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velvetpage ([personal profile] velvetpage) wrote2011-08-16 12:19 pm

Discussing Waiting for Superman

From [livejournal.com profile] pvenables: "I have a question for you about a documentary I watched recently. It's called "Waiting for 'Superman'" and (I'm assuming you have seen it but what the hey) it features the plight of the American public school system, the concept of "drop-out factories," and the perception that it is impossible to change anything that's wrong with the system due to smothering influence of the teachers unions.

One thing that particularly shocked me was the fact that American teachers can get tenure. I've never heard of that going on here-- I assume that's only in the US.

Would love to hear your perspective on the film if you've seen it and if you haven't, to hear about your impressions once you have.

The question I had for you was about Canadian (or just Ontario) schools: Do we employ what they call "tracking" for students wherein some teachers funnel students towards success while others might be destined for a lower quality of instruction or attention based on fairly arbitrary assessments? Actually, in thinking about this, I think I can probably say "yes" we do as I saw it in action when I was in school. Perhaps a better question is, how early does this begin? I know you have an objection to... what was the testing called? It was something you've asked that Elizabeth not be included in..."



First, Waiting for Superman is a very biased piece of editorializing passing itself off as a documentary. It was produced by the Gates Foundation, and its purpose is to prove that adding more choice to education (that is, making it more of a free-market model) will improve it. These same people are funding charter schools all over the U.S. and cherry-picking their evidence so that it looks, in the movie, like charter schools out-perform public schools. That's a dramatic over-simplification, to the point of being an outright lie.

The fact is that choice in schooling has not been proven to improve the education of anyone - not even the kids for whom the choice was made, and definitely not for the kids left behind in the public system. The irony here is that the example the movie uses, Finland, is actually an example of the opposite point to the one they made with it. Finland's school system involves practically zero choice. They have high expectations for their students, small class sizes, and plenty of individualized instruction geared to high-level thinking. They also pay their teachers well, recruit their best students to be teachers, and give them a whole lot of freedom in the classroom - no merit pay, nobody coming in to make sure they're teaching exactly the way they should be. And their results are stunning - over a 90% high school graduation rate. They're an excellent example of how a single public system, fully-funded, with high expectations for teachers and students and small class sizes, gives excellent results.

The studies being done in places with a little less bias than the charter-school-pushers in the U.S. are showing that students whose parents choose a charter school for them - or any other school choice, including French Immersion, for example - are likely to do well anywhere they go, not because their school is better but because their parents are engaged enough to investigate options and follow through. Stuck with a single public school (for example, in a remote location with only one school) those parents tend to get involved in the school and make it better. The deciding factor isn't choice - it's parental involvement, combined with socio-economic level and parental, especially maternal, education level.

Which is to say, the American school system is being systematically dismantled on the back of a well-spun lie.

On to the Ontario-specific stuff.

First, while we don't call it tenure, effectively, Ontario teachers have it; once you've been teaching two years in Ontario, the process to get rid of you is long and arduous and almost never happens. This has its upsides and downsides. Upside: teachers don't have to kiss principal or superintendent ass in order to keep their jobs, and they have protection from firing if a parent complains. Downside: it's incredibly hard to get rid of a bad teacher, and entirely possible to coast through the last few years of your job until retirement. I'd like to see more principals take the bull by the horns and get rid of the people who shouldn't be there, because the mechanisms to do so do exist and I'd like young, enthusiastic people to get a shot at full-time jobs. Getting rid of tenure is a bad idea, though. It's there for a lot of good reasons.

The Ministry of Education officially discourages in-school tracking at the elementary level; that is, schools rarely track all the C students into one grade two class and all the A and B students into another. The accepted wisdom is that mixed-ability classes work better, because they allow for a variety of groupings within the class. So, just because the students are all in the same class, it doesn't mean they're all working on the same work. The kids who are struggling with reading will get small-group instruction geared to their reading level, while those who are more adept will focus on different reading strategies on harder texts to improve their comprehension. As students progress, they can move through groups fluidly, because the groups should be changing all the time. The single most important feature of these classrooms is class size: it's very, very difficult to meet student needs in a diverse classroom once those class sizes start creeping up. At the moment, Ontario has a cap of 20 students per class in primary classes, but there is no cap in the junior grades and some junior teachers find themselves teaching thirty or even thirty-five grade fours - kids who, the year before, were in a class half that size. (If ETFO, the elementary teacher's union, is on the ball, this will be an election issue. If not, it will be an issue in contract negotiations next year, and if those negotiations are with a Conservative government, we'll be looking at a strike. But I digress.)

So, officially, no tracking at the class level in elementary. I know it still happens occasionally, especially in very large schools with many classes per grade, and in cases where teachers and principals are trying to make up split-grade classes. I suspect all the grade 4s in this year's 3/4 split will be fairly independent workers who can be set at a task and keep at it on their own, because the grade 3s can then get more of the teacher's attention (and this year, they need it.) But those are decisions that do not affect any future year, just class placement in one specific grade.

This changes in high school. Ontario streams starting in grade nine, into three streams. The top stream is called "academic," and basically is for the kids who are university-bound. The next is called "applied" and is supposed to be for college-bound kids, or kids who will go into a trade. In practice, it's the warehouse stream for kids who are struggling and tuning out. The remaining stream is a spec. ed. stream for those who came from special classes in elementary, I believe.

This issue is the elephant in the room of Ontario education: there's a gap the size of the Grand Canyon down the middle of grade eight and grade nine, and kids are falling in on a regular basis. It's extremely difficult to get out of one stream once you're in it, partly because you won't know the things you need to know to do the work in the next stream up, and partly because the guidance counsellors and teachers tend to take placement in a stream as a statement of ability and counsel parents and kids to maintain that established order. The high school teachers are not getting the literacy training that the elementary teachers are getting, nor the emphasis on constructivist methods, so the kids who are doing all right with support in grade eight come to grade nine to discover that absolutely everything they thought they knew about school has changed, and nobody can tell them how. The lessons are set up differently, the work expected of them is different, the level of teacher interaction or help is different, the process of improving work is different, and most of their teachers act like they should know all this because it's always been this way. We're in desperate need of high school reform to match the elementary reform we've already had under the McGuinty government. (He hasn't been perfect, but as political regimes go, he's been the best we've had since Bill Davis was education minister.)

The other big issue is standardized testing. In Ontario it's called EQAO - Education Quality and Accountability Office - and it happens in grades three, six, nine, and a literacy test in grade ten. You're right, I'm not letting Elizabeth write it. It won't tell me anything I don't know about her already or can't find out from less intrusive means, and the testing is used to hurt schools and teachers by pitting them against each other. I'll vote for any party that promises to reduce or eliminate EQAO, especially the grade three testing. This is the only spot in which the accusation of tracking fits in Ontario elementary schools: grade three EQAO results are predictive of high school graduation rates more than 90% of the time. That is, a student who does poorly (a level one or two) on EQAO in grade three has less than a 30% chance of graduating high school, while a student who does well (level three or four) has close to an 80% chance of graduating. And yet, most of the deficits in education at the grade 3 level could be remediated. There's no good reason why a kid who is reading at a grade two level in grade three can't succeed over time; she's off to a slow start but that's not statistically indicative that she can't do it, only that she needs more time. By pigeonholing them with EQAO, we're creating a self-fulfilling prophecy. They don't succeed because they know they didn't and therefore believe they can't.

To sum up, I'll say that the situation in Ontario is dramatically better than the American situation overall, though of course there are pockets in both countries where the norm doesn't hold. Ontario is near the top on the measures of school systems in North America, and holds its own against European counterparts, coming in the top ten. We've got a good public system that has improved dramatically in the last ten years. The trick now is to keep from voting in the people who want to take it down the American path.

[identity profile] stress-kitten.livejournal.com 2011-08-17 06:43 am (UTC)(link)
Not necessarily. Private school teachers (and remember that private schools themselves run the gamut... some private school teachers will be paid equivalent or more than public school, depending on sector and prestige of the school, some less) have a number of factors at play other than $$$.

In a private school, you quite frequently have a different discipline policy. You have the ability to expel students who don't conform to the behaviour policies. You frequently have smaller class sizes, better discipline procedures, more involved parents (which can be a blessing and a curse), families who value education and are paying for it, meaning they expect their children to be doing well and there's a family value on education. These families have the money to send their child to private school, and while some families will be working two jobs to make tuition costs, it means they're in easy enough circumstances to make those tuition payments that leads to better world-experiences for the child and a greater background knowledge. This leads to less disparity in the classroom, and for those schools that do accept students with learning disabilities, there's usually adequate support for the student, since the paying parents wouldn't accept any other situation. In some cases, this means that the student with the learning disability is paying higher tuition costs in order to attend. You don't have to count your photo copies, and worry about supplies.

This means that student learning conditions, and thus teacher WORKING conditions, are often much higher... but it comes with some other downsides. No union to back you up. In a good school, this isn't an issue. If an admin takes a dislike to you, this can be an issue. Your autonomy in the classroom may be less than you'd like professionally. And I've heard plenty of horror stories from my private school teacher friends about pushy, abusive parents of the entitled sort, and nasty, soul-sapping school politics.

So... private school teacher turn over? I'd imagine it's dependent on region and type of school. I have friends who love their private school posts, and I have friends who couldn't wait to get out and get into the public sector where they could expect at least consistency of the parameters.

[identity profile] velvetpage.livejournal.com 2011-08-17 11:46 am (UTC)(link)
*nods* I'm in a similar bind in one respect. The fact that French Immersion exists means that there is no pressure on non-French Immersion schools to teach French for fluency. Schools like the one where I teach can truck along on their own with no oversight or help for their French programs unless the teacher seeks out that help. This means that if I want my children to learn fluent French - something that is completely within the power of a well-trained French teacher teaching French for forty minutes a day - I have to violate my own principles and send them to French Immersion.

The choices made at an individual level for one's own children are what they are, and I don't fault individual parents for taking advantage of the choices that are out there. I fault the system (and often, those who make decisions for the system from outside it) for being bad enough that they'd feel the need to do so and unresponsive to their concerns. "If you don't like it, go somewhere else" is a really bad mantra for a public school.

[identity profile] velvetpage.livejournal.com 2011-08-17 11:52 am (UTC)(link)
All of what [livejournal.com profile] stress_kitten said, with the caveat that private schools are far less common in my neck of the woods because the public school system is really good. I do know that unqualified teachers often start out working in a private school, go to teachers' college on the back of that experience, and then seek a job in the public system because around here, it pays considerably more over time.

[identity profile] kisekileia.livejournal.com 2011-08-17 02:16 pm (UTC)(link)
Okay, upon further reflection, I'm going to concede one point.

I think it's possible that kids around the middle of the ability spectrum--say, within one or one and a half standard deviations of the mean--could be productively educated in the same classroom if the type of educational disservice we're discussing did not occur. I'm willing to accept that kids who aren't at the extreme ends of the ability spectrum may be able to handle fairly similar work if they are all given adequate support.

However, I'm still adamant that kids who are highly gifted or seriously intellectually delayed are not ideally served by placement in a regular class, with the possible exception of intellectually delayed kids who have an EA to teach them a totally different curriculum. Even if the regular curriculum was adjusted to meet your needs, you still didn't get the opportunity to interact with peers at your intellectual level at school, and the cross-pollination of ideas and mutual intellectual stimulation that happen when intellectually gifted people interact with each other (like here!) are, IMO, incredibly valuable. It's also much easier to adjust reading materials for a different difficulty level than to adjust other curricula--just give the kid different books. Would you not have benefitted from being taught how to write academic essays about books at an earlier than normal age, or from discussing the material you were reading with other kids of similar ability?

I actually had problems even in gifted classes with material being too easy, sometimes because the teacher or school was reluctant to teach above grade level (this was most common in math), and sometimes because there were a wide range of achievement levels even within gifted classes and the teachers didn't know how to do differentiated instruction. If I had been in regular classes, the problems would have been exponentially worse--I would have had no peers who were anywhere near me in achievement level, and none of the curricula would have been relevant to me. Honestly, I think if it hadn't been for gifted classes, there would have been no point in sending me to school until at least middle school and maybe even high school, because I wouldn't have learned anything much.

Maybe the Peel school board in the '90s was exceptionally bad at differentiated instruction, but I'm not yet familiar with any evidence suggesting that differentiated instruction can address the huge ability gaps that happen when you put highly gifted or seriously intellectually delayed students in a regular classroom. I think it is probably really valuable for addressing the differences among kids who are not too far from average ability levels, and for addressing the differences among gifted or delayed kids, but I'm really not convinced that you can ever profitably put kids like me and kids like Teri in the same classroom.

[identity profile] kisekileia.livejournal.com 2011-08-17 02:30 pm (UTC)(link)
I agree that controlling for poor scholastic experiences would be necessary to determine whether there are large gaps in ability among non-special needs kids, but I don't know whether it's even possible to do that, let alone whether it has been done.

My understanding is that aptitude tests, for all their flaws, generally obtain results with a roughly normal distribution. Whether the differences among kids within, say, 1.5 standard deviations of the mean are enough to mean that they couldn't all be educated in the same class with proper support, I'm no longer sure. I'm willing to admit that Erin is much more familiar both with what kids of average ability are like and with what differentiated instruction makes possible than I am, so I concede that it may be possible to educate everyone in that middle range together.

The differences between kids at the extreme high and low ends of the normal distribution, and kids near the mean, are...I'm not sure whether anyone's really tried to quantify them, but I'm also not really sure how anyone can seriously question that they exist. If everybody could learn equally well if given adequate support, why do we even have diagnoses of intellectual disability or learning disabilities? Why is it that some kids raised in educationally optimal environments do fine in regular classes, and others feel bored and stifled because the work is too easy? I'm not sure where to go looking for the data on this now that I don't have access to a university database, but I'm also honestly confused at how anyone can look at highly gifted or seriously intellectually disabled kids, and not see that there's something different about them that optimal education for everyone wouldn't cancel out. I'm sorry if this looks like a cop-out on my part, and maybe it is, but I also feel pretty intimidated by the task of researching this and I kind of need to devote emotional energy to other things (like finding a job) right now.

[identity profile] kisekileia.livejournal.com 2011-08-17 02:56 pm (UTC)(link)
You and Erin might be interested in The National Association for Gifted Children's position papers (http://www.nagc.org/index2.aspx?id=375), particularly the ones on acceleration, grouping, and curriculum differentiation.

[identity profile] amazonvera.livejournal.com 2011-08-17 03:26 pm (UTC)(link)
I did learn to write academic essays early, my writing was evaluated and graded based on my ability, and there were other peers at or near my intellectual level in my classes with whom I got to converse. I also got a lot out of conversing with all of my peers.

Because so many schools, like, you, don't believe all of the evidence showing that differentiated instruction works, most of them are indeed "exceptionally bad at it."

No one is arguing that "significantly intellectually delayed" kids shouldn't receive special education services. Those children are a small minority in pretty much any mainstream school, though.

[identity profile] amazonvera.livejournal.com 2011-08-17 03:28 pm (UTC)(link)
I'm actually not terribly interested in how ideologically specific special interest groups like the NAGC feel about how general education should be handled. They have a pretty inherent bias.

[identity profile] kisekileia.livejournal.com 2011-08-17 03:30 pm (UTC)(link)
Could you link to some of said evidence, please?

[identity profile] amazonvera.livejournal.com 2011-08-17 03:33 pm (UTC)(link)
I think that it's interesting that you're willing to concede that Erin's superior familiarity with both teaching and differentiated instruction only make you willing to "concede that it may be possible to educate everyone in that middle range together" when that's not what she's saying.

I have to say that conceding that you have no evidence for the basic thesis of your assertion, let alone the assertion itself, that it's unlikely to even exist, and that someone arguing the opposite position has superior experience in this specific area and has offered evidence but still insisting that you must be right and they must be wrong looks exactly like a cop-out.

[identity profile] amazonvera.livejournal.com 2011-08-17 03:33 pm (UTC)(link)
Erin has already referred you back to it.

[identity profile] kisekileia.livejournal.com 2011-08-17 03:39 pm (UTC)(link)
Wait a sec. I am the only one in this entire thread who has linked to a source outside their own experience and knowledge (I've gone through everything Erin's pointed me at and haven't found any outside links), and you dismiss the expertise in gifted education of a group specializing in gifted students by referring to them as an "ideologically specific special interest group"? Sorry, but I'm not interested in engaging with you further.

[identity profile] amazonvera.livejournal.com 2011-08-17 03:44 pm (UTC)(link)
If you don't see why a group who's main thesis is the need to provide tracked learning for one specific minority groups of students is not an appropriate group to weigh and assess the general merits of integrated and differentiated education, than I don't know what to say to you.

[identity profile] amazonvera.livejournal.com 2011-08-17 03:53 pm (UTC)(link)
I was about to type a long-ass comment, but then, luckily, I read this actual page ;).

What I would add to the above comments is that both private and public school pay rates, especially in the U.S., vary widely, with public teachers in the most challenging areas typically being paid the least because of how our school funding structure works. Turnover also varies widely from school to school.

In a private school, not only can they filter students (and student actually come largely pre-filtered), you can expel a problem parent. If a parent is causing a giant stink over something inappropriate, you can tell them that they're welcome to choose another school. Also, while few private schools have teaching unions, many have specific board-enforced arbitration, whistle-blowing, and collective staff representation policies. In general, there are fewer pressures and still a significant number of protections.

[identity profile] aelf.livejournal.com 2011-08-17 04:35 pm (UTC)(link)
This is interesting, thank you! Lots of stuff to think about.

[identity profile] velvetpage.livejournal.com 2011-08-17 10:57 pm (UTC)(link)
It also doesn't make sense to say that all students are capable of the same level of success.

I think this part may be a part of the problem we're having with understanding. I do not think that all students are capable of achieving an A+ in university calculus, with any level of support. I do think that almost all students are capable of achieving a B in grade ten academic mathematics, and probably in grade eleven academic mathematics, given the correct supports throughout their academic careers. Some will be capable of A+'s in those areas, and some will require FAR more work than others to achieve the same things. But how we quantify "a high level of success" is crucial to this debate, and my impression is that you're setting the bar somewhat higher than I am.

[identity profile] kisekileia.livejournal.com 2011-08-17 11:01 pm (UTC)(link)
I was thinking in terms of all students being able to take grade 12 university prep calculus and actually learn the material well. Thank you for that clarification. The idea that almost all (definitely not all, but almost all) students can get a B in grade ten academic math with sufficient support seems reasonable to me.

[identity profile] velvetpage.livejournal.com 2011-08-17 11:04 pm (UTC)(link)
To discuss this issue properly, there are a few things you would need to know about Teri. For example, and this is an incomplete list:
* Did she have a central auditory processing disorder that made her unable to process information in the way you were giving it to her, but able to process it better some other way? What did her IEP say about her best modes of learning and how would she have done in French if her IEP were being properly implemented?
* What was her previous experience of French? Did it involve trauma that made her believe she couldn't learn French, or that playing dumber than she was would result in a reward you couldn't see? (For example, was she hoping that if she failed the class, she'd be exempt from French?)
* What was her home life like? Did she get enough to eat and enough sleep? Was she being abused?

Those are off the top of my head. There are potentially many more reasons why Teri may not have been able to learn French at that time, in that way, with you as her primary instructor, that do not indicate she could never possibly under any circumstances master the material to any meaningful level.

[identity profile] velvetpage.livejournal.com 2011-08-17 11:10 pm (UTC)(link)
I suspect that if we actually got to the point where, say, 85% of high school students were achieving a passing grade in grade ten academic math, it would mean that, in turn, 85% of those would be able to handle university-prep calculus. I have no problem with student choice as a streaming method after grade ten; that is, I would rather see different strands of mathematics offered than different levels, but if a student wanted to focus on financial math in grade eleven rather than intro to trigonometry, at that point I wouldn't care too much. That's partly because if they change their minds later, the difference is two courses, not four or more as it is if they're streamed into applied math in grade nine.

[identity profile] velvetpage.livejournal.com 2011-08-17 11:13 pm (UTC)(link)
The same argument applies whether in math or other subjects. I used math as an example because it's the subject in which I read most of the studies on which I'm basing my position.

[identity profile] kisekileia.livejournal.com 2011-08-18 12:23 am (UTC)(link)
Those are really interesting points, not all of which I'd considered. I don't understand how anyone could not understand the explanation I described giving, but that's one of the reasons I'm not a teacher :P.

[identity profile] kisekileia.livejournal.com 2011-08-18 12:28 am (UTC)(link)
Upon further reflection today, I could maybe see this working for kids from five to fifteen if kids at the extreme upper and lower ends of the distribution were excluded and if all kids were given high support from an early age. I don't think you could just put ninth and tenth graders with what are currently typical rates of educational neglect into non-streamed classes and have it work, but I'm prepared to concede that it might be possible if educational neglect were eliminated and really exceptional kids were excluded.

[identity profile] velvetpage.livejournal.com 2011-08-18 12:29 am (UTC)(link)
If she had a central auditory processing deficit, expecting her to learn primarily through oral explanation is like expecting an ADHD person to be able to manage their paperwork if they're just taught the right routines for organizing it in binders.

[identity profile] kisekileia.livejournal.com 2011-08-18 12:31 am (UTC)(link)
That seems reasonable to me. I suspect some of those students would need a lot of support to handle university-prep calculus, but my OAC calculus course was batshit crazy intense--it basically crammed OAC calculus plus a pretty good chunk of University of Waterloo first year calculus into one semester--so I may not have a good idea of how difficult the current university-prep calculus course is.

[identity profile] velvetpage.livejournal.com 2011-08-18 12:31 am (UTC)(link)
That was pretty much my point.

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