Tuesday, May 14, 2013

Animal Testing: What's wrong with education this time?

Okay it's really about our kids.  But this post was inspired, in part, by this cartoon gaining swift popularity:


There's a burgeoning rebellion against the way we teach.  I'm all for rebellion, but we have to figure out if we really want to overhaul the entire system or just tweak it a bit.  Too many people are ready to throw the baby out with the bathwater.  And not enough want to look beyond schools to other factors that might affect achievement.

On Sorting Students

If this cartoon is just about standardized testing, like the literacy test we had today, then I'm in total agreement.  But this cartoon is being used in a broader context to suggest that if we give all students the same exam, then they'll suffer because their natural and various aptitudes won't be recognized.  Some students are gifted artists, others good at literary criticism, others math, others gym.  Is it fair that they all have to take the same math test?  Some will excel, but others will fail.  How is that fair to the people who just can't do math?  I remember just scraping by in grade 9 gym, and it sucks to know that no matter how hard you try, you just don't have what it takes to flourish in an area.  There have been some arguments lately that school shouldn't be a place to sort students.  It should be a place students learn to find their passion, not find out what they can't do.

And I dare to disagree.

One very, very important thing students need to learn during high-school is their own limitations.  We are immersed in the myth of, "You can be whatever you want to be," such that we've lost sight of the hard work necessary to get anywhere.  And we don't see how impractical it is to try to be the best at everything imaginable.  Sure, if I had a private tutor and spent hours and hours every night, maybe I could hit the side of a barn with a softball, but to what purpose?  There are so many people out there with strong physical abilities that I don't need to add to that mix.  Pursuing that path wouldn't benefit society, nor be in my own best interests.  The mantra, "If I work at it, I can do anything," also sets kids up for shutting down.  Instinctively they know it not to be true, so some will avoid trying anything in order to avoid really knowing what they can't do.   My variable marks in high-school showed me where I was capable, where I was close, and where I should maybe give up the dream.  There's no harm in that kind of knowledge.

Why people jump on that comic at the top is likely because it once wounded their self-esteem to find out they're not perfect in every way.  That's a different issue entirely.  We are fallible and messy.  We're nowhere close to perfection, and that's okay.  Nobody is good at everything, and some people aren't good at a lot of thing in school.  That's something else people have lost sight of over the last generation. Things have gotten so competitive that we can't stand not being best at everything no matter how ridiculous that idea is.  But failing math doesn't translate to being a failure.  It just means you're not great at math.  Big deal.  Try again.

We don't have to accept other people's judgements of us.  If one English teacher thinks you can't write, but you dream of writing, then keep writing.  Remember that teachers old and new base marks against a criterion from the curriculum.  A bad mark means you didn't meet that specific criteria, not necessarily that you can't write for an audience.   But one bad review is no reason to toss the curriculum or change the evaluation structure to make it possible for everyone to get an "A" in every subject.  A shift in that direction would render marks completely meaningless.  Getting an "A" tells us nothing when everyone gets them.  And learning to work in a style necessary for success in an area is a useful skill.  It doesn't mean blindly conforming, but figuring out the rules and using them to your advantage.  You can write free-form outside of school.  School doesn't show you the one right way to do things, but how to follow one structure.  Then you that use skill to follow more creative structures on your own - like spoken word.

It's like Suli Breaks says in his viral video, which also denounces the current system.



Suli questions why we have to study things we don't need to know.  But how do you know you won't need to know it??  That's the trick.  School provides a breadth of ideas.  We can only teach universals - maths, sciences, literature, arts, humanities, technology.  We can't prepare each student for what their specific life will bring.  Nothing can.  That's the reality.  We can only offer a wide variety of options that might come into use here and there.  But yes, get the word out, that the mark on a test isn't a mark on your life.  Exams only tell you what you're worth if you let them.  Granted it can be hard to stop them if that ideology is reinforced by your teachers and parents, so we have to endeavour to make sure it's not.  Most importantly, exams tell you where you excel in our competitive world.  They tell you what you can do within a defined set of criteria.  That's all.  But that's something you can use.

Suli has another video that lists many successful people in the world that didn't finish school.  And he's right.  School isn't for everyone.  I reject the Liberal's idea that everyone must attend until they're 18 or graduated because school is not the best fit for everyone.  I didn't finish high-school, and I did just fine too.  But I'll get to that in a bit.

On Persistence and Staying Competitive

But let's revisit this idea:  "If one English teacher thinks you can't write, but you dream of writing, then keep writing."  What if all your English teachers and your friends and family tell you your stuff isn't as good as you seem to think it is?  A neighbour of mine shoots baskets all day, and misses almost every time - and he's been doing this for years.  This kid has amazing persistence!  And we celebrate that (except when he keeps jumping the fence into our yard to get his ball which comes inches from landing on my laptop).  But I hope he's not doing a mediocre job in something else that he could really achieve if he re-directed his energies.  Lots of kids get to high levels in video games and will play for days at a time leading some people to believe it means we should use video games to teach kids.  But here's the thing:  Persistence to reach an unattainable or undesirable goal is NOT a cause for celebration.  Consider people who persistently harass people, or who make efforts to never miss a day of drinking.  It's not a value in its own right - only when it's aimed in the right direction.  

Even David Foster Wallace gave up tennis when he recognized it was fruitless:



A sneaky thing's happened over my last 20 years of teaching.  The median grade in most courses used to be in the high 60s, and now it's in the low 80s.  Yet I don't think the grads are significantly more knowledgable nor skilled.  In fact, when I look at what I've taught since I started, when I look at saved exams and assignments, my courses have gotten more and more watered down each year.  That fact that many of the grade 12s entering my course don't know how to cite sources or really what plagiarism is (something I learned cold in grade four) or that many grade 10 Academic students need reminders to capitalize the first word in a sentence and the word "I", really, leads me to believe I'm not the only one cutting out content to ensure everyone passes with flying colours.  Out of fear of not measuring up with other countries we've lowered the bar so more kids can jump it successfully.  Now our students have the marks to compete with international students for university entrance, but I worry about the monster we're creating.

Malcolm Gladwell has made popular one of  James Flynn's studies that compared work habits of Chinese students who immigrated to the U.S. with white American students.  Given a difficult puzzle to solve, the white Americans gave up after 2-3 minutes, but the Chinese kids wanted to work past the 15-minute cut off time - even though their median IQ was 20 points lower.  So if it's not about innate intelligence it has to be cultural, right?  Well... first of all, as one of my grade 12s noticed, there's a confound in the study because immigrating students are often driven to begin with.  And secondly, while Flynn thinks it all ties back to our agricultural methods, and Gladwell figures the solution must be to get rid of summer vacation, I think the reason for this difference more likely, as another student suggested, starts earlier in life, not history, and not just through a cultural influence, but distinct familial practices.  It has to do with that Tiger Mother style of parenting.

If, from a very young and impressionable age, kids are taught that school has primary value, and that video games and socializing have secondary value, and if kids are shamed into doing their very best all time, trying their hardest at every puzzle, then they will work harder to achieve scholastically. I remember bringing home a spelling test in about grade 3.  I got 9/10, and my dad asked, "What happened to that one you missed?"  The focus at home was always on improving and working harder in school, never resting on our laurels, which, I believe, affected my drive significantly.

It would be so much easier as a cultural shift than isolated families working against the tide of pop-culture - yet it's still not impossible.  The problem is, it's even easier to just raise the bar so students can compete with kids studying 14 hours a day, every day.  Things don't have to be as extreme as Amy Chua posits (no sleepovers - ever), but they also shouldn't be as extreme as our current dominant ideology that protects fragile self-esteem at the expense of any work ethic at all.  It used to be shameful to be idle.  Now, somehow, it's mean to set deadlines for kids, and demanding work be finished before the end of class is seen as bullying.  Rushing kids gives them anxiety, so no pressure is good pressure.   That's a problem.

Next Steps:  No More Zeros

This latest popular push suggests nothing should ever damage a student's self-esteem. Students struggling with math shouldn't be made to do the same tests as stronger students in the same course because it will harm them emotionally.  But what really harms kids emotionally is not being trained to have the resilience to cope with set-backs and limitations.  We squander talent when we accept slothfulness as the norm.  It's culturally ingrained in some students such that I have students who will refuse to work - even if given an open assignment on any topic of their choice to present in any way.  They know their rights.  They have to go to school, but they don't have to learn anything. There's no law forcing them to do any work.  And they've bought into Ken Robinson's schtick:  if they don't work, it's because I didn't sufficiently inspire them.  They feel no shame in sitting idle at school all day staring into space.  It's no longer their fault nor their responsibility.  And they don't quite get the long-term consequences of missing credits now.  Grade 10 is a good learning opportunity for this, but only if there are consequences.  They know some teachers will just push them through.  I let them fail.  I waver on whether or not it's worth the paper work and phone calls.

But this is the last year I can actually give a failing grade on a grade 10 report card.  Next year, thanks to the relentless work of Damien Cooper and his ilk, like Douglas Reeves, no grade 9s or 10s will get a failing grade.  They just get an "incomplete" and have to finish up the work they didn't do at a later date.  Reeves is concerned that a zero is toxic to students' emotional stability and doesn't inspire them to work.  I don't use grades as inspiration but as an indication of the ability the student has shown during my class, but getting a 50 for an assignment they didn't do gives them absolutely no impetus to do any work ever.  And we look like suckers for falling for that.

Once, rock climbing on the side of a cliff, I struggled with a hold.  The guy on belay watched for a bit, then just heaved me up to the top.  I was furious.  He found it uncomfortable to watch me struggle, so he thought he'd "help" get me to the top.  But the point of climbing isn't to get to the top, it's to figure out your own way there.  Being given a 50% on work that's below standards doesn't give kids the opportunity to struggle with their own learning.

He suggests that students shouldn't get zeros, but should lose privileges if they miss an assignment; we should make them spend their free time doing the work they missed.  It's a similar idea to the Lunch Club that my 8-year-old's school has.  That's a great idea that will work well for students who are running behind, but the kids who openly refuse to work are often the kids who will also refuse to show up for a lunch-time study session.  These kids aren't the norm by far, but they are the exception that specifically adds to the drop-out rate.

Reeves also posits that the "math" around giving a zero is inaccurate using a fallacious analogy in assuming that a 5-point mark scale has to have some ratio relationship with the percentages represented.  If a 4 is a 90, 3 an 80, 2 a 70 and 1 a 60, then a 0 should be a 50.  Really.  I've never used that marking scheme anyway (see one of my rubrics at at link near the end), so it shouldn't apply to me, but in practice, if I give a 50 for every piece of work that isn't done, I'm doing something very, very wrong.  I think a better analogy is money.  If I offer a kid $100 to do a list of yard work, and the kid comes to me for money only halfway through the list, then he deserves $50.  If he comes for money before he even started, then he deserves diddley.  Reeves has discovered that this is a really emotional issue for people, but I think that's only because his inability to see how illogical his argument is is so exasperating!!

On Failing and Learned Helplessness

Finally, Reeves suggests that failing a course is a lifelong consequence that kids just can't overcome.  I think that's partly accurate, but only if nobody has ever taught the student how to overcome failure - a problem that can be remedied in ways others than ensuring they never fail anything.  If people are given work that's far beyond their ability over and over, they can shut down.  It's a phenomenon seen in a famous experiment on learned helplessness done in the 60s - back when they didn't have ethics committees approving studies.

Dogs were put in a compartment and trained to jump a barrier when given an electric shock.  After one or two tries, the dogs jumped the barrier immediately after being put in the compartment even when no shock was given.  BUT some dogs were restrained the first time and not able to jump the barrier.  They had to tolerate the shock without being able to escape.  When they were unharnessed, they still didn't jump the barrier, but just stayed there, tolerating the pain.
"Seligman found that it took many experiences (up to 200) of being forcibly dragged across from the shock compartment to the safe compartment for them to rediscover that responding could bring relief and thus to break out of the learned helplessness syndrome."
Up to 200 times.  So I can see why people are so afraid of giving work beyond students' ability.  But equally damaging is giving them work that's so easy that it makes them lazy and complacent.

Students need to be guided through failure - to be given work just a bit above their abilities to give them enough of a challenge that they learn to be persistent.  Individuated instruction is a welcome shift in education, but only up to a certain level.  And the final evaluation has to be based on curriculum standards - how far they learned, not how much - so the mark is meaningful to other schools, parents, and employers.  At this stage of the game, in high-school, we're at the "dragging-over" stage - "I know you can do this" 200 times until they're willing to try again.  This, of course, applies only to the students who value education enough to be vaguely interested in making an attempt at doing the work.  Failing doesn't have to be a burden, but can be a learning opportunity. It's a chance to figure out what's gone wrong, improve work habits, and develop resilience.

Lots of people have failed, but learned from their failure to go on to greatness:



It's an odd belief that if the kids can all get high marks, or pass without effort, then they'll stay in school.  Kids know when they're getting something for nothing, and they lose all respect for teachers that cater to them.  They want to do work they can be legitimately proud of.  Sometimes that can't happen in a specific class that's mandatory.  They should still have to learn the basics of the course, and do their best work, but not be too disappointed with lower marks if it's not their forte.  But getting a mark handed to them, won't instil a strong work effort, not a sense of pride.  In my experience, failing grades are rarely a result of inability anyway, but of a simple lack of effort.

So What Works?

High-school is a time of discovery.  It needs to offer a breadth of content and skills for students to try, and sometimes fail.  It's as useful to find your limits as it is to find your talents.  Students should be treated fairly, which means evaluating them against the same established criterion for each course.   If the measuring stick moves with each student, then it no longer measures anything accurately.  We can't all be 6' tall - and there's nothing wrong if we're not.  It's curious that we want to celebrate difference in every arena except academically.

If you're bad at math or art or music or gym, well, it is what it is.  So it goes.  You're no less worthy as a human being, so long, that is, that you tried your best throughout the course!  And to figure out what you're good at, what you can do to enhance society and feel good about for your own sense of self-efficacy, it's necessary to weed out your weaknesses.  It will help to clear the field to really excel at doing what you do.  I'm leaning on Aristotle here:  pursue your function with excellence.  Figure out what you're best at, then go for it in spades.  When distressed at a lack of perfection, my mom often barked at us: "Don't worrying about doing the best as long as it's your best."  All the time.

But what to do with that rare but worrisome groups of students who just hate school - who don't even want to do the projects of their choosing? There's nothing that can interest them enough to write about it.  They don't value school; it's a rock bottom priority.  Then what?

The only thing I've seen affect this kind of attitude significantly is a new girl/boyfriend who does value school and doesn't want to date a dummy.  Love (and maybe even the possibility of sex) is a powerful motivator.  But beyond a schoolworkmatch.com solution, I wonder about letting that last year be less academically driven for students with more hands-on aspirations.  It could be a year volunteering.  There are no factory openings for them like there was 20 years ago when kids dropped out at 16, but there could be opportunities to build or garden or fix or help in some capacity to get them moving and practicing skills instead of sitting, feeling imprisoned by inertia.  If we want to keep them in school, and keep them motivated, let them take more courses that they can directly apply to their goals.

One thing that we need to do, and that's happening more and more although many of us have always done it, is to offer a choice of assignments to students at younger grades, and, in older grades, a refinement and an assortment reflective of the likely next stage.  In my 12U classes, I have major assignments that are all very similar to assignments done in 1st and 2nd year university.  The focus in all grade 12 courses should be preparation for the next stage, so it is questionable why all compulsory English courses focus on literary analysis.  They have workplace math, but no workplace English.  By contrast, my grade 10s get myriad options of topic and a chance to display a variety of skills to show they've learned something within each unit.  They can expand their knowledge in limitless ways showing off their talents along the way.

I fear that that dream of unlimited potential all comes part and parcel with unlimited growth and the push towards progress at any cost.  We've lost something vital to our sustainability:  the ability to be content with what we have, what we can do, and where we're at.  I'm lucky that my skills are profitable, and the ones that aren't (like blogging) make a good hobby. I can still play ball with my kids, I just don't plan to try out for the major leagues.   And that's okay.

Sunday, May 12, 2013

Humans: Too Invasive or Too Compassionate to Survive

In my last post, and elsewhere over the years, I went all Agent Smith and suggested that humans are a virus that can't be contained. All other animals work within their environment to regulate their population.  As long as people don't mess things up by moving animals around (like bringing rabbits to Australia where they have no predators), animal populations decrease when food is scarce so their populations never reach overwhelming numbers.  Nature is amazing and everything can work so well if we let it.  But when human numbers rise, we just keep invading other places until we use up all the resources everywhere.  We're going to Mars now, for crying out loud!  It's just a matter of time before we kill off our host and die out ourselves.

But recent conversations in my class have me thinking of things from a different angle.

Maybe the problem isn't our invasiveness, but that we are too compassionate to allow people to just die the way those other, more callous animals do.  Because we have such big brains, and because we have mirror neurons that cause us to feel pain when we watch others suffer, we have found ways to help millions of people survive during famines.  And we can help sickly infants survive that wouldn't have stood a chance 20 years ago.  And we can keep elderly people going for a few more decades.  It's awesome!  Except now we're at seven billion people which might be too much for the earth to sustain.

It's really both at work here.  Some people are focused on their unlimited growth and expansion.  They want to raise themselves to an untouchable level where they'll be safe from predators forever, and they simply can't be content with what they have.  Then others have unwavering compassion to help the less fortunate among us.  They want our entire species to survive - every single creature.  And many people are a mix of the two.  And, this time, it can't be both.  So do we let people die off, or do we put limits on our luxuries?

We're smart enough to save people from tragedies, but we're just putting out fires.  We're not smart enough to prevent unsustainable growth, to maintain a manageable population, or to fetter squandering of resources - not at all - because it's not nice to infringe on people's freedoms to have unlimited opportunities.  And we're not smart enough to curb our predatory instinct to invade every last inch of the universe or to be content with what we need.

Why not?  Why can't we figure this out?

Bangladesh is likely to be entirely underwater within a couple decades.  Neighbouring countries are taking action to fortify their borders.  They don't want all those people trying to move in with them.  Not a lot of compassion on display there, but a lot of primitive animal territorialism.

When push comes to shove, we're not so much smarter than the other animals.  We just have more impressive tools that serve to get ourselves into deeper trouble.

Monbiot suggests the problems we're facing today are all because "the power of the fossil fuel companies is too great."  But we're too busy trying to send food packages to Bangladesh to worry about preventing the pipeline construction that both Harper and Trudeau think is a smashingly good idea regardless all the recent leaks and the fact that we've hit unmanageable levels of CO2 in the atmosphere.  How long will we wait to hear them say, "I've made a huge mistake"?

This is someone's front yard.  It could be yours!  
Don't get me wrong.  It's great to help other people.  Compassion will be our saving grace in the dark days ahead.  But we have to focus nearly everything on preventing more problems.  Immediately.

I just saw Gatsby* last night, and it really brings it home that excess isn't as much fun as it's made out to be.  It's just another means of escaping our issues.  What prevents us from learning this lesson - something that's been espoused by Lao Tzu, Epictetus, Epicurus, Jesus, Montaigne.... for centuries?  This is all too serious to ignore.  We have to restrict our own use of fossil fuels right now - not right down to zero (so I can get away with using a nuclear/coal-generated computer as I write this without feeling too hypocritical), but damn close!  What happens if we just pretend we've almost completely run out of the means of getting oil and gas out of the ground and just leave it all in there?  We'd be putting up solar panels and wind farms in a jiffy (and nuclear, but that's a whole other ballgame).  So what's stopping us?

Anyway, happy Mothers Day.  Is it too early for a drink?

h/t Book Riot
*I liked Gatsby alright - but I wished I'd seen Iron Man 3 instead.

Sunday, April 21, 2013

Enviro-Optimists vs Doom-Mongers: Another Wentian False Dichotomy

Margaret Wente, in her latest discourse, thinks the reason the environment's being ignored is because of all the pessimists making us too depressed about it all.  She splits all environmentalists into two camps:
"But the biggest divide is really between the purists and the pragmatists, the pessimists and the optimists - between the McKibbernists, who believe we're on the brink of global catastrophe, and those who think human beings are more resourceful and the Earth is more resilient than the doom-mongers say they are."
And I ask:  Can't it be both??

Because it is.  Every environmentalist I know wavers between the two fronts or else the pessimists would just kill themselves or stay drunk all the time, and the optimists would stop fighting to be heard - AND, if optimists really believe it'll all come out in the wash, they wouldn't worry about how to frame their arguments to avoid shutting people off by being too depressing.  Follow?

This is all a lead-in to the new Rob Stewart film:  Revolution.  He walks that line all the way.  He clearly believes we're on the brink of catastrophe, but also that human beings are resourceful - that we will actually get our shit together in this generation.

Silence During Tragedy

I went to a history conference, and one of the PhDs at the front was talking about the common occurrence of silence during tragedy.  And, while those around me discussed WWII, and the Iran-Iraq war, and internment of the Japanese in Canada, I started thinking more about how uncomfortable people are talking about rape.

It all fit together for me largely because of a woman I once met, a friend's mom, who had lived in a concentration camp in Poland.  She had nine kids, and two were born there, while she was separated from her husband.  The guards routinely took women into their cabins.  But, she said, the difference between that time and place and now, is that when a woman came out of those cabins, the rest of the women were ready for her, with open arms and warm blankets and a soothing touch.  According to this smiling woman with only one good leg and numbers on her arm, rape couldn't be hidden there, so it was much, much easier to recover from.

Saturday, April 13, 2013

On Our Rape Culture: Rehtaeh Parsons' Unfortunate Legacy

And another one gone - a victim of assault and revenge porn enacted and filmed by a bunch of teenaged boys who had more power than they might have ever imagined:  they could kill from a distance.  As Elizabeth Renzetti says of these double-barrel assaults, they are, "not just an act of violence but a spectator sport."  And here we thought we had come so far from the bloodlust days of the Colosseum.

The act isn't dissimilar from torturing an animal and showing pictures to people.  It's a behaviour that is absolutely depraved.  Who looks at those types of visuals without looking differently at the goon who took them?  Unfortunately, they have enough of an audience that we need to be afraid.  For some people, their body responds to the visuals even if their brain might hope it didn't.  So clips are saved and circulated endlessly.

Circulating the film is also a mean of re-shaming the act.  After years of the rally cry, "Rape is a crime, not a shame!" some perpetrators are working hard to make people ashamed to be raped for obvious reason:  if they're embarrassed by it, they won't tell.  But Rehtaeh did tell.

Monday, April 8, 2013

When Men are Raped

A man was sexually assaulted by four women in Toronto, and the story is make the facebook rounds.  I hate to say "of course," but of course people think it's hilarious.  Here are some choice comments directly copied and pasted without names - but these were all written by men (or, I suppose, people posing as men):

"Lucky basturd!"
"Get any phone numbers?"
"Dayum...And I try to look suspicious to female security at an Airport just so I can get frisked."
"where is this club ? whats the cover charge ? will the women hurt you if you cant get it up?"
"lets give him a luckiest boy in the world medal"
"wierd stuff because most men would not complain unless they tried to cut it off or something"
"Jesus they were about 14 stone each .. fuck me poor guy like getting attacked by hippos , sure he would not of complained if they were of the smaller sized females either way hope they could of raped em I don't know what did they do put there finger up his ass so his cock went hard? Haaa"
"Is he bragging or Complaining?"
"Why do things like this never happen to me???????" 
My comment, in the middle of the fray and largely ignored:  "Wow. Rape is rape no matter the gender. If a guy isn't into it, then it's rape, and it's not fun or cool, and he's not lucky. It's an assault that can cause lasting emotional trauma - even for men."

Monday, April 1, 2013

On Boredom

 I'm not talking about the "nausea of ennui" discussed from Seneca ("many who judge life to be not bitter, but superfluous") to Sartre, that total lack of interest in anything that makes it difficult for some to get out of bed in the morning, but of that feeling that overcomes us when we are required to do something painfully tedious.

We often elevate simple boredom to the lofty realms of melancholia or depression, as if it's worthy of great sympathy and profound relief efforts, when a mere change of scenery (or attitude) can save the day. But often it's the word we use when we have unrewarding work to do.  It's a trapped feeling that we escape with any little thing we can - cat videos or video games - anything to avoid beginning.  And that's easily solved if we can just get on with it.  And sometimes the task is so repetitive, it takes all we have to get to the end of it - like marking 60 almost identical essays or tests.  We muscle through it to the end, sometimes rewarding ourselves with treats after every five papers to keep us alert and focused.

Friday, March 29, 2013

Undergrads: Underloved or Just Under Grads

An article in the G&M today expresses concerns with the "hookup culture" of university students.   There's a big fear that casual sex will create "a drastic divide between physical intimacy and emotional intimacy," and that people will see human bodies as disposable and "become incapable of creating 'valuable and real connections'."  The author goes on to quote researchers who have concerns about the quality of the sex as well.

I think there's a bigger problem that they've missed:  the connection between physical intimacy and emotional intimacy to begin with.  That fact that we see love primarily as a romantic connection between lovers, keeps intimacy from being part of less intense and exclusive relationships - even hookups.  We've created a false dichotomy between true love and nothing at all to the extent that some people, so concerned to clarify their lack of romantic intention, end up acting like jerks to partners in a  temporary encounter.

Sunday, March 24, 2013

Seniority Does Not Always Equal Merit

The title is from a line in an essay published in Friday's Globe and Mail:  "I'm a First-Year Teacher Who Will Automatically be Fired at the End of the School Year."  The author of this unwieldly title laments the reality that, as a new teacher, s/he'll be first out the door over teachers who have been there longer, yet are clearly far less brilliant.  In the comments, people have been led to trash unions.  I don't think that's the real issue.

There are several problem with the author's arguments.  For instance, s/he claims that current teachers generally have only a B.A. whereas new teachers need two degrees.  With the exception of tech teachers, I think s/he must be thinking of a very long time ago - and most of that lot have long retired.  I've been teaching 22 years, and I had to have 5 years  of education with two degrees, and since starting, added several additional qualifications and a Masters.

Monday, March 11, 2013

On Teacher Accountability

One criticism that Cooper and friends say is part of the problem with education is a lack of teacher accountability.  I actually agree with this one.  But how do we assess teacher ability?  And, maybe a bigger problem, what do we do if we find some teachers below par?  This post was inspired by a twitter conversation with some fellow teachers  (Corbett, Dan, Scott, and Marcus), and I went all out to figure out what it would look like.  My goal over this break is to clean my house top to bottom and fix a ton of little things around this place, so I'm getting a lot of random writing done!

Sunday, March 10, 2013

On Deducting Late Marks

I was going to list the pros and cons of taking late marks off assignments, but I had my students blog about it, and they hit on pretty much any points I could think of.  So I'll let their words speak here - in a bit.  But first some back-story:

Right now, we (in the History Department) deduct 5% per day up to 15% off and accept late work only up to one week after the due date.  After that it's a zero.  But starting in September, because of the bizarre influence of Cooper, O'Connor, and Wakeman (or C.O.&W. for short), we'll no longer be allowed to deduct late marks or give zeros for any reason.

The gist of our board's updated Assessment, Evaluation, and Reporting Handbook, as I currently understand it from reading a preliminary draft, suggests that we can still have strict cut-off dates.  Then if a student misses the cut-off, the teacher has to call home immediately and either refer the student to interventional support, negotiate an extension or alternative assignment, or give the student an "I" indicating the work is incomplete.  Zero is no longer an option.  It's not clear, however, what we do with a row of "I"s mixed in with other marks.  Some in the C.O.&W. team would have us accept all work even past the last day of the term - 75 days past.  But our board's document alludes to allowing professional discretion by the teacher encouraging us to start with an average, but then consider the most recent or most consistent marks - something many of us already do.  But it's hard to average a bunch of numbers with a few letters thrown in the works, so I suspect many teachers will treat the "I"s as if they ARE zeros even though technically they're not.   Shocking, I know.

Saturday, March 9, 2013

On Misplaced Admiration

Damian Cooper's out to reform education, and our board has come up with yet another a new assessment document as a response.  The article of the day that he co-wrote with Ken O'Connor and Nanci Wakeman, is "Redefining Fair."

The article suggests that there are four challenges to improving assessment practices:

1.  There's no political will to change.  

It seems to me that changes happen in education pretty much every year.  We're often in long meetings learning the new rules of grading or new jargon to take back to the classroom.  A ton of cash goes into changing the system regularly.  New is always better in my board.  I can't imagine where they got this idea that there's no will to change.  I wish they'd let us get settled into one thing before pulling the rug out again.

On Crappy Contractors - a Solar Powered RANT

I'm trying to get solar panels on my house under the MicroFIT program.  It's been a process so fraught with frustration, I'm thinking of forgetting the whole thing.  A colleague told me, "This could only happen to you," which offered a strange sort of comfort.  At least it acknowledges that it's a crappy situation, full of incompetent people, and that this sort of thing comes my way ALL THE FREAKING TIME!   Well, too much of the time anyway.

First, I did my research very carefully and, after scrutinizing three companies, I chose one that seemed to have the best reputation from satisfied customers, offered the best explanations for how it all worked, always e-mailed me back immediately to answer any further questions, and was in the mid-range for prices.  Then, the weirdest part, one of the sales people from a company I DIDN'T choose started phoning and e-mailing me several times a day, fanatically begging to be chosen and questioning, almost in tears, why I didn't go with his company.  I had to threaten to call the cops if he didn't stop harassing me.  

This is when my colleague first suggested, with a pitying head-shake, "Only to you, Snyder."  

Thursday, March 7, 2013

On Hate Crimes and Sexual Orientation

I was reviewing for a test on theories of discrimination and hate crimes in Canada with grade 12 students, and one review question was, "When was sexual orientation added to the list of identifiable groups in the hate propaganda legislation in Canada?"

And the answers I got started in the 60s - 1968, 1969...  Then another bunch tried the 1980s and early 90s.  One group guessed 2005, and they were off by one.  Being victimized due to sexual orientation has only been seen as a hate crime since April 29, 2004.  Almost 9 years ago.

My first reaction was that it's... sweet? innocent?... somehow endearing that they believe we've been on this for decades - for them to believe that the justice system cared about this section of the population for that long.  They just haven't lived long enough to remember how bad it really was.  And it's a good thing that question wasn't on the test!

Tuesday, March 5, 2013

Following Your Dreams or Living an Illusion?

Ken Robinson, Sir, you are killing me!  I know you probably didn't mean for people to interpret your words in a warped way.  Nobody does.  But that's what happens when you use several rare examples as if they are the norm and send people off to change the world.

Some of my students watched his TEDTalk - the most watched TEDTalk in all the land - and, likely because of it, came away with a firm position that if they're doing poorly, it's entirely because their teacher (me) isn't inspiring enough.  A good teacher with good curriculum - not at all like we have in the schools now - will be able to get absolutely anybody to achieve absolutely anything.

So it goes.

Sunday, March 3, 2013

Regulation 274, Education Act of Ontario

I was just about to start a petition at Change.org about this, but, thanks to Angie Potts, there's one already there.  After, I'm guessing, about 5 day, it's got 415 signatures.  Please take two seconds to click on the link and sign it.

I wrote a letter to Liz Sandals, Minister of Education, and Kathleen Wynne, Premier, and Catherine Fife, my MPP.  No stamps are necessary when you mail anything to Queens Park, so it's free!  But if walking to the mailbox is a chore on this beautiful Sunday afternoon, send a quick e-mail - the contacts are at the links.  You can copy and paste what I wrote if you're not up to creating today:

Monday, February 18, 2013

On Education, Stress, and Success

I'm starting another run at the Futures Forum Project:  three subjects over two periods with one teacher (two team-teaching this year) that emphasizes an intentional digital footprint as we write for an authentic audience including students from classes in the 14 other participating schools.  Whew!

There's no way I can implement every idea suggested by the other teachers in the program, so this is my weeding out time - figuring out what's most important to try this time with the kids.  I've come across several links and videos lately that have me thinking about education in general.  Some recent articles discuss a survey that suggests our kids are miserable and totally stressed out in school, yet elsewhere articles complain that they're too apathetic and aren't trying hard enough.  Is the stress making them shut down?

Sunday, January 20, 2013

The Not-So-Awful Truth About Being Single

"If you're lonely when you're alone, you're in bad company."  Jean-Paul Sartre

In yesterday's Globe & Mail, Margaret Wente claims that people can get to a much greater depth of understanding and "perfection" of self through a married relationship than they can possibly do if they remain single.
"...the road to self-actualization isn't through perfection of the independent self, but through imperfect, messy, long-term relationships.  Everybody needs someone else to nurture, and someone to stand up for them, and someone to plan the future with, and someone with whom they share a past."  
Wente stumbles into one of the most annoyingly common false dichotomies surrounding this issue:  either you're married or you're alone.  And she continues that single people are lonely implying, of course, that loneliness never ventures into a marriage, that it's solely a quality of aloneness.  I've never been married, yet I know too well the messiness of relationships with myriad friends and colleagues whom I nurture, stand up for, and with whom I share a past.  We don't plan a future together in the same "until death" way that some married people manage, but that shared future in marriage is often illusory.  The future is unknowable.  Shit happens, and happily married people can still end up on their own.  

Saturday, January 19, 2013

A Stoic Resurgence

In reading a few other blogs lately, Stoicism has come up a few times, and I'm seeing it in a few books I've been reading lately too.  Maybe it'll stick this time.

In Robin Hanson's blog discussing why middle aged people are most pessimistic, I suggested that maybe it's a point in life where we know too much horrible crap happening in the world, and it's making us miserable.  And we're just before a point in which we've found a way to cope with the unending tragedies that are part of being alive.  Maybe my cohort will become happier in a stoic manner - once we get our heads around how little control we have over the world, accept that many of these problems aren't ours to solve, and develop a tranquility around it all.

Then stoicism came up again in arguments about the relationship to Cognitive Behaviour Therapy via Lieter Reports, a N.Y. Times article by Kathryn Schulz about self-help books' suggested dualism of selfhood.

Sunday, January 13, 2013

The Lasting Influence of Rhoda Morgenstern


I just saw that the house featured in the Mary Tyler Moore show is up for sale.  And I've been thinking about how much I was influenced by the character of Rhoda.  I used to wait for the few minutes she'd be on screen each episode.  I'm sure I'm not alone.