I just watched the video on the C21 Canada site called “Designing Schools for the 21st
Century” presented by the Pearson Foundation and The Mobile Learning Institute.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ur7gp6cB-Zo&feature=player_embedded
It all seems very visionary which some would characterize as progressive and
therefore good. It makes one feel all
fuzzy and warm about educating teenagers.
Everyone is interested in their learning. Everyone is happy. Who could
argue with that? But...what don’t we see
in that video? We don’t see the billions
of dollars required to build such a facility in every neighbourhood. So who would get such an amazing facility? We
don’t see the children who struggle with basic subjects. We don’t see the
special needs children and the supports they require.
This is a pie-in-the-sky vision designed to do what the
community Christmas Tree was meant to accomplish in the sale of overpriced
homes in a recently proposed housing development. Just think of the community Christmas tree
and one can imagine that if he/she moved into the neighbourhood all the
neighbours would get along like family and gather around the tree on Christmas
Eve and sing carols. What a wonderful vision! No matter that the development
was being built on a landfill and no Christmas tree would ever be able to grow
in that environment. As long as the
prospective buyers don’t know what’s under the surface and they continue to envision
the community Christmas tree.
I have no doubt that many of those who share the 21st
C vision have the best of intentions and question why anyone would be skeptical
of this wonderful “new” and enlightened vision.
Why indeed?
Here are some thoughts about that:
Those of us who have been
teaching for a long time have seen the cycles.
In the late 60s and in the 70s we saw what I, as a young teacher thought
were wonderful innovative changes to education.
My children went to an open area primary school, one that worked very
well. The kids were not sitting in rows in most classes. Schools were designed
for free movement of students, we had multi-age classes, etc.
So, many of us are resentful of the Ministry and other
management laying claim to what teachers already have been practicing and to further
innovations which teachers believed to be progressive but were often held back
due to funding shortages, philosophical differences and sometimes parental
concerns about changes. That was evident in the Sullivan Commission
recommendations in the late 80s. Now, all of a sudden, we see the Ministry laying
claim to educational enlightenment with the inference that teachers, especially
the older ones, are stale and not capable of recognizing progress or of adapting
to the times. For example, continually
telling teachers that having students sit in rows with their eyes forward is
from a different era, when teachers have been configuring their classes in many
different ways since the 60s, does nothing but breed resentment.
This attitude does not recognize
that many experienced teachers are true experts who have been working with and
observing children and how they learn for many years. They have seen firsthand
through that work, how the child’s brain works.
And now another important concern: the question of what is
behind the world wide push towards “21st century learning. We see big
corporations making serious inroads into the education “business.” And these
actions by multinational corporations are not philanthropic in nature. They are shrewd business decisions. We see organizations like GELP pushing
agendas that would benefit big businesses like Pearson, Cisco, Dell, Microsoft
and big banks. In the U.S. we see big
business, through ALEC, actually crafting legislation with politicians. We see
meetings of big business and world political leaders, where discussions take
place about education policy around the world. We see the World Bank and the
International Monetary Fund with education and other policies that would profit
banks, but are not necessarily in the best interests of the citizens.
Even those corporations that may appear to
be philanthropic are often looking for something in return. Once the system
gives in to large charitable funding it is often beholden to the donor’s intent
in giving the gift.
We also see teachers being left out of the
discussion. It’s obvious to me why. Teachers are aware of the realities. They
want guaranteed working and learning conditions. They don’t want to be
overworked. They don’t want to be expected to perform miracles without adequate
resources and supports. They would
actually want the system to work and work well, and that would require coming
down from Cloud 9 at the 50,000 foot level to ground level where the action takes
place and where realities have to be faced. For example, how many schools in BC would be
replaced with anything close to the school toured in the video? I would venture none. In short, teachers
would get in the way of the dream because they are the ones in the trenches. Don’t
get me wrong. Teachers dream of the perfect system too, but they are the ones
who have to face the reality of lack of supports and resources and inadequate
facilities while at the same time being pressured with the dream of those at
the 50,000 ft. level.
Going back to the prospective buyers in the
proposed housing development, they need to consider the likelihood of the
Christmas tree growing at all, the likelihood of 300 happy neighbours gathering
around the tree, the reality that it is probably just a shrewd marketing
gimmick, etc. So like the prospective buyers in the proposed neighbourhood,
where they need to look at the reality of the Christmas tree vision and
consider all factors, so do we in the education system have to consider all of
the factors involved in 21stC learning and those delivering the most
fundamental of the services (teachers) need to play a major role. Teachers will inject the much needed perspective of reality. We need that perspective for success.