Schools of Education
by
Walter E. Williams
Recently
by Walter E. Williams: Presidential
Nonsense
Larry Sand's
article "No Wonder Johnny (Still) Can't Read" – written for The
John William Pope Center for Higher Education Policy, based in Raleigh,
N.C. – blames schools of education for the decline in America's
education. Education professors drum into students that they should
not "drill and kill" or be the "sage on the stage" but instead be
the "guide on the side" who "facilitates student discovery." This
kind of harebrained thinking, coupled with multicultural nonsense,
explains today's education. During his teacher education, Sand says,
"teachers-to-be were forced to learn about this ethnic group, that
impoverished group, this sexually anomalous group, that under-represented
group, etc. – all under the rubric of 'Culturally Responsive Education.'"
Education majors
are woefully lacking in academic skills. Here are some sample test
questions for you to answer. Question 1: Which of the following
is equal to a quarter-million? a) 40,000, b) 250,000, c) 2,500,000,
d) 1/4,000,000 or e) 4/1,000,000. Question 2: Martin Luther King
Jr. (insert the correct choice) for the poor of all races. a) spoke
out passionately, b) spoke out passionate, c) did spoke out passionately,
d) has spoke out passionately or e) had spoken out passionate. Question
3: What would you do if your student sprained an ankle? a) Put a
Band-Aid on it, b) Ice it or c) Rinse it with water.
Guess whether
these questions were on a sixth-grade, ninth-grade or 12th-grade
test. I bet the average reader would guess that it's a sixth-grade
test. Wrong. How about ninth-grade? Wrong again. You say, "OK, Williams,
so they're 12th-grade test questions!" Still wrong. According to
a Heartland Institute-published School Reform News (September 2001)
article titled "Who Tells Teachers They Can Teach?", those test
questions came from prospective teacher tests. The first two questions
are samples from the Praxis I test for teachers, and the third is
from the 1999 teacher certification test in Illinois. According
to the Chicago Sun-Times (9/6/01), 5,243 Illinois teachers
failed their teacher certification tests. The Chicago Sun-Times
also reported, "One teacher failed 24 of 25 teacher tests – including
11 of 12 Basic Skills tests and all 12 tests on teaching learning-disabled
children." Yet that teacher was assigned to teach learning-disabled
children in Chicago. Departments of education have solved the problem
of teacher test failure. According to a New York Post story
(11/14/11) titled "City teacher tests turn into E-ZPass," more than
99 percent of teachers pass.
Textbooks
used in schools of education advocate sheer nonsense. A passage
in Enid Lee et al.'s "Beyond Heroes and Holidays" reads: "We cannot
afford to become so bogged down in grammar and spelling that we
forget the whole story. ... The onslaught of antihuman practices
that this nation and other nations are facing today: racism, and
sexism, and the greed for money and human labor that disguises itself
as 'globalization.'" Marilyn Burns' text "About Teaching Mathematics"
reads, "There is no place for requiring students to practice tedious
calculations that are more efficiently and accurately done by using
calculators." "New Designs for Teaching and Learning," by Dennis
Adams and Mary Hamm, says: "Content knowledge is not seen to be
as important as possessing teaching skills and knowledge about the
students being taught. ... Successful teachers understand the outside
context of community, personal abilities, and feelings, while they
establish an inside context or environment conducive to learning."
That means it's no problem if a teacher can't figure out that a
quarter-million is the same as 250,000. Harvey Daniels and Marilyn
Bizar's text "Methods that Matter" reads, "Students can no longer
be viewed as cognitive living rooms into which the furniture of
knowledge is moved in and arranged by teachers, and teachers cannot
invariably act as subject-matter experts." The authors add, "The
main use of standardized tests in America is to justify the distribution
of certain goodies to certain people."
Schools of
education represent the academic slums of most any college. American
education can benefit from slum removal.
January
25, 2012
Walter
E. Williams is the John M. Olin distinguished professor of economics
at George Mason University, and a nationally syndicated columnist.
To find out more about Walter E. Williams and read features by other
Creators Syndicate columnists and cartoonists, visit the Creators
Syndicate web page.
Copyright
© 2012 Creators Syndicate, Inc.
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