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Entries from August 1, 2013 - August 31, 2013

Saturday
Aug102013

BFTP: Damned by a single measure

A weekend Blue Skunk "feature" will be a revision of an old post. I'm calling this BFTP: Blast from the Past.  Original post June 19, 2008. The political calls for high-stakes testing seem to growing rather than abating - sadly. 


Anybody who goes in to see the doctor knows that the first thing you do is jump on the scale so that your weight can be determined. Wouldn't life be easy if the testing ended at stepping on the scale? Weight, after all, can be a pretty good indicator of general health. But a physician would be a quack if the physical exam did not include blood pressure checks, urine analysis, some prodding here, some thumping there, and at least one nasty bit involving a rubber glove and lube.

One's physical health certainly can't be determined by a single measurement. Attempting to do so would constitute malpractice.

Why then do schools let politicians require that they rely on a single measurement - test scores - to determine their health and effectiveness?

No one has ever been able to satisfactorily explain to me how a "5th grade reading level" is established. It seems if a reading level is either median or mean of all 10-year-olds' reading levels, by logic alone, one could conclude a sizable chunk of those tested would be lower than the norm. If not, the norm itself would be too low.

A school being labeled failing because all of its students don't read "at grade level" is like labeling a school failing because not all its students are at or above normal weight for their age group. Of course we should all demand students who are proficient readers, writers, and math users. But does this need to be a race?

The high-stakes testing game is rigged. It is a plan designed not to improve public schools, but to discredit them, giving ammunition to those who want vouchers, charter schools, and other financially motivated "improvement" plans that will keep poor schools poor thus keeping the poor people, poor.

Knowing that the deck is stacked, were I a school board member, superintendent or principal, I would be offering my community other means of evaluating the quality of the education my school(s) offers. And fast.

Ten years ago I railed against our state's "report card," suggesting more informative ways parents can judge the value of their children's schools. Stars, I suggested then and still believe, should be awarded in categories that go beyond test scores:

Star One: School climate. Funny how a person can sense the safety, friendliness, and sense of caring within minutes of walking into a school. Little things like cleanliness, displays of student work, open doors to classrooms, laughter, respectful talk, presence of volunteers, and genuine smiles from both adults and kids are the barometers of school climate. If a school doesn’t earn this star, a parent doesn’t need to bother looking at the other criteria. Get your kids out quickly.

Star Two: Individual teacher quality. This is why total school rating systems aren’t very helpful. Five-star teachers are found in one-star schools and one-star teachers are found in five-star schools. Listen to what other parents have said about the teachers your children will have. Insist that your kids get the teachers that get good reviews - not just those who produce good little test takers.

Star Three: Libraries and technology. The quality of the library is the clearest sign of how much a school values reading, teaching for independent thinking, and life-long learning. A trained librarian and a welcoming, well-used collection of current books, magazines, and computers with Internet access tells a parent that the teachers and principal value more than the memorization of facts from a text book, that a diversity of ideas and opinions is important, and that reading is not just necessary, but pleasurable and important.

Star Four: Elective and extracurricular offerings. What happens in class is important. But so is what happens during the other 18 hours of the day. I want elementary schools for my kids that offer after-school clubs and activities that develop social skills and interests. I want secondary schools that are rich with art, sports, tech ed., music and community service choices that develop individual talents, leadership, and pride in accomplishment.

Star Five: Commitment to staff development. The amount of exciting scientifically-based research on effective teaching practices and schools is overwhelming. Brain-based research, reflective practice, systematic examination of student work, strategies for working with disadvantaged students are some of the latest findings that can have a positive impact on how to best teach children. But none of it does a lick of good if it stays in the universities or journals. Good schools give financial priority to teaching teachers how to improve their practice. Would you send your child to a doctor who doesn’t know the latest practice in his field? 

With only a small amount of imagination and work, most of these qualities can be reported out empirically - through surveys, through comparisons with other districts, and simply through effective communication to the community of the achievement of students both in and out of school.

If test scores are to be used, schools should be reporting the percentage of students who make a year's progress as determined by a value-added test like the NWEA MAPS test. While it is unreasonable to expect every 5th grader to weigh 100 pounds, it is reasonable to demand that every child to put on weight.

I hate seeing good public schools (and the good people in them) damned by a single measure.

Friday
Aug092013

Will e-book access determine the fate of libraries?

Going nearly unnoticed by the school library profession is a battle being fought that may well determine whether libraries continue to exist. And this is not hyperbole.

To date, major publishers (often called the Big6) have been treating e-books far differently from the way they treat print books when providing them to libraries. Limiting the number of circulations before needing to be repurchased, selling for a hugely inflated cost (5X the cost of a print title), leasing rather than selling ownership of titles, and refusing to sell to libraries altogether are some of the conditions major publishers have imposed on library sales - especially of popular titles.

I am not sure exactly why publishers are so leery of entering into the same symbiotic relationship they've enjoyed with libraries that they have had in the print book era - more exposure to books, authors, and genres via libraries leading to bigger sales for publishers. Fear of piracy, maximization of profits, because they can? 

Public libraries have adopted some strategies to deal with the restrictions placed on e-books sales in a number of ways, including becoming self-publishers (Douglas (CO) County Libraries) and public-shaming via Facebook (Kansas State Library System). But neither of these solutions are particularly satisfying when one would like to check out the latest Michael Connolly mystery in digital form.1

What may be more effective are efforts now being made by state and local governments passing resolutions asking for legislation regulating the sale of e-books to libraries, citing the availability of published materials through libraries as a public good.2 We've needed, but not had, a First-Sale Doctrine for the distribution and ownership  of e-materials for some time. Such a doctrine is not something the free market is likely to provide on its own.

I applaud the work the American Library Association is doing in working with publishers to find some treaty in this war between libraries and publishers. As an increasing number of us read primarily (or solely) e-content and as devices for reading e-books and magazines drop in price, the ability for libraries to provide materials that the public actually wants electronically will be critical.

So I'm thinking about this as I prepare to spend over $17K on e-book titles for just our elementary schools. This amount, about 22% of our total materials budget, will buy 66 titles of primarily  high-interest non-fiction. Purchased through Mackin Via, these titles will be available to us into perpetuity, can be read by multiple users simultaneously, and be accessed from home. I estimate we are paying at least 50% more per title than were we buying these items in print format despite getting a "10% discount" and buying for all 10 elementary school libraries at the same time.

So questions...

  1. Is the premium we are paying for getting titles in e-book format worth it? Will classroom teachers use the multiple readers at one time to supplement their reading programs? Will parents access these materials from home to encourage independent reading? Do we have enough devices for students on which these titles can be read?
  2. Will this format appeal to and support some readers better than might print materials? Will we make readers out of students with whom we previously have not had success?
  3. Should a part of the cost of these materials be born by the curricular area that they support since they may be used as classroom readers?
  4. Can library programs afford NOT to experiment with e-books, especially as all classes begin to use online materials to support instruction? Will we be viewed as irrelevant?
  5. What can we (school librarians) do to increase fair prices and liberal use policies from publishers, especially for popular titles in demand by students? Is ALA working with children and young adult book publishers, or just those for adult readers? What can our state school library associations or local units of government do?

AASL, ISTE SIGMS, are you listening? Readers, what actions have you taken to obtain fair access and prices to e-books for your school libraries?

Lookin' for help here! 

1. http://www.npr.org/2013/08/05/209114978/e-books-strain-relations-beween-libraries-publishing-houses

2. http://www.the-digital-reader.com/2013/07/30/librarians-govt-officials-call-for-fair-library-ebook-prices/

Thursday
Aug082013

BS revisited once again

(The bullshitter) does not reject the authority of the truth, as the liar does, and oppose himself to it. He pays no attention to it at all. By virtue of this, bullshit is a greater enemy of the truth than lies are. Harry G. Frankfurt, On Bullshit, Princeton University Press, 2005.

2013/4 Brad Frost from CreativeMornings/PGH on Vimeo.

In Our Capacity for Bullshit is Rapidly Diminishing, designer Brad Frost shares:

  • 10% of all books ever published were published in last year
  • 300,000,000 photos are uploaded to Facebook everyday.
  • 10% of all photos ever created were taken last year
  • 90% of all data ever created was created in the past two years

and suggests that it is not just information overload but bullshit overload that results. CAUTION: Mr. Frost peppers his talk liberally with expletives so if bad language offends you, skip the video - if you haven't already skipped reading this post. But for the rest of us, it's well worth 20 minutes.

I've always been disappointed that my core Bullshit Lit* skills from 2005/2009 have not found their way into any "21st Century Literacy" models. If you believe Frost, they're more important now than ever.


The Bullshit Literate Student will (2009):

  1. Show no social conscience or balance when deliberately distorting factoids, data, or expert opinion in presenting a conclusion.
  2. Skillfully use any medium and all persuasive techniques in order to convince others. This includes the ability to use technology to doctor images and edit published text.
  3. Consistently, vociferously, and blindly hold to a single point of view, and know that volume, repetition and rhetoric trump reason.
  4. Use purposely emotion-laded words so as not to let reason possibly interfere with judgement.
  5. Convincingly fake sincerity and deliver any message with a straight face.
  6. Ably disguise personal gain as public good.
  7. Take a single incident or news story and follow it to an illogical conclusion.
  8. Claim any idea as original.
  9. Deny prior knowledge.
  10. Create a website, wiki, blog, or podcast. (beginning level). Find a publisher, broadcaster or corporate sponsor for whom the bottom line is the bottom line. (advanced).
  11. Never, never, never show doubt.
  12. Take no responsibility for consequences that may occur down the road.
  13. Use any extreme of any financial projection or estimate.
  14. Let the retention of power or position be the deciding factor in all decisions. Doing what's right is for wimps and suckers.
  15. Offer apologies in such a way that the wrong-doer looks morally superior.

Other skills the Bullshit Literate need master?

Does the ability to create bullshit increase one's ability to detect it and thereby protect oneself from its influence? Hmm.....

 * For those of you with scatological avoidance issues, BS Lit. I like Bullshit Lit because it rhymes. I have purposely retained the term bullshit in this set of competencies, acknowledging that it will offend some readers and limit the distribution of this important skill set. However, I cannot think of another, less objectionable term that describes the act of bullshitting, a person who is a bullshitter, or a communication that is bullshit. (No, baloney and crap do not have the gravitas. Writing "bullsh*t" or just "bull" is disingenuous since the full term pops into the reader's head anyway and simply makes them feel guilty about knowing such words.

I try to use expletives or scatological references only sparingly and purposefully. But in adult conversation they are sometimes necessary, even vital. And during times of stress or excitement, unavoidable.