When good intentions are not enough. All teachers need to know the results of a classic study, the implications of which are profound ⬇️
In 1939, over five hundred boys aged 5-13 from 'factory-dominated areas of eastern Massachusetts', described by schools, welfare agencies, churches, and the police as 'difficult' or 'average' and rated for potential 'delinquency' took part in a study.
Half were randomly assigned to a mentoring program involving counselling on family problems, academic tutoring, summer camps, boy scouts and other community groups. Half were assigned to a do nothing control group.
The intervention lasted for five years except for those subjects who had to drop out due to a counsellor shortage in 1941.
In 1978, researcher John McCord followed-up on the outcomes of the project. He found that when he asked participants, those in the program felt it had a positive effect.
However, when he looked as objective measures of criminal behaviour, death, disease, occupational status, and job satisfaction, the program appeared to have a clear *negative* effect. Technically, this is known as an 'iatrogenic' effect.
McCord suggested several possible explanations 1. Contact with adults that did not share the same values as the families involved 2. The development of a dependency on outside agencies 3. The raising of false expectations 4. Subjects identifying as in need of special help
Why does the outcome of an old study matter to educators? Without objective measures, all we would have had were positive recollections of subjects to base an evaluation on. Those in education who reject measures need to explain how they would identify iatrogenic effect.
Perhaps most importantly of all, a well intentioned intervention can lead to a negative outcome. Reality will not bend to our virtue. Reality has its own rules. We have a duty to first, do no harm, and that means we have a moral duty to seek objective measures of our work.
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One mind blowing idea explains why so many armchair takes on education are dead wrong. Once you understand
it, you’ll see schools entirely differently. Let’s jump in ⬇️
This is an ancient Sumerian clay tablet showing cuneiform writing, some of the very earliest writing in the world. It’s around 5000 years old.
However, that’s just a blip in human history. Estimates vary, but anatomically modern humans have been around for about 300,000 years.
It is the bias that makes teaching much harder than we imagine and it reveals something profound about how our minds work.
What is it? Let me explain🧵
Cognitive load theory proposes a simplified model of the mind (not the brain). In this model, the mind has two main components: working memory and long-term memory.
Working memory is extremely limited. It can only process about 3-4 elements at a time. This is a major barrier to learning.
The largest education experiment ever run is one that most teachers and even many education professors do not know about.
Why? It is an intriguing story 🧵
In 1967, President Lyndon B. Johnson announced that the U.S. government funded Head Start program for pre-school children was going to be expanded into the early grades.
Unfortunately, Congress chose to vote him only a fraction of the money needed.
Rather than despair, the government decided to use the money to run a research project.
Instead of a universal program, different providers would run their own programs at a sample of sites. This was a 'horse-race' designed to see which programs were the most effective.
Why are we stuck with such mediocre K-12 education systems in the Western world? Why do they not compete with those of the Far East?
Let me explain 🧵
Not long after the emergence of mass education in the nineteenth century, there came a reaction.
'Progressive education' sought to remedy what adherents thought were the wrongs of the nineteenth century school house: Too much structure. Too much memorisation. Too much discipline.
Intellectuals joined organisations such as America's Progressive Education Association (PEA) and drew on ideas of enlightenment philosophers such as Jean-Jacques Rousseau (who placed his own five children in an orphanage).
They meant well, but educational progressivists threw out the good with the bad.
Structure helps learning.
If students haven't remembered anything then they haven't learned anything.
The absence of discipline leads to a lack of safety.
It is legitimate to question whether special educational needs and disabilities are being over diagnosed. It does not mean you hate kids with these needs. Quite the reverse. Over diagnosis leads to a lack of resources. So let's look at some evidence 1/6
In Michigan, the "youngest students in a kindergarten cohort are 40% more likely (p < .001) to be placed in special education than are the oldest students, and... this effect persists through eighth grade." 2/6 journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/00…
In Wales, *half* of children born in 2002/3 where labelled as having special educational needs. 3/6 thetimes.com/uk/education/a…
Typical anecdote driven reporting. Thanks @ktibus for alerting me. The article tells the story of one kid who was apparently unfairly suspended after… checks notes… “hitting and kicking two teacher aides” 1/10
Do those teacher aides not have a right to a safe working environment? Does QAI CEO Matilda Alexander consider this a ‘silly reason’ for a suspension? We don’t know because the @abcnews journalists didn’t think to ask 2/10
As always, no teachers or teacher aides were interviewed. Instead, the closest we get is Australian Secondary Principals Association president Andy Mison who links rising suspensions with rising enrolments of kids with disabilities 3/10