Tuesday, March 30, 2010

What is education all about?

Education, as I see it, is to provide students with the skills, tools, and confidence for a life of inquisitiveness. Nary a day goes by where I fail to learn something. Some days what I learn is rather pedestrian, or inconsequential. Some days what I learn is eye opening, mind bending, or life changing. Sometimes, something I may not have given much value to will become extraordinary when put together with something new! And that is one of those skills every child needs to develop; the ability to synthesize what they learn, and the ability to transfer knowledge from one part of life, or one subject, to another.



Instead, most children have the love of learning slowing strangled, or wrestled from them by the very nature of school. The architecture of today's education system forces teachers to make decisions which do not encourage children's natural curiosity. Rather, teachers are concerned about meeting ever increasing, externally levied, measures of student progress. While working on my Masters of Education: Best Practices, I have discovered there are any number of ways to measure student progress. The thing is, the teacher has to be able to make informed decisions on how best to do that. I am not yet a full time teacher, though I do spend quite a bit of time in classrooms as a substitute. There is still a lot of originality in classrooms, but less and less of that originality is geared towards educating students because of the focus on students' test scores.



If you are concerned at all about your child's education, get to know your teachers, principals, and district officials. I don't recommend telling them how to do their job, but you can ask them questions. Let them get to know you, while getting to know them. Find out what their views on education are. Find out what they think about standardized testing, and what they think the best sorts of assessment are. If you disagree, that's OK. Try to find out why they think the way they do, and consider what leads you to the conclusions you hold dear.



One of the most important tools in a good, or great, teacher's arsenal is reflection. Any teacher worth their salt is constantly asking themselves what they could do better, how can they reach a seemingly difficult child. Yes a lot of teachers hold fast and hard to points of view, who doesn't. The question is, are you willing to review you point of view. Are you willing to ask why, or what lead you to that point of view. I think you'll find that engaging in civil dialog, rather than telling a teacher how to do something will have far greater pay-offs than being confrontational. No matter what you may think of the person who runs your child's classroom, in all but a few cases, they hold the best interest of everyone in their stewardship as top priority, so find out who is behind - whatever it is that makes you uncomfortable.



Monday, March 22, 2010

Homework, When it Isn't Helpful

Homework is not successful when it causes frustration at home. When parents have to play homework cop, the potential for healthy interaction is reduced. Yes, some families really do go for 'more is better' on the homework front, but that is not a widely held outlook.



When I was in elementary school, I didn't have regular homework until 6th grade. That homework was just to get me used to the idea for jr. high. A good part of my afternoons in elementary school was spent playing with friends, finding ways to entertain myself, using my imagination, and learning conflict resolution by dealing with conflicts between my friends and myself. Adults were seldom around, or 'under foot'. They were readily available when someone got hurt, or if we couldn't solve problems on our own. I remember going home with bruised feelings and ego. I would talk to my mom, and try her suggestions later that day, or the next.



Today, so many children have their lives scheduled for them from dawn 'till dusk. They are never without a parent within reach, or at least a quiet shout. They don't have the chance to deal with conflict on their own, because as soon as one child shouts unfair, or someone gets hit, then a parent is in there pulling rank and dealing with it. The child doesn't have a chance. I think it is a shame that children don't have the opportunities I had to learn on their own through trial and error. The school of hard knocks is not perfect, but it is effective, and the lessons learned are not soon forgotten.



Back to homework though. I find that when the homework is not looked at by the teacher after being completed, that is the WORST kind of homework. The child realizes the teacher doesn't look at it, so it must not be important and is a waste of time! Sending homework without it being related to classroom work, or without being taught first in the classroom, causes stress in the child and potentially they reinforce incorrect thinking. If the student doesn't understand and the parent does it, what has the child learned?



The best homework I have come across, is leveled to the student's ability. Allowing them to reinforce what they know. And should not take more than 15-20 minutes.



What do you think?