Jonathan Alter

Peanut-Butter Politics

Education funding is a sticky issue.

Label

Newsweek Top Stories
Al Gore's Climate-Change Evolution
Al Gore's Climate-Change Evolution

Using emotion to convince people to change.

Heaven Can Wait
Heaven Can Wait

A new book promises proof of eternal life.

The World's Biggest Foods
The World's Biggest Foods

Monster edibles from around America.

Discuss

Sponsored by

Member Comments

  • Posted By: g-peternel@northwestern.edu @ 07/02/2009 2:58:39 PM

    Jonathan Alter suggests that the principals across the country who evaluate teachers and decide which teachers are given tenure can't figure out who can teach and who can't. I was a principal or 28 years and let me assure you, Jonathon, that I had plenty of tools at my disposal to assess the performance of teachers under my charge. The teacher evaluation systems are fine. If we want to fix education, we need better teachers. Are they out there? And we also need to transform the jobs that teachers do into more manageable endeavors. One should not need to be superhuman to be an effective teacher.

  • Posted By: rhe51@sbcglobal.net @ 07/02/2009 10:51:28 AM

    Dear Mr. Alter,

    Using your bias (Bad Teacher Unions), Texas should have the very best schools, because the teachers here have no union protection. Sadly, our schools have the same issues as the rest of the country - poverty, lack of health care, etc, etc, etc. I know why all the pundits pick teachers as the critical unit - no one has the cojones to hold parents or students accountable. After all in your mind you realize you can fire a teacher, and you can't fire a parent or a student. Teaching is the hardest job I have ever had, and I have been a military officer and a corporate vice-president. The number of teachers that washout after 5 years is 50%, and the remaining 50% are reduced by half in the next five years. Let me suggest that your article is simply regurgitation of simplistic thought that both political parties cling to because the real work would actually require politically distasteful measures. A Teacher.

  • Posted By: greenearthschools @ 06/13/2009 7:09:45 PM

    Alter doesn???t ask why new funding initiatives have historically failed tin general to drive or achieve real educational change. Ironically all the talk about change these days seems to have little to do with strategic changes in the nature of public education. Do we do the tinker change thing, improving the status quo, or do we enter different thinkscapes exploring how complex forces may require new kinds of school? Should we explore and implement new strategic ways of learning given that we are now encountering socioeconomic and cultural realities the current education system was never intended to support and sustain? With your permission we would like to add another dimension to your concerns: funding education is clearly a political reality but we not really funding the future, or, put in another way, should the US be content in funding improvements to status quo schools or should we, in part, with highly innovative pilot programs, be financing our future?

    Creating better teachers to improve test scores was clearly important for 19th and 20th century learning, but ---given the White House vision of needing to educate to a future comprised of an emerging post-industrial economy, emerging energy alternatives, a new green-collar work force???how does teachers producing higher student scores on state standardized tests alone prove to be a viable mechanism to create sustainable energy systems or to enable our children to compete in the new millennium. A world where creativity, intelligent resource entrepreneurialism, innovative thinking, and forging new ways of working arguably requires systemically different ways of educating in order that our children participate effectively in crafting this new world. We may be a bit dramatic, but can???t we argue that all the best teachers on earth and 100% test scores cannot???by the very nature of our present system???enable and mobilize the White House???s vision of new millennium learning? There is no doubt we need good teachers, but to what extent do we waste their truly needed value by putting them in a system whose lack of strategic thought may ill-prepare our students to thrive in the new emerging economy?

    Funding new educational models that leverage the most valuable parts of our existing education system???in conjunction with new technologies reflecting how Generation Green students actually live, learn and experience the world, outside of school???has, in our mind, a greater probability of driving real education change than continuing to fund a system unable to address the needs of 21st century students and their innovative participation in helping communities create a new economy illuminating the distant horizon of America???s destiny.

Reply

Report Abuse

Enter comments if any for reporting abuse

My Take

Customize the NEWSWEEK homepage
to feature your favorite columnists.

Customize Now