Posts Tagged ‘about’

PostHeaderIcon Educators and Parents: It’s All About Quality, not Grades

 

The purpose of schooling is to teach our children to learn and produce quality work.  In order to accomplish this goal, our schools must re-think the ways in which they view the educational process.  Such changes do not necessarily cost more money (although increased funding for education is important), but rather requires a radical shift in how we set out to support our students in achieving quality in their school experience.

Although many students are currently experiencing success in our schools, we have too many young people who are branded as failures as a result of the inadequacies of our present academic system.  The premature use of competition, the introduction of compulsory homework, and an obsessive emphasis on grading (which often overshadows the primary purpose of education – learning), all serve to detract from promoting quality education. 

In his classic work, Schools without Failure, psychiatrist William Glasser focuses on the components of successful schooling.  In his opinion, teachers must develop a positive involvement with students, re-think the relevance of their curriculum and consider the student evaluation process as a byproduct of a successful, quality learning experience. 

Within most schools, grading takes on a life of its own.  I call it the “wad-ya-get” phenomenon.  I find it interesting that when I talk with students and parents about their schooling, the topic promptly turns to the issue of grades.  Grades have become the “be-all” and “end-all” of education.  Rarely, when students or parents talk about school, do they discuss the content or quality of what kids are learning.  They invariably turn their attention to grades.  Parents typically ask their children “how” they do in school rather than “what” they accomplish in school.  Power struggles between parents, their children or teachers rarely involve the nature or quality of the work students accomplish, but generally pertain to the unsatisfactory grades received. 

When teachers are asked about grades, they insist that grades are positive motivators.  My educational experience has shown that good grades (A’s and B’s) are positive motivators for excellent students, but poor grades (C’s, D’s, and F’s) actually reinforce failure-oriented school behavior among those students who chronically fail. 

When I taught elementary school students, I would say, “I want all of you to succeed in my class; let’s talk about some meaningful objectives for getting A’s and B’s in my class and how you can achieve that goal.”  My students were puzzled.  They were used to being told, “If you don’t get your work done and turn it in on time, you will have trouble making it in this class; there are specific standards you must meet in my class or you will fail.”  When the attitude implies “the glass is half full,” students are more likely to buy in to a teacher’s expectations and fulfill them.  Students are eager to accommodate teachers who believe that all of their children have the potential to succeed no matter what happened in their prior school experience. 

The primary purpose of grading/evaluation is to provide students with a yardstick for progress being made.  Grades should never be used as an arbitrary measure reflecting a teacher’s standards.  When we are evaluated on our job, the process is hopefully designed to motivate us and improve our performance.  Many teachers mistakenly believe that they can coerce students who are not doing quality work by using grades as a motivational tool.  However, it is naïve to assume that a student who has chronically failed school will improve his performance by being labeled a failure through the grading system.  Dr. Edward W. Deming, noted management theorist and consultant, believes that managers (i.e. teachers) who attempt to coerce employees (i.e. students) will get workers who do just enough to get by.  The use of coercive, punitive management techniques is not good enough for our students and our educational system. 

Here are some principles of grading that will enhance a student’s chances of learning and experiencing school success:

Accentuate the positive with one’s grading policy.  “All students can achieve in my class.” Allow students who do not turn in quality work to re-do work until it is quality.  This should include re-takes of tests, re-working in-class material, and fine-tuning non-compulsory homework.  Remember, the goal is not some arbitrary school standard, but having your students ultimately learn the material no matter how long it takes. Homework should be removed from the grading process.  Many students do not have an appropriate environment at home or the support from parents to make it a priority.  Make homework non-compulsory and meaningful and you will get better buy-in from students.  Teacher involvement with students is critical in order to get students to embrace the concept of quality work.  Students should be able to say, “My teacher is fair, reasonable and pleasant to be around.”  Work tasks should be meaningful rather than focused on memorizing information for the purposes of the teacher.  Students should be taught how to learn.  This process should include critical thinking, learning how to find information, creative activities, problem-solving, cooperative learning strategies, and class meetings. Teachers should look for fresh ways to motivate students without the use of coercion.  Excuses such as this kid is too lazy, un-teachable, or from a troubled home are not helpful.  Grades are a reflection of the quality of the learning experience.  If many students are doing poorly, it is the responsibility of the school to correct the problem.  Dr. Deming never blamed the workers for management’s failure to lead and motivate.  If the school system is organized upon a healthy, need-satisfying leadership style among its teachers and administrators, most students will succeed and receive good grades. Positive evaluation is a byproduct of the quality of a school program.  If students are not succeeding, the program is faulty. 

Some in the educational establishment may say that the ideas articulated in this article call for a lowering of academic standards and a “dumbing-down” of the curriculum.  On the contrary, I am suggesting that school systems need to honestly grade themselves and see where improvement may be needed.  Without a lead-management style of relating from administrators and teachers, and a curriculum based upon critical thinking, problem-solving, and meaningful work experiences, schools will fail along with their students.  We cannot afford for that to happen if we are to promote quality schooling.

James P. Krehbiel is a Licensed Professional Counselor and Nationally Certified Cognitive-Behavioral Therapist. His first book, Stepping Out of the Bubble is available at www.booklocker.com. He specializes in working with children and adults experiencing anxiety and depressive disorders. He is the Shrink Rap columnist for TheImproper.com, an upscale news and entertainment resource located in NYC. He has published numerous counseling-related articles, most available via Google searches. He can be reached at jkboardroomsuites@yahoo.com.

PostHeaderIcon Parents fret about MPS middle-high school hybrids

Parents fret about MPS middle-high school hybrids The emerging middle/high model may offer students a greater variety of accelerated courses, but in some parents’ eyes, it comes with a serious price: the mixing of vulnerable adolescents with older teenagers. Read more on Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

PostHeaderIcon Self-Improvement: All About Quality

People run into two major problems when they try to apply self-improvement ideas or techniques:


1) They attempt too great a change in too short a time, and


2) They expect that by changing one aspect of their life, their whole life will improve.


Major changes are always an accumulation of minor changes. You don’t change the direction of an ocean liner instantly, and a life has at least as much momentum as an ocean liner. Real self-improvement comes from small, directed changes, each one designed to improve one small aspect of life.


Self-improvement must involve all parts of one’s life, because all those parts interact with each other. If they are not all getting better, improvement in one small area will not be stable, as the others will drag it back down. As an example, a student decides to study much harder and get better grades. This won’t be possible if he has just as many distractions from friends, just as many money problems, and his girlfriend keeps getting mad at him.


The solution to both of these problems is to learn the actual principles of quality that underlie self-improvement. To improve anything is to increase its quality. This includes self. It includes life. Without knowing the principles of quality, attempts to improve it become “best guesses” or blindly following advice that worked for someone else or seems to make sense.


Here is the first major principle of quality: Quality Is An Attitude.


This simply means that you have decided to make things better. You have recognized that better is a good direction to move in, rather than letting things stay the same or get worse. Of course, deciding to do something and actually doing it are not the same things. That is where the rest of the principles come in. This first one, though, is necessary. You know you have a quality attitude when you see something that is not as good as it could be and you want to make it better. Maybe you can and maybe you can’t, but you wish you could.


Here is the second major principle of quality: Quality Leads To Opposition.


What should be a relatively simple and essentially painless process, self-improvement, is made difficult. Improvement of any kind flies directly into the teeth of many people’s fear of or distaste for change. Not knowing this, not expecting this, can make a person get discouraged in his attempts to change things in his life for the better.


Finally, here is the third and last major principle of quality: Quality Takes Time.


We get back to the ocean liner here. It doesn’t turn on a dime. Neither does a life. When you start to improve an aspect of your life, it doesn’t become perfect overnight. What it does do is start to turn. It starts to move more in the direction you want it to go. It starts to get better.


The above are very condensed, over-simplified explanations of some of the principles of quality. Even so, they contain the kernels of the truths a person needs to begin to make long-term, meaningful improvements in his or her life.

Don Dewsnap has been teaching the principles of quality to his children, his employees, and his co-workers for over twenty years. Now they are in a book, Anyone Can Improve His or Her Own Life: The Principles of Quality, found at www.principles-of-quality.com.

PostHeaderIcon YEMEN: What to do about child labour?

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PostHeaderIcon I am 30 yrs old and I am thinking about returning to school to get a better career?

I am trying to figure out which school I should go to. Devry contacted me today through my inquirey and I am wondering if this is a good school? I am also wondering if I should go to one of the local universities instead. There is Old Dominion univerisity, the college of william and mary and there are a few community colleges. I have already done the community college route and I have gone 1 year at westwood online. I am interested in computers or web design or game design.

PostHeaderIcon Ripley students learn about PRWIN, environment

Ripley students learn about PRWIN, environment Ripley-Huron students learned how they could help improve the Pine River Watershed last week. Students in Grades 5-8 participated in the Pine River Watershed Integration Network’s field trip The Arc Native Plant Nursery, owned by Janice McKean on the B-Line. Adrienne Mason, PRWIN coordinator said [...] Read more on Kincardine News

PostHeaderIcon Professors express concerns about student evaluations

Professors express concerns about student evaluations By: Timothy Sandoval Some professors at Sacramento State and across the country have expressed anxiety over student evaluations, which can weigh heavily on a professor’s chances of promotion or tenure…. Read more on The State Hornet

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