Is B&MG Foundation Admitting They Don't Know Everything?
Update: I'm just going to piggyback on Michael's story which needs some sussing out for full impact (but I'm glad he got to it; I'm behind.)
Here's the letter that the Gates Foundation's CEO, Sue Desmond-Hellman wrote earlier this month. Buried in there are some real gems about public education (couched of course in nuanced language.)
The lead paragraph:
However, all this learning never seemed to get them out of their echo chamber which is their biggest problem.
She goes into talking about Common Core and how it's helping and uses Kentucky as an example. Kentucky was one of the earliest adopters of CC. One thing Ms. Desmond-Hellman leaves out is this (from The Hechinger Report):
Here's where they eat their humble pie:
"identifying or developing Common Core-aligned materials is a challenge."
As for the LA Times editorial, this is big. The LA Times, like the Seattle Times, has a "partnership" relationship for ed reporting. Many people have been troubled by how the Gates Foundation has tried to - well - buy media, create faux teacher and parent groups, etc. In short, control the messaging on public education.
That the LA Times is pushing back was quite a surprise. From the editorial:
end of update
Could this be the breakthrough where the really rich people actually start listening to teachers and parents and stop believing just because they went to school 40 years ago and they have made billions of dollars they have all the answers to public education in the country?
I doubt it, but we can always hope.
Gates Foundation failures show philanthropists shouldn’t be setting America's public school agenda
Here's the letter that the Gates Foundation's CEO, Sue Desmond-Hellman wrote earlier this month. Buried in there are some real gems about public education (couched of course in nuanced language.)
The lead paragraph:
From the beginning, Bill and Melinda wanted their foundation to be a learning organization; one that evolves and course corrects based on evidence. We want to get continually smarter. One of our greatest areas of learning has been our work in K-12 U.S. education.I actually laughed out loud. Well, the Gates Foundation may have "learned" something but it has taken them millions to do so and that "evidence" is more experience in failure. As well, they were using other people's children and schools as their guinea pigs.
However, all this learning never seemed to get them out of their echo chamber which is their biggest problem.
She goes into talking about Common Core and how it's helping and uses Kentucky as an example. Kentucky was one of the earliest adopters of CC. One thing Ms. Desmond-Hellman leaves out is this (from The Hechinger Report):
Once the state introduced the Common Core-aligned tests in the spring of 2012, that percentage dropped 28 points in reading (to 48 percent) and 33 points in math (to 40 percent), according to the Kentucky Department of Education. Middle and high school students’ scores also dropped. Scores have been edging up ever since.Desmond-Hellman also says this:
Despite that improvement, within those numbers are hidden divisions that have existed for decades. Breaking the scores down shows that African-American students fare much worse than their white peers.
And those gaps, in many cases, have widened, according to an analysis of state testing data by The Hechinger Report and the Courier-Journal.
Rigorous standards and high expectations are meaningless if teachers aren’t equipped to help students meet them.Okay then, what has the Gates Foundation done, either verbally or with dollars, to better equip teachers on a systemic level? I can tell you that if Bill Gates went to Olympia and testified before either the Senate or the House education committees about McCleary, they would listen.
Here's where they eat their humble pie:
Unfortunately, our foundation underestimated the level of resources and support required for our public education systems to be well-equipped to implement the standards. We missed an early opportunity to sufficiently engage educators – particularly teachers – but also parents and communities so that the benefits of the standards could take flight from the beginning.Of course, they then blame the confusion/problems around CC implementation on
This has been a challenging lesson for us to absorb, but we take it to heart. The mission of improving education in America is both vast and complicated, and the Gates Foundation doesn’t have all the answers.
"identifying or developing Common Core-aligned materials is a challenge."
As for the LA Times editorial, this is big. The LA Times, like the Seattle Times, has a "partnership" relationship for ed reporting. Many people have been troubled by how the Gates Foundation has tried to - well - buy media, create faux teacher and parent groups, etc. In short, control the messaging on public education.
That the LA Times is pushing back was quite a surprise. From the editorial:
It was a remarkable admission for a foundation that had often acted as though it did have all the answers. Today, the Gates Foundation is clearly rethinking its bust-the-walls-down strategy on education — as it should. And so should the politicians and policymakers, from the federal level to the local, who have given the educational wishes of Bill and Melinda Gates and other well-meaning philanthropists and foundations too much sway in recent years over how schools are run.
Philanthropists are not generally education experts, and even if they hire scholars and experts, public officials shouldn’t be allowing them to set the policy agenda for the nation’s public schools. The Gates experience teaches once again that educational silver bullets are in short supply and that some educational trends live only a little longer than mayflies.I'm with Michael - this could be a breakthrough.
end of update
Could this be the breakthrough where the really rich people actually start listening to teachers and parents and stop believing just because they went to school 40 years ago and they have made billions of dollars they have all the answers to public education in the country?
I doubt it, but we can always hope.
Gates Foundation failures show philanthropists shouldn’t be setting America's public school agenda
Comments
--Stop Bill
I never even thought his software was very good.
S parent
"...We want to get continually smarter...."
-McClureWatcher
I am disappointed at how little time is devoted to fiction/literature in elementary. Most if the year seems to be spent on non-fiction. I am not sure if this a function of the readers writers workshop or the common core.
Opt out news from the Diane Ravitch blog:
Half the juniors in 2 Palo Alto high schools opt out of SBAC
https://dianeravitch.net/2016/06/02/half-the-juniors-in-palo-alto-opt-out/
-nh
I am in complete agreement and Gates will never be held accountable to the voting public.
So his calling card to this work is his money and nothing else.
Second, I think the standards are not too low. There is a lot of emphasis on thinking skills which are much harder to teach than knowledge. I've had high achieving students who are great readers (fluency, to lesser degree vocabulary), but who do not make connections well. Inferences, subtext, connections - these all require competencies that for many kids start at home but for many others do not. They take discussion and multiple experiences to teach all of which takes time.
Also, in math I've had numbers kids who are facile with numbers but couldn't do more than addition, subtraction, multiplication and division. Once they had to think more deeply or make connections as simple as $1.49 = 149 pennies = 149% they were lost. Or once they had to explain why their computational method worked, they couldn't. So they would sometimes too often employ the incorrect method to the problem. Perhaps this gets back to reading skills again!
Giving students time to apply their reading and math skills to real life projects is key but again time consuming. Such projects would also increase children's engagement and fun. I guess I'm back to number one again!
I think Bill and Melinda Gates need to spend a lot of personal time in classrooms if they really want to understand education beyond Lakeside and privilege. Then I would welcome their opinions.
Exhausted
Thank you "another opinion" and "exhausted". Thank you to all teachers out there who take these developmentally inappropriate standards and still try and teach our children something meaningful everyday.
-nh
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/answer-sheet/wp/2013/01/29/a-tough-critique-of-common-core-on-early-childhood-education/
A child psychologist finds Common Core inappropriate for young children. If you get a chance, please watch this video. There is a very good explanation regarding cognitive development and the need for children to discover a sense of mastery. Developmentally, it is very important for children to have a sense of mastery. Teachers, writing tests, understand this concept.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7tSQlJE6VuA
Sadly, I feel our legislature and school districts do a poor job of independent analysis. IMO, legislators and school districts are fed messaging points. Political consulting firms create letters for parents, messaging tips to superintendents etc.
As Gates himself said, it will take 10 years before we know whether or not his scheme works- and our children are the guinea pigs. Shameful.
Now if you believe some people who get called conspiracy theorists, the goal is to tear the public education apart. Tests that many kids can't pass, piling on of more and more unfunded mandates from feds/state, closing schools, pushing charter schools, etc.
If schools perform badly enough, than there are those who say, "Our school system is 'failing,' we need to do something new and drastic."
Chicago is a great example (except that they have the great Karen Lewis as head of the teachers union who is on Emanuel's case all the time.)
Common core and the testing regime have no shortage of real goals, and could be considered modestly successful in that regard:
1) Some right-wing types hate unions and consider the teachers' union to be a department of the Democratic party. So they want to make the schools look bad to weaken unions.
2) Globalizers want a rationale for off-shoring jobs and hiring foreigners instead of Americans. First they table a scheme in which all Americans will become knowledge workers; then promote an impossible regime of standards and tests to make that possible; then watch kids fail; then shrug their shoulders and say what can we do? The schools failed so we have to send the jobs to China.
3) Crony capitalists make loot selling books and tests to the school systems, and are delighted if the direction of education policy changes every six months.
See, common core and the tests are successful after all. They work in so many ways for so many people. But don't worry, Ms. Clinton will stop it all.
I think that the common core emphasis on skills vs content will mean
1. NAEP scores will be flat or start to decline.
2. Achievement gap will widen.
-nh