In a December 2011 article in The Atlantic, “Everything You Know About Education Is Wrong,” Jordan Weissman reports a study by recently minted MacArthur “genius” award winner, economist Roland Pryer. His findings underline a set of correlations between high student achievement and school conditions. Which factors seem to have little, and even negative influence on student performance? Class size, per pupil expenditures, certification, and advanced degrees had no positive effect on performance.

The culture of the school is intimately linked with performance. High performing students in this study come from schools with a relentless focus on academic achievement (Professor Pryer studied 35 NYC charter schools). The related attributes consistently associated with effective learning support that focus:

• High expectations;
• the numbers of times students got feedback;
• the number of assessments of student work (more is better);
• the number of times students were tutored in small groups; and
• the number of hours students spent at their desks

Schools with these characteristics produced better standardized test scores. Emphasis on “self-esteem” and “emotional health,” as opposed to academic achievement fared less well by Professor Pryer’s measurements.

The positive qualities consistently point to teachers—teachers who note students’ differences and individual needs; teachers who go the extra mile in providing personal tutoring; teachers who tirelessly provide feedback and assessments; and teachers who maintain a positive environment in which students love to learn.

Of course, we will get results related to performance standards for which we seek solutions. Perhaps, if Professor Pryer were more concerned about social adjustment and emotional fulfillment, he would have identified other characteristics. I do not think that these results and academic achievement are incompatible or mutually exclusive. Balanced and textured schools like CCES promote both emotional intelligence and academic success. The reason: teachers committed to the school mission and our religious foundation.

Links to the study: the former must be purchased.

http://www.nber.org/papers/w17632
http://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2011/12/everything-you-know-about-education-is-wrong/249722/

Dear Friends,

Several years ago, I discovered Robert Sternberg, who made his mark with The Triarchic Mind. This article in Education Week was published fifteen years ago and still hits home for me. At this time he taught at Yale. As a further measure of his independent spirit, he now plies his trade at Oklahoma State University. Sternberg brings home the value of practical and creative intelligence. Schools are so enamored of analytical thinking at the expense of recognizing the enormous power of other kinds of intelligence.
I would love to start a conversation about Sternberg’s ideas.
Leonard

 

Robert J. Sternberg, a professor of psychology and education at Yale University, argues in his new book, Successful
Intelligence
: How Practical and Creative Intelligence Determine Success in Life, that appreciating the differences between knowledge useful in school and knowledge applicable to everyday life should inform the way educators and laymen alike judge the potential of the young. Those people who succeed, he says, have managed to develop a wide range of intellectual skills beyond those taught and valued in academic life. In the following excerpt, he explores the three critical elements of creative and practical intelligence:

 

Jack, who considers himself smartest in his class, likes to make fun of Irvin, the boy he has identified as stupidest in the class. Jack
pulls aside his friend Tom and says, “You want to see what ‘stupid’ means, Tom? Watch this … Hey, Irvin. Here are two coins. Take whichever one you want. It’s yours.”

Irvin looks at the two coins, a nickel and a dime, for a while and then selects the nickel.

“Go ahead, Irv, take it, it’s yours.” Jack laughs.

Irvin takes the larger coin and walks away. An adult who has been watching the transaction from a distance walks up to Irvin and gently points out that the dime is worth more than the nickel, even though it is smaller, and that Irvin has just cost himself 5 cents.

“Oh, I know that,” replies Irvin, “but if I picked the dime, Jack would never ask me to choose between the two coins again.
This way, he’ll keep asking me again and again. I’ve already collected over a dollar from him, and all I have to do is keep choosing the nickel.”

This apocryphal story points out something we already intuitively know–that someone can be slow in school but think well outside it, and vice-versa. The hoary question “How can someone so smart be so dumb?” reminds us that people can be good or bad thinkers, regardless of how well they may do in a school setting. I found this out the hard way.

My interest in broadening our means of identifying potential high performers in life and not just in school came from an experience in my own career. Because of my wretched performance on IQ tests as a child, I became very interested in psychology. By the time I was in 7th grade, I decided I wanted to study intelligence. I did just that. In carrying out a project on the development of mental tests, I constructed my own test. I also found in my hometown library the Stanford-Binet intelligence test and decided to give it to some of my classmates.

My first subject was a girl in whom I was romantically interested. I figured I would break the ice by giving her the test. Not a good
idea. The relationship not only terminated at that point, it never even got started.

My choice of the next subject–a boy I had known from Cub Scouts–was also a mistake. I thought he was a good friend, but he was a fink. He told his mother I had given him the test. She told the junior high school guidance counselor, who reported me to the head school psychologist. The whole affair came to an unpleasant conclusion when the psychologist took me out of social studies class and, after bawling me out for 50 minutes, threatened to personally burn the book containing the test if I ever brought it to school again. He suggested that if I wanted to continue studying intelligence, I should limit my subjects to rats.

Once in college, I was still eager to study intelligence and figure out why I was so stupid, because I knew I had a low IQ. There is a
not so hidden point here. Once students get low scores on aptitude tests such as an IQ test, the SAT, or the ACT, they come to think of themselves as dumb. Even if they achieve, they may view themselves as achieving in spite of their being dumb. Society may view them in the same way. They may come to be labeled overachievers, people whose achievements seem to exceed their intelligence and who ought to be pushed down in size.

Some societies don’t value outstanding performance or, at least, performance that stands out. In Norway, they speak of the Law of Jante, according to which if someone’s head sticks up over the heads of others, then it should be cut off to get that person down to size. This same mentality is rather common in other parts of the world and is not unknown here. Many people grow up in families or go to schools where what is valued most is not standing out from the crowd–at least in unconventional ways. Too often, conformity is the norm.

Pursuing my interest in psychology as a freshman at Yale, I got off to a bad start. I got a grade of C in the introductory psychology
course, scarcely an indication of a bright future in the field. It was further confirmation that my IQ scores were right and I didn’t have the ability. My psychology professor apparently agreed with me. Handing back a test to me one day, he commented that there was a famous Sternberg in psychology (Saul), and it appeared there wasn’t about to be another. I took the message to heart and decided to switch to another major. I chose mathematics, because I thought it was useful. The choice turned out to be fortunate. After receiving a worse grade in the introductory course for math majors than I had received in the introductory psychology course, I decided to switch back to psychology. And I did well in the upper-level courses.

I have now been a psychologist for 21 years, and one thing of which I am certain is that I have never–not even once–had to do in the profession what I needed to do to get an A in the introductory course, as well as in some of the other courses. In particular, I’ve never had to memorize a book or lecture. If I can’t remember something, I just look it up. The way schools set things up, however, they reward with A’s the students who are good memorizers, not just at the college level but at many other levels as well. In defense of our schools, the educational systems in many other countries are worse in this regard.

The problem is that, in psychology as in other fields, the demands of the field bear little or no resemblance to the demands of the
training needed in order to enter the field. For example, my son once said to me that he hated history and wished he never had to take another history course. I said to him that I, personally, had always found history interesting and I wondered why he didn’t. His response was that he hated memorizing dates. Indeed, memorizing dates, battles, and historical documents constitutes the way many history courses are taught. But historians are not experts in their fields by virtue of being walking encyclopedias of dates or names of battles or historical documents.

In general, the same thing is true in the sciences. Often what gets an A is memorizing formulas or solving problems in textbooks and on tests. But scientists don’t memorize formulas for a living, nor do they solve textbook problems. Rather, they generate problems for themselves. Indeed, to a large extent they are judged on the importance of the problems they decide to study.

I went to my son’s English class one Parents’ Day. They were studying the Odyssey. A good book–actually, a great one. The teacher read a quote, and the students had to identify who said it, or what was happening at the time. For students who loved to memorize, that was just fine. But no one who excelled in that class was showing the talents of either a writer or a literary critic. And among those who did not do so well was, for all we could tell, one who had the potential talent to be the next Shakespeare. Unlikely, perhaps, but the teacher would never know, given the way the class was taught.

The danger is that we overlook many talented people in any field of study because of the way we measure intelligence, and some of the best potential psychologists, biologists, historians, or whatever may get derailed because they are made to think they don’t have the talent to pursue their interests. Clearly, we need to teach in a way that recognizes, develops, and rewards the three aspects of successful intelligence that are important to pursuing a career in any field.

Two boys are walking in a forest. They are quite different. The first boy’s teachers think he is smart, his parents think he is smart, and as a result, he thinks he is smart. He has good test scores, good grades, and other good paper credentials that will get him far in his scholastic life. Few people consider the second boy smart. His test scores are nothing great, his grades aren’t so good, and his other paper credentials are, in general, marginal. At best, people would call him shrewd or street-smart. As the two boys walk along in the forest, they encounter a problem–a huge, furious, hungry-looking grizzly bear, charging straight at them. The first boy, calculating that the grizzly bear will overtake them in 17.3 seconds, panics. In this state, he looks at the second boy, who is calmly taking off his hiking boots and putting on his jogging shoes.

The first boy says to the second boy, “You must be crazy. There is no way we are going to outrun that grizzly bear!”

The second boy replies, “That’s true. But all I have to do is outrun you!” Both boys in that story are smart, but they are smart in different ways. The first boy quickly analyzed the problem, but that was as far as his intelligence took him. The second boy not only spotted the problem, he came up with a creative and practical solution. He displayed successful intelligence.

To be successfully intelligent is to think well in three different ways: analytically, creatively, and practically. Typically, only analytical intelligence is valued on tests and in the classroom. Yet the style of intelligence that schools most readily recognize as smart may well be less useful to many students in their adult lives than creative and practical intelligence.

The three aspects of successful intelligence are related. Analytical thinking is required to solve problems and to judge the quality of ideas. Creative intelligence is required to formulate good problems and ideas in the first place. Practical intelligence is needed to use the ideas and their analysis in an effective way in one’s everyday life.

Successful intelligence is most effective when it balances all three of its analytical, creative, and practical aspects. It is more important to know when and how to use these aspects of successful intelligence than just to have them. Successfully intelligent people don’t just have abilities, they reflect on when and how to use these abilities effectively.

From Successful Intelligence by Robert J. Sternberg. ©1996 by Robert J. Sternberg. Reprinted by permission of
Simon & Schuster Inc.

http://www.amazon.com/Successful-Intelligence-Practical-Creative-Determine/dp/0452279062

 

South Carolina Bar Association President, CCES parent of three, and friend Marvin Quattlebaum spoke to our US AP Government students and a history class in celebration of Constitution Day on September 16.  He engaged the students in a discussion of  the Seventh Amendment.

I am delighted to bring Marvin’s fine op-ed, published in Columbia’s The State newspaper, to your attention.  I quote the comment with which Marvin opened his note to me, “I thought you might be interested.  Fortunately, from my experience, CCES does a better job at teaching about civics and government than most any place I have seen.”

A discussion on the importance of civic education is especially fitting today, as over 100 of our Upper School students depart for the Youth in Government Conference in Columbia.  They will join over 1,400 South Carolina students for a four day, hands-on experience at the State House and South Carolina Supreme Court.

Read Marvin’s OpEd at:

http://www.thestate.com/2011/11/16/2047667/quattlebaum-making-ourselves-fit.html

Do you consider civic illiteracy an epidemic?

 

 

 

 

Greetings, one and all,

Saturday’s WSJ Review section opens with a lengthy piece on cyber education ( http://www.emailthis.clickability.com/et/emailThis?clickMap=viewThis&etMailToID=343868324&pt=Y). I believe that some hybrid version of virtual schooling is inevitable at independent schools. Depending on how we handle it, it may be an asset. However, in isolation it spells danger in my judgment. Virtual learning in lieu of the conventional classroom experience undercuts collaboration, the promotion of social skills, the development of citizenship, and thwarts the powerful inspiration that a passionate teacher brings to students. Yet, its economic benefits, its trendiness, its flexibility and individualization make virtual schooling a likelihood in our professional lives and in your children’s education.

What are your thoughts?

 

 

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/19/opinion/how-to-stop-the-drop-in-verbal-scores.html?emc=eta1

Do you agree with Hirsch, the father of the Cultural Literacy series? Are your children experiencing a content-rich, word-laden experience in the LS at CCES?

This discussion presents a research based set of proposals about making homework productive. One of its recommendations also addresses tests and their utility in cementing memory as opposed to assessing knowledge. Instead of the customary “either-or” options, this article presents thoughtful strategies to improve learning. Your thoughts about the article would stimulate discussion.

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/11/opinion/sunday/quality-homework-a-smart-idea.html?emc=eta1

 

Welcome to the new school year at CCES. Let’s begin a conversation among us about the value of technology in schools. This topic seems to resist any finite resolution. We continue to argue about the same issues and invest fortunes without any plan or data to support a plan. Note Larry Cuban’s comments in this article. I think that tablets, for example, can play a significant role in enriching the educational experience of students and prepare them for higher education. We can evaluate learning more directly and can reduce the textbook burden with tablets. However, no initiative involving technology, whether the technology is a slide rule, a TI calculator, a SmartBoard, or an iPad 2, will succeed without suitable teacher training. The rule is the schools pour money into technology and proclaim expectations about the great value that this investment will yield. But they forget that to produce value the instructional leaders need to reorient their approaches and know how to include devices and their tremendous range of access into their instructional arsenal.

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/04/technology/technology-in-schools-faces-questions-on-value.html?_r=1&emc=eta1

Thanks to Dr. Chandler for his regular participation in the blog. I have mentioned on many occasions my admiration for the columns that David Brooks writes in the New York Times. His op-ed columns are invariably reasonable and relevant. He avoids taking sides and applies a non-ideological standard to assessing the social good. He has recently published a book, The Social Animal, a portion of which appeared in the January 17th issue of the New Yorker. The article as a whole is provocative. However, one passage especially engaged my interest because it captures attributes that I value highly.

He fashions an imaginary social class of upwardly mobile twenty-somethings, which he designates the Composure Class. The magazine excerpt begins with a courtship ritual of two members of that class, Harold and Erica. The moment at which this key paragraph begins, Harold contemplates a choice of gelato flavors:

Occasionally, you meet a young, rising member of this class at the gelato store, as he hovers indecisively over the cloudberry and ginger-pomegranate selections, and you notice that his superhuman equilibrium is marred by an anxiety. Many members of this class, like many Americans generally, have a vague sense that their lives have been distorted by a giant cultural bias. They live in a society that prizes the development of career skills but is inarticulate when it comes to the things that matter most. The young achievers are tutored in every soccer technique and calculus problem, but when it comes to their most important decisions—whom to marry and whom to befriend, what to love and what to despise—they are on their own. Nor, for all their striving, do they understand the qualities that lead to the highest achievement. Intelligence, academic performance, and prestigious schools don’t correlate well with fulfillment, or even with outstanding accomplishment. The traits that do make a difference are poorly understood, and can’t be taught in a classroom, no matter what the tuition: the ability to understand and inspire others; to read situations and discern underlying patterns; to build trusting relationships; to recognize and correct one’s shortcomings; to imagine alternate futures.  In short, these achievers have a sense that they are shallower than they need to be. [my bold]

Brooks singles out traits that might well fall under the “emotional intelligence” rubric. I agree with him that these qualities pay long term dividends in our lives—personal and professional. However, I believe that these attributes can be promoted in schools. In fact, I believe that our school goes a long way in cultivating these qualities. We extend opportunities for leadership, we encourage cooperative work among students, we develop practical analytical skills to encourage students to “read situations” by surrounding students with a variety of opportunities to perform on stage and participate in sports (these venues foster many of these attributes). The interaction among teachers and students and the presence of an Honor Code promote “trusting relationships.” Teachers and coaches who humanely inspire students to make the most of their talents direct students to recognize their shortcomings and work on correcting them. Envisioning “alternate futures” eludes me as an intentional school engagement. But, I am confident in the course of discussions at all grade levels, students hypothesize futures.

I would love to hear from you about your views of the importance of these traits and about other traits that you wish schools would nurture.

Let’s get a dialogue going. This essay prompts many questions near and dear. The first one is “What is the value of treating blocks of time—segments of our lives, levels of schooling, stages of professional ascendancy as stepping stones or preparations?” Don’t we lose something by always looking at time as preparation for the next stage instead of taking pleasure in the present? Why not look at the inherent value of experience rather than its instrumental value, i.e., getting us somewhere else? Why can’t exult in where we are? Maybe the “next” level would be much more satisfying if we made the most of Time now?

So, would we educators be better off beating the drums for lapping up all you can while you are a fourth-grader or a junior instead of treating them as launching pads for Middle School and the senior year respectively?

That’s one large issue that this op-ed raises.

Then we have the romantic view of childhood with its longing for a return to our prelapsarian innocence. Are we better off innocent? Or as Professor Murphy puts it: “childhood innocence teaches us how the world ought to be.” Is the world a better place without the Fall, the archetypal loss of innocence? What would life be like without experience, disobedience, failure, adversity, disappointment? Would we be better off? Is a life in which we fully trust others superior to one hardened by the knowledge of evil and duplicity? Should we beat our weapons into plowshares? The second point stresses an enviable openness to the future, a state in which we are venturesome, not confined by adult contingencies. Is a cliff right ahead? Professor Murphy’s third point is his glorification of our former ability to become so lost in an activity that we lose sight of time? Again, we enjoy the extended moment for itself and become indifferent to external constraints. Would the trains run on time when we become disdainful of time? It’s interesting that an article that provokes a good deal of comment in The Chronicle of Higher Education is “The Case for Play,” a discussion of the work done by the researchers who wrote Einstein Never Used Flashcards.
Finally, he argues that as children we made the greatest art, asked the deepest philosophical questions (“Where do babies come from?” “Where did our beloved pet go after it died?”), and we boldly took on the daunting challenge of figuring out how to work gadgets that now we would feel abjectly inept to master. We did not care about self-image or the view others had of us. We just greeted the challenge with no worries about failure or clumsiness.

Do we need to prolong these conditions of childhood in parenting and schooling? Are we rushing the demise of childhood? These questions are hopelessly dated but timeless. What does it mean to “get ahead”? Of whom? Of what? What’s wrong with staying where we are and making the most of it? Am I debunking the value of education or elevating it? This article prompts us to ask what constitutes a worthwhile life? Outward achievement? Measurable products? Does a life of quiet thought and imagination without much output make a mockery of the time and talents we are blessed with?

Ok, then, take a crack at reading this piece and responding.

 

 

Amy Chua’s new book, The Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother, about Chinese parenting is creating a huge stir. What do you think?

I am including links to the original WSJ article from two Saturdays ago, an op-ed by David Brooks from Monday, and a related piece in the last week by Nick Kristof on Chinese schools. In this op-ed, Kristof discusses the recurrent contrast of high academic rigor and output and low creative perspective in Chinese education. Chua’s book is all about discipline and rigor in parenting to produce maximum output.

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704111504576059713528698754.html

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/18/opinion/18brooks.html?_r=1&emc=eta1

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/16/opinion/16kristof.html?ref=nicholasdkristof