W Post
 
 
Five bad education assumptions the media keeps  recycling
 
By _Valerie Strauss_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/valerie-strauss/2011/03/07/ABZrToO_page.html) , 
Published: August 29, 2013

 
Here author Alfie Kohn uses a review of Amanda Ripley’s new education book, 
 “_The  Smartest Kids in the World and How They Got That Way_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/The-Smartest-Kids-World-They/dp/1451654421) ,”  to write 
about  
how the media keeps recycling bad education assumptions. Kohn is the author of 
 12 books about education and human behavior, including “The Schools Our 
Children  Deserve,” “The Homework Myth,” and “Feel-Bad Education… And Other 
Contrarian  Essays on Children & Schooling.” He lives (actually) in the 
Boston area and  (virtually) at _www.alfiekohn.org_ 
(http://www.alfiekohn.org/index.php) .  
By Alfie Kohn 
It very rarely happens that the cover of The New York Times Book Review,  
which represents some of the most prestigious intellectual real estate in the 
 United States, is given over to a discussion about education.  When that  
does happen, _as  it did last Sunday_ 
(http://www.nytimes.com/2013/08/25/books/review/amanda-ripleys-smartest-kids-in-the-world.html?pagewanted=all)
 , 
it becomes clear why “_school  reform_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/answer-sheet/wp/2013/08/19/whats-the-most-pernicious-cliche-of-our-time/)
 ” 
just perpetuates and intensifies the education status quo. 
A certain ideology, along with a set of empirical assumptions, underlies 
most  conversations about education in this country, most of what actually 
happens in  schools, and most proposals for change.  These assumptions are 
accepted by  the overwhelming majority of politicians, business leaders, and  
journalists.  (Whenever three entities are involved in something, the usual  
metaphor is a three-legged stool.  Here, I find myself thinking of the  
recycling logo, in which three bent arrows are arranged in a triangle, each one 
 
pointing to another in an endless loop.) 
Progressive critics have complained to one another about how corporations,  
corporate foundations, and a corporate sensibility drive education policy.  
 The creation of the Common Core “State” Standards is only the most recent 
 example.  We’ve also pointed out that Democratic and Republican public  
officials sound remarkably similar when they talk about schools — similar to 
one  another and similar to the business community.  But much less has been 
said  about how journalists who cover education tend to reflect and feed this 
same  mainstream — and, I think, deeply flawed — view of education. 
That third arrow was conspicuously on display in the Book Review as one  
journalist and author, Annie Murphy Paul, summarized a book by another, Amanda 
 Ripley.  I haven’t yet read the book, “_The  Smartest Kids in the World 
and How They Got That Way_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/The-Smartest-Kids-World-They/dp/1451654421) ,” but the  
reviewer appears to accept just about all of 
what she takes to be the author’s  key assumptions.  The resulting _review_ 
(http://goo.gl/HKWbnJ)   (titled “Likely to Succeed”) offers a cautionary 
collection of problematic  premises: 
1.  America desperately needs to turn to other countries for solutions  
because our students’ performance is “mediocre.” 
2.  The best way to judge educational success or failure is by looking  at 
standardized test scores.  High scores are good; low scores are bad —  full 
stop.  And high scores are defined in zero-sum terms:  The point  isn’t to 
reach a certain level but to outscore students in other countries. 
3.  The primary objective of schools is to transmit to children the  “
knowledge and skills to compete in the global economy.”  (This statement  
actually comprises two premises:  that education should be understood  
primarily in 
economic terms, and — just as with test results — the goal is not  to 
succeed but to triumph over others.) 
4.  Similarly, from the individual student’s point of view, the main  
reason to learn is that doing so is a prerequisite to making more money after  
one graduates.  A U.S. student is quoted as asking two Finnish girls why  they 
seem to care so much about what they’re studying, and they supply what Paul 
 and/or Ripley regard as “the only sensible answer”:  Studying hard will  
eventually result in a “good job.”  Alas, we’re told, this “irrefutable  
logic still eludes many American students.”
 
 
5.  A key ingredient of success is “persistence” — knowing “what it  
[feels] like to fail, work harder, and do better.”  Putting children on a  “
hamster wheel,” with “relentless and excessive” pressure to succeed at any  
cost, may have tragic human costs — for example, in Korea — but this is said 
to  be preferable to the less intense pressures said to be experienced by 
American  students. 
(There’s actually one more set of interesting premises in the review, which 
 is that _Finland’s  process_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/answer-sheet/wp/2013/05/15/what-if-finlands-great-teachers-taught-in-u-s-schools-not-
what-you-think/)  of selecting only top candidates to be teachers initiates 
a  “virtuous cycle” in which “better-prepared, better-trained teachers can 
be given  more autonomy, leading to more satisfied teachers who are also 
more likely to  stay on.”  Notice that (a) selecting “top” students to be 
teachers is  equated with offering better preparation and training, and (b) it’
s assumed that  teachers who weren’t at the top of their class or provided 
with a certain kind  of training shouldn’t be given autonomy.  Thus, the 
process of  micromanaging teachers, imposing detailed prescriptive curricula 
and 
pedagogy,  is justified because all those barely qualified teachers require 
it.) 
Along with many other writers, I’ve tried to challenge each of these  
premises.  The first one is really the cornerstone of the others:   It’s 
because 
our students are at the bottom of the barrel that we have to turn  to other 
countries to learn how education ought to be done.  This turns out  to be 
nonsense, as I pointed out in a recent essay called _“’We’re  Number 
Umpteenth!’: The Myth of Lagging U.S. Schools_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/answer-sheet/wp/2013/05/03/were-number-umpteenth-the-myth-of-lagging-u-s-scho
ols/) ,” and as Iris Rotberg,  Richard Rothstein, the late Gerald Bracey, 
and others have explained for some  time. 
While the occasional journalist and even politician may acknowledge that,  
just possibly, we’re overtesting kids, almost all take on faith that test 
scores  are appropriate for judging a student’s, school’s, state’s, or nation’
s  education status.  If it turns out that _standardized  tests _ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/answer-sheet/wp/2013/08/06/five-absurdities-about
-high-stakes-standardized-tests/) are inherently flawed indicators — not 
just misapplied, overused, or  badly implemented — then all judgments based on 
those numbers would have to be  rethought.  Suddenly one would realize that 
it’s possible for awful  teaching, and unimpressive intellectual 
capabilities, to produce high test  scores.  And for superb teaching, and 
creative 
thinking, to yield  relatively low test scores.  That of course would call into 
question every  article or book that judges “smart kids” or “successful 
schools” on the basis of  standardized test results. 
The third premise is based on a value rather than evidence, so one can only 
 argue, as I have _elsewhere_ 
(http://www.alfiekohn.org/teaching/edweek/competitiveness.htm) ,  that there’s 
something deeply disturbing about 
regarding children mostly as  future employees and reducing education to an 
attempt 
to increase the  profitability of corporations — or, worse, the probability 
that “our”  corporations will defeat “theirs.”  Some of the least 
inspiring approaches  to schooling, and the least meaningful ways of assessing 
its 
success, follow  logically from thinking of education not in terms of its 
intrinsic worth, or its  contribution to a truly democratic society, but in the 
context of the  “21st-century global economy.” 
The fourth premise — that “the only sensible” reason for kids to take 
school  seriously is their own eventual financial gain — also reflects basic 
values, but  here there are some relevant data.  For example, a _study_ 
(http://psycnet.apa.org/psycinfo/2011-21773-001/)  published last  year in the “
Journal of Educational Psychology,” which built on a great deal of  other 
research, found that “highlighting the monetary benefits that education  can 
bring
…could very well discourage youths from fully engaging with  learning.” 
As for that last premise:  To be honest, I find it deeply depressing to  
consider the possibility that anyone could regard the misery visited upon  
children, the sacrifice of their childhoods on the altar of higher grades and  
test scores — all in the name of cramming them full of more facts[1] so they 
can  squeeze out another few points on a do-or-die test — and say, “Hey, 
we ought to  treat our kids more like that!”  (Ripley is quoted as saying 
that,  despite its excesses, she would “reluctantly pick the hamster wheel” to 
the  American approach because it “felt more honest.”)  By contrast, some 
folks  closest to these nightmarish regimens of tutoring and psychological 
stress are  saying it must stop.  A _South Korean education  official_ 
(http://ow.ly/4C7r2)  surveys the damage and says, in effect, “What do high 
test 
scores  matter when we’re destroying our children?  We’re struggling to move 
beyond  this stifling test-prep version of education, and you Americans 
want to  imitate us??” 
Part of the ideology underlying the hamster wheel sensibility is the 
current  glorification of grit, self-discipline, and the alleged benefits of 
making  children experience more failure and frustration.  I’ve challenged 
these  
modern versions of the Protestant work ethic _here_ (http://ow.ly/ecenV)  
and _there_ (http://www.alfiekohn.org/teaching/selfdiscipline.htm) , and I’ll 
 do so at greater length in a book to be published next year called “The 
Myth of  the Spoiled Child.”  What’s striking, though, is how so many 
journalists  have uncritically accepted a set of principles based on a 
combination 
of  conservative ideology and bad psychology.  (I challenge you to find a  
single article in the mainstream press that raises meaningful questions about 
 the value of self-discipline or grit.)  And of course these assumptions 
fit  beautifully with all the other premises — about mediocre U.S. students, 
the  value of standardized tests, and an economic rationale for education. 
Come to think of it, the synergistic relationship among politicians,  
businesspeople, and journalists really is captured by that three-triangle logo  
because the principles in question are endlessly recycled.  One of the key  
features of the conventional wisdom, the dominant ideology, is that we no 
longer  recognize it as such because we hear it so often.  There’s no food for  
thought here; everyone just knows that our students are lousy, or that  
raising test scores would improve our economy, or that grit is good; there’s no 
 need to defend these propositions. 
Food for thought?  Listen — I’ll gladly eat the front page of the New  
York Times Book Review if it ever features a book that challenges these  
premises. 
NOTE 
1.   Many books and essays about “smarter kids” or the “new science  of 
learning” turn out to be mostly about techniques for memorizing facts more  
efficiently, not about meaningful learning — in the sense of understanding 
ideas  from the inside out.  But that’s a journalistic misrepresentation for  
another day.

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