“NAKED SHORTING”
OUR KIDS –
Why is New York
State Testing a Curriculum It Hasn’t Even Delivered Yet?
By Susan Crawford
Starting this week New York State students from grades 3-8 are
expected to take tests on a Common Core curriculum that they have not yet been
taught. If there was ever a case
of “the emperor having no clothes,” this is it! Actually, another “naked” analogy came to mind for this
situation. If the corporate reform
movement has been trying to apply business practices to education for the past
decade, it was surely only a matter of time before it would cross from the boardroom
to Wall Street for inspiration.
From the boardroom, instead of “principals” of schools, New York City
schools now have “CEOs.”
“Accountability” has been the buzzword for calling to account teachers
and students who fail to meet “benchmarks,” i.e. test scores, even while the
tests and the “cut scores” on them have been changed or moved virtually every
year for more than a decade. “Merit
Pay” is repeatedly trotted out as a panacea, even though research, replicated
numerous times, shows it doesn’t work in business settings, much less in schools.
With strong support for these corporate reform measures by the USDOE
and two successive presidential administrations, there has been plenty of
outcry at the ground level, but no institutional counterweight to call the
practices, and their practitioners, to account. So, if one gets away with implementing unproven practices
for enough years without being called to account, it is likely one might start
to think it’s all right to move the bar to wherever you need it to be to get
what you want. At this point, the
corporate reformers want virtually all coursework to move online, where it will
be issued as a “Common Core” curriculum, adapted now by 45 states. Most of those states are waiting for
the rollout of the tests in school year 2014-15. For some reason, New York State decided instead to test its
students on a curriculum they have not yet been taught. There’s a term for that on Wall Street:
naked shorting. That’s when stock
traders sell a stock short that they not only don’t own, but have not even
borrowed. In a regular short sale,
the shares have to be owned or borrowed. The trader sells them anticipating the
cost of the shares will go down, and can be repaid at that lower price within a
three-day settlement period. In naked short
selling, the nicety of having an actual share in someone’s actual possession is
bypassed. The Securities and
Exchange Commission (SEC) banned the practice in the wake of the 2008 financial
meltdown, though it is considered to still be used to some degree.
New York State parents can call a “time-out” on next week’s Common
Core tests by opting their children
out of them. They should also demand that the New York State legislature (our ersatz SEC
for these purposes) force the State Education Department (SED) to deliver an
actual curriculum before presuming to test the state’s schoolchildren on
it. Anything less is “naked
shorting” our kids.
During the time-out – preferably of several years duration – SED could
try out some other business practices that they might find useful. These include focus groups with
teachers, principals, school boards and parents on the relative merits of the
proposed Common Core curriculum. SED should do small-batch pilot-testing
of elements of the curriculum over the course of several years, comparing it to
alternative curricula to see if it is an actual improvement. This would curtail the risk of
wholesale curricula change that has resulted, in NYC for instance, in the need
for massive remediation by high school students who wish to go to college. More than a decade of exposure to the inadequate
reading and “fuzzy math” programs brought into the city schools a decade ago has
caught up with a whole generation of the city’s students.
“Standards” for the Common
Core have been issued in New York by the State Education Department, and
teachers have been offered professional development and webinars to explain them. But those measures do not constitute a curriculum, which is
arrived at over time, with practice and, one hopes, periodic feedback on the
ground to make sure the curriculum is actually working. In fact, here’s one more business
practice that would help: study the schools that ARE working right now – of
which we have many – then bring THOSE practices to the schools that are not. Corporate reformers pride themselves on
making rapid decisions. Parents,
teachers and students and taxpayers much prefer that when it comes to education,
we take the time to get it right
By Susan Crawford
As long as we're talking about business terminology (and practices) infesting the schools, let's not forget the "hostile takeover" of public education.
ReplyDeleteOr we could consider a curriculum that has been tested for more than 100 years and is proven to produce passionate, successful, life-long learners in nearly every environment--Montessori.
ReplyDeletehttp://mariamontessori.com/mm/
http://montessorimadmen.com/resources
Bonus: In addition to supporting children as they discover and express their brilliance, Montessori involves zero testing and zero or nearly zero homework. Don't brilliant kids deserve to enjoy their family, hobbies, and sufficient sleep for their growing bodies and minds?