Showing posts with label teaching. Show all posts
Showing posts with label teaching. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 21, 2014

Common Core, Commonly Misunderstood


I came across the following op-ed article “Why I Want to Give Up Teaching” in The Hartford Courant this Sunday. The author, Ms. Elizabeth Natale, is a middle school Language Arts teacher who feels that Connecticut’s move toward adopting the Common Core State Standards (CCSS) is so discouraging as to have her seriously contemplating quitting her teaching career.   

In reading her article, I’ll admit, a small part of me thought that this fellow educator may be on to something, that the Common Core when paired with the new State demands for accountability may have taken a lot of joy out of going to work. However, that was only a small part of me that felt this way; and fleetingly at that. Mostly, I couldn’t help but wonder how well Ms. Natale understands the goals and requirements of the Common Core State Standards and if she simply isn’t overreacting, much in the same way our students sometimes do when feeling overwhelmed by new and unfamiliar learning.

As interesting to me have been the comments and reactions more than a few people have given in support of her op-ed article. For the record, I haven’t bothered to follow up on these accounts myself. I learned about the support the article received on Facebook and in face-to-face conversations from my wife. Still, it doesn’t surprise me that many a teacher would rally around an article and stance such as this one, as misguided it may be.

Below is my reply to Ms. Natale’s op-ed article. I have submitted it to the Hartford Courant in the hopes that it will reach the same audience Ms. Natale’s article reached because I believe her article to be damaging to peoples’ perception of the Common Core. Her article lacks accuracy and plays too strongly on emotional, rather than factual, appeal. My modest explanation of why such an article, while passionate, needs some counterbalancing follows:

Common Core, Commonly Misunderstood

In reading Ms. Natale’s op-ed piece, “Why I Want to Give Up Teaching”, I found myself wondering if her reaction to the changing winds isn’t a bit extreme, or at least misguided. Yes, the Common Core State Standards (CCSS) are both different and more demanding than the focuses and assessments of the Connecticut Mastery Test (CMT) and the Connecticut Academic Performance Test (CAPT), but in examining her article closely, it appears that at best she misunderstands the CCSS, and, at worst, holds a skewed interpretation of them. 

Natale writes “The Common Core standards require teachers to march lockstep in arming students with ‘21st-century skills.’". I can understand how it may appear that teachers are to move in “lock-step”, but that isn’t correct. The standards are the final outcome all students must be able to demonstrate; and how you, as a proven and effective educator, work to get them to that point is up to you and your district. 

By way of example, consider the commonly done science activity of dropping an egg from a two-story building so as to have it survive the fall unscathed. Students, for this activity, are given the same materials and the exact same goal (help Humpty Dumpty survive his fall). However, how they cobble together their materials to accomplish this feat is entirely up to their clever minds as paired to their grasp of the laws of motion, velocity, air resistance, and so on. That is not “lock-step” education, as she’s painted it, because only the outcome is the same, everything leading up to it is on the teacher to implement –however she deems it best to do so. (Interestingly, one could actually make the case that because the CCSS only provides teachers with student goals, and not the body of knowledge, skills, and materials needed to meet the goal, it is actually too vague and open to teacher creativity to be useful to a teacher.)

In the same paragraph, Ms. Natale continues with: “In English, emphasis on technology and nonfiction reading makes it more important for students to prepare an electronic presentation on how to make a paper airplane than to learn about moral dilemmas from Natalie Babbitt's beloved novel ‘Tuck Everlasting.’" True, the CCSS asks that teachers help students become more proficient with technology. Again, this seems to make sense in our technologically growing and dependent world; and, frankly, most of our children embrace technology as their preferred means of learning and communicating, but where Natale strays too far for my sensibilities is with her claim that it is more important for students to share their understanding of the paper airplane over the moral dilemmas presented in Natalie Babbitt’s wonderful classic Tuck Everlasting. It just isn’t so. 

Time spent studying the issues that can be culled from Tuck Everlasting -and any other moral dilemma presented in written fiction and non-fiction- is completely welcome within the realm of the CCSS. The CCSS devotes one of its three forms of writing and discussion to helping students learn to interpret and write in the argumentative style. Indeed, it is highly prized by the CCSS, as helping students pull complex ideas and issues like those from a text, then guiding them through discussion of them, and finally leading them to form their own well-supported opinions of them is part of the Common Core standards. As example: the key dilemma in Tuck Everlasting is one of immortality. The idea of living forever sounds great, but as students read Babbitt’s book, they begin to really wrangle with the idea of it, the pros and cons of immortality. The CCSS is very much okay with this and might only ask that a teacher bring in some real-world examples where living a long life is both good and bad: Japan’s aging population and the incredible medical advancements that are extending our lives would be two relevant and interesting examples to pair up with Tuck Everlasting, not supplant it.

This idea that the Common Core is asking teachers to stop teaching a particular book is well off base. The Common Core is blind to the specific books and articles a school or teacher uses. It wants critical thinkers that can read and write well by using any of today’s technologies as tools. 

On Natale’s comment that the CCSS emphasizes non-fiction reading and writing over fiction. This is essentially true, in part because it is the most prevalent type of reading done in college. Even in a Liberal Arts program, students will read a great deal from non-fiction. It makes entire sense to help prepare our students for this setting since we want our students to attend and graduate from a college. “College readiness” is frequently used in the CCSS documentation as rationale for the goals is has set.

Also worth considering, though it is not directly written by the architects of the CCSS as a reason for pushing more non-fiction reading into classrooms, non-fiction reading and writing are often given short-shrift by Language Arts teachers. Many a Language Arts teacher presumes their main responsibility rests in developing a love of stories, novels, plays, poetry and other fiction-focused materials with their students. On this, I completely understand where Ms. Natale is coming from, because I also hold that same framework in my head: Language Arts teacher equals reading classic stories, plays, poetry, et al., Where Natale appears to misunderstand the call for more non-fiction reading and writing in our classrooms is in her supposition that it is the sole responsibility of a Language Arts teacher to develop it. 

Nowhere is something like that written in the CCSS. In fact, the opposite is true. Reading and writing non-fiction is to be a share load, shared with the sciences, mathematics, foreign languages, technologies, and arts departments in her middle school setting. This is clearly borne out when one examines the standards for each of the disciplines covered in the CCSS. Everyone is responsible for helping our young leaners read and write well from non-fiction sources. When that notion sinks in and becomes common practice across a district, a Language Arts teacher’s work load should actually lessen.  

I can, of course, only surmise as to why Ms. Natale believes she needs to throw out much of her fiction-focused reading for non-fiction reading. Maybe she suffers from what many Language Arts teachers suffer from: the affliction of believing that all reading and writing, whether fiction or non-fiction, falls to an English teacher to develop with students, that no teacher of science could teach writing. As written already, that isn’t to be the case. Maybe she feels it won’t be addressed by the other subject-specific departments in her school? It’s a fair concern, but good leadership within her district will ensure that this charge is shared.
  
I happen to know one of West Hartford’s two Language Arts directors quite well, a former director of mine, Mrs. Catherine Buchholz, and have great trust in her ability to help Ms. Natale and similarly worried educators in West Hartford understand that all is not lost because education is taking a different tact. I’m confident that she understands that every department has a hand in meeting the CCSS goals. And, in reading another Courant article, “Learning Curve in the Schools”, (regarding how teachers, parents, and administrators are all working to understand what moving to the CCSS entails) I see that West Hartford’s other Language Arts Director, Mr. Tom Paleologopoulos, understands that the shift to the CCSS doesn’t mean fiction is dead. "We will still be reading Hamlet. We're not going to stop reading The Great Gatsby in 11th grade or To Kill a Mockingbird," said Tom Paleologopoulos, English department supervisor at Conard High School….” 

The CCSS is only asking that a little more focus be directed to developing non-fiction reading and writing than fiction. Is that worth walking away from a profession you love, and, from what I’ve read, seem to be quite dedicated to?

I suspect that Ms. Natale is dealing with a situation many of her students find themselves in when confronted with something new and daunting, the stress and fear of trying to absorb something quite foreign and novel. Teachers call that scary moment, when trying to get a handle on new instruction feels like trying to speak a language you’ve never heard before, cognitive dissonance, really just a fancy phrase for being unsettled by what isn’t immediately understood. 

Again, she is nowhere near being alone on this front. I work for the Glastonbury School system and have heard similar notes of concern and frustration from colleagues. Within our Language Arts department, which I am privileged to be a part of, many of us on the other side of the river have wondered a great deal too about how our students will perform on the CCSS assessment known as Smarter Balanced, SBAC for short. We’ve taken the practice assessments and laughed and gnashed teeth over the unfamiliar vocabulary and complex steps our students will need to work through just to complete various parts of the assessment. We’ve raised eyebrows of doubt that the results will be valid, empathized with the challenges students will face as they attempt to negotiate the test online with its small writing windows and need to move this way and that to locate questions, and we’ve even wondered a whole lot about how we’re expected to help prepare our students for an assessment that is literally being built and refined as we head into taking it this year, our pilot year. 

So, while we are as frustrated as the next Language Arts educator out there, we are also learning to step back and understand that this is new for us too. That part of our angst comes from its newness. Glastonbury teachers and administrators are also working to keep a perspective by realizing that as the next few years come to pass and all the different grades levels before and after us make changes toward implementing approaches that help our students to meet the CCSS standards, we’ll wonder how we ever taught another way. Nothing is second nature at this point, eventually it will be and the stress will lessen. (Stress never really disappears in education.)

I know that I try to maintain my focus on this change by remembering that the Connecticut Mastery Test went through four generations of changes over a period of twenty years before settling on a final assessment method that it deemed valid and reliable. SBAC will be no different. 

Ms. Natale, as a colleague across the river, know that you’re not alone in your frustrations; and, as a resident of West Hartford, please consider re-evaluating your stance regarding your professional career in light of these clarifications.

Ralph Lagana is a reading specialist for the Glastonbury School system. He works at Gideon Welles School and sometimes writes for his “semi-professional” blog Reading Teacher (CT). You can contact him at laganar@glastonburyus.org.

Friday, September 21, 2012

Touching a Touchy Subject: Banned Books



Remember when you were a kid and your mom would yell, "Don't touch!" Well, like any kid warned not touch something, I'm going to go right ahead and do it anyway -one of the better ways to learn, I guess.

I have a strong disposition against the banning of books.

That's my personal opinion; one which I very much live up to in my house with my children. I have never forbidden them from reading a particular book. Read that sentence well, now. This doesn't mean I trot all kinds of age-inappropriate materials out for them to read, because I do not. I merely respect their curiosities when it comes to books -books which might be too mature for them- and try not to play mom, yelling, "Don't touch!" I stick to providing a father's opinion. "I'd probably be interested in this too when I was your age, but you should know that it has some rough words and scenes to it. Are you sure you don't want to wait until you're a little older?" Again, this is my opinion as a father of three and lover of the printed word.
 
As a teacher, of course, my stance on books and their availability to students differs. And, if one wants to stretch the imagination a bit, one could say I nearly participate in the banning of books all the time, because as a teacher of reading, I make decisions everyday on which books are best suited for a particular level and type of reader; thus removing certain titles from my student's hands because I have to consider their content and  age-appropriateness. I am very much okay and respectful of this as a professional. I'll wager that not a week goes by when I don't say, "You know, you may not be ready for this book just yet. Let's search some more." Or, "Hmm... I'm glad you're interested in reading this book, but this is one you need to have your mom or dad approve of first." Such is the job of any educator. We put aside our opinions to serve the whole, seeking to respect everyone in the process. And, it generally works.
                 
Generally.

Enfield schools recently made waves when banning a book from its summer reading list because one parent objected to it.

One.
               
Enfield High School removed Matthew Loux's graphic novel SideScrollers because one parent found the language too profane. This despite the fact that the book, which has anti-drinking and anti-bullying themes, received the honor of being rated a Top Ten Graphic Novel for Teens by the American Library Association.

Personally, I have difficulty understanding Enfield School's choice. One parent should not be able to overturn a reading list vetted by professional teachers. I write this because it goes against the entire idea of serving the whole and -most importantly- respecting everyone in the process. The decision to pull the book from the list because of one voice ignored the collective voices of teachers, as well as, the larger community that tacitly accepted the title in not speaking against it.

Thankfully, there are others -many others- willing to come to the table to fairly and thoughtfully try to ascertain how the greater community feels about having this particular title on its high school reading list. The Comic Book Legal Defense Fund has joined together with the Kids Right to Read Project to see that Enfield schools at least reconsiders its initial decision. 

I applaud this. Me, personally. Maybe you feel differently? 

Either way you can and should read the details of this book banning decision as it is presented on the Comic Book Legal Defense Fund website. Mr. Charles Brownstein, Executive Director of the Comic Book Legal Defense Fund, has posted an excellent account of the matter, including a superbly crafted letter which was sent to the Enfield School District this month.

Additional note: I do make chartable donations each year to the Comic Book Legal Defense Fund. I am incredibly fond of graphic novels (as evidenced by some of my posts) and I believe the work they carry out benefits everyone who likes to read.

Sunday, February 13, 2011

Kindles Can Do

     After a period of considering and testing several other portable reading platforms, I ended up exactly where I had originally planned when applying for a grant to fund eReaders for my young readers. After buying and trying the Nook, the result is we've become a Kindle-toting classroom.
     After the perfunctory introduction to all the little buttons and tasks a Kindle can perform, the students have settled into reading from them as they would any other print -albeit with a few positive wrinkles.

* We all have a voice: Kindles offer a voice-assisted reading program, which when activated  translates displayed text into audio. Several students make regular use of this feature and appear to enjoy it. Personally, I find the computer-assisted reading feature off-putting, but that's me.
* Swiss-knife eReading: Many students have been interacting well with their Kindles by making use of the ever-present dictionary. When they discover a word that confuses them during read, they can move a cursor to a spot just before the word and then glance to the bottom of the viewing window. There they will find a suggested word meaning in a slim pop-up window. This is one of the least intrusive ways I've seen for learning about challenging word and I like it a lot. The Kindle is like a Swiss-knife reading unit in this way because it has all you need, and more, packed into a portable package.
* Chocolate Sampler: The students have explored almost 25 books in only a few classes using their Kindles. The ability to download a sample for almost any new book has been awesome, because while my room is filled with books, which students can easily examine, I couldn't possibly fund bringing in all the latest books for review. The Kindle can and, unlike a laptop, presents all of this in one easy-to-survey glance. Students have poked their minds into many books samples to date such as Woods Runner by Gary Paulsen, Models Don't Eat Chocolate Cookies by Erin Dionne, and Sharks by Peter Benchley -none of which I have in my room in hard copy. Of these three titles, I've ordered the latter two because interest in them has been significant. Sadly, and maybe only for the moment, Paulsen's Woods Runner is not in demand. His book, apparently, is the butter creme of the bunch for this discerning group of readers.
* Making the Most Cents: Another powerful aspect of having Kindles has been the number of copies I have been able to bring into it with a simple click of a button. When I noticed the book Boost was a hit with students in other classrooms, I made that my first Kindle purchase. It cost 9.99, which seems fair, at first, and then quickly became a steal of a deal when I transferred 5 more copies of the book at no additional cost to four other Kindles. (Most ebooks allow for 5-10 copies to be used at a time from one an account.) So, the real math worked out to less that two bucks a book, which makes the most (sorry) cents to anyone running a classroom and promoting reading. I now have about half my students reading Boost and being in a position to share their reading experience. Thus, for 10 bucks I have 5 happy readers. Excellent stuff!

     It's not all been perfect in this early going. Because I have ebooks spread unequally across several Kindles and far more students than Kindles, I've had to track which person is reading from which Kindle. Then everyone has had to learn the art of recording a location number to find their place for when they return to their book a few days later. Also, while the American and Oxford dictionaries are excellent sources for finding definitions, many continue to be too difficult for the younger audience. I wish there was an intermediate version available for installation. I'd happily pay for those to be on each Kindle. Still, these are minor nuisances when compared to how well they're enjoyed in the classroom.

     Maybe your child has come home asking about one already? I will say that -if you can swing it financially- it worth buying one. And, there's a chance Kindles will drop to 99 dollars by the summer as that seems to be a good price point to sell even more. 


Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Age Banding

The United Kingdom is holding a very interesting discussion which may affect you. In short, book publishing companies are looking into the idea of rating their books the same way movies and video games are rated. This is called "age banding".

Age banding basically means they're going to rate books in a way that suggests what age should be reading them. Their plan, at least for now, works as follows: Early will stand for children 5+, Confident will stand for children ages 9+, and Fluent will stand for children 9+. I'm not sure I understand the labels they're thinking about using beyond Early. 

Word choice is VERY important and labeling books "confident" and "fluent" makes me worry that more negative attachments will come with those labels than positive ones. For example, "fluent" suggests that a child who can read all the words on the page is automatically ready for the 9 and up books. This is not always true. It also cuts another way. There may be pressure to move a child up to a book labeled fluent when he or she is not ready for it; or voices of derision for a child enjoying a book deemed "below" his/her age.

Banding opens the door for many other labels to land on books. As it is now, there are sometimes "age appropriate" labels on books, and/or reading levels given to them. These are simplistic labels and as a highly experienced reading teacher -oh and reader- I often question the validity of either form of labeling. I've come across plenty of books claiming to be one reading level but are in fact either much higher or lower than claimed. Besides, reading levels do not tell us anything about the complexity of the content inside.

I do see merits to age banding at times. Video games are a pretty solid example. But books aren't video games. Books are a different matter entirely. As you may suspect, I love the printed word. I do not withhold any materials in my home because I feel that if I do this, then they only want the books in question all the more. I'm fine with my children trying books, which the age-banding publishers might deem above their age range, on their own. What happens is that they either put it down (too confusing or boring) or find  this "difficult" book, interesting enough that they then begin to push themselves as readers. Awesome!

We live in an age where SO MUCH is available to use when it comes to learning the appropriateness and content of books that it seems completely out of touch to STEP BACK with simple, age banding, labels. Take 5 minutes, scan Amazon from home or your iPhone, and then decide if a book is a good match for your child. There you get a book's themes, reading/age levels, reviews, and a chance to sample the text yourself.
I've got some strong feelings on this topic, but I would love to hear what you think about this idea. Maybe I'm overreacting.

I leave you with a quote from C.S. Lewis, which is also the pretext for the No-to-Age-Banding website.
... the neat sorting-out of books into age ranges, so dear to publishers, has only a very sketchy relation with the habits of any real readers. Those of us who are blamed when old for reading childish books were blamed when children for reading books too old for us. No reader worth his salt trots along in obedience to a time-table.

CS Lewis (1952 essay On three ways of writing for children, collected in Of Other Worlds (latest edition, Harvest Books 2002)

-Mr. Lagana