Tuesday, June 19, 2007

Astrology is good enough for Me.

Principals are not really held accountable for science scores in their schools. It sort of counts, but not as much as math and English. If they personally don't think much of science then basically the science department is screwed. The only thing that saves it is the state mandates. I received a call from one of my old science teachers who is no longer at my old school. She seemed very dissatisfied because her principal had eliminated labs and gone to a 5 day a week science schedule. This is of course borderline illegal.

I think science pisses off principals for a number of reasons. 1)It costs money for supplies, some of the supplies are even icky. 2)Science teachers laugh at people throwing around terms such as "reptilian behavior" that have almost no basis in research. 3)Science students often fail because they do not have enough lab minutes and are therefore banned from the Regents. 4)Science is perceived as being hard. 5)High school science meets 6 times a week, this messes up the nice neat boxes that make principals and programmers happy.

The part of all of this that I find the most disturbing is the elimination of lab periods. The state says that all students need 1200 minutes of labs before they take the regents. The separate lab period provided our students with more than 1200 minutes. Those students who were absent on a few lab days could still pass lab. The motivation for eliminating these labs is programming. The idea that programs should fit into these nice square boxes is the product of people who are not good with numbers or patterns. Exactly the same people who were probably never good at science. Decisions about programs are made for administrative purposes and not student needs. This is sad.

The other thing about labs is that science needs to be hands on. Teaching theory without doing experiments short changes students. In my last school we had 43 minute lab periods. Most of the time the labs were far away from the class, the students were often not the same as those in the class. This was devastating to the science program. Teachers often did cookbook labs, not discovery labs. The past few years it was hard to get anyone to listen to my complaints about this. Bad scheduling changed from being the exception to being the norm.

When you think of it, the idea that knowledge can be divided into little discreet units of 43 or 45 minutes is absurd. The idea that if teaching math five days a week is a good idea than teaching Spanish five days a week must also be a good idea is equally as absurd. Some principals just want the programming to be easy so they can concentrate on instruction. This is a bad idea. Programming often defines instruction. To think otherwise is wrong. You can not ignore programming in a high school.

Good teachers are always number one, but they are followed by good programming. Programming is the way you support teachers and students.

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

You wrote:
> When you think of it, the idea
> that knowledge can be divided
> into little discreet units of
> 43 or 45 minutes is absurd.


Marion Brady's take on this which is found at (http://tinyurl.com/2bxuxv)
is that
"Making sense of experience requires the seamless weaving together of knowledge. Fields of study are now walled off from each other with awkward, artificial, arbitrary boundaries. Because of this, our brains are denied, in real and immediate ways, access to the raw materials essential for productive, creative thought."

Ms. M said...

We don't really have to deal with this in elementary school but why can't the NYSESLAT scores come back in the spring so that ELLs can be properly programed for ESL classes or not. If you don't know if a student has passed the test or not it's impossible to put them in the correct class. I've heard of HS students that were put in ESL and when the results came back in October that they passed they had to stay because it was too late to change their schedules. That is unacceptable.

Anonymous said...

Although passing the NY State science test for 4th grade is not required for promotion, it *is* factored in when determining a school's status. For example, a school can meet targets in ELA and math but not in science, and may be identified as a School in Need of Improvement (SINI). This puts pressure on the administration and teachers to make sure the kids know what they need to pass the test, even if they don't really get the concepts. In my school that's translated into having the 4th grade kids go through all the activities for the practical part of the test, though unrelated to what they're studying at the time.

R.

Anonymous said...

Programing is a way to support good teachers... Then there is Washington Irving High School.

Anonymous said...

I wonder how many science classes China and India does away with? And we wonder why we are slipping further down the worldwide academic ladder.