Sunday, April 27, 2008

Content vs Stuff that actually matters

Is it important to know stuff?

Of course it is but how does knowing stuff help when looking through thousands of lines of computer code because a program crashes without any error messages? How can knowing stuff help you manage a financial crisis at your company? If I read Shakespeare, will that allow me to work effectively in a team to brainstorm ideas to improve productivity of my company's manufacturing line? By the way, two of the members live in China and one lives in Europe and we collaborate using the latest Web 2.0 technologies. If I can factor a polynomial using the complete the square technique or be able to simplify a trigonometric expression using the identities, will I be able to sift through tons of information on the internet to make an informed decision on who I should vote for in the next presidential election?

Now, I have nothing against the old Bard or trigonometry but it seems that in education we believe that if all children are given the same content, somehow that creates equal opportunity. For the sake of the argument, let’s assume that all children are well fed and never abused. Let's take those children and put them in the same classroom in the same school with the same curriculum and give them the same tests and then graduate with the same piece of paper. Consistency must be the vehicle of opportunity...or is it? What about the child that sees the world with color and shape but has no art class? What about the child that can solve any logic puzzle but can't find the speed of train A traveling at 50mph? And more importantly, what about the child that just isn't interested in poetry but loves to read and write science fiction?

Consistency seems to be our society's rationalization for being too apathetic or preoccupied to think about the education problem. The pitfall is that it actually is important to know stuff…but it's pointless to teach STUFF without the context. To give the context you must start with the thinking. And to inspire critical thought, you must engage. Out of all those, content is the only measurable criteria. Unfortunately, educators are trained in such a way that they must be a master of their content and they must inspire their students to be as enthusiastic about their content as they are. I don't know about you but there are some things that just don't interest me (poetry, classical literature, advanced mathematics). There is nothing a teacher can do to inspire me to be a poet or read Charles Dickens. If we are to be sincerely empathetic we need to understand that young people have similar feelings toward content. However, whenever I say things like, "Do they really need algebra 2 right now?" it's heresy among mathematics teachers, and yet I have never come across a problem using matrices or determinants.

My point is this...if we want to build the School of the Future, we need to ask ourselves fundamental questions about what education is as an abstract, philosophical idea and what it means to manifest that idea in a classroom. There must be a veil of ignorance when answering the question, how should we educate young people? We must forget what and how we learned and also what and how we learned how to teach.

Knowledge is the cornerstone to an intelligent, well-rounded citizen, but it is only a cornerstone to a structure that is large and never complete. To use content to drive education is like watering a plant without soil. It might grow for a while but it will never reach its potential unless it is potted first. Content is almost incidental to the real vehicles of education. Without an initial focus on leadership, ethics and critical thinking, education is nothing more than a really expensive game of trivial pursuit.

4 comments:

. said...

trivial pursuit can be played over and over to memorize those facts to win.

our educational system doesn't have a reset button like my pc, or a box i can hide it away in until i feel like breaking it out and trying again to win.

i think there is a basic skill set that everyone should have. this skill set isnt fact based answers like a^2 + b^2 = c^2, plug in for a and b to determine c. the skill set isnt quotable ideas from any book, play or speech.

the skill set is being able to self design and create those facts and quotes.

while i agree on how the "system" is now, and how it should be- it's not a light switch. education is in it's own way an organism that must evolve. evolution happens slowly enough that you may not see a notable difference while alive, even if it really is there.

that all said- a rapid climate change annihilated thousands of species because evolution coudn't react fast enough. you think the educational system would remain in some small sense if at all if we forgot what and how we learned and what and how we learned how to teach?

i may be naive in saying so, but i'd like to believe that we, or at least the we that are clever and creative can take what we have been working with and change its principle foci and direction. you're apart of why i think that.

Mr. Gaffey said...

I am not saying tear all the schools down and start over...I am just frustrated that a school was built to show the education can be different but hardly anyone involved seems to have the will or even the desire to ask the tough questions. We all complain about public education and how it isn't funded properly but very few people actually offer suggestions on how to change it or fund it.

When is the tipping point? Why is the School of the Future turning into a regular school with lots of technology?

. said...

why?- i do not know.

how, well i expect you already know that one. you know our society sees technology as progress.

i remember way back in 1996- the year i graduated 5th grade- there were 32 apples in my elementary school. with some 32x4x6 students attending. the idea that we were integrating technology to entertain and learn was remarkable to my parents. soon by the end of middle school every family i knew had one, and so did every classroom. nothing about the what and how we learned changed, it was the way it was delivered. instead of a teacher holding up flash cards and asking children to multiply the numbers for an answer, we were told to play the math munchers game. instead of writing words over and over until we stopped misspelling, we sat at a machine and played reader rabbit.

my point is this: technology is not the answer, nor is it a required means.

the school of the future is just a regular school with lots of technology unless you choose to change the what your students learn.

Johnny said...

You should ask yourself, what is the goal of this school? Are you in existence to build the best and the brightest? or are you there to just educate the masses to become knowledgeable citizens - because the approach to the 2 are completely different. It seems to me that the logical way to keep a school funded and maintained is to keep first - churn out Ivy League candidates to help give the school it's prestige and trust to the community of it's quality of staff and methodology, then secondly, worry about the children who are struggling. Not to say that one comes after the other, but moreso that the first takes priority in building a curriculum and school structure.

By giving this priority, you will need to give students the knowledge that may not come into their daily lives. You will have to feed them the advanced math theories, the useless history lessons, the classic literature, and the creative arts so they can be first competitive enough to have a chance at prestigious schools -- otherwise, their(the top 1-2%) lives will be just as limited as before they started at your school.

Trickle down isn't just an economic policy. After reading your blog, I see that what you are trying to do is educate the masses... the bottom 90% - which is certainly a need. But you should focus your attention on the top 10%. These are the ones who are going to lead the next generation with 'change.' You should consider these future leaders to be your reformation, not the 90% that you're going to help by giving them a more 'practical' education to essentially avoid bagging groceries for the rest of their lives.

We need to get back to building a country with not only innovators among us, but with teachers and leaders who can help identify these small geniuses and grow these young minds to be great, not just extra capable blue-collared employees.