Now who would disagree with Howe's words? Certainly not David
Berliner, Alfie Kohn, Jonathan Kozol, perhaps Ted Sizer and Deborah
Meier, to mention just a few of the countless progressive educators who
are out there thinking first of the kids.
In fact, at first blush we would probably all agree. For how can you
teach a child to read who hasn't had enough to eat? And what about the
preschooler who has seen his Mom taken from him during the night and
who has that mostly on his mind when he arrives at school?
And then there are the homework assignments, always having to be
done in the same room with the big screen television set that is never
turned off, or even down? Who is going to win that competition?
And then there are the children who get to school in the morning,
well almost at 7:30 and almost on time, but they're still half asleep
because bedtime was midnight and the alarm went off at 5:30 in order to
make the hour long subway and bus ride to school. Are they going to be
listening to their teacher?
So is there any sense in teaching, let alone testing kids, whose
lives are seriously deficient in proper food and shelter, and the no
less important rest and quiet, and most of all, whose lives are mostly
without close contacts with caring adults?
The liberal (and yes common sense) response is to say, "let's not
blame the kids for their failure in the classroom, let's direct more
resources towards improving their lives outside of the classroom," or
in Doc Howe's words, "first improve their lives and schooling and then
give them the tests."
And what's wrong with this response? Why aren't we all pushing along
with Jonathan Kozol to direct increased resources to our impoverished
inner city and rural school communities?
Well this sort of response acquired a name, the war on poverty, and
it began some 44 years ago, when then President Lyndon Johnson declared
his War on Poverty in his first state of the union speech on January 8,
1964.
Johnson's war created programs such as Head Start, food stamps, work
study, Medicare and Medicaid, all of which still exist today. But the
poverty rate, the percentage of those falling below a government
determined poverty threshold, since an initial reduction probably as a
result of these programs, has remained steady since then, right up
until today, fluctuating between 11 and 15% of the population.
Would another series of anti-poverty programs, comparable in weight
and substance to Head Start, food stamps, Medicare et al. bring about
another 5% reduction in the poverty level? We'll probably never know
because neither republican nor democratic politicians, with the
exception of John Edwards who is now out of the presidential race, have
any interest in doing such.
Therefore, it's probably just not going to happen, that kids lives
are going to be improved outside of school before we get them in
school. We get them in school the way they come to us and we have to
take them that way and teach and test them.
There are those who have accepted this state of affairs and have
decided to go ahead and teach and test regardless of the gaping
inadequacies of kids' lives outside of school. These individuals have
been properly recognized by Abigail and Stephan Thernstrom in their
book, No Excuses: Closing the Racial Gap in Learning, their "no
excuses" meaning that the excuses kids bring to school with them, no
less than guns and knives, must be left at the door before coming in.
I think, for example, of the MATCH School, a Commonwealth Charter
School in Boston. I sent Doc Howe's not unreasonable statement to the
founder of the school, Michael Goldstein. Here is what Goldstein said
in response:
"If teachers believe that kids' 'overall lives' must be improved
(and this never comes to pass), it undermines the idea of teachers
taking responsibility for driving big gains in student learning. [And
instead of being accountable, we have teachers saying] "Well of course
my students continue to be bad readers, even after a year of my
teaching them, for nobody has improved their lives!"
He's right. You have to go ahead with what you have, and most
important take responsibility for what you do with what you have. Now I
say that realizing with some trepidation that my position comes
dangerously close that of Donald Rumsfeld, who in December of 2004, in
response to a question from a member of the Tennessee National Guard,
said, "You go to war with the Army you have. [Even if] they're not the
Army you might want or wish to have at a later time."
But of course the analogy to the war situation doesn't hold. For
yes, we could have adequately armed our combat vehicles. But no, we
can't by our government programs diminish, let alone do away with, the
poverty in people's lives. For this poverty is one of human, not so
much material, inadequacy. Afterall we are the world's wealthiest
country.
So yes, we have to do as Michael Goldstein does at the MATCH School.
We have to teach our kids, whether or not they've had a good night at
home before walking into our classrooms, and we have to hold them
accountable for their learning, or not learning, while they are there.
For otherwise we are abandoning them to be members of another failed
generation, the second or third since Johnson's War on Poverty in 1964,
not to mention all those undocumented generations of impoverished kids
that came before.