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Failure to Launch Learning

“Last week, our class launched a rocket.”  

Sounds fun, doesn’t it?  I wish my class launched a rocket.  When I was a kid, we did have some great experiential and project-based learning experiences – but no rockets.  Unfortunately, that sentence about rocket-launching isn’t quoted from an actual student or teacher, nor did it orginate from an actual classroom.   It’s simply a random, isolated sentence on a worksheet, used by third-graders to prepare for their standardized tests.

While walking to work the other day I was browsing through myPublic Radio Player app on the iPhone, and decided to check out a podcast of the Tavis Smiley Radio Program (May 4, 2012).   I wasn’t looking for anything in particular, but as it turned out, the program featured a segment on education.  More specifcally, Smiley has begun a radio follow-up to his televised reports on the educational experiences of Black males in the United States, titled “Too Important to Fail.  In this podcast, there was a segment for which a producer from Smiley’s program had spent a school day shadowing a third grader, Don’jae Adams, atOak Street Elementary School in Inglewood, California (neighboring Los Angeles).  Smiley doesn’t hint at any particular conclusion or lesson we should derive from learning about Don’jae’s experience in school, but I came away discouraged.

With minimal introduction, Smiley lets the segment begin, and the producer explains that the show’s focus on a third-grader has to do with studies that suggest this year is the key to future success in school.  We also find out that 90% of the students at Oak Creek are economically disadvantaged.  The report does not mention that the school is one of many in the state that have landed in the gap between state and federal accountability systems.  By California’s system, the school is meeting its growth target.  It is above average for all elementary schools, in the seventh decile overall, and in the top decile for ratings of comparable schools.  However, the school is also in the second stage of program improvement (PI) under the provisions of No Child Left Behind, having made adequate yearly progress in only 12 of 17 categories.  So, whatever the qualities of the school overall, we can understand that the Oak Creek administrators and staff might be worried about this year’s test scores.

As the program begins to immerse the listener in Don’jae’s school day, we hear his teacher review the day’s agenda and begin the Pledge of Allegiance.   Then, we are told, the test prep begins – with the actual state tests to follow later in the week - ”using grade-level Kaplan test work sheets.”

“Last week, our class launched a rocket.”  When I heard the teacher read this sentence, my mind flashed momentarily to images of students actually launching rockets.  Imagine how much more these students might learn if rocketry was something they could experience, rather than the the subject of a non-contextualized sentence with no relevance to anything in the classroom or the students’ lives.  I’d consider it likely that some of the students have no idea that there are rockets students actually canlaunch, and they might very well have been wondering what that sentence actually means: how couldschool children launch rockets into space or up to the moon?

As you can see from the pictures below, students really can launch rockets.  These pictures were provided by Tom Collett, a 2012 California Teacher of the Year, and sponsor of a middle school rocketry program at Newark Junior High School in the San Francisco Bay Area.  Now, some clever readers are thinking“launching rockets won’t teach students how to spot the subject of a sentence” - and that’s true.  But launching rockets might give them a reason to care about the subject of a sentence.  Because a student who launches a rocket for school purposes should certainly then write about it.  And if they’re learning to write, they’ll not only need to talk about sentence structure, but they might want to; they might care about why sentence structure matters.  After all, they’d be writing about something personal, meaningful, and relevant.

But it doesn’t matter in test prep.  No authentic meaning or purpose, no discussion.  The sentence could say anything, because all that matters is that Don’jae can choose the subject of the sentence from the four choices provided.  The sentence is not part of anything, and the next sentence will have no connection to the rocket sentence.

Then, we hear Don’Jae reading about Benjamin Franklin flying a kite in a lightning storm to test his theory about electricity.  But again, it’s apparently test prep, not part of any study of science or history.  Couldn’t students read something without multiple choice questions at the end, perhaps because they themselves could be sending something skyward, to conduct their own experiment?

Students could.

If you have the time to watch this TED video by Brian Crosby, you should (right after you finish reading).  Instead of reading about Benjamin Franklin for test prep, imagine reading the same passage and then going out to launch your class weather balloon to an altitude of 100,000 feet.  Would that motivate you to do more reading and writing?  And to care about it for more than the minute or two it takes to bubble in the answers to someone else’s questions?  (And thanks to Brian for giving me a little sliver of TED cred at the end).

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So, back to Don’jae’s day at Oak Street Elementary.  As if the morning of test prep wasn’t inspirational enough, after lunch, there was an “awards assembly” – though in the portion we hear in the program, the principal “stressed the importance of good test scores.”

“All we can do is ask you to do your best…”  he tells his students.  Okay, not bad.  But you don’t hold an assembly and stop at that.  A moment later, the pressure ratchets up a bit: “Those tests are meant to be hard.  They challenge you.  So you have to be detectives to get all the answers right.”  Get them all right?  Or if not, you’re not a good enough detective?  Sorry, am I being a bit picky here?

But then, he adds, “This is your time to show the state, and show everybody – ’cause again, your name’s on that test.  So, it’s not my name, it’s your name.  So everyone looks at you and said, ‘Look at this person, how smart they are.  Look at this person – that means they struggled here.  So do your best.  It’s a reflection of you, your parents, your teacher, your principal, your school – it’s everyone.”  Now, there’s too much on the line.  I know what the principal is trying to do for the kids, and I know what he’s trying to do for his school.  I’m sure he’s a fine person, but he’s caught in a messed up system – because the tests don’t show “how smart” Don’jae is.  To the extent that the test reflects the child, parents, teacher, principal, or school, it’s a rather small and imprecise reflection, and it shouldn’t be that significant.  And we certainly shouldn’t lay that much on a little kid before they spend days being examined with a rather shoddy test.  We shouldn’t run a school, district, or state according to the results that little kids generate on these lousy tests.

A ray of hope… at the end of the day, Don’jae explained what he liked about school: learning things you don’t know, like “how to times bigger numbers.”  And why would that be worthwhile?  Why try hard in school?  ”So you could get your education and maybe one day you might start your own career, and you might start you own business.  Just be yourself and do your own thing, and that’s how you be a student.  And listen to the teacher.”

From the mouths of babes…

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David B. Cohen

David B. Cohen is the Associate Director of Accomplished California Teachers (ACT). His main responsibilities are in communications and membership, and he wo...