Ed Schools: Officially Part of the "Problem" Narrative?
Monday, February 15, 2010 at 7:48AM
Justin Bathon in Ed. Law Instruction, Educational Leadership, Governance, Higher Education, Justin Bathon, Time Magazine, education schools, gilbert cruz, teachers' unions

Reading my latest edition of Time Magazine this week, there was a story on school turnarounds and the likely components of NCLB. The article was really neither good or bad, but this struck me: 

Of course, the education establishment (i.e., the teachers' unions and ed schools) likes to remind critics that children are not cogs and what works for companies may not necessarily work for schools.

How flippant, that combo of teachers' unions and ed schools. Are we to be demonized the same way as teachers' unions historically have been? Are we now officially part of the "problem" narrative in the media and amongst politicians? I have been noticing an uptick in the blame associated with ed. schools lately and this seems to be just the latest evidence in our eroding respect. 

This is unfortunate. Education schools can be natural allies for change in education, but attacking them in the way teachers' unions have been historically attacked is likely to have an entrenching effect. If you call them the enemy of change ... they might actually become the enemy of change. And even though there are a ton of problems in education schools (anyone that works with me knows how frustrated I can get with some of our arcane rules), folks like me are trying our best to change ourselves at the same time that we help change our schools. I literally lose sleep at night trying to work through all these issues. 

Now, as in the article, are we naturally skeptic of the corporatization of education ... of course. There is no data that shows that Arne Duncan's corporate turnaround efforts in Chicago worked ... and, yes, we actually care about the data. The last administration demanded that we be scientific in our efforts and only commit to changes that show positive outcomes in data ... and we went partially down that path, but now we are being attacked as impediments to rapid, data-deficient change.

I also get that we are somewhat defenseless, and thus easy targets. So, we are going to take some of the heat, rightly so, for the issues in our education system. But, taking heat and being typecast are two totally different things. I'm fine taking heat and working toward change, but I am not fine with being typecast as the evil empire of education.   

Article originally appeared on The Edjurist - Information on School and Educational Law (http://edjurist.com/).
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