Saturday, March 26, 2022

Old Man Rant

Things I hate about getting old: every little bump and bruise hurts for way too long, much longer than they used to. Was playing lacrosse with my two youngest and one of them smacked my elbow as they were playing defense (I had looked at my elbows before leaving the house, but I didn't grab them - I should have). The rest of the day and into the next day my elbow felt like I sprained my whole arm - like really?!? My index finger, the top joint, has some kind of ligament dilemma, and it's been hurting for days, maybe weeks. Seriously. Go jogging around with the boys again, and my knees start screaming at me (maybe it's because I spend all day sitting at this computer).

Things I like about getting old: patience. I have a lot more patience (sometimes). I hope I am little wiser every day, at least about some things. I get to see my children grow and grow - and while I love every stage and they were really cute when they were younger, their personalities are getting more and more visible. It's beautiful to see them struggle - again, sometimes. Sometimes, with these schools, it's just a headache - I keep forgetting that humanizing practices, seeing students as human first and rule followers and compliance machines second, is just not what most schools are about. 

Thursday, March 24, 2022

Learning Loss in the Banking System of Education


The term learning loss assumes that learning is linear, that youth can be in a state of non-learning, and that our current measurements of student learning are effective. It also assumes that there are times that we are losing what we have learned. While I do think that we get rusty with things that we do not practice, as I have experienced this myself, I am not sure the term “loss” captures the essence of this phenomenon; while my swimming is rusty, I am not going to drown in a pool once I have learned to swim; while my Spanish is rusty since I have not been regularly using it, I can still find my way through a conversation, and with some practice and social connection I will grow right back into my previous capacities, my neural networks will wrap some more myelin. We (and definitely youth) are learning all of the time, every day, every moment. Youth may not be learning what “we” want them to learn, but they are learning - there is no such thing as a non-learner, or non-learning (with rare exceptions in the case of acute physical damage or neglect).

The concept of "learning loss", akin to the achievement gap, is based on the use of standardized testing, and represents a colossal failure in our school system - but not a failure of our students to learn or be open to learning. If for decades we continue to see the same results from standardized testing why does the system continue to employ the same testing methods and ask why we don’t see change?

A focus on relationships, caring, and community building are the key elements to creating educational spaces where students will engage in deep learning because they know they belong and have agency. It is in these holistic structure where we focus on the overall health and well-being of youth in order that they be open to taking the risks and sharing of themselves fully, stances necessary for students to effectively build their academic, intellectual, and social-emotional capacity. These interrelational and interconnected factors are the primary necessities of a school community, especially after and during a worldwide pandemic during which our communities have experienced trauma, loss, and disruption. Coming back to school and focusing only on the “rigorous” implementation of academic instruction, essentially eliminating time students have to create community and connection, will only lead to more loss, trauma, and disruption to both academic learning and overall wellbeing.  

Dorn et al’s concerns about the disparity in opportunities for students of color and other marginalized populations are not unfounded. However, their argument is based on standardized assessments and the concept that grade level buckets of knowledge are to be deposited into each students’ brain at each stop along the linear factory model of banking education. Learning is so much more complicated than this and requires holistic collaborative formative forms of assessment, not standardized one-size fits all students, from every community, testing. Of course it is imperative that youth access and develop academic rigor and capacity, in numeracy and literacy, and in art, science, dance, movement, cooking, crafting, music, athletics, critical thinking, acting, medicine, social-emotional dynamics, and so much more; this holistic community responsive and personalized education will not be accomplished in equitable ways if all we keep looking at are the results of standardized tests as our measure of success.

The building of community, of relationships and student agency, is the way forward to building students’ academic capacity. While access to the resources necessary to learn (such as internet, devices, and in person instruction) are very necessary, the gap in access for excluded and underserved communities has been in existence for decades (centuries). The world-wide COVID-19 pandemic has laid bare these disparities, inequalities, and inequities in access to quality education. What we do now with this information should not be to turn back to the decades old models of oppressive capitalist driven schooling methods that have consistently, systematically, and historically created these very disparities. It is time that we see this biological disruption as the beginning of a prolonged social, economic, and political disruption of the status quo. This requires economic and political will, a will that, sadly, I am not confident the dominant social order will permit to persist and take root. But that for dammed sure doesn't mean I'm giving up. 

As Dr. Betina Love so poignantly and powerfully states - the pandemic showed us that school systems, despite the decades long lack of political will (and supposed economic capacity) to respond to the calls of transformation, stop on a dime, move quickly, and provide some of the resources and changes that seemed "impossible" prior to the pandemic - stopped using standardized tests, gave one-to-one devices for all children/families, relied on trusting teachers' pedagogy, expertise and ingenuity - treated almost like professionals (no?), relied on trusting parents as integral partners in education, provided flexible schedules and hybrid models, tech companies gave out free internet, "compassion over compliance". . . So we know these changes are not only possible, they are realistic and doable. So how do we keep this same energy and spirit going? That is the only question in my heart and mind. 

What was normal pre-pandemic was not healthy for our communities - as Dr. Love compels us to fight for - we need to maintain and reinvigorate the trust in teachers, parents, and students that was readily given during the beginning stages of the pandemic - the flexibility around due dates, grading, and standardized testing and curriculum - the abolishment of punitive compliance driven policies - let that shit rest - it's done - at least it should be and we know it has been done before and can be done again.

Saturday, March 12, 2022

Student Learning is 100% Teacher Responsibility


Mario Echeverria, educator, school leader, and friend of mine, swears by an interview question for teacher interviews. "How much of a student's learning is your responsibility?" To which there is only one answer. 100%.

I had an interesting exchange on Twitter a few days ago, with a stranger. At first we misunderstood each other, as most exchanges go on social media, but this stranger was there for sincere communication. We are both teachers, educators, and students and we both listened to each other in an attempt to understand the other's point of view. 

He had an interesting first reaction to my statement that teacher's are 100% responsible for student learning. First, he felt that idea could be used to scapegoat teachers, from outside of education, to put the blame of the ills of schooling solely onto their backs, which is a genuine concern. Teachers are blamed for a lot when it comes to the poor outcomes in schools. I reassured him that I am a teacher myself and am not trying to scapegoat anyone. Instead I want to push teachers to embrace the role of curating educational environments were students can bring their whole selves and engage in true dialogue around their learning processes and capacities.

His second concern was that making a statement like this, 100% of student learning is up to the teacher, can potentially reduce a student to a thing, to an object, that the teacher must put upon. That it can potentially strip students of their agency in co-creating educational spaces, that it could be used to uphold a banking system of education. I again reassured him, that the learning that I speak of is liberatory, predicated on the empowerment of student voice and agency in the co-creation of learning spaces.  

This statement is about the power that teachers do have to curate the environment in their classrooms and spaces. Teachers have institutional power to grade, to punish, to stifle, to oppress. Or their power can be used to uplift, empower, and value. Students have power too, as can be witnessed in so many forms of expression, walkouts, outspokenness, and quiet resolve to resist - but many students are disconnected from their power as well.

Dr. Jorge Ramirez Delgado shared this quote from Anzaldua with us during our semester's course, “The struggle is inner: Chicano, indio, American Indian, mojado, mexicano, immigrant Latino, Anglo in power, working class Anglo, Black, Asian--our psyches resemble the bordertowns and are populated by the same people. The struggle has always been inner, and is played out in outer terrains. Awareness of our situation must come before inner changes, which in turn come before changes in society. Nothing happens in the 'real' world unless it first happens in the images in our heads”  (Gloria Anzaldua, 1999).  

My father work tirelessly to awaken our Chicana/o/e awareness within everyone he met, to help spark critical consciousness and dialogue in every interaction possible, to shed light on our inner struggles of oppression, and create the conditions for change within the social order, to co-create liberatory spaces. That is the true power of love, to create transformative healing and emancipation, bit by bit, moment by moment, from the shackles of the contorted constraints of colonialism, white supremacy, and patriarchy.

"It is 100% the move of a teacher to create a liberatory space, to humanize every child, to hold high expectations of each kid, and to stop at nothing to help each child reach their goals. The passion and purpose need to be aligned. Literally, kids' lives depend on it." Mario Echeverria (2022).