Comments for The Hechinger Report https://hechingerreport.org/ Covering Innovation & Inequality in Education Wed, 18 Sep 2024 19:42:29 +0000 hourly 1 Comment on Students aren’t benefiting much from tutoring, one new study shows by Bill Henk https://hechingerreport.org/proof-points-tutoring-research-nashville/comment-page-1/#comment-78747 Fri, 13 Sep 2024 23:49:43 +0000 https://hechingerreport.org/?p=103555#comment-78747 Tutoring programs of any scale for struggling readers are largely dependent on the extent to which the tutors, often amateurs or volunteers, know or have been trained to know exactly what to do. Typically they need specialized instruction because typical school instruction has not worked for them.

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Comment on OPINION: It’s finally time to put pandemic excuses behind us and hold students to higher standards by Joe Feldman https://hechingerreport.org/opinion-its-finally-time-to-put-pandemic-excuses-behind-us-and-hold-students-to-higher-standards/comment-page-1/#comment-78691 Thu, 12 Sep 2024 17:06:43 +0000 https://hechingerreport.org/?p=103515#comment-78691 Higher standards requires us to stop using traditional grading practices. It’s simply dishonest and unfair to include a student’s behavior in a grade–to allow a student with weak understanding to get a higher, inflated grade. Awarding “participation” points (for contributing to discussions and being prepared for class) or giving students points for submitting HW (regardless of who does it or what help they got) allows students to avoid actual learning. Hold students to higher standards by more accurate and equitable grading! https://crescendoedgroup.org/blog/equitable-grading/can-we-trust-the-transcript/

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Comment on OPINION: It’s finally time to put pandemic excuses behind us and hold students to higher standards by Ken O'Connor https://hechingerreport.org/opinion-its-finally-time-to-put-pandemic-excuses-behind-us-and-hold-students-to-higher-standards/comment-page-1/#comment-78684 Thu, 12 Sep 2024 13:58:01 +0000 https://hechingerreport.org/?p=103515#comment-78684 Let us be very clear – so-called “pandemic grading” wasn’t “softer grading; it was and remains better grading because it removed some of the worst aspects of traditional grading- mixing achievement and behaviour, zeros, percentages and averaging.

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Comment on TEACHER VOICE: Big mistake — Schools are swapping out Shakespeare, Chaucer and Dickens for Kendrick Lamar and Taylor Swift by SA https://hechingerreport.org/teacher-voice-big-mistake-schools-are-swapping-out-shakespeare-chaucer-and-dickens-for-kendrick-lamar-and-taylor-swift/comment-page-1/#comment-78682 Thu, 12 Sep 2024 11:36:02 +0000 https://hechingerreport.org/?p=103181#comment-78682 One assignment of analyzing artists you don’t like, isn’t taking away from famous authors. My former English teacher had us dissect Dead or Alive by Bon Jovi and some other songs. That was really hard for me as I’m literal and not good at symbolism. We learned how to try to use context clues and read between the lines to see what the artist was saying. This is good practice and is easier to do on songs as they are modern, compared to Shakespeare. That didn’t mean we didn’t look at novels either. If the whole year is spent looking at song lyrics, then there’s a problem. One unit or assignment isn’t an issue. We didn’t leave class thinking our teacher was praising artists as “literary greats.”

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Comment on PROOF POINTS: This is your brain. This is your brain on screens by mr jhon https://hechingerreport.org/proof-points-neuroscience-paper-v-screens-reading/comment-page-1/#comment-78681 Thu, 12 Sep 2024 11:33:26 +0000 https://hechingerreport.org/?p=101581#comment-78681 Screens have become a huge part of our daily lives, and they can have both positive and negative effects on our brains. While screens provide access to information and entertainment, overuse can lead to reduced attention spans, disrupted sleep, and even anxiety. It’s all about finding a balance and using screens mindfully!

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Comment on Students aren’t benefiting much from tutoring, one new study shows by Jim Therrell https://hechingerreport.org/proof-points-tutoring-research-nashville/comment-page-1/#comment-78662 Wed, 11 Sep 2024 21:47:33 +0000 https://hechingerreport.org/?p=103555#comment-78662 Good, honest assessment of tutoring, but . . . no mention of how AI will become the tutor of the future (see Khan’s book, Brave New Worlds: How AI will Revolutionize Education (and why that’s a good thing), making human / face-to-face efforts at tutoring secondary or even unnecessary.

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Comment on Work rules for benefits programs deter low-income Americans from going to college by Jessica craine https://hechingerreport.org/work-rules-for-benefits-programs-deter-low-income-americans-from-going-to-college/comment-page-1/#comment-78615 Wed, 11 Sep 2024 06:59:00 +0000 https://hechingerreport.org/?p=93988#comment-78615 I’m a fulltime student and they are taking my insurance and food stamps don’t no what I’m going to do I guess I’m dropping out of college because I can’t give up my insurance.So we win and we lose I’m giving my dreams in life that I’ve always worked so hard for.

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Comment on TEACHER VOICE: Big mistake — Schools are swapping out Shakespeare, Chaucer and Dickens for Kendrick Lamar and Taylor Swift by DEVIN CLARY https://hechingerreport.org/teacher-voice-big-mistake-schools-are-swapping-out-shakespeare-chaucer-and-dickens-for-kendrick-lamar-and-taylor-swift/comment-page-1/#comment-78552 Mon, 09 Sep 2024 19:17:56 +0000 https://hechingerreport.org/?p=103181#comment-78552 Will we ever have another Shakespeare? Will you ever give them room?

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Comment on Building better early grade math teachers: Milwaukee goes back to an old playbook by Joaquin Carlos Armendariz https://hechingerreport.org/building-better-early-grade-math-teachers-milwaukee-goes-back-to-an-old-playbook/comment-page-1/#comment-78525 Sun, 08 Sep 2024 23:28:02 +0000 https://hechingerreport.org/?p=103025#comment-78525 Sad to see similar problems in Math Education ( and Science etc.) we faced 50 + yrs ago exist today. As an 81 yr old retired Math/Physics community college instructor and administrator, I propose the following: (1) Creation of National Subject Standard Rubrics for each academic subject incl PE etc by teachers advised by curriculum practitioners, university math education and math professors PTA and appr unions/assns. Critical side project will be creation of multilanguage parental short courses about current subject studied by their students . These short subject “literacy” courses could be taught by local district subject specialists and community college/university faculty for certificate/academic credit . The Rubrics are intended as a common reference for states, agencies, districts and boards to provide their administrations and teachers/professionals to design their curriculum and instruction implementations. (2) The US education professions (teachers, administrators, librarians, counselors, etc) need to have their academic freedom be legally defined within the public (and private) education systems like the medical, engineering, etc. professions. Interference with and abuse towards their professional discretionary responsibilities will not be allowed. (3) National standards for class size need to be created with primary recommendations from local districts, university education researchers, etc.. (4) A national task force on Educational Salaries and Benefits should be created with special emphasis on Federal, State and Local funding capabilities and responsibilities. (5) The DOD, Intelligence Agencies, and Business Community should be invited to provide input on impact of educational outcomes and curriculum (esp Literacy, Math, Science, Modern Languages,etc) on our security and economic competitiveness. (6) Funding for these efforts could be enhanced by contacting program officers at Ford, Rockefeller, et al foundations and US Chamber of Commerce to etc.. We need to help our hardworking educational professional and stop destroying our chances to have a future in this Republic . “The sleep of reason creates monsters”, Goya. “Truth is real; lies are fake”, Georges Braque”.

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Comment on Building better early grade math teachers: Milwaukee goes back to an old playbook by Barry Garelick https://hechingerreport.org/building-better-early-grade-math-teachers-milwaukee-goes-back-to-an-old-playbook/comment-page-1/#comment-78443 Fri, 06 Sep 2024 16:35:58 +0000 https://hechingerreport.org/?p=103025#comment-78443 From the article: “Before the partnership, the district’s approach to math resembled what math instruction looks like today in many schools across the nation — a patchwork of different methods and approaches. ”

Take a look at many of the Common Core aligned textbooks that have been in use for more than 10 years and you might see why. Common Core aligned textbooks delay the teaching of standard algorithms (even though CC doesn’t prohibit teaching them earlier), result in a smorgasbord of methods (many if not most being inefficient and some relying on drawing pictures), so that students are awash in a never-ending buffet of side-dishes. When the “main dish” of the standard algorithm arrives after a few years, it looks like yet another side dish.

The NSF has been funding reform/progressive math education methods for the past three decades. From the looks of it, they will be doing it for many more years. The usual reason for the why “the current approach isn’t working” (even though they are supposedly teaching for the holy grail of “conceptual understanding”) is that teachers are “doing it wrong.”

Also from the article:

“The elementary teachers in the room solved the problem quickly. But the solution wasn’t the point. The teachers spent more time discussing what type of problem this was. Describing and deconstructing it helped the teachers reach a deeper understanding of not only how it works but how to explain it to their youngest learners. “Put yourself into the mind of a child,” Robinson said.”

They are clearly NOT putting themselves in the mind of a child. Most children focus on procedures with teachers honing on in whether students “really get it” and will spend much time on “concepts”. Ss will parrot back the explanations of “concept” so what we have is “rote understanding.” Other students whose parents can afford it will reap the benefits of outside tutoring–something that has never been taken into account when looking at school districts’ standardized test scores.

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