I have long espoused that one of the problems I see with our current education system is that it operates as a one size fits all ideology. This is also the problem with many teacher education programs. One size fits all is a fallacy. We all aren’t the same. Our kids aren’t all the same. If we were doing our job right–our test scores and students performance would fit perfectly on the bell-curve. Well, guess what it doesn’t. We have a huge proportion of our kids who are in the bottom–more than should be. Will there always be kids at the bottom? Yes. Just as there will always be kids at the top and the rest happily spread out in the middle.
Our educational system is bottom heavy in terms performance on a bell-curve. Especially in our urban schools. But even in our suburban schools–the system we have doesn’t work for everyone. We talk about choice and how charters are about choice–I agree they should be about choice and they should be about different. Schools that try the same thing that other schools have failed at are not offering a choice. They are offering the idea of a choice.
My kids are in private school. That is a choice I made. I looked long and hard for a school that fit my kids and fit what I believe is important as a parent and as an educator. My kids school is small and we pay a lot of money for their education. But if you look at per pupil expenditure–they don’t spend much more than the local urban district. One thing that is different is that my kids school has a mission. A clear mission and everyone in the building has bought into that mission. The students are at the center of the mission.
At many public schools, there is no mission. They are the defacto choice and don’t need a mission to help hold the school together. I would argue that they do. There is no reason why every district school has to look like the every other one. Why can’t districts create schools the have a mission. A mission that guides instruction and choice. A mission that puts students first. A mission that parents can understand and use to determine which school to enroll their child.
We have to think outside of the box. We need to think about how our education can be redesigned to serve our constantly changing population. Just because I live on x street shouldn’t dictate where my kid goes to school. As a parent, I should get to look at all schools in my district and determine the best fit for my child. I know that this would pose a problem with transportation, etc. I get that–but then maybe we don’t need to offer transportation any more. Maybe we need to think about transportation and other ways to do this effectively so that where someone lives doesn’t dictate the school they have to go to.
I know that in some districts Magnet schools were meant to do this–but many of them are only innovative on the surface and still teach and design coursework the same way as the district does.
This is why I support choice. I think that when something gets too big the only way to manage it is to streamline and make everything uniform. So each school and each class is taught the same thing in often the same way and at the same time. This makes it easy for those who manage the system, but does nothing to develop learning in the staff nor the students.
School districts are too big. Sure it’s nice to have a central office to handle all the paperwork, etc. But is the trade off really worth it? Does it make sense to create huge conglomerate districts. The larger something gets that harder it is to change and who loses out? The little guy. The little guy in this case is the students. They are the 99% in education.
This is why charter schools have caught on so greatly. They are little “districts” and they give parents an option. They give parents a choice of what type of school they want their kids to attend. Larger districts could revision their schools and create the autonomy needed to allow for such free-thinking. Allow each school to determine what is best based on the population who has chosen their school.
We need to not only think outside the box–we need to revision why we have a box in the first place. Students don’t fit in any box I’ve seen.