Saturday, August 09, 2014

Wanna Be A Great Teacher? Get A Log!

Supposedly, President James A. Garfield said that the ideal college education would be "Mark Hopkins on one end of a log and a student on the other." Garfield had been a student at Williams College when Hopkins taught there (and later become the school's president). So much for an old school definition of great teaching when the present mania to quantify good teaching with student test scores has produced a mob of "teaching the test" grinders in classrooms across the land. In the meantime, Dumbos yammer for charter schools and school choice because they hope that the charter schools will insert some religion when state school officials aren't looking. The denigration of public education has become a blood sport for the Dumbo/Teabagger cretins. If this is (fair & balanced)skepticism of "scjool reform," so be it.

[x The Atlantic]
Are Great Teachers Born Or Made?
By Nick Romeo

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One of the best teachers in Elizabeth Green’s new book, Building a Better Teacher (2014), uses an analogy to convey the intricacy and difficulty of her craft. “Every single time I get on a plane,” she says, “I’m really glad that the plane is not being flown by someone who just always loved planes.... But that’s what we do in this country. We take people who are committed to children, and we say... work on it, figure it out.”

This is just one of many comparisons that teachers make in Green’s book. They also liken their profession to surgery, general medicine, nursing, professional athletics, and even chamber music. The metaphors converge on the same point: Not only is teaching technically demanding, its complex component skills can be studied, isolated, practiced, and ultimately improved. Teaching, in short, can be taught.

Such a claim might not seem particularly controversial, but popular culture promotes the idea that good teachers possess a kind of magical, ineffable charisma. An entire genre of films, from "Stand and Deliver" to "Freedom Writers," presents teachers as alchemists, working miracles of transformation not only through dedication but through brilliance and pure charm.

There have been countless efforts to strip away this mystique. Teach for America presents prospective teachers with a document listing the 24 elements of good teaching. Educator and best-selling author Doug Lemov spent years compiling the “Taxonomy of Effective Teaching Practices” featured in his book Teach Like a Champion (2010).

Others have been even more exhaustive: Magdalene Lampert, a longtime trainer of teachers, wrote a dense and detailed 500-page book (2003) that documents a single year inside a classroom. The most ambitious of these efforts bring to mind the Jorge Luis Borges short story “On Exactitude In Science,” [PDF] in which cartographers try to design maps so precise that they describe the terrain down to the most infinitesimal point.

Green takes a more nuanced approach, emphasizing that there is no single magic method that can transform any teacher. Instead, she argues for the teachability of teaching with a host of case studies, research findings, and cross-cultural comparisons. Her conclusions are persuasive, but only to a point. A huge gulf still separates competence from excellence. Can we expect that even the best training will transform a significant number of teachers into the pedagogical equivalents of Kobe Bryant?

It's a worthwhile question, especially since a comparison between teachers and pro athletes runs throughout Green's book. Athletes analyze game film to study what worked in different situations and apply that knowledge when similar circumstances arise in the future. Green tells stories about teachers in Japan who engage in frequent and intense scrutiny of their own practices, arguing convincingly that structured weekly study of filmed lessons would benefit American teachers tremendously.

Some teachers, however, will learn more deeply and effectively than others. They will be better able to anticipate potential sources of students' confusion, to admit and correct their own shortcomings and mistakes, to adapt efficiently to the ever-changing flux of a dynamic classroom.

To return to the sports analogy, an NBA shooting guard can improve by analyzing other athletes. But when it's game time, he'll find himself facing a range of questions: Should he pull up for the perimeter jumper, drive inside to the hoop, drive inside and feed the ball back out to a teammate, or look for a post player in a strong position? The answer will always depend on the strengths of the particular player and his defender, as well as how much time remains in the game and many other factors. In other words, a particular approach tends to work well in a given situation—except when it doesn’t.

This is not because great teaching is some intangible gift, but because—like other intricate and demanding skills, from performing surgery to playing chamber music—it requires a mixture of tenacity and instinct. Does it make sense to interrupt a student whose reply is leading the class away from the relevant point? It depends on the student, the mood in the room, the teacher's personal style, the broader curriculum, and countless other factors.

Some teachers certainly realize this. Others, however, indiscriminately apply methods approved by pedagogical research. One of the least effective teachers I ever encountered had read somewhere that the best way to engage students’ attention was by moving around the room and broadcasting her own love for the subject. Both were potentially good ideas, but she applied them so zealously that many students found her constant motion distracting and her over-the-top enthusiasm bizarre.

The idea that great teachers can be made is appealing for many reasons: It provides hope that our schools can improve and sends the reassuringly democratic message that all of us are fundamentally equal. But self-improvement requires learning, and the undemocratic truth is that some people are better at learning than others.

This is not to say that school districts should fire underperforming teachers instead of offering the sort of slow and careful training that will help them improve. Green’s title is Building a Better Teacher, and making teachers better than they currently are is a reasonable and laudable goal—one that Green’s carefully researched book will surely promote. But it's important to honor the fact that teaching—like any other profession—has its geniuses. Better training could certainly make many mediocre teachers competent, but it’s less likely to make competent teachers extraordinary. Ω

[Nick Romeo is a journalist and cultural critic. He has written profiles for Rolling Stone and Newsweek, book reviews for The Daily Beast and Christian Science Monitor, and his music journalism has appeared in Carnegie Hall's Playbill magazine. He is also the author of two books. His first book (with Lia Romeo) was the internationally released humor book 11,002 Things To Be Miserable About (2009). His second book, Driven: Six Incredible Musical Journeys (2011), is a work of narrative journalism about the future of classical music in America. Romeo received a BA (English) from Northwestern University.]

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