Friday, November 25, 2011

Hiring—and What Teacher Training Colleges Do Not Teach

Hiring is fraught with peril because of the uneven experiences that potential teachers have at college.  Sadly, the current educational hierarchy has not been able to train teachers effectively. Many young teachers train themselves through trial and error. Theorists at prominent teacher colleges roll out one reform after another. Each one eventually fails and is followed with fanfare by the introduction of a new reform that soon fades. Colleges of education are not evaluated by outcomes and are never held accountable for their graduates. Are their graduates effective? No one can be sure, because prospective teachers are not tested for their teaching abilities.
Not only are departments of education not accountable but the current process for hiring professors is haphazard. Who teaches teachers? In my years in education, I have repeatedly seen weak teachers and unsuccessful principals hired to teach at the college level. There does not seem to be a pattern whereby the most talented teachers became faculty members in departments of education. Perhaps it happens sometimes but it is not the focus of hiring. (In a similar vein, I have been amazed by how poor-performing principals have attained powerful positions in New York City’s Department of Education. From these positions they spread their faulty notions throughout the system.)
One example of this pattern happened early in my career. When I was a new second-grade teacher, there was an early grade teacher down the hall from me who had received a very high mark on the city teaching test. And yet she was actually the weakest teacher on the grade. She “escaped” the classroom by going to graduate school, eventually getting a doctorate in education. Ultimately, she became a tenured professor, but nowhere in this progression did she learn the practical aspects of teaching that needed to be imparted to new teachers.
Two bottom-tier teachers at the school where I was principal (Patrick Henry School, P.S. 171 in Manhattan) left to teach at the college level. I remember that one of them would assign children to look up words they could not read and copy the definitions. This kept them busy and quiet but not meaningfully engaged. She later became a new teacher guide and mentor.
I observed the second one tell her class that King Arthur of the Round Table and Christ lived in the same time period. This happened even though my teachers were expected to research their texts in order to build student understanding of the story background. This teacher too was later hired to mentor and support young teachers. But here's the problem: if you cannot teach, then you cannot teach someone else to teach. 
A few classes at Patrick Henry had great teachers when I took over as principal, evidenced by the better results that they attained. I made the decision to spend blocks of time in their classrooms, even if it meant ignoring or delegating my paperwork and other duties. I continued to do so until I understood what was happening there. I saw discernible patterns, behaviors, and outcomes. My study of teachers showed them to be the greatest contributing factor toward better student achievement. I told myself to sit there until I had a complete grasp of what was happening. Passing on this knowledge would become the first step in coaching new teachers. Today, I am reminded of the aspiring artists that I see at the Metropolitan Museum, copying the artwork of the old masters. I picked out the master teachers and my new teachers thrived by learning from them.
Much can be learned from training in objective studies in the social sciences. Ultimately, my background in anthropology helped me more than my educational and administrative coursework.  In education, we must do research based on hypotheses that can provide testable empirical results. I believed then, and believe now, in an interdisciplinary approach. I felt like Margaret Mead, silently observing and perceiving patterns and relationships. I came to understand great teaching. Now the challenge was to reproduce it. 
Often, teacher colleges and departments of education do not get much attention or respect from other branches of academia. Schools of education are not known as sources of rigorous and objective research, and the programs they advocate often lack in-depth research. The answers to our educational problems are unlikely to be found in education departments. There are of course a few exceptions. An extremely fine second-grade teacher I worked with ended up with a doctorate and a tenured position at Hofstra. More recently, I was training in a school in Brooklyn and asked a wonderfully gifted first-year teacher what she attributed her knowledge to, and she told me that her methods teacher at Saint Francis College was instrumental. Unfortunately, these instances are aberrations and not the norm.
Yet the quality of teacher preparation makes a huge difference.  Early childhood programs, content-rich curricula, and parental involvement are also major factors in boosting the achievement level of inner-city children. If an inner-city student is “lost” in school for one year, the result might be an irretrievable slide into compensatory programs. Programs for failing students are costly and have low success rates. I strongly believe that failure can be averted with great teachers and great programs. But we still lack research-based training programs like those in Finland, a country that generally scores higher than the USA in international comparisons.
At Patrick Henry, we stopped relying on the colleges to prepare our teachers. Too many newly graduated teachers from these colleges flounder in their initial school assignments. We realized that it was pointless to have any expectations about what they might have learned in college. My master teachers were much more adept at training my new staff than the entire college hierarchy.
 
In future installments we will describe how we created and supported teacher greatness in one inner-city school.

Monday, September 5, 2011

A call for better leadership in education


This is the first installment of Empty Playgrounds, a commentary on elementary education in America and what can be done to solve its problems.

All of us who care about education and who care about our country’s future have heard the news: year after year, test scores show that the U.S. is sliding downward in the rankings of countries by educational achievement. Everybody agrees that we must reverse this trend; nobody can agree on how to do it.

Education fads come and go, with no perceptible improvement in classroom learning. Fragmented experimentation occurs in tightly prescribed areas, adding little to our knowledge of how to run schools. Contributing to the problem is a hierarchy that does not seek to accumulate knowledge, that does not gather evidence about the many variables that affect a child’s learning in the classroom or make decisions on the basis of that evidence, and that hires and promotes on the principle of “those who can’t teach, can administer.” It’s not just that we lack a macro-theory of how to help schoolchildren; we suffer from the hierarchy’s unwillingness to put such a theory into operation. Meanwhile, many people believe that we cannot be successful in our schools because of the nature of parenting in the inner city. Heartbreakingly, we have come to accept failure.

But failure is not acceptable. And it does not have to happen.

In each installment of Empty Playgrounds I will discuss what happened in an inner-city school that would not accept failure, and the lessons that can be drawn from it. If this school could succeed, then every school can succeed. Here is the evidence that failure is not inevitable, and that it is not an inherent feature of schools in areas of poverty.

The school was a neighborhood elementary school in East Harlem where I was the principal for twenty years. In Empty Playgrounds we will look at it as a social-science laboratory where experiments in change were evaluated. It was not a place where the latest fad flourished and withered, to be replaced by the next fad.  Constant observation, hypothesizing, and theory-building took place. In other words, something was happening here that was a departure from the norm.

In the spring of 1977, when I took over leadership of Patrick Henry School, P.S. 171 (Manhattan), it ranked in the bottom third of a district that—while improving—was one of the lowest-achieving among thirty-two districts in New York City.  When I retired twenty years later, P.S. 171 had the lowest rate of failure out of several hundred zoned inner-city schools. 

The following table shows the great variability in student achievement within the same neighborhood. The table was formulated and distributed by the New York State Department of Education and has been reformatted so that table headings are clear. Notice the great difference in the number of students falling below state standards in P.S. 171 versus the other schools in the district.  In 1998, the rate of failure at P.S. 171 was only 7.8%, versus an average of 45.3 % for the district as a whole.

Percentage of Pupils below Academic Standard, FY 1998







CSD
School
Pupils Tested
Pupils Below
Percentage Below

4
7
408
261
64.0%

4
13
344
165
48.0%

4
45
855
502
58.7%

4
50
235
98
41.7%

4
57
345
200
58.0%

4
72
319
178
55.8%

4
83
492
113
23.0%

4
96
264
132
50.0%

4
99
1367
480
35.1%

4
101
218
130
59.6%

4
102
394
209
53.0%

4
108
478
222
46.4%

4
109
339
163
48.1%

4
117
776
326
42.0%

4
121
270
149
55.2%

4
146
357
184
51.5%

4
155
413
229
55.4%

4
171
309
24
7.8%

4
206
653
238
36.4%

Total:  District 4
8836
4003
45.3%







Source:  New York State Department of Education. 
CSD 4 refers to the East Harlem Community School District, one of 32 districts composing the New York City public school system at the time.







By 1998 the low rate of failure at P.S. 171 put it on a par with schools in districts with much higher socio-economic indicators, proving that achievement rates in inner-city schools can be improved

How did this happen at P.S. 171? How did we achieve these numbers, against all odds?

The answer to this question is what I will be providing, at greater length, in Empty Playgrounds. The short version is this: the paradigm for running this school diverged from current thought then and now. School change and improvement were based on accumulated empirical knowledge that was based, in turn, on observed phenomena. And failure was not an option.
                                                                                                 
Is it all a matter of who serves as school principal? Of course not. Teachers are of critical importance. After all, the life of the child is in the classroom. Other than at breakfast and lunch time, the child is in the classroom. But the education hierarchy, in its current form and composition, does not understand the classroom and does not understand how to train classroom teachers.

I think that the hierarchy succumbs to fads because it doesn’t know what else to do. The hierarchy is good at public relations and creating buzz and appearing to be engaged. What it isn’t good at is analyzing what happens in great classrooms and using that knowledge to help teachers become master teachers.

The plain truth is that many people in the hierarchy were never teachers—or if they were teachers, they were not good teachers. I remember that when Hunter College had a student teaching program at my school, they hired one of my worst teachers to be a mentor. A couple of years later, they hired another one of my fairly terrible teachers to mentor teachers. Another failing teacher ended up teaching a college-level course on methods. But she couldn’t teach a second-grade class. It’s almost as if there is no merit involved in going from one level to the next. Furthermore, the system is not structured to make sure that one attains the knowledge necessary to mentor those coming up. In the field of medicine one goes through a series of internships and builds a body of knowledge. Not so in education.

And so this very powerful hierarchy does not know how to run schools. Those who DO know how to run schools . . . Well, they do not enter the hierarchy. In my decades of experience I know almost no successful principals who have gone on to a higher level. But I do know people who have NOT succeeded, who have gone on to much higher levels.

To put it simply, if you don’t know how to run a school, then you can’t teach someone else how to run a school. And if the knowledge and the training aren’t there, then knowledge can’t accumulate. And unlike in medicine, we do not have randomized clinical trials to tell us what impacts learning and what does not. So again, we perpetuate a lack of knowledge. But every year the hierarchy gives the impression that wonderful things are going to happen. Every new fad is very exciting and gets rolled out with tremendous fanfare.

Now, for example, we have an incredible reliance on “data-driven decision-making,” and we’re intensely testing students, which generates lots and lots of data, and the data are supposed to tell people how to run a classroom. It’s a fad, and it addresses only one small segment of what happens in the classroom, and it doesn’t help teachers at all. If anything, teachers are in fear of focusing on testing and data and not focusing on great teaching.

But teachers—even great ones—do not exist in a vacuum. One thing that happened at P.S. 171 was that I analyzed leadership and its impact. And I realized that teachers’ perceptions of a principal affect their own behaviors strongly. When a principal understands what supports are needed in a classroom, then teachers and children and schools can succeed. Here was a school that overcame whatever we say exists in the inner city that cripples children. We don’t have to accept those platitudes. We don’t have to accept failure. We really can run terrific schools.

The guiding principle behind Empty Playgrounds is that when we seek out and accumulate knowledge and figure out ways to transfer it to others, we succeed. Our current rate of failure indicates that the education hierarchy hasn’t recognized this. If teachers are failing our students, it’s because the hierarchy has failed our teachers and does not know how to create viable schools. I realize that what I’m saying is unpopular. But I’m saying it because I have the experience and the evidence to back it up. Empty Playgrounds will deal in hard-earned lessons, not idle speculation.

Thank you for reading what I have to say and for spreading the word.

The next issue of Empty Playgrounds will be devoted to the topic of hiring new teachers.

Building the Background
If accumulating knowledge is important, then so is this feature of the commentary. The term “Building the Background” was used in my reading program and it required the teacher to provide the knowledge necessary for students to comprehend what they were about to read. The reader of Empty Playgrounds needs background, too. To comprehend education today we need to understand why we are where we are.  For the first “Building the Background” assignment, I am recommending a book that is the most comprehensive and insightful exposure of what’s happening in education today:

 (Diane Ravitch is Research Professor of Education at New York University and a historian of education. She is also a former Assistant Secretary of Education.)

After extensive research Diane Ravitch has been able to investigate and cut through educational rhetoric to write what is considered by many to be the sharpest critique of current educational practices.

Reading this book is your homework assignment. It should be read by anyone with an interest in the lives of our most vulnerable children.

Monday, August 15, 2011

Who We Are


Lorraine Skeen served as principal of Patrick Henry School (P.S. 171 Manhattan) from 1977 to 1998. She began teaching in 1964 at Luis Munoz Rivera School (P.S. 83 Manhattan) where she completed her administrative internship under the direction of Joseph Pacheco, known as a brilliant tactician and leader of political and educational groups.

Born on the Lower East Side of Manhattan, Lorraine received her early education in schools in high-poverty neighborhoods. She graduated from Hunter College High School and earned a Bachelor’s degree in Education and a Master’s in Sociology from Queens College. She pursued additional studies in school administration at Fordham University.

Lorraine’s approach to school leadership was interdisciplinary, systematic, and guided by the tools and methods of the social sciences. During her tenure at P.S. 171, the school was  recognized as a unique model of student achievement where poverty was never an excuse for deprivation and failure. The school model that she built more closely resembles schools in high-achieving countries such as Singapore and Finland than the typical American school. Her different approach and dissenting voice attracted both admiration and disapproval from the educational community.

After retiring in 1998, she worked for brief periods as an education consultant and as a local instructional superintendent in the Bronx.

Catherine Skeen (Editor/Proofreader) grew up in New York City listening to her stepmother, Lorraine Skeen, discuss the challenges faced by NYC schools. She has assisted in a second-grade classroom in a Chicago public school and has taught English and Humanities at the college level. Today she works as a freelance editorial consultant. Her three children attend public school in Pennsylvania.