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Non-teaching teachers and class size
Jan 28th, 2010 by Garrett

Themselves understaffed, Detroit principals understaff classrooms even further in spite of the rules.

Detroit Public Schools emergency financial manager Robert Bobb has ordered a full audit of the district’s 5,200 teachers and how they spend their time to ensure that all are teaching students.

Teachers are supposed to teach five classes periods, but often, for whatever reason, “the principal decides he needs help,” said Falcuson.

The years-long practice violates district policy, and became worse after Bobb cut administrators to reduce the deficit. Union officials fear that it is now so widespread that it may be impossible to end.

“There would be no way of knowing (where teachers are),” Falcuson said. “It’s under the table. On paper, oftentimes, administrators have them (teachers) down as teaching five classes when they’re not.”

source

The teacher quality argument
Nov 20th, 2009 by Garrett

Besides cost, the most common argument against smaller classes is that it would lower teacher quality by bringing in new teachers. In my book I offer several refutations of this. My main response is that new teachers brought on through class size reduction will be instantly better because the job will be easier and the teaching force will stay better because frustration attrition will go down.

Another argument I brought up is that the percentage of K-12 teachers per capita approximately doubled in response to the baby boom and then stayed steady since its end. And yet I’ve never seen anyone try to argue that teaching got worse between 1950 and 1970. Here’s my source: http://www.bls.gov/opub/mlr/2006/03/art3full.pdf

percentk12teachers

Indeed I point out in the book that the teaching force simultaneously became more likely to hold graduate degrees during that same time span.

This brings us to the issue of higher ed, which is my main point here:

It struck me recently that another educational trend could be scapegoated by this same logic that assumes there are a finite number of smart-enough/educated-enough people available to fill teaching posts. What of the trend to send more people to college? Couldn’t that be a significant brain-drain on K-12 teaching if more teachers are needed in higher ed? I went back to the same Bureau of Labor Statistics report and found that college and university teachers grew constantly as a percentage of the population over the last century. Since 1960 it appears to have tripled, and the trend has shown an acceleration since 1990.

percentcollegeprofsCouldn’t this be one place where the coveted “best and the brightest” potential K-12 teachers are going? The ones who are so good that class size doesn’t matter? Yet often the same people who argue that we will dilute the quality of the K-12 teaching force if we try class size reduction are also those arguing that we must send still more of our workforce to college to be ready for “the information jobs of the future.” Those aims might be in competition.

Add to that this question: Couldn’t teaching be one of those information jobs? If we are sending an increasing percentage of our students to college, why is it supposed that there is some finite and ungrowable number of people smart-enough/educated-enough to be teachers? Either the initial assumption of a finite supply is wrong, or higher education actually does nothing to make people smarter or more educated, which would leave the goals of intensifying K-12 education and universalizing K-16 both pointless endeavors.

The definitely non-pointless endeavor would be not to neglect our kids with large classes, to do education more ethically—rather than race off into fantasies of the infinite perfectibility of the human being, which at bottom reveal their belief that people are currently stupid and will stay that way until “saved.”

Total student load (and manifesto-like rant)
Sep 29th, 2009 by Garrett

Ted Sizer and the Coalition for Essential Schools often take the focus off of school size per se and put it on pupil load, or what a new book by William Ouchi calls “total student load”–the total number of students teachers have in their current classes.  CES says 80 should be the max. They summarize their goals as:

  • Personalized instruction to address individual needs and interests;
  • Small schools and classrooms, where teachers and student know each other well and work in an atmosphere of trust and high expectations;
  • Multiple assessments based on performance of authentic tasks;
  • Democratic and equitable school policies and practice;
  • Close community partnerships. (source)

In The Secret of TSL [total student load]: The Revolutionary Discovery that Raises School Performance, fresh off the presses September 1st,  Ouchi acknowledges Sizer and CES’s focus on pupil load and incorporates it into a a theory of district management: Empower principals with the freedom to make more budgetary decisions and they are likely to choose to reduce total pupil load on their teachers (partly by hiring more), which is likely to improve outcomes.

When I sought in writing my book to link class size, school size and the length of time students and teachers stay together, I broadened this idea of pupil or total student load into relationship load. This offered a concept that could

a) clearly communicate the import of total student load

b) act as an umbrella to include class size, school size and length of relationship

c) include the perspective of the student and the parent or guardian as also bearing a load of school relationships that affects their “performance”

d) refocus on the broader concern of schooling as a part of rather than apart from child rearing

So though I applaud Ouchi’s analysis, I think it’s still framed within a conception of schools as “apart from.” His other educational management book is Making Schools Work, whose title echoes an entire discourse around the mantra of using research to find out “what works” in education. “Works what?” is the question we have to remember to ask so as to keep an eye on the assumptions behind all this work.

“What works” is code for what can be shown in random sampling to produce quantified snippets that symbolize educatedness, which in turn loosely prophesies employability or usefulness to economic growth, which in turn signifies American superpowerhood.

What can’t be shown to be true in general (because it isn’t general and never will be) is what works with unique people but not with other unique people, so this educational knowledge that only materializes in specific classrooms is not classified as “what works.” And what works to, say, not neglect students while educating them, doesn’t necessarily lend itself to quantification, thus doesn’t get labeled “what works.” (See my post comparing small classes to crosswalks. They aren’t meant to make traffic more efficient–they’re meant to make traffic more ethical, to correct for the power imbalance between cars and pedestrians.)

But it is possible to use quantitative research to investigate ethical improvement. You can measure, for example, whether crosswalks efficiently improve the ethics of car power. Analogous work gets done in education. It’s not the method per se that’s the problem–it’s the culture of assumptions that surrounds the method and those initiated into it. It’s a means-end question. “Raising school performance” is a questionable end, as is its cloaked sister goal of American economic hegemony. Money is an instrument for more important ends.

If relationship load is an instrument, it’s an instrument only for relationship. If total student load is an instrument, then, it isn’t for “raising school performance” but literally for the total student, the whole child. The Secret of TSL: The Revolutionary Discovery that Raises School Performance. The real secret is not its transcendent instrumentality but its inherent, immanent value.

“Raising school performance” in the abstract or across the board is valueless. It only makes sense within a frame in which there will never be enough–a deep belief in scarcity, a religion of “we are never good enough.” It only makes sense within a competitive frame where raising school the performance of my kid or my nation-economy  has value because I’m assuming others will not get access to this “raise.” More ethical values are (a)  raising school performance where it results in equity across lines of social stigma and (b) raising children.

The complication to how I value equity in and by education is that I don’t believe schooling is necessarily the alchemist’s stone of equity it’s trumped as. Oftentimes it merely serves as a rationalization for inequity because it offered the have-nots their chance, so they must’ve blown it–they more clearly deserve it than the serfs of old.

Don’t get me wrong, there’s no harm in trying for equity in and with schools, but there is harm in doing this in lieu of fixing what’s more endemic to education itself. This would be trying for what’s farther off without getting what’s close and easy: more ethical raising of children. In other words, let’s not sacrifice the definite gains to all children/future adults of a less mass-produced upbringing on the altar of better test scores for kids of color and poor kids. Because there’s no guarantee–much as I’d like there to be–that better test scores will make much of a dent in what holds the marginalized back after graduation.

The goals outlined in my book are thus to help fix primarily (but not exclusively) the problems specifically of schools (unethical relationship loads), and secondarily the problems also manifested in schools (other social justice concerns). Luckily it’s not really an either-or choice because relationship load reduction has been shown to equalize outcomes across social justice fault lines.

Ultimately, though, I could take or leave schools as an instrument as well–keep them or scrap them entirely–so long as I got to my ends-in-themselves of equity and child rearing.

And that’s the best I’ve come up with.

Hurry, Class Size is Limited!
Sep 4th, 2009 by Garrett

Internet research is funny because you often have to sift through a discourse with similar key words that’s not what you’re looking for, a discourse often much more frequently used. This imbalance can often have an ironic twist.

For example, when I was researching the importance for kids of  “adult attention” for my book, I had to sift through a mountain of articles about adult attention deficit disorder. I liked the irony so much that I named one of the chapters “Adult Attention Deficit” as a punny way to highlight how there is a deficit of adults paying attention to kids in schools. The reason the irony works so well is that AAD as a psychological idea is focused entirely on adults being able to pay attention to things for their own benefit. Thus,  an overwhelming majority of the time the words “adult attention” are used, they portray adults as in need rather than kids as in need of adults.

Part of the idea of this blog was to make available on the web some running commentary on class size issues in the news that didn’t just reduce the issue back down to test scores. That has meant sifting through keyword searches that reveal a similar ironic trend: a much used discourse in advertising education to adults that urges them to hurry and sign up because “class size is limited” or assures them the class will be effective because “class size will be limited to” some number (vastly smaller than public K-12 classes).

This recent article from North Carolina, for example, lets the reader know about a required course for all teachers and substitutes in the state. “Class size is limited. Early registration is suggested” (”Required teacher course offered at UNCA,” Asheville Citizen-Times, August 31, 2009). Will the classes those teachers teach be limited in size?

That’s not actually a rhetorical question. Another recent article from North Carolina claims the state recently removed class size limits in grades 4 to 12, but I haven’t yet found any confirmation of the removal or the prior limits.

The state has taken away class size limits for grades four through 12, allowing districts to put as many students in each classroom as necessary to deal with drastically reduced school funding.

Henderson County school officials say they will have more students in each classroom, but will hopefully not exceed the previous class size limits.

The previous limits were a maximum of 29 students per class in grades four through nine and 32 students for grades 10 through 12.

(”State removes class size limits.” Jennifer Heaslip. Hendersonville Times-News, August 25, 2009)

Whatever the case in NC may be, most states have no class size limits whatsoever, and those that do have only K-3 limits. Florida is the exception. (See my post on Florida.)

It struck me as I was going to sleep the other night that part of the irony of limited class size being such a selling point for classes advertised to adults is that it represents the antithesis of the problem of large classes in compulsory schooling. It has everything to do with the interplay of scarcity and abundance, of exclusivity and the commons.

Those who get to choose whether to go to school (adults), and those who get to choose exclusive schools, are presented with a scarce opportunity: the chance to seize one of a limited number of spots. But what’s the appeal of these spots and what is the rationale for their exclusiveness? To guarantee an abundance of the teacher’s attention and the chance to participate. Scarcity for the purpose of abundance. Public K-12 education, on the other hand, is the inverse: It’s abundant in that it’s open to all, but scarce once you’re in.

It may sound like I’m suggesting that “school choice” is the abundance we need, that children, like adults, should have an abundance of schools to choose from. I’m not—I’m basically agnostic on school choice. What I’m suggesting is that we take seriously what drives school choice when people do have an option. It is claimed that parents and students choose among curricular emphases. These are in fact hyped, sales-pitch-level differences in most cases. As I detail in my book, what drives school choice in the big picture is (a) the widespread preference for a smaller school with smaller classes and (b) classism and racism (i.e., exclusivity).

So rather than trusting choice per se to fix anything, I say we give people half of what they want: We give them smaller schools with smaller classes that are not based on a logic of exclusivity. Once all schools are small and have small classes, this form of abundance will no longer be scarce or exclusive. Chances are smallness will help reduce  white flight and middle-class flight. Even if it doesn’t, it will at least fix the problem of the urban poor (of color) getting the largest schools and the largest classes.

Here is a graph from my book that shows how small classes in public schools go disproportionally to white communities. The school size disparity is even starker. And private school  smallness clearly goes overwhelmingly to whites.

class-size-race1

If you ain’t got the do-re-mi
Aug 25th, 2009 by Garrett

Woody Guthrie informed us during our other great depression that “California’s a Garden of Eden, a paradise to live in or see, but believe it or not, you won’t find it so hot if you ain’t got the do re mi.”

This article from Bakersfield’s paper Monday highlights how the average district class size of 37 predicted for this year stands in stark contrast to local private schools. “Private schools, which charge thousands of dollars in tuition, continue to make low class size a priority.” I highlight in my book how class and school size are the only real advantages of private schools.

Juxtapose this with the same paper’s article from the day before that interviews “can do” teachers who say it won’t be a big deal to have bigger classes. “Sure, they’d rather teach fewer kids, they say, but they’ll make it work.” “It’s just going to take more time and preparation on my part,” says one.  Oh. I guess I don’t get where the no big deal part comes in then. It will be as simple as just more and harder work!

Here is some more “make it work” testimony:

“The key to success in a bigger class is organization and creativity, like dividing students into small groups and inviting parents or other teachers to help with the rotating stations.” Oh, just get unpaid adults to help you do the “same” job.

“I just feel that teachers are so resourceful and so proactive and so caring about their students — they will find a way, regardless of circumstances, to meet the needs of their pupils.” The martyrdom argument.

“They still got the one-on-one (individual attention), they just didn’t get as much.” Um, yeah, that’s the point.

“Maberry said there actually are advantages to larger classes: more diversity and more opportunity for parent volunteers.” Is there more diversity in a one pound bag of M&Ms as opposed to a vending-machine-sized bag? And the parent thing is brilliant: reduce the number of adults with the kids so more adults will come to be with the kids.

I have a class of 42 right now, so I’m entitled to a little sarcasm. Ain’t I?

Buying smaller child/adult ratios in Manhattan
Aug 6th, 2009 by Garrett

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/20/education/20schools.html

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