My greatest academic achievement isn’t on my resume, because it’s not a grade-point average or a major or even a minor. Unless you’re a political junky who attended West Virginia University, you won’t even realize its significance.
I never got a shovel from Robert DiClerico.
Dr. DiClerico was — and, I assume, still is — hell-on-wheels tough hidden behind a tweedy facade. He didn’t lecture — he led. He’d stroll in front of the class, reeling off facts without glancing at a single note. Then he’d pivot and pounce.
“What do you think, Dr. Legg?” Dr. Legg had to come up with a credible answer, quickly.
His tests were short-answer essay, designed not to gauge whether you’d memorized facts but formulated to reveal whether you could apply them. If you wrote a bunch of barn-yard excrement, he’d draw a shovel beside it.
I love that man.
And I love what his techniques could do to truly reform education if teachers could use them instead of focusing on getting kids to gray in the right bubbles with their No. 2 pencils.
Instead, we have No Child Left Behind and its emphasis on “high expectations” and “measurable goals.”
Problem is, “measurable goals” always involve target scores on standardized tests. And educators have known for 20 years that standardized tests are problematic at best. The manipulation is so blatant these days that in some parts of the country, superintendents are hiring testing companies to write curriculum.
Even worse: Two months into school, Big Guy already is being prepped for the diabolical DIBELs — Dynamic Indicators of Early Basic Literacy. His homework dovetails perfectly with three of the four test areas listed on the company’s Web site.
He’s 5 years old, for heaven’s sake.
It’s near impossible for any candidate to buck No Child Left Behind. Too many folks fall for the “high expectations” and “measurable goals” malarkey, and there’s no future in being against that.
Since we’re stuck with a world more DIBELs than DiClerico, the only thing to do is make the best of it.
Will either of you make No Child Left Behind better for children, Sen. McCain or Obama? Continue reading
Posted under Girl gone wonk, Parenting in the news, School days