Archive for category Education

Solving Problems in the Wrong Direction

What is the problem? Recently my district administered Semester exams. Our practice is to have one standard exam for each of the core courses (Chemistry, Algebra, World Geography, etc.). They are administered in the core class period, during the school day through D2SC. The problem is there is not sufficient bandwidth to handle administering so many exams, across multiple high schools, simultaneously. The result is that it takes a long time for the tests to load and sometimes the student’s answers are not submitted, so they have to redo the exam. Both are extremely frustrating when you are working under time constraints.

What is the solution? We use Blackboard LMS for most, if not all of your classes. Especially in my building. The Blackboard administrators have done an excellent job in making Blackboard integration into the classes seemly and nearly flawless. Part of Blackboards LMS involves a testing function, that is superior to the testing in D2SC. My suggestion would be to move testing from D2SC into Blackboard.

What was their solution? The administration decided, on the third day of testing, to have Social Studies teachers use paper copies of the exam and only release a “bubble sheet” version of the exam on D2SC, thus reducing the bandwidth necessary for the image heavy exam.

This is a clear example of solving a problem in the wrong direction.

What should have figured into the decision making process?

 

  • Use what works: Blackboard works. D2SC doesn’t
  • Use what benefits the students: More authentic assessment in Blackboard with multiple question types and the ability to randomize questions. In D2SC everyone get the same questions, in the same order. This doesn’t test what the student knows as much as what the students around him know.
  • Why this benefits the administration: They get reports. Not reports on good data, that accurately expresses the learning, just good reports.

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Re: 10 Questions to Ask Yourself About Your Job

 

In response to this Lifehack post.

 

1. Is what I do really worthwhile? I believe that, second only to medicine, education is the most worthwhile endeavor you can have. I has the ability to change the future and your perception of the past, it can be used for good or evil, and we consider it so important that everyone gets it for free. No one is allowed to forgo it because they are too poor, or too busy, or even too rich.

2. Do I enjoy my job? Absolutely! I use to be in the military, and I really enjoyed my job there, until some changes were made and I choose to leave and become a teacher.

3. Am I learning? Constantly. I’m learning how to learn, I’m learning how to teacher better. I’m learning technology and content and about people in general.

4. Does this job lead to somewhere I want to go? That is a difficult question to answer, since I don’t have a clear idea where I want to go. I enjoy my job. I enjoy my school. I enjoy my students (even the ones that aren’t good students). Could I go somewhere else? Maybe. Right now? No, thank you.

5. Am I well paid? I am paid well for the hours I put in at work. All the extra hours I spend at home, helping others, learning new information and knowledge, I do for free.

6. Do I get on with my boss? I have an excellent boss. Easily the best of my career. He has a clear vision and is a life long learner, like me.

7. Do I get on with my colleagues? We have a good work environment. We have many strong relationships throughout our floor and good friendships between most of the teachers and staff. I count many of my colleagues among my closest and dearest friends.

8. Am I empowered to be creative and do things my way? Absolutely. Everyone from my principle to my floor vice principle and team leader supports my ideas and plans.

9. Is my work/life balance acceptable? Hmmmm…This is a close call. I love my work, so I spend a lot of time working. Probably more than most. Could I spend less time working and more time relaxing? Yes. I work harder than I have to, but not harder than  I want to.

10. Is my job title prestigious? Yes. I don’t think I’ve ever told someone that I was a history teacher without some kind of affirming response. Everyone either loves history, and would love to have a job that let them talk about it all day long, or they admire the fact that you work with teenagers, because they don’t think they could do it themselves (mostly this comes from parents of teenagers).

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And next, we will base teacher pay on test scores.

 

This Washington Post article talks about Ed. Sec. Arne Duncan’s impact as schools chief in Chicago. Arguments can be made about the definition of success, or improvement, or change, but one quote has come to the attention of more than a few readers:

"Obviously, you always want to get better faster," Duncan said in an interview when asked about the federal math scores. "I was focused on outcomes — improving graduation rates, making sure that students who graduated had a chance to pursue higher ed. You can have the best test scores in the world, but if kids aren’t going that next step, you’re not changing their lives."

That is one danger of teaching based on standardized testing. Based on the metrics you are using, it is an useless loop. You establish a test to measure teaching, and then teach to improve the test. The measurement in itself is meaningless. You might as well be teaching to improve their height.

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