Educational romantics believe the current K-12 education system is in need of vast improvement.
Murray describes two types of educational romantics, one set on the Left and one on the Right, and differentiates between the two thusly:
"Educational romantics of the Left focus on race, class, and gender. It is children of poor parents, and girls whose performance is artificially depressed, and their academic achievement will blossom as soon as they are liberated from the racism, classism, and sexism embedded in American education. Those of the Right see public education as an ineffectual monopoly, and think that educational achievement will blossom when school choice liberates children from politically correct curricula and obdurate teachers' unions (Murray, 2008)."
Both of these accounts fail to take into account the vast differences in intellectual ability that permeates the average American classroom. Murray calls the No Child Left Behind Act a reaction to the misguided beliefs of both the Left and the Right. This legislation mandates that by 2014 all students will be proficient in math and reading. By definition this means that all students will be above average. "The No Child Left Behind Act transcended optimism. It set a goal that was out of touch with reality" (Murray, 2008). To emphasize his point Murray reminds his readers that there are no examples of intensive in-school programs that permanently raise intellectual ability during the K-12 years. Intelligence is fixed. The author further notes a mandate included in the 1964 Civil Rights Act called for a nationwide study of the effects of inequity of educational opportunity on student achievement. The resultant Coleman Report found that the quality of schools explains almost nothing about differences in academic achievement. Further data and studies confirm this conclusion.
Murray believes the roots behind the No Child Left Behind legislation and educational romanticism can be traced to different phenomenon. The first is the notion of the "mythical" good old days. This belief extols the virtues of a time when teachers were strict and all students learned the three R's. The reality at the turn of the twentieth century only about a quarter of adults had a fifth grade education and half had not reached eighth grade. In today's classrooms almost one hundred percent of children are in school and all are tested albeit some with accommodations. We test everybody, and this will lower the average.
The second phenomenon is the periodic discovery of the "magic bullet." This encompasses the belief that intellectual differences can be alerted through teaching methodologies and practices. As an example Murray cites a 1968 study by Robert Rosental and Lenore Jacobson which describes the positive effect of teacher expectations on student achievement. While this belief is still highly held in the educational community subsequent studies have established the fact that the effect was either non-existent or very small. Murray also notes the belief that fostering self-esteem is another magic bullet. While the belief that one is a worthwhile individual is certainly a laudable goal, the ensuing movement focused on having a favorable self opinion regardless of what the empirical data indicated. A 2003 study found that improving self-esteem had no discernible effect on raising grades. A third educational "bullet" is the idea of "stereotype threat." This is the notion that group differences in test scores are illusions stemming from the projection of stereo types on children who are racial minorities. While there is no definitive resolution to the effects of stereo type threat on academic performance, Murray concludes their also is no way to mitigate the problem within the day-to-day activities of the K-12 education system. While some...
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