Much of the
current critique and criticism of education policy reforms of our day casts
doubt on the motivation, paradigms, and practices that standardize education; here and here and for example (by no means an exhaustive list). And, while those critiques are not only
necessary and, in my opinion, mostly correct, the implication is often that
colleges of education and the status quo of preparing future teachers, are by
default, better. However, the blame for
the growth of standardizing reforms is not to be entirely had by Pearson, Michelle
Rhee, the Gates Foundation or the rest of the lot from the neoliberal reformer
camp who view standardization as a mechanism for equity.
In fact, traditional
colleges of education have not done enough to raise the social perception of
teachers and the profession, recruit and properly train pre-service teachers,
and actively subvert reforms that seek to standardize pre-service teaching. Colleges of education continue to promote pedagogies
of standardization and, in turn, prepare their teachers to do the same. And with the threatening extinction of
foundations courses, colleges of education are considering their work to be
limited to preparing future teachers for the privatized and standardized work
environments awaiting them – all the while dismantling foundations courses that
demand students think critically and challenge what it means to be educated and
conversely, schooled.
With this in
mind, it is easy to suggest that colleges of education have adopted the
perspective that the teachers they produce are commodities that will, in turn,
produce a commoditized product for the schools in which they serve.
This type of
approach to teacher preparation understands teaching to be a standardized hard
service rather than a more constructivist approach to teaching and
learning. Deron Boyles makes this point
by addressing the dualism of hard versus soft services, I will quote him at
length,
[w]hat makes the
service “hard” is really the ease of measurement of the topic or process. Differently, “soft” services in schools
include counseling and teaching. They
are traditionally seen as “soft” because they have not been as easy to
quantify. This distinction between the
ease of accountancy associated with “hard” versus “soft” services gives us one
indication of the larger purpose of privatization: to de-skill teaching and
learning such that the traditional “soft” services become subsumed under the
behavioristic, scientistic, economistic logics of “hard” services. A form of reductionism, the ideology of
privatization calls for breaking down complex relationships into their most
component parts for ease of accountancy. (p.
359)
Accordingly, such
narrow views of teachers and the attempt of reducing teaching into standardized
segments of “best practices” for duplication/reproduction are an attempt to
reduce teaching into measureable units as part of the quest for certainty.
Instead of
colleges of education churning out automatons who espouse phrases like “data
driven decisions,” and “evidence-based practices,” or anything written by Ruby
Payne for that matter (see here
and here
for examples), colleges of education ought to be producing free thinking agents
of change who will stand up against the privatization and commercialization of
our nations schools.
Indeed, colleges
of education ought to begin to take the lead in confronting and subverting
standardized reforms that have become too common in the colleges
themselves. It is one thing to espouse
subversive rhetoric in foundations courses while silently abiding by
teacher-preparation methods courses that approach preparation in standardized
fashions (e.g., methods on test development, behavioristic classroom management
techniques, and general strategies for increasing test scores) all in the name
of “helping teachers get jobs.” However,
this characterizes colleges of education as complicit in the rapidly growing
standardization of teacher preparation and pedagogical methods instead of
characterizing them as the true champion of real and meaningful educative learning
that follows a democratic training experience.
Juxtaposed to colleges operating with the mantra of preparing graduates
for jobs, we need our colleges of education to forgo the standardization
movement that is too often linked to the effort to privatize for profit. Then, and only then, will teachers be
equipped to fight standardization in their classrooms because they know their
colleges of education and the professors therein have their backs.
2 comments:
Of course, this is made even more complex by the manner in which standards (NCATE, CATE accreditation, and the "Specialized Professional Associations" or SPAs that create standards for specific programs) are deeply affecting our practices... And by an increasingly aggressive Federal DOE that pushes university administrations to force standardized assessments and outcomes even in foundations courses. Us, it's evil, and bad...and he's, we should resist it... But how?
Errrr...can't edit a posted comment.. "He's" = "yes" above.
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