Part 1 of this series, “The state of K-12 education is miscommunication,” described how two recent conferences illustrate the divide in American K-12 education between education professionals and those outside the field. This post looks at the educator’s perspective and offers advice for all sides moving forward.

The educators I talk to speak mainly about their passion for helping young minds find a love of learning. They also talk of feeling stressed out, juggling too much responsibility, fearing layoffs, being required to practice methods they don’t support and having criticism heaped on them from every quarter — whether it be unsupportive parents, critical administrators and education vendors who fail to provide adequate product training.

Educators are developing a bunker mentality from feeling constantly under siege. We are in a new era of accountability in K-12 education, and many educators feel that the criteria for success are arbitrary, measure the wrong things, and — in the worst cases — are bad for kids.

It strikes me that our current discourse isn’t very productive. Everyone agrees that there are challenges in education, but disagreement about the best path forward is preventing us from looking at the problem in the same way. For what it’s worth, here’s my advice for having a better conversation about education.

To educators:

  1. Lose the defensiveness. I frequently hear educators say, “Everyone thinks he is an expert on education because he went through the K-12 system.” That’s true, insofar as it goes, but it isn’t helpful. It’s a rhetorical trick, meant to shut down debate by discrediting the non-educator who ventures an opinion. Moreover, it misses the point. One needn’t be a concert violinist to hear a sour note struck in a symphony — just as one needn’t be a teacher to see areas in need of improvement in the education system.
  2. If you want teaching to be treated like a profession, be a professional. This means knowing your customer — the child, and her parent, of course. Society is also your customer. That cute seventh-grader will need skills and a job; the hiring managers of corporate America are your customer. Listen to their feedback.

To corporate stakeholders:

  1. Lose the glibness. If there were easy fixes to be had in education, someone other than you would have suggested it.
  2. Have some respect. Teaching is probably the single most important profession, as it makes all others possible. The data show that it’s also one of the most stressful professions, with one of the highest rates of turnover. We feel respect for other careers that are deemed to be both important and difficult (think air-traffic controllers). Teaching should not be the exception.
  3. That means listening to teachers, and taking their collective voice seriously. If enough teachers tell you a thing won’t work, pay attention.

Lastly, for anyone who cares about education or has an opinion, get involved. Don’t be an armchair quarterback. Volunteer, donate, run for school board. Put up, don’t shut up. Because what we really need are educators and non-educators talking to each other, sharing perspectives and identifying common goals. We each have an interest in having a healthy, dynamic, world-leading workforce. We will never agree on every detail for achieving that goal, but let us at least agree that a collective effort will afford the best chance of succeeding.

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3 Responses to “How can we have a more constructive conversation about education?”

  1. Cindy says:

    Good points all. The first step is to give teachers a voice and the next step is to listen to what they have to say. We're doing it at New Voice Strategies through our VIVA Teachers projects. If NY had listened to what NY teachers said about teacher evaluation, the whole process likely would gone more smoothly. Chicago Public Schools did listen to VIVA Teachers there–they came up with 49 recommendations about how to use time in school better. Teachers in Minnesota spent hours crafting a principal evaluation system designed to help good principals become great and struggling principals get the help they need to succeed. You can read all of the teachers' reports and ideas on our website at http://vivateachers.org/.

  2. Audrey Flojo says:

    Excellent starting point for a civilised public discourse. We seem to not have the ability to talk to each other on important topics without talking "at" each other and making it a political agenda.

  3. Craig says:

    The new era of accountability continues to lack the basics needed to successful: to hold students and parents as accountable for the education of students as are educators; however, because governments and politicians have no real control over these two groups, the weight of accountability will continue to bear of the shoulders of educators. This may not be right, but it is what it is!

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