Tuesday, March 30, 2021

We have lost our way

 We have lost our way…

 

In the last year plus, hundreds of thousands of lives have been destroyed by this virus.   And that is not counting the hundreds of thousands of human lives that have been lost due to the illness.

Other than those with the illness and their loved ones, children have suffered the most by the pandemic.   The situation has been  made worse by the people who told us they have dedicated their professional lives to providing for the education of students.

The first response to the pandemic over a year ago was the closure of schools and the pivot to online teaching.  It did not matter that there was slim to no evidence (still isn’t) that schools were hotbeds for spreading the virus.  It did not matter that for many, many children schools were where they got food, emotional support, protection and, oh right, academic learning.  Life immediately switched to online teaching for the final quarter of the 2019-2020 school year.   Asynchronous learning began in full blast.  Kids got packages for worksheets mailed to them.  No matter that worksheets are one of the most boring forms of learning.  Next came Chromebooks so kids could watch that 12” screen for 3.5 hours a day.  Many times what they watched were videos and pre-filmed learning activities without real-time interactions with those well-paid teachers who received full salary and benefits.

Finally as the 2020-21 school year cranked up, there was more real-time teaching via internet access.  For those kids who didn’t have internet access, well there were hot-spots in parking lots.

During all of this time, where were the teachers and their unions.  Did anyone hear them jumping and shouting that “their” children were being deprived of an appropriate education?  I must have missed it.  Probably because that couldn’t be heard over the union cries of “hell no we won’t go” whenever they were asked to go back to work in buildings.  Finally it was the Maryland Governor who threatened that kids needed to be back in school this spring or he would need to look to see whatever measures as Governor he could take.  Miraculously, school districts began to respond with a few hours here for a few kids and a few hours there for a few more kids.

Data show that the course failures for the 3rd quarter of this school year are in the double digits.  The few kids that are returning in-school are showing positive signs for being back in school but there are also obvious signs of emotional damage that we do not have sufficient clinical staff to help.

Meanwhile, politicians are getting into the game.   The Baltimore County Council has issued a veiled threat if the County schools do not offer a rigorous free program this summer to help students recoup, their review of the school system’s budget request for 21-22 school year might get a more careful look than usual.  After all, education costs represent over 50% of the County budget.

And what was the teachers’ union response to all this- a HUGE hosannah that kids were finally getting what they needed?  Nope.  But the president of the union did say, “it’s an opportunity for teachers and support staff to make some extra money”.  Well there you go, now we know what the unions are all about, not that anyone could have missed it.  

In addition to taking so many human lives, and damaging so many kids, seems like the virus has caused us all to lose our way on what schools should be about.

Tuesday, March 23, 2021

 The Language of Learning

Several books have been written on the Language of Love.  The question is how does a person want to be shown that he/she is loved.   One person might appreciate little acts of kindness, such as emptying the dishwasher or taking out the trash.   Someone else might want words of affirmation as in, “you look so great in that shirt”.   Or "I was so proud of you last week".  The idea is that if one person knows what the other person wants and then delivers that, there will be less miscommunication.

But what is the language of learning?  It seems that scholars can tell us about love but not so much about learning.  Somehow educators have convinced us that grades are the language of learning and that we all understand that language in the same way.  Nothing could be farther from the truth.  

We have been told that during the pandemic kids’ grades are plotted in a U shape rather than the typical Bell Curve.  Essentially what is happening is that the number of students with failing grades or dropping out altogether has gone through the roof and so has the corresponding number of students whose grades have gone up.  All of the large school systems in Maryland are reporting double digit failures in core subjects. The question is why?   

There is a strong likelihood that the students who are failing are doing so because online learning does not align with their skill set.  There are also large numbers of kids, particularly in urban environments or lower social economic groups who do not have adequate WIFI for connectivity.  The hot spots established by schools just doesn’t do it.  

The great grades kids might be perfectly aligned with online distance learning.  Some children on the autism spectrum may be very happy not having to interact with peers.  Then there are families that may be so happy to be able to “help” their child that it is hard to tell just who is finishing high school.

But both of these scenarios hide the real issue which is the use of grades themselves.  No one wants to admit that the Emperor is not wearing any clothes.

Truthfully, do we really believe there is a quantifiable difference between a 91.2 average in a course and an 87.5?  Somebody must believe that foolishness because the two kids will probably get different grades.

Then there is the subject of how the teachers arrived at those grades.  Were the grades based on how many homework assignments the child handed in or on the quality of class participation?  These are totally different metrics but  you would never know that when you compared the grades.  One educator admitted that grades do not measure objective learning.  If they don't measure objective learning what exactly is the purpose.

Every person who has ever received grades in school can tell you about a class in which he or she got a terrible grade but a learned a great deal and the one where the course was aced  because the student knew how to butter up the teacher.

We are all learning about the language of love.  That is not a bad thing.  If we could consider working on the language of learning- that would be a great thing. 

Tuesday, March 16, 2021

Separate but equal....

 Separate but equal never did work…

Separate but equal was a very false dichotomy from the beginning and it hasn’t gotten any better over the years.  It appears to rearing its ugly head again.

As the full impact of online instruction is becoming more and more apparent with both reduced learning and damage to children’s mental health, politicians are pressing hard for a return to in-building instruction.

As school systems around the state begin to prepare for full return by the next school year, some families are thinking about having a parallel school system in which some students are in buildings but some will remain online.  In Maryland, two members of the general assembly have introduced this parallel system as a continuing option.  Here we go again, separate but equal.

It is a terrible idea!

Children go to school for many reasons.  And as we have learned during the school shutdown, one of the primary reasons is to provide child care so parents can work.  While that is not a child-centric reason, it is still a reason.  They also go to school for instruction and to learn socialization skills. 

Online instruction may be popular among parents for a few reasons.  It gives them more control and input into their child’s education.  Some parents feel it is safer.  One parent remarked that she is not sending her child back to school until the COVID virus is totally eliminated.  Good luck with that.  Besides, living in a bubble makes a person much more susceptible to all manner of illness once the bubble is removed.  Some parents just really like having the kids at home all day so they do education at the family’s convenience.  A separate online system will deny children all of the things that make school fun for kids- hands-on art classes, sports, theatre, having a real best friend that changes weekly and getting into fights with your last best friend. All, important skills for living.

Some school systems are now requiring that teachers teach in-person and online at the same time.  Talk about a one-armed paperhanger.  No kids get a good education with that approach and teaching becomes even more impossible. Some districts have the kids in the building but the teacher is at home.  Students are in the building with Chrome books propped on their desks and an aide walking the room for discipline.  

Can we PLEASE get real here.  It is time for schools to open fully.  It is time for students to be back in buildings.  It is well past time for teachers to start earning the salary and benefits they have been receiving and to get into classrooms.

If there is some extra money around, let’s hire more clinical staff because I can tell you that when kids do come back there are going to be some serious mental health issues that will need to be addressed.  

We have been so busy worrying about the virus that we have not noticed a whole lot more that has gone wrong.   The piper is about to be paid.

Separate but equal was always inherently unequal and it still is!

 

Tuesday, March 9, 2021

Do Kids Deserve Compensation?

 Do kids deserve compensation?

 

During the last year, students have lost so very much in terms of their instruction and social development.  This situation is particularly true for children with disabilities.  Under federal and state law, children with disabilities are entitled to a free and appropriate education through the school year in which they turn 21.  So far nothing has been done to change that entitlement timeline.  Many kids have suffered academic regression during this long stay at home period.  Others are emotionally impacted.  The usual job training experiences in the community are not happening.  Still the clock will tick and entitlement will end without the learning and the experiences.

Some legislators believe that entitlement should be extended for another year.  There is a bill in the Maryland State Legislature that would extend entitlement for another year for all students with disabilities 17 and older.  The bill has a price tag of just over 40 million dollars.  

There are multiple questions about this bill and the equity of it.  First of all, it will grant a privilege to kids 17 and older with special needs that will not be granted to plain kids 17 and older.   Many of these non-disabled kids have also missed out on their senior year in school and all of the traditions and experiences that go with that.  Students in vocational programs have had virtual machine experiences but that isn’t the real thing.  Would you like to fly in a plane with a pilot who only learned to fly online!?

What about other younger children with disabilities.  They, too, have been shorted in their educational experiences and what are the chances that they are going to be made up?   Not great.

So, what about this bill?  Is it a good one or not?  Depends on how you feel about some help for some students being better than no help for all students, even if the “some” help is unfair to the rest of the kids.

There needs to be a reckoning for all children.  Only a small minority of children have progressed in an appropriate way with distance learning.  All of our kids deserve compensation for what they have endured.  We need to make that happen.

Tuesday, March 2, 2021

In Defense of Snow Days

 In Defense of Snow Days

 

The world is turning upside down.  Theatres are closed, both live and screen.  Restaurants are barely surviving.   Children are learning online.  If you want to call that learning.

Everyone knows that February is the longest month of the year.  Winter is in its 7th month and blue skies are a thing of another century.  The winter holidays are over, there is little for which to cheer.  But, blessedly, there is one hold out to pure joy and that is SNOW DAYS.

  Snow days are a thing of beauty.  You wake up to discover that the harried day you were about to enter is no more.  If you are fortunate, you can’t even drive anyplace and your school and workplace are shut tight.  No one can call you lazy or malingering for snuggling down for some extra winks.  Even A type personalities can enjoy being the first on the block with a clean sidewalk and driveway.  And just think of those snow day projects you can get to.  The rest of us can build a snowman or woman.  Read.  Binge on your favorite show.  Just drop out for a day.   Better and less expensive than a visit to a therapist or a pill.

Now some fools are trying to do away with that.   They say technology has made all of that snuggling down unnecessary.  We can all telecommute into work.  Teachers can keep teaching online.  Life can go on as if there is no beauty outside.  Just because we can do something does not mean it is makes good sense. 

Let’s face it.  Weigh the value of a day to clear the ice particles that have been accumulating in our brains with a warm cup of tea.   Later in the day, add a touch of spirit to that warmness along with a good book makes the day even better.  Weigh the value of all that against the loss of a day or two of virtual learning or even a day at work.  Truthfully, how much learning is going to accrue as the kids’ wandering eyes leave the 12” screen for the white fluffy coming down outside their windows.  Probably less learning than usual.  And the adults at work will be concentrating on how long it is going to take them to get home and will they be able to do it safely.  Not much work will be lost either.   Really, there is no contest, a snow day wins out.

So, when it is snowing and the roads are rough, let’s call out for a snow day.  And those of you who think technology can cancel all of that, well what will you go after next- the Tooth Fairy or the Easter Bunny.  Save Snow DAYS!