Comments for The Hechinger Report https://hechingerreport.org/ Covering Innovation & Inequality in Education Tue, 23 Jan 2024 19:26:29 +0000 hourly 1 Comment on PROOF POINTS: Two groups of scholars revive the debate over inquiry vs. direct instruction by Nic Vitale https://hechingerreport.org/proof-points-two-groups-of-scholars-revive-the-debate-over-inquiry-vs-direct-instruction/comment-page-1/#comment-61416 Tue, 23 Jan 2024 19:26:29 +0000 https://hechingerreport.org/?p=98101#comment-61416 “Our view… is that explicit instruction is essential for novices” but that as students gain knowledge, there should be “an increasing emphasis on independent problem-solving practice,” Sweller and his camp wrote. “To the extent that De Jong et al. (2023) agree that explicit instruction can be important, we appear to have reached some level of agreement.”

My experience is quite the opposite… especially with anything abstract (such as math concepts or big ideas in science) and reflected in the previous comment by Vince Wolfe: Novice students need exploratory experiences in order to understand the abstractions shared in direct instruction. Students with more prior knowledge and familiarity can benefit from direct instruction because they can relate the abstractions to existing funds of knowledge and experiences.

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Comment on PROOF POINTS: Two groups of scholars revive the debate over inquiry vs. direct instruction by Vince Wolfe https://hechingerreport.org/proof-points-two-groups-of-scholars-revive-the-debate-over-inquiry-vs-direct-instruction/comment-page-1/#comment-61408 Tue, 23 Jan 2024 16:53:00 +0000 https://hechingerreport.org/?p=98101#comment-61408 Scenario 1: Teacher has students dissect frogs. She starts the activity with a diagram of a cross-section of the frog on the board. She has students fill in a worksheet of the diagram, along with answering a few questions. Maybe she leads a quick discussion asking students to predict what they will find.

Then, the students dive in and dissect the frog. The find organs, they are grossed out, they laugh. And they likely get something out of the whole experience. BUT, in my experience as an educator for almost 20 years, I’ve found that the “winners” in the class, those who seem to always do well, get more out of the activity than those who feel they are always behind, who are struggling to understand textbook material, who might be intimidated by school.

Scenario 2: Teacher hands out the frogs. She gives them one simple instruction: cut the frog in half and see what you find. Students do, and they start asking all kinds of questions. They laugh, they are grossed out, they wonder. At the right time, when students want the information, the teacher puts up the same diagram of the cross-section. The students look to see if their guesses were right. They look to find answers to the questions they formed. In other words, information is given when students most want it.

Anyone who how the brain learns knows that this is the best time for new information to be integrated and processed. And, while there are no guarantees, the open-ended nature of this type of experiencial and inquiry-based activity makes it more likely that all students benefit and have an opportunity to ask questions, notice things, and have curiosities. It’s not just the top 30% of students (although this activity is great for them as well, to sharpen and extend their thinking).

I’m an academic coach, and I work with a teacher who did both scenarios. She did scenario one for many years before trying the second. She is now a huge proponent of scenario 2. She said the level of engagement was pretty high with both, but in the second scenario, the questions and discussions were more scientific, and that the students were begging for the teacher to tell them the “answer”. She said she’d never go back to Scenario 1.

My take is that if we want students to think like scientists, and approach the world using empirical reasoning, we have to let them have the same experiences that scientists have on a regular basis. We have to create conditions for some open-ended noticing and wondering before dropping “teacher-knowledge” into the mix.

Sometimes, inquiry based learned can be doing the exact same activity, with the same materials, as explicit direct instruction. The difference is the order, where there is time given (usually at the start) for students to think in an open-ended way with no immediate answer.

Finally, in all of these articles about which method is more successful, I’m aways asking myself, “why aren’t we talking about the validity of the assessment that was used to qualify which method is more successful?” Having 2 kids of my own in middle school, I can say that I don’t really care if my kids have memorized facts that allow them to ace a multiple-choice test about plate techtonics or the Krebs cycle. I’d much rather that they have the opportunity to think and wonder about plate Techtonics or the Krebs cycle, to work collaboratively with others, do research, and to figure out how to find the information they need to reach the teacher’s goals. I want the teacher to allow, or even promote “messy thinking” where the students are struggling to make sense of something before finally understanding. These are skills that my kids will use in college, work, and life.

I think we need to be very careful about drawing conclusions about the success or failure of a method when we haven’t carefully examined what the assessment actually measures.

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Comment on Experts predicted dozens of colleges would close in 2023 – and they were right by Paul Adams https://hechingerreport.org/experts-predicted-dozens-of-colleges-would-close-in-2023-and-they-were-right/comment-page-1/#comment-61177 Tue, 16 Jan 2024 20:38:10 +0000 https://hechingerreport.org/?p=98001#comment-61177 Jim Worrall may need to educate himself before attacking higher education for failing to do so. First, going through the process of introducing young people to colleges is instructive and sometimes enlightening, but it doesn’t make him or anyone else an expert on what attracts colleges toward or drives students away from higher education.

Second, it’s unclear what he means by “honest” and “dishonest mega” schools, although it isn’t hard to guess. The universe of schools isn’t divided neatly into those two categories. If you have a problem with certain “schools,” Jim, name them!

Third, the “leftist indoctrination, DEI nonsense” remark is a dead giveaway for Jim’s white nationalist agenda.

Fourth, we taxpayers underwrite lots of things, Jim, including corporate welfare. Financial aid to students is among the best uses of tax money.

Fifth, the claim that abortion is reducing the birthrate and therefore the cohort of college-bound students is, well, just laughable.

Want to have a legitimate, data-based conversation about financial aid, transferability of college credits, the tax status of certain non-profits? Sure. But I for one would rather that conversation with someone who’s less ideological. Which is to say, with someone who’s done his homework.

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Comment on Experts predicted dozens of colleges would close in 2023 – and they were right by Langston Donkle https://hechingerreport.org/experts-predicted-dozens-of-colleges-would-close-in-2023-and-they-were-right/comment-page-1/#comment-61137 Mon, 15 Jan 2024 15:42:24 +0000 https://hechingerreport.org/?p=98001#comment-61137 “We’ll trim our administrative staff a little bit.” That’s the most important sentence in the article. Many administrative staffs have swollen unnecessarily over the past 20-30 years.

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Comment on Experts predicted dozens of colleges would close in 2023 – and they were right by Jim Worrall https://hechingerreport.org/experts-predicted-dozens-of-colleges-would-close-in-2023-and-they-were-right/comment-page-1/#comment-61059 Sat, 13 Jan 2024 17:11:38 +0000 https://hechingerreport.org/?p=98001#comment-61059 As a father, intricately involved in the college admissions process for three of my children over the last four years, I am well equipped to speak to issues driving students away from formal education.

Honest colleges and universities are competing against dishonest mega schools run as businesses but inappropriately benefiting from nonprofit status. These nonprofit schools plow the money they should pay in taxes into marketing. They lie and mislead prospective students and play games with student financial aid.

Broader issues affecting all students include the following:
1) Tuition has risen far faster than inflation driven by student loans. Taxpayers should not be funding student loans.

2) College has become far less relevant as many colleges and professors focus on leftist indoctrination, DEI and other nonsense rather than teaching useful information.

3)Most students lose a significant amount of credit when they transfer courses to a different school. Introductory courses should contain the same essential information to reduce cost and facilitate credit transfer.

4) The proliferation of free or low cost non-collegiate online educational resources has reduced the pool of potential students.

5) Abortion has reduced the birthrate and the pool of potential students.

6) For decades we have been pushing students to college who would be far better served going to vocational school and learning a high paying trade. German has an excellent system of vocational education America should model.

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Comment on OPINION: We can and must do better to help Black students enroll in college and succeed by Bobby Rice https://hechingerreport.org/opinion-we-can-and-must-do-better-to-help-black-students-enroll-in-college-and-succeed/comment-page-1/#comment-61057 Sat, 13 Jan 2024 16:03:47 +0000 https://hechingerreport.org/?p=93449#comment-61057 I have a son that’s enrolled at Brevard college NC and it’s or they are making it hard for him to go to school. He went to brevard to play football and he really like the program their.

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Comment on PROOF POINTS: Flashcards prevail over repetition in memorizing multiplication tables by Jill Barshay https://hechingerreport.org/proof-points-flashcards-prevail-over-repetition-in-memorizing-multiplication-tables/comment-page-1/#comment-60866 Tue, 09 Jan 2024 17:43:29 +0000 https://hechingerreport.org/?p=96854#comment-60866 @Linda Hulteen — Great question and apologies for the slow reply. Students practiced with the flashcards on their own but had a booklet where they could make a check mark after each practice round. The study didn’t test different frequencies or dosages. More details on the experiment here: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/acp.4141?campaign=wolearlyview (see section 2.4)

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Comment on PROOF POINTS: Four lessons from post-pandemic tutoring research by Rachel Gluck https://hechingerreport.org/proof-points-four-lessons-from-post-pandemic-tutoring-research/comment-page-1/#comment-60830 Mon, 08 Jan 2024 20:22:14 +0000 https://hechingerreport.org/?p=97826#comment-60830 I read this report on post-pandemic tutoring with great interest. I agree with your findings regarding the difficulties schools are facing with struggling students that have fallen behind and how to best support them. I have found, after following this closely for the past few years since Covid, that the research has been too conflicting due to limited studies and too many variables. The number of struggling students is staggering and schools are scrambling in an effort to make it work for everyone.
In an effort to turn the tide, I have done a lot of research on the latest strategies that have proven effective in teaching struggling students core skills such as teaching students strategies that link reading comprehension to test taking by connecting questions with answers. I then created a coach certification program for tutors where they master the art of successful coaching. I also created a student workbook to go along with it so students track their progress and start to feel successful instead of stressful. I am testing it in several schools in our area for the past year and the results have been amazing so far!
I would therefore conclude that effective tutoring requires close school contact and well-trained tutors or coaches, as I prefer to call them. (Tutors teach a subject whereas coaches teach a student until they’re able learn on their own.) It also requires flexibilty within a structured framework so scheduling is individualized according to students’ preferences and needs. I found myself nodding along when I read about the twice a week tutoring being so much less effective than four times weekly. Another core component that’s important to target is proper goal-setting and continuous performance assessment. As students improvements were evident, they began tracking their goals and felt empowered and motivated to achieve academic excellence! As the parent of a struggling eighth grader related earlier today, ” Previously, my daughter would avoid sharing any of her test scores and would deny or refuse facing her struggles. Now that she’s feeling so much better with her school performance due to her support, she’s asking me to take a look at her test scores and is positively glowing!”
As educators, it is up to us to create an effective tutoring program that works so that students become successful, independent learners for school and life beyond the brick walls.
Thank you, Jill, for the article! I’ll be looking out for your updates.

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Comment on COLUMN: What’s wrong with white teachers? by Daniel Wistoff https://hechingerreport.org/whats-wrong-white-teachers/comment-page-1/#comment-60737 Sat, 06 Jan 2024 02:40:04 +0000 http://hechingerreport.org/?p=33144#comment-60737 I would like to apologize to the author of this article for being a white teacher. Apparently being white and a teacher makes me inherently racist. I never knew that before reading this article, so I guess after 30 years of teaching many different races I must apologize for my guilt. I feel as if I have stood in the way of many a quality education that could have been had by the many minority students that I have taught through the years.

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Comment on PROOF POINTS: Two studies find scattergrams reduce applications to elite colleges by Mark A Scalabrin https://hechingerreport.org/proof-points-two-studies-find-scattergrams-reduce-applications-to-elite-colleges/comment-page-1/#comment-60689 Thu, 04 Jan 2024 20:58:53 +0000 https://hechingerreport.org/?p=97797#comment-60689 I take issue with colleges that basically fish for applicants to inflate their numbers – I’m looking at you University of Chicago. My son, who didn’t have the scores received a good deal of marketing from them.

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