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Love is not enough : Comments
By Glynne Sutcliffe, published 25/10/2006There is an educational revolution in progress with kindergarten as the new first grade.
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Posted by jimoctec, Wednesday, 25 October 2006 11:50:51 AM
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This is little more than an "advertorial" for the author's business. If you want to read the REAL story about the utter failure that is "No Child Left Behind", you only need to google Jonathan Kozol, a writer and researcher "on the ground" in some of the most poverty-ridden districts of the US.
The dramatic increase of private tutoring businesses is a blight and a shame. It has arisen from, ironically, government intervention (the author states this herself) - terribly misguided, ideologically driven government intervention - and has only served to widen the socioeconomic gap. Far from the private sector coming to the rescue (which seems to be implied in the article - and the author's link to other articles by Kevin Donnelly on her website seem to confirm this), the US government has worked, once again, to benefit the rich and leave the poor behind. The only beneficiaries of such actions are those who stand most to gain from the increasing privatisation of all sectors of education - the tutoring businesses (run by people like Glynne Sutcliffe); the self-styled "education consultants" (like Kevin Donnelly); and the companies that make and sell tests and marking programs - whose numbers have proliferated since the introduction of "No (white, middle-class, from the proper neighbourhood) Child Left Behind". Glynne Sutcliffe, please declare your interests much more overtly before attempting another advertorial. Posted by petal, Thursday, 26 October 2006 8:28:08 PM
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Response to Petal
When one stands up to be counted, one can predict an attack – it’s the great Australian way. Still, it would help the emergence of better social policies if the attack was well-informed. One of the more grievous intellectual errors of the residual left in Australia is the unfounded assumption that those on government funded payrolls are pure of heart and dedicated solely to the delivery of professional excellence. Yet in the arena of reading instruction (surely one of the most important tasks for schools initially set up to make sure all children could read, write and count) teachers have been near-criminally incompetent. The reign of ‘whole language’ could NEVER have occurred were teachers minimally thoughtful about the logic of the curriculum content they were charged with imparting. That the ‘whole language’ juggernaut rolled on for thirty years after the 1960‘s publication of “Why Johnny Can’t Read” - to the point where the entire educational enterprise was in jeopardy - is almost unbelievable, except that’s what the record shows. Regarding Petal’s contempt for ‘business’, it is in the business arena that you find innovation, energy, and some attempt to supply what service users actually want. Government monopolies rarely do this. Both the shift to private schooling and the growth in home-schooling document parental appreciation of options. The No-Child-Left-Behind Act has been patchily successful not because Bush is engaged in some kind of conspiratorial endeavour to advantage text book publishers, or test providers. The critique of Halliburton seems to have migrated quite inappropriately. Nor does NCLB favor the children of the wealthy! NCLB has run into difficulties primarily because teachers, unions and education faculties have resented and resisted the idea that teachers should be made accountable for children actually learning an identifiable quantum of curriculum content. Something to do with comfort zones, I think. To find out how ‘business’ can contribute to policy debates Petal should go to http://www.earlyreadingplayschool.com.au - Theoretical Issues page and read “The More Things Change - A case study in the conduct of intellectual debate and discussion in Australia”. - GS Posted by veritas, Monday, 30 October 2006 9:08:08 PM
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I have read a number of articles on your site, Glynne, and I would like for you to read a number of articles on the man I mentioned, Jonathan Kozol. I think it would benefit you to have a broader understanding of the real implications of the NCLB policies you support so assiduously.
Posted by petal, Thursday, 2 November 2006 7:21:39 PM
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Petal - I am puzzled by your assumption that I have not read Kozol. Death At An Early Age was one of those must read texts in my Dip Ed year. I have also lived in Chicago for a number of years, and sent my children to a public school on the Hyde Park/ghetto border. At the University of Melbourne as a History student I read extensively on the race problems of Jim Crow America and wrote a substantive research essay comparing Du Bois favourably with Booker T.Washington. Kozol is a nice man, and an excellent author. I do not believe he has come to terms with the obligation of teachers to actually teach. His approach depends entirely on the availablity of top quality, highly trained teachers with a total and missionary commitment to their students. In the real world of jobs, salaries, careers, etc. this is pie on the sky, and doesn't address the real issue, which is that that 'whole language'is a misbegotten and essentially stupid and ignorant method of teaching children to read, with predictably poor results. The only students to survive 'whole language' have, I believe, been those with parents who provoked a love of learning in their pre-school children. I could say more. But I'll wait to see what you have to say next.
Posted by veritas, Thursday, 2 November 2006 11:47:07 PM
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Veritas, you've got your head up your own dark place - Jeez - Petal wasn't talking to YOU. Cant't you read? She was addressing the author of the article, Glynne.
You might have been talking to her, but she wasn't talking to you. Anyway, Petal, you go for it, I'm with you. The less the bastards of the establishment have to do with our kds the better. How do we keep their filthy hands off of our kids? That's the fight. Posted by Maximus, Friday, 3 November 2006 8:46:20 PM
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The social benefits of early learning and early intervention tend to be discounted because it is hard to place a money value on them, but there can be no doubt that money invested in early learning and family support is more than adequately repaid in the long term if we can avoid the need for more-and-more expensive remedial interventions in educational, health and social welfare in later life, after the horse has bolted.
My entire career was spent in public education, and we knew that for those who entered school at age five from a home with a conscientious mother (in particular) had a wonderful head start. A conscientious father and interested and involved other friends and relations was an added bonus.
What a shame that we have never been able to adequately financially compensate those parents who actually do most to prepare their offspring for school and for life. Instead, we give a baby bonus with no guarantee of it being "earned" in the long term.