A Consumer’s Union for Schools
What would it be like if we took our children and their teachers as seriously as CU takes the many products it “assesses”, “tests”, “reviews/”
If you haven’t looked at an issue of CU recently, pick one up. Read the average auto review—and particularly the ones that compare a great many cars. They do not give you a single score. They “score” according to dozens of categories—so that the reader/consumer can keep in mind the trade-offs that are critical versus those that are trivial for their uses. Do they need a lot of storage space, what the price tag? how many people fit into the car and other “objective” factors. They also rate more subjective ones: how they like the dashboard, how “quiet” the ride is, etc. The tests they use to create these individual scores are expensive and time-consuming. And ever so often they even do a more in-depth review of most of the leading or more interesting cars. They are guides to help us exercise judgment.
But when it comes to kids, their teachers and our schools we have a simpler cheaper and more standardized solution.
We’ve apparently concluded that it’s “easier” to rank order, rate, assess human beings than cars. When it comes to schooling, one, maybe two or three categories suffice. We either care less about accuracy when it comes to students/teachers/schools vs. standardized products, or misunderstand the peculiarity of treating human beings like they were standardized products. Which, I wonder?
This blog post has been shared by permission from the author.
Readers wishing to comment on the content are encouraged to do so via the link to the original post.
Find the original post here:
The views expressed by the blogger are not necessarily those of NEPC.