Read-i-cide: n: The systematic killing of the love of reading, often exacerbated
by the inane, mind-numbing practices found in schools.
Teaching reading in schools can be
hard. We have the kids who do not want
to read for a slew of reasons (They forgot to read, they did not want to read,
they did not understand it, they cannot read, etc.). This hinders the learning experience in the
classroom. For most teachers, we like to
teach all over Bloom’s Taxonomy; focusing not only on the knowledge and
comprehension at the lower end but also synthesis and evaluation as well. If the teacher is focusing on trying to get
the students to show knowledge and comprehension of the book, it is almost
impossible for them to get the whole way up to synthesis and evaluation. Kelly Gallagher comments in his introduction
about Readicide and how there are four main contributing factors:
·
Schools value the development of test-takers
more than they value the development of readers
·
Schools are limiting authentic reading
experiences
·
Teachers are over teaching book
·
Teachers are under teaching book
Like I have been talking about,
this blog is off of the book Readicide and I could sit here all day and
talk about ever little aspect of it. We
focused on chapters one and two for this first post. I think it would be best to post my questions
in response to the first two chapters now instead of making so many other
points about the book.
| High stakes testing like a carrot on a stick |
At one point in the first chapter,
Kelly Gallagher talks about the Texas Miracle.
This was the “remarkable progress Texas schools made when educational ‘carrots
and sticks’ were attached to high-stakes, multiple-choice reading exams”
(Gallagher 19). Well, here is where my
question comes in. It goes on to talk
about how “school officials did not count many students who gave up and dropped
out” and “at the height of the Texas Miracle, special education students were
not counted in the test scores” (Gallagher 19).
Well, if these students were not held to the same standards as students
today (EVERY child must be accounted for) how and why did the policy
change? They are basing their
information off of something that should NOT be compared to students
today. That is not right and then the
government wonders why student testing is not the same. Any thoughts on this would be great!
| Like building a skyscraper on quick sand |
My next question has to deal with
the idea of our schooling practices in general.
I have two quotes from chapter one that go along with this idea. First, “…as their (the student’s) state
scores were rising to impressive heights, ‘only about one third of Alsine’s
graduates entering public colleges scored high enough on college readiness
tests to avoid remedial classes’” (Gallagher 20). This is simply stating that the students were
scoring really high on these high-stakes tests, but were not doing well on the
things that actually matter (college placement testing). How horrible is that? The second quote to go along with this is “Building
a national education agenda on the Texas model was like building a skyscraper
on quick sand” (Gallagher 21). So, here
is my question to this. If we have all of
this information about our way of schooling and we know high-stakes testing is
a bad idea for the well-being of our students, WHY DO WE CONTINUE TO DO
IT? That is so wrong!
Those two questions are the two
most important questions I found in the first two chapters. Of course, I came up with many good ideas for
my own classroom, but do not want to give them away until I have had the chance
to work them out and refine them first.
I hope the questions I pose are not to strong or do not make sense. I think Mr. Gallagher has written an
outstanding book and again, if you have not had the chance to read it. PLEASE do!
You will learn so much and it will open your eyes to something totally
different in the world of education.
“You don’t have to burn books to
destroy culture. Just get people to stop
reading them.”
---
Ray Bradbury
The point you make about the student who is a strong silent reader but who has trouble reading out-loud reminds me of myself. In school, I could always quickly read and understand what I was reading, but, when called on to read aloud, I had a hard time due to being a quiet student who didn't like to speak up in class. It's hard as a teacher, though, because you want all students to participate, but...how is that possible for students like me or the student in your example?
ReplyDeleteP.S. Love your background. Mine is similar, but features the flaming mockingjay that is used for the movies.