Dec 19, 2017

Bob Walser is a Particularly Objectionable Member of a Generally Terrible Minneapolis Public Schools Board of Education--- and Nelson Inz is Deeply Implicated in the Walser Abomination


Bob Walser, who in November 2016 narrowly edged Josh Reimnitz for the District #4 seat that the latter had held for four years on the Minneapolis Public Schools Board of Education, is the most objectionable occupant of a generally terrible compositional membership of that board.

 

Walser repeatedly wastes school board meeting time with trivial thoughts, and much of what comes out of his mouth is harmful in the extreme.  Walser has deeply imbibed the poisonous ideological brew concocted by education professors, who occupy the lowest rung of status on any college campus.  These  putative education professionals spout rhetoric devaluing the knowledge that they themselves lack, sending forth teachers severely deficient in knowledge and skill sets who cannot possibly give our students the knowledge and skill that their teachers do not possess.

 

Remember now that Amanda Ripley, in her insightful, The Smartest Kids in the World (and How They Got That Way) (2013), provides a lively summative account of facts available for many years now regarding the superiority of East Asian educational systems and others across the international landscape. 

 

After reviewing the superiority of systems in Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Singapore, Taiwan, and Shanghai (China), Ripley ultimately follows three American exchange students to the high-performing nations of Finland and, South Korea, and to Poland, whose students have been on a steady academic ascent in the course of the last twenty years.

 

Ripley cites several factors that abet elevated academic performance of students in these three nations. 

 

These nations all have the following characteristics:

 

1) rigorous national curricula;

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2)  excellent teachers, selected from the top of their high school classes for training in prestigious, academically demanding programs specific to their fields;

 

3)  a lack of emphasis on sports;

 

4)  parents who are engaged in the academic lives of their children rather than PTA-type activities and athletic boosterism;

 

5)  students who as a matter of internalized ethic know that perseverance and diligence are more important than natural intelligence or ability; 

 

6)  whole-class instruction;

 

7)  grade by grade coherence of curriculum;

 

8)  class sizes that are large by the standards of the school systems of the United States;

 

9)  an assumption that all students can succeed.

 

With regard to the latter aspect of the most successful educational systems in the world, the children of immigrant populations and economically impoverished populations of these nations do well, because the systems are designed to serve all students in uniformly excellent schools, each institution staffed by well-paid and high-status teachers who have gained certification in highly selective teacher-training programs.

 

Students of these nations regularly far exceed the performance of students in the United States on the PISA (Program of International Student Assessment), an exam largely designed by the physicist and educator Andreas Schleicher, a German by birth who lives in Paris, where the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (the entity that sponsors PISA) is located.  The PISA exam requires a great deal of factual knowledge, with an emphasis on application and critical analysis.  In placing a great deal of importance on critical analysis and creative application, Schleicher of his own convictions constructed an assessment that answers the typical criticism of those who oppose standardized tests and are quick to offer excuses for the abysmal performance of students in the United States.

 

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Bob Walser is wont to voice the ideological expostulations of education professors that run counter to the features noted in the most successful public school systems in the world.

 

Walser probably does not understand for how long we in the United States have had to endure the education-professor-speak that he delivers as if the verbiage-primed robot of these campus low-lifes.   

 

Our educational dilemma in the United States is traceable to the lamentable postulations of William Heard Kilpatrick, who at Teachers College of Columbia University from the 1920s perpetrated the anti-knowledge rhetoric that has ruined generations of teachers, victims of the erroneous expostulations of education professors.  Kilpatrick himself was under the influence of 19th century Romanticism, with its unscientific but firm faith in the potential of the unfettered individual to live well if unmarred by the strictures of society.

 

Thus do we in the United States cling to a putatively “progressive” philosophy of education that has had decisively unprogressive consequences.  Those in our education establishment and reform camps alike emphasize individualization or student and teacher generated curriculum based on personal interest, rather than on the commonly provided knowledge-intensive, skill-replete education that has moved Finland, South Korea, Poland and a bevy of other nations far ahead of students the United States on such objective measures as the PISA exam.

 

We in the United States should take our cue from Meiji japan (1868-1912) and from Taiwan during the latter’s remarkable economic ascent of the 1965-2000 era.  These geopolitical forces each surveyed the world for the best available approaches to governmental policy, catalyzing unprecedented advances in health and education.  Were we in the United States to do that, we could make everyone, including the American exceptionalists, happy by designing a system of K-12 public education that even students, families, and the general public in Finland, South Korea, Shanghai, Taiwan, and Singapore would view with awe.

 

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Readers should remember that in the November 2016 elections, Nelson Inz, the Minneapolis Public Schools Board of Education member from District #5, endorsed Walser’s candidacy against that of Reimnitz, a former Teach for America participant who discerns many of the problems of the education system of the United States and understands the international context given above.

 

Hence, Inz is deeply implicated in the abomination that is Walser’s presence on the current board.  Unless we can exert enough pressure on Walser to resign, or unless by some fortunate turn of events he should decide to do so, we will have to endure both Walser’s silliness and his errant rhetoric for another three years.  But we will have the chance in November 2018 to oust Inz, along with Rebecca Gagnon and Don Samuels---  in the meantime evaluating the candidacies of Jenny Arneson and Siad Ali.  

 

The K-12 Revolution that will sweep the halls of the Davis Center (central offices of the Minneapolis Public Schools, 1250 West Broadway) will bring knowledge-intensive, skill-replete curriculum and thoroughly retrained teachers to students who have been awaiting an excellent education for a very long time.

 

As we bring that overhaul for excellence, we will redesign the Minneapolis Public Schools (MPS) as a model for the locally centralized school district, and will place on the MPS Board of Education members who are aware of the international models for excellence and supporters of knowledge-intensive, skill-replete education.

 

Nelson Inz will be gone, and Walser will be overwhelmed with observations as to his foolishness and the insidiousness of his views.   

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