U.S. News &
World Report. , v. 125 no5 (Aug. 3 1998) p. 15
A reader sent in a list of teacher-education courses at the University
of Massachusetts--Amherst, along with a note: "This explains why 59 percent of
prospective teachers in Massachusetts flunked a basic literacy test." The courses
listed were: "Leadership in Changing Times," "Social Diversity in
Education" (four different courses), "Embracing Diversity," "Diversity
& Change," "Oppression & Education," "Introduction to
Multicultural Education," "Black Identity," "Classism,"
"Racism," "Sexism," "Jewish Oppression,"
"Lesbian/Gay/Bisexual Oppression," "Oppression of the Disabled," and
(get this one) "Erroneous Beliefs.".
The reader was referring to a basic 10th-grade test in language, math, and other
subjects, given to 1,800 would-be teachers in Massachusetts. Among other things, the 59
percent who failed often couldn't spell simple English words like "burned" and
"abolished." Apparently they went into ed school without knowing much about
anything, then came out the same way. But at least they are prepared to drill children in
separatism, oppression, and erroneous beliefs.
Our schools of education have been a national scandal for many years, but it's odd that
they are rarely front-and-center in our endless debate about failing schools. The right
talks about striving and standards, the left talks about equal funding and classroom size,
but few talk much about the breeding grounds for school failure--the trendy,
anti-achievement, oppression-obsessed, feel-good, esteem-ridden, content-free schools of
education.
For an article in City Journal, journalist Heather Mac Donald recently visited New
York's City College to see how a modern education school manages to fill its class time
without making the dread, professional mistake of having any actual content or clear
purpose. She found a teacher talking about "building a community, rich of talk"
and how ed-school students should "develop the subtext of what they are doing."
Each student wrote for seven minutes on "What excites me about teaching,"
"What concerns me about teaching," and "What was it like to do this
writing?" After their writings were read aloud, the teacher said, "So writing
gave you permission to think on paper about what's there.".
Stupid is as stupid does. Then the students split into small groups and talked about
their feelings. "It shifted the comfort zone," said one student, already fluent
in ed-speak. Another said: "I felt really comfortable. I had trust there."
"Let's talk about that," said the teacher. "We are building trust in this
class." But what they were not doing was talking about anything in the real world, or
about how to teach real lessons to real children. The credo for ed schools, Mac Donald
says, is "Anything but Knowledge." "Once you dismiss real knowledge as the
goal of education," she writes about the make-work silliness in ed classes, "you
have to find something else to do.".
The education schools take for granted that education must be "child
centered," which means that children decide for themselves what they want to learn.
Heavy emphasis is put on feelings and the self. An actual curriculum, listing things
students ought to know, is viewed as cramping the human spirit. Ed-school students are
taught to be suspicious of authority and the notion that teachers might be expected to
know more than the children they teach, so the word "teacher" is in decline. The
fad word is now "facilitator," part guide and part bystander watching the
self-educating child.
The traditional ed-school hostility to achievement currently hides behind the word
"equity"--bright students must be tamped down so slower learners will not feel
bad about themselves. Smuggled in along with equality is the notion that performance and
learning shouldn't really count--they elevate some children at the expense of others.
Grades and marks are bad, too, because they characterize and divide children. The result
is that the brighter students get little help and are often the target of teacher
resentment. Rita Kramer in her 1991 study of education schools, Ed School Follies, wrote:
"What happens to those more capable or motivated students is hardly anyone's
concern.".
This lack of concern for achievement now has a racial cast. Asian and white children
are often depicted as somehow out of step if they work harder and achieve more than
blacks, Hispanics, and other minorities. Instead of working hard with children to reduce
the racial gap, ed-school theory calls for strategies to conceal it under group projects
or simply to demonstrate that achievement doesn't matter.
Various experiments are underway to let bright college graduates bypass education
schools. Connecticut has a program allowing graduates to switch into teaching from other
careers simply by taking an eight-week summer course and a test. In New York, the Teach
for America program produced a sudden infusion of very good teachers into public schools,
also by bypassing the ed-school swamp. But the hidebound education industry is digging in
to close these loopholes and protect its closed-shop monopoly. It makes no sense to force
teachers through schools as bad as these. People should be able to qualify as teachers
simply by passing rigorous tests in their area of competence. Scrapping the ed-school
requirement is clearly the way to go.