Teachers are abominably trained.
Teachers presently employed by the Minneapolis Public
Schools do not have the information bases necessary to impart the
knowledge-intensive curriculum summarized in the next article as you scroll on
down this blog.
In the September 2014 edition of my Journal of the K-12
Revolution: Essays and Research from Minneapolis,
Minnesota, I lay out a comprehensive program for teacher training, the
key points of which are a follows:
1) >>>>>
Teachers aspiring to teach at the grades K-5 level will earn a Masters of
Liberal Arts degree organized by officials at the Minneapolis Public Schools.
This will involve a 34-week intensive course of study during one full academic
year, followed by a summer of research, writing, and defense of a master’s
thesis.
2) >>>>>
Teachers aspiring to teach at the grades 6-8 and 9-12 levels will earn
field-specific, non- education master’s degrees giving them expert knowledge
relevant to the classes that they will teach.
3) >>>>>
Teachers aspiring to teach at all grades (K-5, 6-8, and 9-12) will serve a full
year of internship before gaining consideration for employment in the
Minneapolis Public Schools.
Thus, all teachers aspiring to teach in the Minneapolis Public
Schools will earn a master’s degree in a rigorous academic program and then
serve one full year of internship.
The need for rigorous training of teachers to impart a
knowledge-intensive curriculum is particularly critical for teachers at the
grades K-5 level. The training that they
receive in departments, schools, and colleges of education occurs in the
context of the least rigorous program on any college or university campus.
The Currently Abysmal Training of Prospective Teachers for Grades K-5
The Currently Abysmal Training of Prospective Teachers for Grades K-5
Programs that train large contingents of prospective
teachers include the University of Minnesota/ Twin Cities, Augsburg College,
and the Universities of Concordia, Hamline, St. Catherine, and St. Thomas.
At most of these institutions, prospective grades K-5
teachers major in elementary education. Hamline is unique among the metro area
institutions offering teacher preparation programs in requiring its aspiring
K-5 teachers to earn bachelor’s degrees in legitimate disciplines (e. g.,
mathematics, chemistry, history, economics, English, fine arts). At most other
institutions, teachers aspiring to teach at grades K-5 get a degree in
elementary education. For such a degree, students take courses that include
Educational Psychology, Diversity and Education, Theory to Practice, Schools
and Society, and Exceptionality.
The only meek nod to subject area specificity is in
courses such as Social Studies, Language Arts, Mathematics, and Science
Instruction in the Elementary Grades. Education professors, not subject area experts,
teach these courses.
Students at the University of Minnesota who aspire to
teach, both at grades K-5 and grades 6-12, must get a master’s degree. Students
in the College of Education and Human Development typically do their coursework
during the summer and fall terms; they student teach in the spring, also taking
two education courses online.
The route to the Masters of Education degree takes just
three semesters. Once the college or university certification program is
complete, prospective teachers must take exams that include a basic skills
exam, a content-focused pedagogic exam, and a mathematics exam. Upon passing
these exams, licensure is granted. The license is permanent, given the
teacher’s ongoing demonstration of professional development through certified
participation in teacher-in-service days, workshops, conferences, and the like;
and with the option to pursue an advanced degree, typically a Masters of
Education in teaching elementary education (remembering that a master’s degree
is embedded in the program leading to teacher certification via the schedule of
courses at the University of Minnesota).
The Need to Retrain Teachers at the Level of the Locally Centralized School District
The Need to Retrain Teachers at the Level of the Locally Centralized School District
Teacher training programs are cash cows for colleges and
universities:
Bachelor’s and master’s degrees in education are
academically insubstantial but huge revenue generators for institutions of
putative higher learning. The ruse pulled by the University of Minnesota in
requiring both of these empty degrees for certification constitutes
irresponsible philistinism of the worst sort.
Over the long haul, we need to dissolve our departments,
colleges, and schools of education and come to a consensus on a new approach to
training teachers:
The vision that I convey for the training of teachers projects
an approach that would transform teacher training throughout the United States.
The approach to be implemented nationally follows logically from the program of
teacher training that I assert to be ideal for the Minneapolis Public Schools.
The transformation nationally will require much time to
confront entrenched interests of the many adults in the education establishment
who benefit from the current system that is so deleterious to the interests of
excellent teachers and students waiting to receive a substantive education. The
program designed for the Minneapolis Publics Schools could be implemented
immediately, given full focus and dedication to the task, before that time when
we can expect to dismantle departments, schools, and colleges of education. The
immediate task is to retrain teachers newly certified after participating in
current, useless programs of teacher preparation.
As to veteran teachers, my abiding estimate is that no
more than 10% of the teachers presently on staff in the Minneapolis Public
Schools are truly excellent; 15% are so terrible that they never should have
been allowed in a classroom; and the remainder fall in the broad 75% that are
intolerably mediocre. The terrible teachers in that 15% category will most
likely always be terrible and in almost all cases will have to be jettisoned.
Most teachers in the 75% category of mediocrity should be given the option to
retrain and prove their mettle for retention.
For those already operating at levels of true excellence,
incentives should be put in place for them to retrain according to processes
detailed in the September 2014 edition of Journal of the K-12
Revolution: Essays and Research from Minneapolis, Minnesota and
summarized in this article, but a flexible approach may be utilized for those
already manifesting abundant knowledge and high-level performance.
In my program for retraining teachers of the Minneapolis
Pubic Schools, teachers aspiring to teach at the K-5 level will have to undergo
an intensive full year of weekly, all-day training leading to a high-quality
Masters of Liberal Arts degree; followed by a full academic year
internship.
The Masters of Liberal Arts Degree for Aspiring Minneapolis Public Schools Teachers at Grades K-5
The Masters of Liberal Arts Degree for Aspiring Minneapolis Public Schools Teachers at Grades K-5
Teachers at level K-5 should be broadly and deeply
knowledgeable scholars, at home in the intellectual worlds of mathematics,
natural science, history, literature, and the fine arts. The key components of
the academic program leading to this degree are described below. It is expected
that the courses taken for the Masters of Liberal Arts will be taken
intensively, five days a week, during one full school year, from late August
until early June. Over the summer, the aspiring teacher studying for the Masters
of Liberal Arts degree will write her or his master’s thesis, then the
remaining months of the master’s program will be spent as a classroom intern
undergoing a full academic year of classroom observation and teaching under the
guidance of a teacher identified as highly competent. The latter teacher will be chosen for
manifesting as much excellence as we dare hope, given current realities with
regard to teacher quality.
Officials in the Minneapolis Public Schools should
embrace these components and set about establishing a program in conjunction
with one of the universities in the Twin Cities. Those representing the
Minneapolis Public Schools should articulate exactly what they want from the
degree-granting
institution. From the degree-granting university, this
will mean embracing the details of the program given below, providing the
professorial expertise required, and following through on the administrative
aspects leading to the granting of the Masters of Liberal Arts to the K-5
teachers of the Minneapolis Public Schools.
The program and requirements for the Masters of Liberal
Arts degree for prospective teachers at levels K-5 are given as follows:
Mathematics
Mathematics
During the full academic year of retraining of teachers
at grades K-5, professors of mathematics should be brought in by
decision-makers at the Minneapolis Public Schools to give educators of the very
young a thorough overview of mathematics up through calculus. Teachers at grades
K-5 need a fundamental readjustment of the way that they view themselves. They
must regard themselves as capable learners and practitioners in the full range
of human knowledge. We cannot abide the level of math phobia that often abides
in the hearts of many current K-5 teachers. The way for an aspiring teacher to
overcome mathematical phobia and prepare to launch the young student on the
K-12 mathematical experience is for everyone involved to know what is ahead on
this exciting quest for numerical, algebraic, geometric, trigonometric, and
statistical knowledge--- pursued to that final (third) semester of calculus
that their students will take in the substantive curriculum summarized in the
next article as you scroll on down this blog.
Mathematics Professor Jonathon Rogness has commented to
me, “It is always advisable that a teacher have knowledge far beyond the concepts
that he or she immediately covers in class.”
If teachers themselves had a substantive education in
either high school or as undergraduates at a college or university, then
reviewing previously learned mathematical concepts will not be difficult: Much
of the information is either lying latent for reawakening or, even more happily,
is actually operating nearer the surface to be pulled upward into the
brightness of mental reflection, ready for application. But for those teachers
who have done what our K-12 schools and universities too often encourage,
somehow muddling through math courses without really understanding for lack of
teachers capable of giving them clarity, then the process will be more arduous.
And since we want them to be teachers who most certainly
never themselves abet the muddling through approach to mathematical education,
we want them to have confidence as capable mathematicians.
Over the course of ten (10) weeks, aspiring K-5
teachers studying for the Masters of Liberal Arts degree will pursue
the following topical schedule for mathematics:
Week #1 >>>>> Fundamental Math
Week #2 >>>>> Algebra I
Week #3 >>>>> Geometry
Week #1 >>>>> Fundamental Math
Week #2 >>>>> Algebra I
Week #3 >>>>> Geometry
Weeks #4 and #5 >>>>> Algebra
II .
Weeks #6 and #7 >>>>> Functions, Statistics, and Trigonometry (FST)
Weeks #8, #9, and #10 >>>>> Calculus (corresponding to a full year of college-level calculus)
Weeks #6 and #7 >>>>> Functions, Statistics, and Trigonometry (FST)
Weeks #8, #9, and #10 >>>>> Calculus (corresponding to a full year of college-level calculus)
Natural Science
Prospective teachers at K-5 should also be highly
confident in themselves as students of natural science, one of the five key
subject areas emphasized during the K-5 years. The three natural science fields
that should dominate their own study in route to the Masters of Liberal Arts
degree are biology, chemistry, and physics. Professors in these fields should
teach compact courses of about two weeks each, during which the
prospective K-5 teachers review (ideally) or learn well for the first time (as
too often will be the case) the most important concepts pertinent to these
important fields of natural science.
Over the course of six (6) weeks, aspiring K-5
teachers studying for the Masters of Liberal Arts degree will pursue
the following topical schedule for natural science:
Week #1 and Week #2 >>>>> Biology
Week #3 and Week #4 >>>>> Chemistry
Week #5 and Week #6 >>>>> Physics
History
Week #1 and Week #2 >>>>> Biology
Week #3 and Week #4 >>>>> Chemistry
Week #5 and Week #6 >>>>> Physics
History
Teaching for all subjects in our current system of K-12
education is mediocre. Knowledge of history is particularly unskillfully
imparted to students. And what is true generally is especially true at the K-5
level. In our K-5 schools, history is subsumed under an amalgamation known as
“social studies,”
in an innervated curricular approach that is entirely
consistent with the “constructivist” precepts under which teachers have been
trained. There is a great deal of focus on the lives of the students, in which
they are asked to reflect about their own families and community, in the
absence of any social scientific context in which to compare their own family
mores and structures with others that prevail in the general society. Nothing
is learned of any substance in the way of sociology, psychology, economics, and
government--- and certainly nothing very coherent in the way of history.
An enormously better approach to curriculum was
summarized in the next article as you scroll on down this blog and detailed in
the August 2014 edition of Journal of the K-12
Revolution: Essays and Research from Minneapolis, Minnesota.
Under this curriculum, history will be the subject
identified for study at the K-12 level, giving the original “social studies”
categorization much more focus. History as an appellation is used rather than “social
studies,” because humankind’s experience over time has produced the life that
we live today, and when we study history in depth, we also learn a great deal
about sociology, psychology, economics, and government. For that matter, great
discoveries in mathematics and natural science are contextualized in a study of
history, and knowledge of the essence of those discoveries is gained.
Hence, history is key to full understanding of all subjects germane to the liberal arts.
Hence, history is key to full understanding of all subjects germane to the liberal arts.
Over the course of eight (8) weeks, aspiring K-5 teachers
studying for the Masters of Liberal Arts degree will pursue the following
topical schedule for world and American history:
Week #1 >>>>>
Prehistory and Developments Through Earliest Civilizations (Beginnings to 700
B. C.)
Week #2 >>>>> Classical Period (700 B. C to 500 A. D.)
Week #2 >>>>> Classical Period (700 B. C to 500 A. D.)
Week #3 >>>>> European
Middle Ages, Renaissance, Reformation, Contemporaneous World
Development (500
A. D. to 1500 A. D.)
Week #4 >>>>> The Rise of the Nation-State and the Importance of the European Enlightenment (1600
Week #4 >>>>> The Rise of the Nation-State and the Importance of the European Enlightenment (1600
to 1800)
Week #5 >>>>> Imperialism and the Industrial Revolution (1600 to 1900)
Week #6 >>>>> Major Events of the 20th Century and Early 21st Century (1900 to 2016)
Week #7 >>>>> American History through the 18th Century
Week #8 >>>>> American History from 1800 through 2016
Language Arts
Week #5 >>>>> Imperialism and the Industrial Revolution (1600 to 1900)
Week #6 >>>>> Major Events of the 20th Century and Early 21st Century (1900 to 2016)
Week #7 >>>>> American History through the 18th Century
Week #8 >>>>> American History from 1800 through 2016
Language Arts
Over the course of six (6) weeks, aspiring K-5
teachers studying for the Masters of Liberal Arts degree will pursue
the following topical schedule for language arts:
Week #1 and Week #2 >>>>> Classical Greek and Roman Literature; Classics of World Literature;
Premodern
and Renaissance Classics of Europe; Shakespearean and Elizabethan Literature
Week #3 and Week #4 >>>>>
Modern and Contemporary British and American Literature
Week #5 >>>>> African American Literature and the Literature of Other Major Ethnic Groups in the
Week #5 >>>>> African American Literature and the Literature of Other Major Ethnic Groups in the
United States
Week #6 >>>>> English Grammar, Syntax, and Written Composition
Fine Arts
Week #6 >>>>> English Grammar, Syntax, and Written Composition
Fine Arts
Over the course of four (4) weeks, aspiring K-5
teachers studying for the Masters of Liberal Arts degree will pursue
the following topical schedule for fine arts, which adopts a chronological
approach for presenting the history of the visual arts, architecture, and music:
Week #1 >>>>> The Prehistoric World (Beginnings to 3,000 B. C);
Week #1 >>>>> The Prehistoric World (Beginnings to 3,000 B. C);
The Ancient World (3,000 B C. to 700 B. C.)
Week #2 >>>>> The Classical World (700 B. C. to 500 A. D.);
Week #2 >>>>> The Classical World (700 B. C. to 500 A. D.);
The Medieval World (500 to 1500
A. D.)
Week #3 >>>>> The First-Stage Modern World (1450 to 1750); The Second-Stage Modern World (1750
Week #3 >>>>> The First-Stage Modern World (1450 to 1750); The Second-Stage Modern World (1750
to 1945); The Contemporary
World (1945-2016)
Week #4 >>>>> Survey of Musical Forms and Composition: Composers and Music in the Western
Week #4 >>>>> Survey of Musical Forms and Composition: Composers and Music in the Western
Classical Style; Blues, Blues-Based, and Blues-Inspired
Music in the United
States; Folk and Country Music; Musical Instruments
Additional Requirements for Prospective
Teachers at Grades K-5
Teachers aspiring to teach at grades K-5 will, after
completing the above-given course of study during a full academic year,
research, write, and defend a master’s thesis in the course of the following
summer.
Then, during the succeeding academic year, aspiring K-5
teachers will serve a full year of internship before gaining consideration for
employment in the Minneapolis Public Schools.
Revolutionizing Training for
Teachers of Students in Grades 6-8 (Middle School) And Grades 9-12 (High School)
Teachers of students at grades 6-8 and at grades 9-12
will, in the revolutionized curriculum in this program for achieving academic
excellence, of necessity be first-rate scholars possessing broad and deep
knowledge of the subject areas that they will teach.
As with teacher aspirants at the grades K-5 level,
master’s degrees in education will not be recognized. Teachers aspiring to
teach at the grades 6-8 and 9-12 levels will earn degrees in departments
relevant to their teaching fields (e.g., mathematics, physics, economics, world
literature, Spanish).
As in the case of K-5 teachers, teacher aspirants at the
secondary level (grades 6-8 or 9-12) will serve a full year of internship
before undergoing evaluation for employment in the Minneapolis Public Schools.
Thus, for both teacher aspirants at the K-5 level and
those at grades 6-8 and 9-12, the entire program in the aftermath of earning a
bachelor’s degree will typically take three years.
Such teachers will thereby gain professional status via
academic training as rigorous as programs in law and medicine. They should be paid accordingly, with median
salaries rising to around $85,000 from the currently prevailing median of
$64,000.
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