i don't think it's just being nice! i seriously question how much someone doing that job can be told what to do or who to be, even to the extent of taking guidance from a 'master' / mentor for a limited period of time. i know that it HAS been done, that arrangements like that are not unheard of (thinking of old-timey disciplinarian schoolmarms or whatever, to dig that far back?), but it literally just perplexes me. something about the idea of one person who is supposed to enjoy/exercise some degree of authority visibly/tangibly being directed by a superior exercising their own authority, same place same time, gets something wrong about the work that's being done. (i suppose that is why this program gets pitched primarily as 'observation', 'helping' etc.?)
once in graduate school i happened to have (this was in no way the norm, for obvious reasons) a fellow graduate student as a t.a., for one of my first classes of my own in fact, and one day i heard her sitting in with some students engaged in group discussion, and the stuff she was saying made me just want to stop and say SHUT UP, DON'T RUIN THEM WITH YOUR MEDIOCRITY, but of course i couldn't quite do that so i just tried to leave her with few responsibilities so that she would disengage from the class for the remainder of the semester instead of trying to chip in. (now, with less of a need for control over all the aspects of the course, i could handle that better, but even late on i had a nightmare of a t.a. who i just had to cross my fingers would not ruin her students' chances of getting anything out of the class.)
'let me teach you how to teach someone else' kind of leaps over the fact that you're the one who has to do it, in the end. and in some way which is not exactly the same as say with a surgeon, 'let me teach you how to perform this procedure'. or 'explain thing x to someone else the way -I- tell you to explain it', which is a little closer maybe. with certain things, you can tolerate the requirement that your own explanation essentially repeats one you were given / told to give. but when the requirement bears on your own manner of giving the explanation / relating to others?
― j., Saturday, 4 January 2014 01:41 (twelve years ago)
I agree with you. I meant it's nice of you to think of them because no one else will, because they're students, and nobody cares about students, even if they're adults. I see you're addressing it from a much more practical point of view, though.
You're perfectly describing one of the key motivations for decentralizing schools! Structural changes will always trump reforms that emphasize behavior.
― bamcquern, Saturday, 4 January 2014 01:54 (twelve years ago)
'but how can we make improvements if we don't tell people what to do and then look to see if they did it?!'
― j., Saturday, 4 January 2014 01:57 (twelve years ago)
http://dianeravitch.net/2014/01/22/north-carolina-greatest-insult-to-teachers-ever-cooked-up-in-backroom/
“The NC 60/30/10 Plan, which “embraces high teacher turnover,” would place teachers on one of three tracks: Apprentice, Master or Career.“Sixty percent of all North Carolinian teachers would make $32,000/year in the Apprentice category and be allowed to teach for up to twenty years, at which time they must retire or move on to another industry.“Thirty percent of teachers would be eligible for the Master category if they have been teaching for three years, have completed an online training program, and can demonstrate mastery of the teaching method based on “customer survey data.” Master teachers would earn $52,000/year.“Ten percent of teachers would become Career teachers, making $72,000 if they have an advanced degree and can innovate and lead.“All teachers would be able to serve in North Carolina for no more than 20 years. If the plan were to be adopted, all teachers in North Carolina would be required to reapply for their jobs in 2015.
“Sixty percent of all North Carolinian teachers would make $32,000/year in the Apprentice category and be allowed to teach for up to twenty years, at which time they must retire or move on to another industry.
“Thirty percent of teachers would be eligible for the Master category if they have been teaching for three years, have completed an online training program, and can demonstrate mastery of the teaching method based on “customer survey data.” Master teachers would earn $52,000/year.
“Ten percent of teachers would become Career teachers, making $72,000 if they have an advanced degree and can innovate and lead.
“All teachers would be able to serve in North Carolina for no more than 20 years. If the plan were to be adopted, all teachers in North Carolina would be required to reapply for their jobs in 2015.
wau
― j., Sunday, 26 January 2014 17:44 (twelve years ago)
i guess the tool hawking the plan has since said they are backing off the most bonkers part, the 20-year limit for 'apprentices'
though now that i look more closely, the 'masters' aren't just more highly trained, they're trained in 'the teaching method based on "customer survey data"', surely one of the cornerstones of any solid customer-teacher relationship
― j., Sunday, 26 January 2014 17:50 (twelve years ago)
fuck corporate ed reform forever
― rhyme heals all goons (m bison), Sunday, 26 January 2014 18:35 (twelve years ago)
this is disgusting
― mambo jumbo (La Lechera), Sunday, 26 January 2014 19:05 (twelve years ago)
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-25906736
UK Government allegedly briefs against the schools inspection body, partly for the right reasons but largely for the wrong reasons:
...the wish for schools to develop their own approaches to teaching was being held back by child-first orthodoxies among inspectors...
...who were stifling innovation
I would not disagree that Ofsted stifles innovation, not least because teachers have little time to really plan because they're too busy shuffling paperwork and fabricating Ofsted-pleasing frameworks.
― ljubljana, Sunday, 26 January 2014 19:26 (twelve years ago)
hiya, if you are or know of a good maths teacher in london (up to a-level) who's in the market for a part-time role in a good school, do get in touch with me!
― lex pretend, Thursday, 13 February 2014 15:35 (twelve years ago)
This seems like the place to share my series of recent essays and how-to notes on authority, classroom management, and the Law of the Jungle. I wrote this for myself, while in grad school and while subbing, but wonder if it could help others too. I'm really interested in people's experiences with any of the phenomena described, and your reactions to anything below.
Main essays/outlines on Fred Jones (on "say, see, do" teaching, preferred activity time, "meaning business," Alfie Kohn, cooperative learning, and more):Instruction.Motivation.Discipline.
Offshoot essays:John Taylor Gatto's 'Dumbing Us Down.'Why classrooms aren't communities.School and the Law of the Jungle.Teaching or violence.John Locke, A.S. Neill, and authority revisited.
― Pete Scholtes, Tuesday, 18 February 2014 15:33 (twelve years ago)
i've read some of those, pete, but it's a lot to take in and pitched way below my student level, so i might need a think on it.
meanwhile
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eAy3vJn4pbs
― j., Wednesday, 5 March 2014 02:55 (twelve years ago)
http://www.forbes.com/sites/carolinehoward/2014/02/12/no-college-left-behind-randy-bests-money-making-mission-to-save-higher-education/2/
on the illiterate businessman whose company 'academic partnerships' is raking it in helping businesses and schools convert to online course delivery
― j., Monday, 17 March 2014 12:10 (twelve years ago)
http://spartandaily.com/119401/online-proctoring-raises-privacy-concerns
sure, no big, we'll just be watching you through your own camera while you pay $20 to take this test
well, watching you and half a dozen other test-takers, night-watchman style
― j., Wednesday, 9 April 2014 02:24 (twelve years ago)
yeesh
Nguyen said he is also concerned with the type of personal information he was asked to provide to ProctorU.In addition to showing the remote proctor his driver's license and entering in his student ID number, Nguyen said he was asked to answer four personal questions about himself.One was to pick a family member's name out of a list of names.Nguyen said that his uncle's name was on the list, although he isn't sure how they had his name since he's never willingly shared that information in a public context.The questions, Hayes said, are a security measure that is also employed by some credit card and insurance companies.He said all of the information is compiled from public records and databases by Acxiom, a data-brokering company."We're looking for something that you are, something that you have and something that you know," Hayes said, explaining the comprehensive verification process.
In addition to showing the remote proctor his driver's license and entering in his student ID number, Nguyen said he was asked to answer four personal questions about himself.
One was to pick a family member's name out of a list of names.
Nguyen said that his uncle's name was on the list, although he isn't sure how they had his name since he's never willingly shared that information in a public context.
The questions, Hayes said, are a security measure that is also employed by some credit card and insurance companies.
He said all of the information is compiled from public records and databases by Acxiom, a data-brokering company.
"We're looking for something that you are, something that you have and something that you know," Hayes said, explaining the comprehensive verification process.
― j., Wednesday, 9 April 2014 02:26 (twelve years ago)
fuck ed tech in whatever orifice is convenient at the time
― smooth hymnal (m bison), Wednesday, 9 April 2014 02:27 (twelve years ago)
there are no orifices, they are remotely located and you receive updates about them in an app on your phone, which does not work
― j., Wednesday, 9 April 2014 02:29 (twelve years ago)
the worstughso gross!
― Mayor Manuel (La Lechera), Wednesday, 9 April 2014 02:36 (twelve years ago)
cool i will just give this ed tech to my students*it is broken within a week*welp*prepares paper lessons*
― smooth hymnal (m bison), Wednesday, 9 April 2014 02:38 (twelve years ago)
i spoke up against educational products during our HLC visit this weekfeel good about that
― Mayor Manuel (La Lechera), Wednesday, 9 April 2014 02:38 (twelve years ago)
been following this dude
https://twitter.com/Beaker_Ben
who is a regular from one of those college instructor griping blogs
and he has made a habit of retweeting students tweeting about their teachers
good GOD are they vituperative and abusive about the most innocuous things when they're doing it in a public backchannel
― j., Friday, 25 April 2014 02:00 (twelve years ago)
best to avoid shit like thatyou can't even start to think about it
also are you an old ilxor with a new name?
― Mayor Manuel (La Lechera), Friday, 25 April 2014 03:50 (twelve years ago)
nope, same one my mother gave me
― j., Friday, 25 April 2014 04:29 (twelve years ago)
This story is really bizarre. Teacher jail!
http://www.thenation.com/article/179605/where-shame-policy-inside-las-teacher-jail
― polyphonic, Monday, 12 May 2014 20:24 (twelve years ago)
http://inthesetimes.com/article/16691/a_boycott_today_keeps_the_testing_at_bay
― j., Saturday, 17 May 2014 15:40 (twelve years ago)
http://www.geoffshullenberger.com/archives/269
against 'adaptive learning' platforms
― j., Wednesday, 21 May 2014 18:38 (twelve years ago)
That Nation story is both crazy and sad: “They want to dehumanize the profession as a whole, because if you can bring this profession down, if you can make people lose trust in this profession, then you can do anything.”
― Peter Scholtes, Thursday, 22 May 2014 17:22 (twelve years ago)
http://www.theatlantic.com/education/archive/2014/10/does-england-have-the-solution-to-the-grade-inflation-problem/381571/
The U.K. is not immune to disputes about grade inflation. But it’s telling that the most common grade by far is still a second, not a first. When employers all accept that a second-class degree already provides a stamp of quality, it removes the narcissism inherent in minor differences. There are also fewer incentives for professors to assign higher grades if students recognize that the majority of them will receive the same mark. And sticking to four grades hasn’t harmed the UK’s stellar standings in global university league tables.This approach might be called the Goldilocks principle of grading. It suggests that students, teachers, and employers can all find their way in a system where grades are not too high and not too low, but just right. And that might mean the majority of students get exactly the same grade.
This approach might be called the Goldilocks principle of grading. It suggests that students, teachers, and employers can all find their way in a system where grades are not too high and not too low, but just right. And that might mean the majority of students get exactly the same grade.
it's called a C, people
― j., Tuesday, 21 October 2014 00:54 (eleven years ago)
Ban grading aside from pass fail
― owe me the shmoney (m bison), Tuesday, 21 October 2014 01:09 (eleven years ago)
http://curmudgucation.blogspot.com/2014/12/pearsons-renaissance-1-history-and.html
this crank's anti-corporate-reform-gobbledygook blog makes me happy
― j., Tuesday, 16 December 2014 20:50 (eleven years ago)
Odd German film from a few years ago--looks and feels more like a television show than a movie--but very good in terms of what it's like to face the reality of class control when you're starting out (not that that issue ever really goes away):
http://www.filmmovement.com/downloads/photos/Forestfortrees_hi.jpg
The teacher's personal life belongs in a Fassbinder film.
― clemenza, Sunday, 4 January 2015 17:18 (eleven years ago)
The black hole/Bermuda Triangle of elementary teaching: marking a class set of stories. Some never make it back.
I'm halfway through one about a new gaming console that does everything from waking you up in the morning to getting you something to drink:
"Ahh now that is one tasty glass of lemonade" said Jake relaxed.
Pulp Fiction reference, I'm pretty sure.
― clemenza, Sunday, 8 March 2015 20:49 (eleven years ago)
I like marking math.I don't mind marking art.As noted above, I hate marking anything with words.
― clemenza, Monday, 8 June 2015 17:29 (eleven years ago)
the wordst
― j., Monday, 8 June 2015 17:30 (eleven years ago)
I love this.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0fn_vAhu_Lw
― clemenza, Monday, 8 June 2015 17:34 (eleven years ago)
http://wishtv.com/2015/07/12/indiana-schools-report-shortage-of-teacher-applications/
School districts across Indiana are having trouble finding people to fill open teaching positions amid a nearly 90 percent drop in the number of teacher licenses issued by the state.The Indiana Department of Education says the state issued about 7,500 teaching licenses for the 2007-2008 school year. WTHI reports that number fell to 934 for the 2013-14 school year.Licenses for teachers with at least 10 years of experience fell from 333 to 4 in the same period.
The Indiana Department of Education says the state issued about 7,500 teaching licenses for the 2007-2008 school year. WTHI reports that number fell to 934 for the 2013-14 school year.
Licenses for teachers with at least 10 years of experience fell from 333 to 4 in the same period.
― j., Sunday, 12 July 2015 14:13 (ten years ago)
Wow--I'll know where to direct all the underemployed supply/graduating teachers here. It's really hard just to get on my board's supply list (i.e., substitute, if you're American--I remember an American friend once thinking we hired teachers to man the supply cupboards).
― clemenza, Sunday, 12 July 2015 19:43 (ten years ago)
that's a key position tho
― j., Sunday, 12 July 2015 22:39 (ten years ago)
If you don't have the key, you'll never be able to open the cupboard, so yes.
― clemenza, Sunday, 12 July 2015 23:33 (ten years ago)
the hell's going on in indiana?
― not a garbageman, i am garbage, man (m bison), Monday, 13 July 2015 02:42 (ten years ago)
http://www.salon.com/2015/07/18/charter_schools_worst_nightmare_a_pro_union_movement_may_change_charters_forever/
ha ha god bless unions
― j., Tuesday, 21 July 2015 19:17 (ten years ago)
Let’s say, hypothetically, that the charter-union movement starts picking up steam. Is there any chance that Wall Street, which has been a massive supporter of charters, will abandon it because of their views on unions?Yes, I think that’s definitely a possibility. That’s something that various union people said to me. Jesse Sharky, from the Chicago Teacher’s Union, said that right, there’s a lot of businesspeople and entrepreneurs who are very interested in the charter school sector, and if that sector became more heavily unionized, it’s not so clear that suddenly it would be such an interesting or intriguing investment for them to make.
Yes, I think that’s definitely a possibility. That’s something that various union people said to me. Jesse Sharky, from the Chicago Teacher’s Union, said that right, there’s a lot of businesspeople and entrepreneurs who are very interested in the charter school sector, and if that sector became more heavily unionized, it’s not so clear that suddenly it would be such an interesting or intriguing investment for them to make.
― Orson Wellies (in orbit), Tuesday, 21 July 2015 19:33 (ten years ago)
at a top-tier university, how many pages can you expect undergraduates (these days) to be able to read per week? i am composing a syllabus from scratch for the first time in a very long time and im realizing i have no idea what's a reasonable expectation on my part.
― ryan, Saturday, 25 July 2015 04:33 (ten years ago)
1000
― j., Saturday, 25 July 2015 04:35 (ten years ago)
ha there's an undergraduate class at my institution that's gonna be reading the entirety of A Remembrance of Things Past. i wonder how that's gonna go.
― ryan, Saturday, 25 July 2015 04:39 (ten years ago)
^i did that as an undergrad (though can't remember if it was grad course) & it was one of my fave courses ever
― drash, Saturday, 25 July 2015 04:56 (ten years ago)
can't remember if it was 2 semesters or one (prob 2)
― drash, Saturday, 25 July 2015 04:59 (ten years ago)
god years of grad school is like river of lethe
― drash, Saturday, 25 July 2015 05:33 (ten years ago)
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/2/634624c6-312b-11e5-91ac-a5e17d9b4cff.html#slide0
Student monitoring service Skyfactor, which is sold in the US and used by 130 universities there, advertises itself as a risk management service, promising to help academics “quickly see which students need attention and resources now — before it’s too late”. Course tutors are given access to a dashboard that documents each student’s class attendances, assessment grades, participation in sports practices, and visits to the campus financial aid officer. A door icon placed next to each name, either closed or open, signals the program’s prediction of how likely the student is to leave the institution early. If their high grades drop, or their passion for basketball begins to wane, Skyfactor will flag these individuals in red.David McNally, chief technology officer at Macmillan Science and Education, which owns Skyfactor, says the early warning mechanism is beneficial for all involved. “In the US more than the UK . . . losing a student is a very expensive loss to an institution because they pay high annual fees,” he says. “If you can get to a student before they drop out, you can keep them in the institution.”When asked about privacy implications, McNally says his company — a competitor to Pearson, current owner of the Financial Times — is “extremely serious” about abiding by both US and UK data security laws. He adds that the information is “being used for the greater good, which is better education for everybody”. He insists it is not only students being tracked: the same programs that measure their performance are being used to compare how effective their tutors are and how well one school is teaching its pupils compared with another. In the future, it will be possible to compare entire local education authorities.
David McNally, chief technology officer at Macmillan Science and Education, which owns Skyfactor, says the early warning mechanism is beneficial for all involved. “In the US more than the UK . . . losing a student is a very expensive loss to an institution because they pay high annual fees,” he says. “If you can get to a student before they drop out, you can keep them in the institution.”
When asked about privacy implications, McNally says his company — a competitor to Pearson, current owner of the Financial Times — is “extremely serious” about abiding by both US and UK data security laws. He adds that the information is “being used for the greater good, which is better education for everybody”. He insists it is not only students being tracked: the same programs that measure their performance are being used to compare how effective their tutors are and how well one school is teaching its pupils compared with another. In the future, it will be possible to compare entire local education authorities.
― j., Saturday, 25 July 2015 15:35 (ten years ago)
That's pretty creepy. We do data analysis with stuff like Revel - interactive digital textbooks that allow tutors to monitor reading and have micro-assessments that enable changes in performance to be tracked over time, and it's pretty common to have centralised systems for attendance / grades, but i don't think we would ever want to monitor extracurricular activities or "visits to the campus financial aid office".
― I wear my Redditor loathing with pride (ShariVari), Saturday, 25 July 2015 15:43 (ten years ago)
it has 'sky—' right in the name
i mean cmon
― j., Saturday, 25 July 2015 16:00 (ten years ago)