges—especially
“elite” colleges—are more concerned with acquiring status markers of
intelligence (high entering student gpas and test scores, faculty publication
numbers, and so on) rather than creating the conditions for students to become more intelligent during their
time in college. Instead of the scramble to attract students already identified
as smart, Astin wonders, what if colleges put increased effort into helping
students become smarter through more attention to teaching, mentoring, and
enrichment activities? It’s a provocative and important question.
Back,
now, to that letter. Over the years, I’ve spent time in many sectors of higher
education, from a medical school to a community college tutoring center, and
one of the things that has most struck me is the distribution of intelligence
across the domains of the enterprise. To be sure, I’ve observed the routine
pursuit of trivial research, uninspired teaching and unimaginative management,
tireless self-promotion. A whole host of sins spread across areas of study and
levels of the system. But I’ve also witnessed insight and inspiration, deeply
humane problem solving, moments of brilliance in both a writing and a
mathematics classroom, in a counseling session and in a meeting of tutorial
center coordinators, in a laboratory and in a library. No little domain has a
lock on being smart.
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Labels:
academic status,
Alexander Astin,
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Friday, July 29, 2016
Challenges Facing the Guided-Pathways Model for Restructuring Community Colleges
This
commentary appeared in Inside Higher Ed on June 23, 2016. It offers some
thoughts on a currently popular and valuable reform strategy that is being
considered and in many cases implemented by a number of community colleges
across the country.
***
A much-discussed, comprehensive
reform plan for improving community colleges and their low rates of student
persistence and completion is the “Guided Pathways” model put forth by Thomas Bailey,
Shanna Smith Jaggars and Davis Jenkins’ in their book: Redesigning America’s Community Colleges. Published last
year, the book condenses and focuses years of research -- a fair amount of
which comes out of the Community College Research Center at Columbia
University’s Teachers College, which Bailey directs.
I support of the reforms laid out
in book. But I also have some concerns -- maybe cautions in a better word -- about
the social and political dynamics of establishing the Guided Pathways model,
and about the complex nature of the typical community college student
population.
In the book, Bailey and his
coauthors locate the fundamental problem with the community college in the
structure of its curriculum and the institutional assumptions that undergird
that structure. In its attempt to serve all members of its area, the typical
community college has allowed to proliferate a wide range of academic,
occupational, general interest, and service courses and programs. Though some
type of orientation and counseling and advising are typically available,
quality and effectiveness vary, and counselors’ caseloads -- 1,000 students per
counselor is not uncommon -- work against any substantial contact. Many
students don’t utilize these services at all.
The authors label this arrangement the
Cafeteria- Style, Self-Service Model. Students, many of whom are the first in
their families to go to college, might enroll without a clear goal, get
inadequate or incomplete advising or take courses that don't lead to a
specified outcome are out of sequence or that they’ve already taken.
As a remedy, the authors suggest a
basic redesign,, arguing that community colleges “need to engage faculty and
student services professionals in creating more clearly structured, educationally
coherent program pathways that lead to students’ end goals, and in rethinking
instruction and student support services in ways that facilitate students’
learning and success as they progress along these paths.”
The authors acknowledge the laudable
reforms attempted recently, such as improving the curriculum for remedial
courses and streamlining them or creating programs at the front end of college
to better orient and guide new students. But these reforms have had limited
impact on completion, the authors claim, because the large macro-structure of
the Cafeteria Model remained in place.
To realize the Guided Pathways
Model, faculty and staff would create sequences of courses that lead to clearly
defined outcomes. And this major
restructuring of the curriculum would provide direction for other significant
institutional reforms that will aid in retention and completion. Faculty
members who work within a particular pathway will together define the skills,
concepts and habits of mind they want students to develop through the pathway
“and map out how students will build those learning outcomes across courses.”
At the front end, increased effort will go to helping students clarify goals
and choose a major or “meta-major,” which would reflect broad areas of
interest. Orientation to college will be
beefed up, and students will be enrolled in courses that provide ongoing
information and guidance about college life. Through the increased integration
of technology into advising, students will receive timely feedback on their
progress, and instructors and counselors will be alerted when something goes
awry --when a student drops a course, for example.
In addition, the authors adopt
various promising reforms to remedial education, such as sequences featuring
fewer, more intensive courses, and the use of additional instruction and
tutoring. Their assumption is that improved remedial courses will function more
effectively as part of a Pathways model, resulting in greater numbers of
students moving into a college-level course of study.
Enacting the Model
The
Pathways idea is a good one. I have known so many students who would have
benefitted tremendously from it -- would have taken fewer courses that were
extraneous to their goals, used up less financial aid money, moved more quickly
toward completion of a certificate or degree or toward transfer to a four-year
school. And the suggested reforms that follow, especially related to
orientation and advising, are long overdue. I raise similar suggestions in my
2012 book, Back to School. As for
rethinking remediation, I’ve been on that boat for more than thirty-five years.
To achieve this restructuring will require collaborative engagement on the
part of faculty and staff, both within departments and across them. The authors
realize the challenges of effecting such engagement and devote a chapter to the
topic. They wisely begin the chapter by noting some of the difficulties,
including the possible lack of trust among administration and faculty and
staff; the divide between faculty and student services; the disruptive role
played by dissenters.
The book then suggests strategies
to work through these problems. For example, its authors suggest including
dissenters in program planning, creating planning teams that combine faculty
with student services personnel, the use of data to question current practices,
and so on. Though this is a legitimate way to structure such a chapter, the structure
implies that the barriers to change listed at the beginning of the chapter can
be overcome with the management and group facilitation techniques presented in
the remainder of the chapter -- an impression reinforced by the lack of any
examples or discussion of what to do when the techniques fail.
The authors have a wealth of
experience studying two- and four-year colleges, so they surely know how messy
and unpredictable the process of reform can be. Perhaps they (or their editor)
decided that it was best to present their model and a process to achieve it,
and not to overly complicate things with extended discussion of potential
pitfalls and blunders. Fair enough. And perhaps the authors’ disciplinary
backgrounds in economics, public policy and quantitative methodologies limit
their treatment of politics, ideology and the tangled day-to-day dynamics of
status, power and turf -- which, depending on the institution, can include
everything from budgets to racial tensions to contentious personal histories.
To limit treatment of all this is a
legitimate choice, but should be stated and underscored, for my worry is that
individual colleges attempting the reforms suggested by Bailey, Jaggars, and
Jenkins will encounter more of a mess than anticipated and possibly scrap or
significantly weaken the implementation of ideas that have real merit.
The organizational
compartmentalizing and the administrative hierarchies that exist in the
community college are not only structural features; they are electric with
power and status. The various methods suggested by the authors to bring people
together to work through these dynamics toward the common goal of creating
Guided Pathways are good ones, tried and true in the toolkit of management consultants.
But they also can be foiled by genuine ideological differences about the
purpose of a particular area of study or of education in general. They can also
be foiled by turf protection, administrative power struggles and pure and
simple personal animosity.
To be sure, change happens. I’ve witnessed several successful programs take shape over the past few years as a core of energetic and creative faculty are given the resources to run with their ideas. But during that same time I’ve also seen such groups -- inspired, seemingly tireless people -- be stonewalled or shut down by larger groups of faculty within their subject area, by their department heads or by middle managers.
To be sure, change happens. I’ve witnessed several successful programs take shape over the past few years as a core of energetic and creative faculty are given the resources to run with their ideas. But during that same time I’ve also seen such groups -- inspired, seemingly tireless people -- be stonewalled or shut down by larger groups of faculty within their subject area, by their department heads or by middle managers.
Bailey and his coathors suggest
arriving at shared values as a starting place for examining current practices
and changing them. For example, the authors write, “In our experience, faculty
and staff choose to work at community colleges because they believe in the
open-access mission and are passionate about improving students’ lives.” This
is generally true in my experience as well, but with two qualifications -- which
illustrate how arriving at shared values can be more complicated than it seems.
First, regarding the embrace of the
open-access mission of the community college, a percentage of faculty at most
institutions believe some of the students they teach should not be in college,
and certainly not in their classrooms. These faculty align themselves with the
universities that educated them, want to teach students who have some affinity
with their discipline, and are not at all trained to work with students who are
academically underprepared. In some cases, they are younger and work at the
community college because that was the only position available in a tight job
market. In other cases, these are older faculty who have been at the college
for decades and lived through a significant shift in student demographics. They
look back at a golden age -- one that most likely did not exist as they
remember it.
Furthermore, faculty can have quite
different beliefs about concepts like “improving students’ lives.” And some of
these differing beliefs can present resilient barriers to change. One faculty
member believes that to change methods of instruction will compromise standards
and lead to sub-par education. Another believes that students -- particularly
those with poor academic backgrounds --need to have positive experiences in
school, so avoids challenging them intellectually. And yet another operates
with racial, class or gender biases that limit what he or she thinks is
realistic for some students in school or career.
Another assumption in the book is
that when faced with data about student, instructor or program performance,
faculty and staff with guidance will engage in reflection and behavioral change.
Some people will respond thus -- and thank goodness for them. But other
responses are also possible. People don’t believe the data -- especially in
institutions where there is a high level of distrust between faculty and administrators.
People question the way the data were obtained. People blame the students. This
last response is a big one where test data or pass/fail rates are concerned.
When faced with data demonstrating the low pass rates in remedial English or
math, some faculty respond by stating that those students don’t belong here. As
one community college staff member said to me, “It’s hard to admit we’ve been
doing something wrong.”
For all its merits, the book’s implementation plan is sometimes thin on the political and social dynamics of institutional change. To work amid a complex human landscape, the plan might well need to be combined with savvy, perhaps even Machiavellian leadership; with horse-trading; with both symbolic and financial incentives; with the strategic use of personal relationships; and, unfortunately, at times, with reassignment or marginalization of obstructionist personnel.
For all its merits, the book’s implementation plan is sometimes thin on the political and social dynamics of institutional change. To work amid a complex human landscape, the plan might well need to be combined with savvy, perhaps even Machiavellian leadership; with horse-trading; with both symbolic and financial incentives; with the strategic use of personal relationships; and, unfortunately, at times, with reassignment or marginalization of obstructionist personnel.
Pathways and Students' Lives
The structural fix Bailey and his
coauthors offer makes sense given the evidence that the status quo creates a host
of barriers to student success. Still, like all structural remedies, this one
runs the risk of reducing nuanced and layered human dilemmas to a technical
problem, and thus being unresponsive to or missing entirely the particular life
circumstances of students. So, yes, make the college curriculum more coherent,
but realize that other human and material resources also will be needed to meet
the needs of many students, and, as well, build into your structural changes
the flexibility needed to honor the range of life circumstances your students
bring to college. Otherwise, the fix may create unintended negative
consequences.
A significant number of people who
go to community college are adults with family and other responsibilities. They
can only go part-time. They can’t go every semester. They sometimes quit in
mid-semester because of family emergencies or changes in employment. They go to
two or three different institutions. A Guided Pathways model could help them in
some ways -- at the least lend coherence to their course selection -- but not
necessarily speed up their progress through college. For them, evening or
weekend classes, good online courses, legitimate competency-based options and
counseling and advising in off-hours, weekends or online would also be
necessary.
A different kind of problem lies at
the other end of the college age continuum. We don't have in our country many
avenues to help young people develop after high school. We don’t, for example,
have a robust system of occupational apprenticeships or of national service.
Young people who are not on the academic fast track and do not have a clear
college goal have few options: entry-level, low-skilled, low-paying work or the
military. Or they can enroll in the local community college hoping that some
career path will reveal itself. Many such students don’t stay long, but those
who do typically change their areas of study several times, shift between
full-time and part-time attendance, start classes they don’t complete, stop-out
and return to school. Eventually some find their way. A Guided Pathways model
could help these students by more clearly delineating curricular and career
options at a critical stage of early adult development.
But there are some powerful
developmental dynamics going on here that lie beyond a structural fix in the
curriculum. In interviewing such students, I’m taken by the simple but powerful
fact that this process of discovery takes time. A lot of growing up happens:
cutting back on partying and frivolous entertainments, changing one’s
understanding of the purpose of school, bringing one’s fantasies in line with
one’s abilities, learning how to manage time and to study. In some cases,
students arrive at the big questions: Who am I? What kind of work do I want to
do? What is meaningful work for me? Why am I on this Earth? It certainly could
be argued that the community college is not the place to work all this out, but
if our society provides limited transitional institutions or spaces, young
people are left with few other options.
Then there is the issue of the
burdens students carry. I am continually struck by the hardship experienced by
so many community college students. To be sure, middle-class students from
stable and secure backgrounds attend community college, but, depending on the
location of the college, many students come from low-income to destitute
families; have to work 30 or more hours a week; live in cramped housing, some
of which is substandard; are food-insecure; and have health problems that are
inadequately treated. For some, there are worries about immigration. Some must
contend with prior involvement in the criminal justice system while others
struggle with addiction.
In the book After Admission, sociologist James Rosenbaum and his colleagues make
the critical point that a structural analysis of the problem with community
college student success takes us “beyond individual blame” and focuses our
attention on institutional factors that create barriers to academic progress.
Bailey and his coathorsoffer a corrective to these problematic structural
features. I do not intend to refocus blame on students, but I think it would be
a mistake to not attend to the details of their lives while conducting this
structural analysis. Otherwise the structural remedy might promise more than it
can deliver -- thus threatening its longevity -- and also inadvertently
contribute to the barriers students face by diverting attention from other
remedies they need.
I do not want the issues raised
here to be used as an excuse for maintaining the status quo. But even with the
most coherent and streamlined curricular pathways, there will still be a number
of students who enroll in one course at a time, who stop out, who take years to
find their academic or occupational path, whose past blunders and
transgressions continue to exact a material and psychological price, whose
personal history of neglect and even trauma can cripple their performance. All this and more require institutional
responses beyond Guided Pathways (though the model could enhance these
responses) as well as extra-institutional social services. The needs of the
community college population require a range of programs and accommodations to
make “the people’s college” more fully the uniquely American institution it, at
its best, can be.
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Thursday, June 23, 2016
"Grit" Revisited: Reflections on Our Public Talk about Education
"Grit"
is in the news again big time with the appearance of Angela Duckworth's
alliterative best-seller Grit: The Power of Passion and Perseverance. I
wrote about both the conceptual and methodological problems with grit last
year, and given the attention Professor Duckworth's book is attracting, I
thought it would be worthwhile to repost what I wrote below and add a few
thoughts here.
The book is drawing its share of mixed and negative reviews for superficiality bordering on pop psychology, for its narrow conception of character, for its focus on individual personality traits over social and economic factors, and for problems with methodology. Most of these characteristics were evident in Professor Duckworth's work long before the publication of her book, but it seems that they got amplified as she (and most likely her editor) prepared her book for a general audience.
Given the number of mixed to negative reviews, it would seem that the opinion-makers are finally countering their original enthusiasm for grit. The ledger is balanced. Those of us with concerns about grit can relax.
Well, no. The meteoric rise of grit reveals troubling problems in the formation of our public discourse about education. I and many others have written about our policy maker's culpability in the formation of this discourse, but here I'd like to consider another dimension of the circumstances that give rise to phenomena like the one we’re witnessing with grit.
The book is drawing its share of mixed and negative reviews for superficiality bordering on pop psychology, for its narrow conception of character, for its focus on individual personality traits over social and economic factors, and for problems with methodology. Most of these characteristics were evident in Professor Duckworth's work long before the publication of her book, but it seems that they got amplified as she (and most likely her editor) prepared her book for a general audience.
Given the number of mixed to negative reviews, it would seem that the opinion-makers are finally countering their original enthusiasm for grit. The ledger is balanced. Those of us with concerns about grit can relax.
Well, no. The meteoric rise of grit reveals troubling problems in the formation of our public discourse about education. I and many others have written about our policy maker's culpability in the formation of this discourse, but here I'd like to consider another dimension of the circumstances that give rise to phenomena like the one we’re witnessing with grit.
With
some notable exceptions, not many journalists who cover education--and even
fewer opinion page columnists--have a solid background in the field. The people
who review the few books on education that get coverage--most of which are
written by other journalists--are often culture critic types who are bright, to
be sure, but not schooled on schooling...so they go to school quickly on the
Internet, which will yield the mega-hit hot topics (grit, for example) and the
people who champion them. This state of affairs hardly generates the kind of
knowledge (and more to the point, understanding) that complex topics in
education demand. Every concern now being raised about grit was there in plain
sight for anyone who did some homework and consulted with a few dispassionate
psychological or educational researchers. Oh, that those who contributed to the
original frenzy had done so.
The situation I just described leads to a small and closed circle of voices. The concept of grit got the huge attention it did because it was seen as a way to help poor kids persevere in school and achieve their way out of poverty. When the journalists and other writers I mention above are astute enough to question such claims and want to underscore the challenges of poverty, they will find via their search engines trending books and reports on education and poverty that suffer from the same one-dimensional and hot-topic focus as the treatments of psychological traits and character education. So we end up with a constrained, sometimes problematic, concept of poverty used to counter a constrained, sometimes problematic, concept of character.
I'm not sure how we get out of this mess, though I've been thinking a lot about it lately. I'll post those thoughts as soon as I can tame them into coherence.
The situation I just described leads to a small and closed circle of voices. The concept of grit got the huge attention it did because it was seen as a way to help poor kids persevere in school and achieve their way out of poverty. When the journalists and other writers I mention above are astute enough to question such claims and want to underscore the challenges of poverty, they will find via their search engines trending books and reports on education and poverty that suffer from the same one-dimensional and hot-topic focus as the treatments of psychological traits and character education. So we end up with a constrained, sometimes problematic, concept of poverty used to counter a constrained, sometimes problematic, concept of character.
I'm not sure how we get out of this mess, though I've been thinking a lot about it lately. I'll post those thoughts as soon as I can tame them into coherence.
***
One
of the many frustrating things about education policy and practice in our
country is the continual search for the magic bullet—and all the hype and trite
lingo that bursts up around it. One such
bullet is the latest incarnation of character education, particularly the
enthrallment with “grit,” a buzz word for perseverance and determination. Readers of this blog are familiar with my
concerns and can read my earlier posts by clicking here,
or go to a 2014
report on character and opportunity from the Brookings Institution in which
I have a brief cautionary essay. I pulled much of this material together in
"Being Careful about Character," a chapter in the 2014 revised
edition of Why School?.
In
a nutshell, I worry about the limited success of past attempts at character
education and the danger in our pendulum-swing society that we will shift our
attention from improving subject matter instruction. I also question the easy distinctions made
between “cognitive” and “non-cognitive” skills.
And I fear that we will sacrifice policies aimed at reducing poverty for
interventions to change the way poor people see the world.
In
this post, I would like to further explore these concerns—and a few new ones—by
focusing on “grit,” for it has so captured the fancy of our policy makers,
administrators, and opinion-makers.
Grit’s
rise to glory is something to behold, a case study in the sociology of
knowledge. If you go back ten or so
years, you’ll find University of Pennsylvania psychologist Angela Duckworth
investigating the role of perseverance in achievement. This idea is not new in the study of
personality and individual differences, but Duckworth was trying to more
precisely define and isolate perseverance or persistence as an important
personality trait via factor analysis, a standard statistical tool in
personality psychology. Through a series
of studies of high-achieving populations (for example, Penn undergraduates,
West Point cadets, Spelling Bee champions), Duckworth and her colleagues
demonstrated that this perseverance quality might be distinct from other
qualities (such as intelligence or self control) and seemed to account for
between 1.4 to 6.3 percent of all that goes into the achievements of those
studied. (Later studies would find
several higher percentages.) These
findings suggest that over ninety percent of her populations’ achievements are
accounted for by other personal, familial, environmental, and cultural factors,
but, still, her findings are important and make a contribution to the academic
study of personality—and support a commonsense belief that hard work over time
pays off.
It
is instructive to read Duckworth’s foundational scholarly articles, something I
suspect few staffers and no policy makers have done. The articles are revealing in their listing
of qualifications and limitations: The original studies rely on self-report
questionnaires, so can be subject to error and bias. The studies are correlational, so do not
demonstrate causality. The exceptional
qualities of some of the populations studied can create problems for factor
analysis. Perseverance might have a
downside to it. The construct of
perseverance has been studied in some fashion for over a century.
But
Duckworth and her colleagues did something that in retrospect was a brilliant
marketing strategy, a master stroke of branding—or re-branding. Rather than calling their construct
“perseverance” or “persistence,” they chose to call it “grit.” Can you think of a name that has more resonance
in American culture? The fighter who is
all heart. The hardscrabble survivor. True Grit.
The Little Train That Could.
Grit
exploded. New York Times
commentators, best-selling journalists, the producers of This American Life,
Secretary of Education Arne Duncan, educational policy makers and
administrators all saw the development of grit as a way to improve American
education and, more pointedly, to improve the achievement of poor children who,
everyone seemed to assume, lacked grit.
I’ll
get to that last part about poor kids in a moment, but first I want to ask some
questions few policy makers are asking.
What is an education suitable for a democracy? What kind of people are we trying to
develop? What is our philosophy of
education? With these questions in mind,
let’s consider some items taken from the two instruments Duckworth and
colleagues have used in their studies.
The items are listed under grit’s two subscales, the factors that
comprise grit:
Consistency of Interests Subscale:
· New ideas and
projects sometimes distract me from previous ones.
· I have been
obsessed with a certain idea or project for a short time but later lost
interest.
· I often set a goal
but later choose to pursue a different one.
Perseverance of Effort Subscale:
·
Setbacks don’t discourage me.
· I
finish whatever I begin.
· I have
achieved a goal that took years of work.
These items are answered on a
five-point scale:
Very much like me
Mostly like me
Somewhat like me
Not much like me
Not like me at all
Let
me repeat here what I’ve written in every other commentary on grit. Of course, perseverance is an important
characteristic. I cherish it in my
friends and my students. But at certain ages and certain times in our
lives, exploration and testing new waters can also contribute to one’s
development and achievement. Knowing
when something is not working is important as well. Perseverance and determination as represented
in the grit questionnaires could suggest a lack of flexibility, tunnel vision,
an inability to learn from mistakes.
Again, my point is not to dismiss perseverance but to suggest that
perseverance, or grit, or any quality works in tandem with other qualities in
the well-functioning and ethical person.
By focusing so heavily on grit, character education in some settings has
been virtually reduced to a single quality, and probably not the best quality
in the content of character. The items
in the grit instruments could describe the brilliant surgeon who is a distant
and absent parent, or, for that fact, the smart, ambitious, amoral people who
triggered the Great Recession. (Macbeth with his “vaulting ambition” would
score quite high on grit.) Education in
America has to be about more than producing driven super-achievers. For that fact, a discussion of what we mean
by “achievement” is long overdue.
But,
of course, a good deal of the discussion of grit doesn’t really involve all
students. Regardless of disclaimers, the
primary audience for our era’s character education is poor kids. As I and a host of others have written, a
focus on individual characteristics of low-income children can take our
attention away from the structural inequalities they face. Some proponents of character education have
pretty much said that an infusion of grit will achieve what social and economic
interventions cannot.
Can
I make a recommendation? Along with the
grit survey, let us give another survey and see what the relationship is
between the scores. I’m not sure what to
call this new survey, but it would provide a measure of adversity, of
impediments to persistence, concentration, and the like. It, too, would use a five-point response
scale: “very much like me” to “not much like me.” Its items would include:
·
I always have bus fare to get to school.
·
I hear my parents talking about not having enough money for the rent.
·
Whenever I get sick, I am able to go to a doctor.
·
We always have enough food in our home.
·
I worry about getting to school safely.
·
There are times when I have to stay home to care for younger brothers or
sisters.
·
My school has honors and Advanced Placement classes.
·
I have at least one teacher who cares about me.
My
guess is that higher impediment scores would be linked to lower scores on the
grit survey. I realize that what grit
advocates want is to help young people better cope with such hardship. Anyone who has worked seriously with kids in
tough circumstances spends a lot of time providing support and advice, and if
grit interventions can provide an additional resource, great. But if as a society we are not also working
to improve the educational and economic realities these young people face, then
we are engaging in a cruel hoax, building aspiration and determination for a
world that will not fulfill either.
The
foundational grit research primarily involved populations of elite high
achievers—Ivy League students, West Point cadets, National Spelling Bee
contestants—and people responding to a Positive Psychology website based at the
University of Pennsylvania. It is from
the latter population that the researchers got a wider range of ages and data
on employment history.
I
was not able to find socioeconomic information for these populations, but given
what we know generally about Ivy League undergraduates, West Point cadets,
etc., I think it is a safe guess that most come from stable economic
backgrounds. (In one later study,
Duckworth and colleagues drew on 7-11 grade students at a “socioeconomically
and ethnically diverse magnet public school” where 18% of the students were
low-income—that’s some economic diversity, but not a school with concentrated
disadvantage.) It is also safe to assume
that the majority of the people who are interested in Positive Psychology and
self-select to respond to an on-line questionnaire have middle-class employment
histories with companies or in professions that have pathways and mechanisms
for advancement. So the construct of
grit and the instruments to measure it are largely based on populations that
more likely than not are able to pursue their interests and goals along a
landscape of resources and opportunity.
This does not detract from the effort they expend or from their
determination, but it does suggest that their grit is deployed in a world quite
different from the world poor people inhabit.
It
is hard to finish what you begin when food and housing are unstable, or when
you have three or four teachers in a given year, or when there are few people
around who are able to guide and direct you.
It is equally hard to pursue a career with consistency when the jobs
available to you are low-wage, short-term and vulnerable, and have few if any
benefits or protections. This certainly
doesn’t mean that people who are poor lack determination and resolve. Some of the poor people I knew growing up or
work with today possess off-the-charts determination to survive, put food on
the table, care for their kids. But they
wouldn’t necessarily score high on the grit scale.
Personality
psychology by its disciplinary norms concentrates on the individual, but
individual traits and qualities, regardless of how they originate and develop,
manifest themselves in social and institutional contexts. Are we educators and policy makers creating
classrooms that are challenging and engaging enough to invite
perseverance? Are we creating
opportunity for further educational or occupational programs that enable
consistency of effort? Are we gritty
enough to keep working toward these goals without distraction over the long
haul?
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Labels:
Angela Duckworth,
grit
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