Schools shape our future as a society. They are the bedrock
of a community – a place in which all of our futures are nourished and
developed. A place where skills are taught, enabled and encouraged. A place
where a young person discovers their passions and concerns and is encouraged to
develop. We should all care about what happens in schools, even if we do not
have children attending them. One of those kids stood at the bus stop with
baggy jeans and a funny hat may well become your pension fund manager just a
few years from now. Others will run businesses that will hire your
granddaughter or work to ensure our planet survives the onslaught of climate
change.
But there is something wrong with our schools. They are burdened
with too much direction about what they should teach – too many curriculum
objectives, too many politically correct imperatives and too many instructions
for our instructors. They are held accountable but are not given the tools for
the responsible tasks they are given. They are subject to high stakes testing
where students, on a single day, determine the fate of the school and its
teachers. They are vulnerable and stressful. They are permanently failing to
deliver to all of our expectations.
We also do not treat our teachers as true professionals.
They are given limited scope for independent action – as if we do not trust
them, despite their years of training, to do the job entrusted to them. We
disdain their professional development activities and scoff at their summer
vacations. We do not show them respect when, as they must do, they tell us that
our son or daughter is not the paragon of excellence we thought them to be and
that they are struggling.
We also see schools as a preparation for something else –
for work, College or University – rather than places of learning in their own
right. In fact, as one keen observer has noted, much of schooling is seen as a
preparation for the work of a few – those who go to University - and is not,
therefore, a great place for those for whom the trades, or creative arts or
community service or retail is their chosen destination. We therefore teach,
through our structures, large numbers of students to live with failure.
It is time for a radical change. Our schools need to do more
to help our students be part of the solution to the problems our communities
face – homelessness, poverty, isolation of the elderly, climate change, driver
irresponsibility, the growing challenges of obesity and early onset diabetes, to
name just some. Our schools also need to become less focused on being the
pathway to post-secondary education and more focused on developing the skills
which would enable all students to be life-long learners at any level and at
anytime.
We need to counter the view that schools should narrow their
focus to the basic science, mathematics, literacy and technology subjects and
instead encourage a richness of personal learning which involves creativity,
emotional intelligence, physical education, wellness and social skills as well as the more usual subjects. Creative diversity is a better bet for our
future that a focused insistence on just a core. All need literacy and
numeracy, but the development of these skills needs to be based on authentic
and engaging learning activities.
We should reduce our division of knowledge into subjects and
focus more on real world problem solving for authentic audiences where students
are asked to contribute directly and in a meaningful way to the solution of
problems facing their community. By focusing on project based work, the need to
learn and develop skills normally associated with our “traditional” subject
areas will arise naturally and be driven by student engagement rather than
Provincial requirements.
We should empower and enable teachers to determine large
“chunks” of the work their students do, rather than directing them with
curriculum requirements – one Grade 9 science Provincial curriculum has over
260 objectives which teachers “must” complete during the year, 60% of which are
likely to appear on a Provincial Achievement Test. This is pure nonsense,
driven by the demands of post-secondary institutions rather than the learning
needs of students. If we give schools back to the teachers, we should indicate
the competencies at a broad level which students need on leaving school and let
them, as professionals, determine the best route to these outcomes.
Finally, we should accept that teachers are best place to
assess their students and reduce the focus on standardized, annualized,
aggregated, average test results and focus instead on frequent, systematic and
focused teacher assessments as the basis for pupil evaluation.
Our schools and the curriculum which informs their work were
designed for nineteenth century education for an industrial world. It is the
twenty first century and an age in which knowledge rather than industrial
systems drive our economy. Our schools need a transformation – they need to be
part of the future, not stand apart from our time or our destiny.
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