LA SCHOOLS-You have to hand it to Pearson. No, really…you have to. It’s in the contract. It’s embedded in the standards and the NCLB waivers. It’s in the stars.
They are the world’s largest publishing company. They are the world’s largest textbook publishing company – which has the best highest-on-investment of any kind of publishing save for printing money itself. They apparently own the market in digital content publishing for the Common Core State Standards with their Common Core System of Courses – which may or may not actually exist – developed with start-up money from the Los Angeles Unified School District, thank you very much.
Now they have a vision for the future, and in it they are the world’s largest testing company.
They have seen the future and it’s Pearson.
Last week Pearson’s Chief Education Advisor, Sir Michael Barber and assessment expert, Dr Peter Hill, generated a report about this bright new wonderful tomorrow. Their “essay” PREPARING FOR A RENAISSANCE IN ASSESSMENT says that new technologies will transform assessment and testing in education.
According to the authors:
● Adaptive testing (for example, tests that evolve in real time on screen) will help generate more accurate tests and reduce the amount of time schools spend on testing
● Smarter, automated marking of exams will help improve accuracy and reduce the time teachers spend marking “rote” answers
● Technology will help combine student performance across multiple papers and subjects.
● Assessment will provide on-going feedback, which, will help personalise teaching and improve learning.
● New digital technologies will minimise opportunities for cheating in exams or “gaming the system”.
● The essay argues that current assessment methods are no longer working, so that even the top performing education systems in the world have hit a performance ceiling.
The authors set out a ‘Framework for Action’ that details the steps that should be taken for “policymakers, schools, school-system leaders and other key players to prepare for the assessment renaissance”.
The report is 88 pages under the Pearson imprint. 88 pages of research an inch deep and a mile wide, reminiscent of every slick new modern educational text you’ve ever seen – with pictures and graphs and text boxes, all Helvetica and white space and more designed than written.
It is salesmanship pretending to be scholarship. Data masquerading as knowledge. Advertising making believe it is research.
In print I’m sure you can smell the shiny acid-free paper and soy based ink – with a press run of varnish to make the pictures pop and blacks truly black. You probably can’t smell the barnyard fecal matter at all.
You can read it here: And you should, because as an early reviewer writes: “… these are the people that the reformsters listen to.”
This is the very Kool Aid we were warned not to drink.
That reviewer, Peter Greene, who blogs here continues:
“…Let me just try to distill some of the big takeaways from Peter Hill and Michael Barber's essay. Here are some important things to know about what Pearson's brave new future education world would look like.
Welcome to the matrix: students will be plugged in-Pearson does not aspire to simply administer a high stakes test or two a couple of times a year. Think of every sort of assessment you do, from unit tests to small check quizzes to daily exercises for understanding. Pearson wants all of that. All. Of. That. Every single bit of assessment will generate data which will go straight into the Big Data Bank so that a complete picture of the individual student can be created and stored. I once noted that the Common Core standards make more sense if viewed as data tags. I wrote that last March, but it still looks correct to me.
The point of having everything done via internet-linked device is not just to deliver instruction and assessment to the student-- it's to be able to collect every bit of data that the student generates.
Through the use of rubrics, which will define performance in terms of a hierarchically ordered set of levels representing increasing quality of responses to specific tasks, and a common set of curriculum identifiers, it will be possible to not only provide immediate feedback to guide learning and teaching but also to build a digital record of achievement that can be interrogated for patterns and used to generate individualised and pictorial achievement maps or profiles
And Pearson is completely comfortable with assessment and instruction centered on character traits, developing grit and tenacity and prudence and the ability to work well with others. So their system will hoover all that info up as well. By the time your child is eighteen, there will be a complete profile, covering every aspect of her intellectual and personal development. I wonder if Pearson would be able to make any money selling that database to potential employers or to government agencies.
Hmmm...
Teachers will not be teachers-Pearson doesn't much like the teaching profession as it currently stands. They believe that teaching must be transformed from a "largely under-qualified and trained, heavily unionized, bureaucratically controlled semi-profession into a true profession with a distinctive knowledge base, framework for teaching, well-defined common terms for describing and analyzing teaching at a level of specificity and strict control."
"Learning systems of the future will free up teacher time currently spent on preparation, marking and record-keeping and allow a greater focus on the professional roles of diagnosis, personalized instruction, scaffolding deep learning, motivation, guidance and care." The system will do all the planning and implementing, and the system will put all the necessary technology at hand. "But without such a systematic, data-driven approach to instruction, teaching remains an imprecise and somewhat idiosyncratic process that is too dependent on the personal intuition and competence of individual teachers."
All educational decisions will be made by the software and the system. Teachers will just be needed as a sort of stewardess. We will teacher-proof the classroom, so that any nasty individuality cannot mess up the system.
Personalized learning won't be-Pearson's concept of personalized learning is really about personalized pacing. The framework for learning starts with "validated maps of the sequence in which students typically learn a given curriculum outcome." So-- like railroad tracks.
Personalized does not mean wandering all over a variety of possible learning paths. It means adjusting to move slower or faster while pausing for review when there's a need to fill in holes.
Pearson does not offer an answer to the age-old question, "How do all students move at their own paces but still cross the finish line in time?" They do suggest that we give up the old age-grade progression, and they believe that high expectations fix everything, but they do not directly explain if that's enough to keep some students from being stuck in school until they're twenty-nine years old.
Character may be important, but humanity, not so much -One of the odd disconnects in Pearson's vision is that they value (enough to plan measuring) social skills and character, but they do not pause to consider how their system might affect or be affected by the development of these qualities.
What does it do to the development of a child to be in groups that change regularly because of differing educational pace. What will happen when an eight year old must leave her best friend behind because she is being moved up? What will happen to the very bright twelve-year-old grouped with a bunch of fairly slow seventeen-year-olds?
Pearson lists a wide variety of possible obstacles to this system's emergence, but they assume that students will simply fall in line and take the system seriously, feeling some sort of accountability to the device screen that delivers their instruction and assessment. Teachers no longer automatically receive the trust and respect of our students--we have to earn it. Pearson assumes that because they think they're important, students will, too. That's a bad assumption.
Software will be magical-Pearson knows that trying to test any higher levels of cognition with bubble test questions is doomed to failure. Their solution is magical software. Software can ask questions that will delve deep, and software can read and assess the answers to open-ended essay questions.
Software can suss out a student's intelligence so well that it can then create more test items that will be perfect for that student. Software can unerringly crunch all the data to create a perfect profile of the student. Software can do all of these things better than live human beings (even though software is written by live human beings).
And if you believe all that, I would like to sell you some software that controls the Brooklyn Bridge.
Important people are listening to these guys-You cannot read a page of this essay without encountering familiar references. New tests that move beyond the old bubble tests. High expectations can bring all students up to excellence. Enhanced data collection will lead to better learning. The job of teaching needs to be changed. We've heard it all from various bureaucrats, reformster leaders, and US Secretaries of Education.
Important people pay attention to Pearson, even though most of their ideas are rather dumb and self-serving. We all need to be paying attention to Pearson as well, because back behind the Gatesian money and the policies of Arne Duncan we find these guys, generating and articulating the ideas that become foundational to the reformsters.
It would be easy to dismiss Pearson as simple money-grubbing corporatists, to lump them together with the goofy amateurism of a Duncan or a Coleman. But they are rich, they are polished, they are powerful, and they are, I believe, driven. I have never read work by Michael Barber in which he does not note that changing the global face of education is a moral imperative, a job that he must do because he knows what must be done to improve mankind.
For me, that takes this all to a new level of scary.
Does any of that sound somewhat familiar?
Mr. Greene is quite verbose, if you really want to get into the weeds in deciphering Pearson’s Renaissance, continue on here:
(Scott Folsom is a parent and parent leader in LAUSD. He is the former President of Los Angeles 10th District PTSA and represents PTA as Vice-chair the LAUSD Construction Bond Citizen's Oversight Committee. Scott is a member of the California State PTA Board on Managers. He blogs at the excellent 4 LA Kids … where this perspective was originally posted.)
-cw
CityWatch
Vol 12 Issue 103
Pub: Dec 23, 2014