Jun 28, 2018

Essentials of Retraining Teachers at the Minneapolis Public Schools >>>>> (Part Six of a Multi-Article Series >>>>> Major Principles in the K-12 Revolution, for Mandated Study by Aspiring Superintendents and School Board Members)

In considering the essentials of teacher retraining at the Minneapolis Public Schools, be reminded of these definitions and a firm conviction:

 

Definition #1:

 

An excellent education is a matter of excellent teachers imparting a rich liberal arts curriculum in specified, grade by grade sequence to all students throughout the K-12 years.

 

                                                                                               

Definition #2:

 

An excellent teacher is a person of broad and deep knowledge, with the pedagogical skill to impart this knowledge to all students.

                                                                                               

Firm Conviction

 

People are highly intelligent creatures.  All people possessing IQs of 85 and above may learn anything there is to know. 

 

Once we get this conviction in our guts, we must acknowledge that the important factor for learning great amounts of information concerns rate of intake and processing.  People whose cognition operates at higher IQ levels will learn more rapidly than those whose IQs are in the lower range.  We then adjust our rate of delivery and our schedules projected for student acquisition of information accordingly.  But we proceed on the absolute conviction that the great bulk of students can learn anything, and that they can be properly prepared to take advanced courses no later than the high school years.

 

We then do acknowledge that some students, those operating below IQs of 85, are not likely to learn some information at an acceptable rate during the K-12 years.  Even with this acknowledgment, we must be cautious.  Cognitive assessments are extremely useful but imperfect.  We must maintain high expectations for learners traditionally consigned to “special education” classes, aspiring to give them the rich skill and knowledge sets that our enhanced curriculum offers.  We then try hard, observe

astutely, and adjust schedules as necessary.  Even people who do give evidence of genuine cognitive impairment have capacities to learn, feel, and experience for which they frequently are not credited.  We must do our very best culturally to enrich every single child entrusted to our intellectual nurturing;  then we must manifest the skill to make judgments as to the learning capacity for those who process information very slowly.  We must sensitively and accurately adjust learning schedules accordingly.

 

With our definitions of an excellent education and an excellent teacher residing at the upper levels of our consciousness;  and upon the conviction that human beings are highly intelligent creatures;  we must then set about creating highly educated students by giving them an excellent teacher in every single classroom.

 

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In order to impart to our students their rightful inheritance of the rich storehouse of knowledge that has been generated by their fellow human beings, we need better teachers.

 

We must energetically be about the task of training teachers to deliver the high-quality, advanced curriculum.

 

We must retrain teachers at the level of the central school district, with the training that we render in our own Minneapolis Public Schools as the model that other school districts will follow.

 

To revolutionize teacher training is to revolutionize the human experience.

 

Knowledge is empowerment.  To empower teachers with knowledge is to create in them the high potential for transforming the lives of young people who have waited far too long to receive a substantive education.

 

As things stand now, many young people in the Minneapolis Public Schools are not graduating as a technical matter, which denies to them important certification in the workaday world via a high school diploma;  almost as bad is the prevailing circumstance that those who do walk across a stage at the end of their senior year to claim that formal certification lack the knowledge base that a diploma should signify. 

 

Many of our students graduate without understanding fractions, decimals, or percentages;  much less, then, do they understand algebra, geometry, trigonometry, statistics, or calculus.

 

Many graduates of the Minneapolis Public Schools have no ability to read Shakespearean literature, most have never heard of August Wilson, and in fact even the mere names of Jane Austen, Mark Twain, Herman Melville, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Lorraine Hansberry, Ernest Hemingway, Claude McKay, Langston Hughes, William Faulkner, Gwendolyn Brooks, John Steinbeck, Pearl Buck, James Baldwin, Toni Morrison, or Maya Angelou echo faintly if at all.  Most graduates cannot write an acceptable essay, nor do they have the ability to conduct research or to produce papers with proper citations (footnote, endnote, or internal).

 

Most graduates cannot tell you how long ago the Big Bang occurred, and they do not know when the Earth was formed or anything about the processes that formed our planet.  They cannot trace the evolutionary development of plant and animal life on Earth, and they cannot identify the importance of Australopithecus, homo habilis, or homo erectus.  They could not tell you about the importance of neural synapses, chemical bonding, or the difference between nuclear fission and nuclear fusion.  Mention the names Copernicus, Kepler, Galileo, Newton, and Curie and you’ll see a lot of dazed eyes and hear confused mumbling.  They may know that Albert Einstein had some wild hair and said something about “E” being equal to “MC-squared,” but they could tell you little about the physics of energy, mass, and velocity, or the relativity of time in space. 

 

Graduating seniors cannot as a rule separate out very clearly the defining features of the great river valley civilizations or tell you much about Egypt---  other than that the latter had some cool

pyramids and some ruler-types called pharaohs.  Ask students to explain clearly why the civilizations of ancient Greece, the Roman Republic and Empire, Han Dynasty China, the Mauryan Emperor Asoka, Charlemagne, the Abbasid Muslim Empire, empire of Songhay, or Mayan civilization are of such importance to humankind’s past--- and they’ll be hard-pressed to give you anything resembling an acceptable answer.  Many would struggle to distinguish a meteorite from a Shi’ite.

 

Our graduates typically walk across the stage to claim a piece of paper that does not signify any understanding of Classical Roman versus Gothic architecture;  the style of the Renaissance master painters versus those of the Impressionists, Expressionists, Cubists, Surrealists, or abstract Modernists.  They most likely could not identify whether a recording played for them is Mozart, Bach, or Beethoven;   Muddy Waters, Howlin’ Wolf, or John Lee Hooker.  They would be at a loss to explain how exactly the disparate traditions of Ma Rainey and Hank Williams gave us Elvis Presley and Buddy Holly.  Ask them to describe the contributions to architecture made by Albert Suger, Fillipo Brunelleschi, and Frank Lloyd Wright---  and those puzzled expressions would grow more intense. 

 

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This will change with the implementations of knowledge-intensive curriculum that I detail in Volume I, No. 2, August 2014 of my Journal of the K-12 Revolution:  Essays and Research from Minneapolis, Minnesota;  and the training of teachers able to impart such a curriculum, detailed in Volume I, No. 3, August 2014 of the journal. 

 

Deliver to young people an abundant store of knowledge in mathematics, natural science, history, language arts, and fine arts and we transform their lives.  Add to those core subjects of the liberal arts the training detailed in the second edition of the journal for world languages, industrial arts,  physical education, and an abundance of specialized courses in the social sciences---  and we send a new kind of human being forth into a world that they will make better.  They will apply for employment confidently as they prepare for lives of professional satisfaction;  but, just as important, they will live lives of cultural enrichment and civic engagement.  They will have the information base and the interest to vote, to be sure.  But they will also be motivated to be active citizens, showing up at public forums, organizing for community and institutional improvement, and volunteering not as rote, guilt-driven, episodic exercise---  but as human empathy put to altruistic action in the service of people considered part of the human family.

 

To give students the knowledge base that they will need to live such high-quality lives, we will need to view teachers in a whole new way, and to train them accordingly.

 

Concisely stated,

 

K-5 teachers will undergo a full academic year, 34 weeks in all, of training that will result in their receiving a rigorous Masters of Liberal Arts degree.  Multiple weeks will be dedicated to the study of mathematics through calculus;  the natural sciences of biology, chemistry, and physics;  history, economics, and psychology;  world literature and English usage;  and the fine arts (visual and musical). 

 

Teachers at grades 6-12 will be credited for a bachelor’s degree pertinent to the subjects that they will teach.  They must then pursue and receive a master’s degree in a discipline related to their teaching specialty;  master’s degrees in education will not be recognized.

 

Teachers at both grades K-5 and 6-12 will undergo a full year as interns, at the end of which they will be evaluated for positions as teachers in the Minneapolis Public Schools.

 

Teachers will thus be professionals who have undergone rigorous training comparable to that of physicians and attorneys;  accordingly, their pay will be raised to a median of $95,000 (from the current approximate figure of $67,000), with top earners receiving salaries of $155,000.  Such public sector salaries will not quite those of private sector physician and attorney counterparts but will recognize teacher professionalism and represent significant monetary upgrades.  With teachers thus trained, the Department of Teaching and Learning, the Office of Black Male Achievement, and the Associate Superintendent positions will be eliminated.

 

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We must have such education for our precious children.  We must allow those currently mired in generational poverty to break the cycle.  And beyond the break-through into economic stability, we must give children of all demographic descriptors lives of cultural enrichment, civic engagement, and professional satisfaction for the common good of the human family.

 

We can do this through the power of a knowledge-rich education, imparted to all members of the family named Humanity, by high-knowledge, fully professionalized teachers.

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