|
|||
|
A Teachable Moment From an Esteemed TeacherPosted on Jul 12, 2010
By Jim Mamer At a time when our country’s educational system is sliding down our government’s priority list, it takes reminders like this one, by noted California educator Jim Mamer, to set us straight and offer some much-needed inspiration. By way of introduction, Mamer’s colleague Stan Corey, founding superintendent of Southern California’s Irvine Unified School District, weighed in with this tribute:
Mamer’s June 22 speech at the Northwood High graduation follows. Advertisement * * * Parents, Faculty and Graduates: I have a confession to make. I’m beginning to feel somewhat past middle age. Partly this is because I started teaching before any of you, in this graduating class, were born. Partly it’s because I started teaching in Irvine when some of your parents were my students and, recently, this has happened with enough frequency that I began to fear that if I didn’t leave soon I was bound to have a student tell me that her grandmother had been one of my students. So, we get to leave together. But I wish I could say that I am leaving at a time when I’m not as worried as I am about where we are headed. I’m not referring to the economy—I don’t have that much time. I’ll stick to the pressures on education. Specifically, pressures that you might not be aware of and pressures that I think you can all help to counteract, even if only by constantly asking questions and, of course, voting. Given who I am and what I teach, I’m most concerned about the future of the arts and humanities. And my concern spreads to the colleges most of you will be attending. It is, of course, possible that many of you haven’t noticed what has been happening because all of you, all of you who have attended Irvine schools, have attended schools with a variety of opportunities, but it is important to realize that Northwood is an exception. I’ve been lucky to work here, where this community, where you parents, have continually attempted to fill the gaps left by what has been cut, year after year, by the state. As a result of these substantial community contributions those of you graduating today have had extensive programs in sports, music and theater. Can you imagine how different the last four years would have been without these? Unfortunately, schools, colleges and universities across the country are still facing constant calls for budget cuts. This is nothing new. Since the beginning of my career the cuts get larger and larger with every crisis and the suggested remedies become more and more frightening. One “remedy,” one that you are all aware of, is the extremely rapid increase in the costs of college; but that is only one example. Many proposed changes are more fundamental. The current pressures are on how American society views education itself and how this is redefining what is important; redefining what needs to be taught. In the time I have I can only summarize these pressures, but I do so with the hope that all of you will decide to create a discussion where there is none. We are not helpless unless we want to be. First of all, consider how we Americans have come to measure educational success. There is an increasing reliance on mostly state-approved multiple-choice exams. These may seem harmless enough, but when you consider what is tested, and what is not, they have serious consequences. I don’t have to explain the rush to state-sponsored, multiple-choice, easy-to-score, illusions of accountability to any of you graduates, but if any parents or relatives are not sure what I’m talking about, ask any of the students to explain. They have hours and hours and hours and hours of experience. In 35 years of teaching, I’ve learned a lot from you and from the students who came before you. Beyond any doubt, you have taught me that real learning is more complex than is the ability to pick out the correct answer from a short list. Now there is nothing wrong with measuring progress. There is nothing wrong with accountability. The question is, accountability in what? None of these state exams measure progress in love of learning, they do not measure progress in imagination or artistic achievement, not progress in music, not progress in increased scientific curiosity, not progress in an increased commitment to human rights, or in confidence gained, or in stories written. None of that is sufficiently easy to measure. The increasing tendency to see schools, colleges and universities as businesses has led to a focus on what most clearly results in immediate economic reward. And while economic growth is important, a myopic fixation on the short term has dangerous consequences. Just last week, the L.A. Times ran a front-page story asking if a college degree is still “worth the cost.” And recently there has been serious talk of encouraging new college students to choose a major, to focus early, and to graduate in three years. While I realize that there are real reasons for some to finish in three years, most of the articles I’ve read suggest students refrain from taking classes that don’t apply directly to a career. Don’t do it. If you can afford it, explore whatever interests you. Learn another language and spend a year abroad. Take a few courses in philosophy or in ethics along with the courses in accounting and microbiology. Life right after high school, in college or not, should be a time where it is normal to discuss random topics all night long—stopping only when the sun takes away the dark and reminds everyone that a new day is coming. What I want you all to realize about this more “efficient” educational future is that whatever remains untested, or whatever is not immediately applicable to a career, becomes unimportant. The humanities and the arts, creativity and music, are being diminished at every level. Consider how many times you have heard reference to a crisis in math and science. Now consider how many times you have heard it reported that, as a country, we suffer from a crisis in the study of history and literature and music. I keep waiting—but such a news report suggests a comedy skit more than a serious warning. Without much discussion, without any discussion, we are allowing decision makers to discard programs that develop skills that I believe are needed to make life richer and foster an appreciation for diversity. We are allowing others to discard programs that, I believe, are needed to keep democracy alive. Your significant contributions to maintain many of these programs in Irvine gives me hope that many, maybe most, of you agree with my concerns. But how long can this community hold out against national trends toward more efficient, businesslike schools, and severely limited opportunities? I ask each of you—graduates, educators and parents—to remain concerned with our collective future by, at least, being wary of reactionary pressures toward educational efficiency. Significant learning is often accidental. As voters, as college students, as citizens, don’t limit your choices to what is immediately rewarded. Reach out and stretch yourselves. Demand accountability in more than what can be measured with Scantrons. Demand accountability in increased love of learning. Demand accountability in increased commitment to human rights. Demand accountability in imagination and music. And please, if only to make me happy, refuse to engage in discourse and argument by slogan and stereotype. Thanks. I will miss you.
Previous item: Obama's Health Care Bill Is Enough to Make You Sick Next item: Polanski and Unmitigated Gall New and Improved CommentsWe are launching a major overhaul of our comments section. In addition to more robust spam filtering and moderation, new features include the ability to rate other comments, sort how they are displayed and respond directly via e-mail or in a thread. Unfortunately, commenters will lose their existing Truthdig identities. It's a pain, we know, but on the plus side you will now be able to log in with a plethora of options, including Google, Twitter, Facebook and Disqus accounts. Before launching this system we spent months in discussion with our top commenters. We listened to the feedback and we hope you like what we've come up with. Please direct any problems or concerns to us via our contact page. |
By Brent Eldridge, August 23, 2010 at 7:53 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
I am one of Mr. Mamer’s (many) students and am a teacher myself. I took that ‘road less traveled’ that he speaks of in this, his farewell address. It has not always been easy: many of my peers pay taxes greater than my salary; many are further along in their retirement plans; have nicer cars, bigger homes. But my friends and acquaintances are consistent in their observation that I do what I love and I receive joy and satisfaction from it. And I think I can directly attribute much of that happiness and self-awareness to those classes that were unrelated to any major, to those extra-curriculars that have helped to round out my humanity. Communicating that love of life—as he did to me nearly two decades ago—is the very challenge I face in my classrooms year after year. And it is the same one we all face when every one of us communicates with the young. Let us take his advice and trek the more difficult path: cherish, nurture, save those things that make us more creative, more inventive, more alive, and—finally—human.
Report thisBy Jeanne, August 2, 2010 at 4:27 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
Jim speaks for so many teachers! The only thing I can add is that I am not just concerned about humanities, arts, etc. As a college instructor who teaches more technical courses, I also see the lack of ‘thinking out of the box’ when students are studying those concepts too.
Report thisBy Jo, July 21, 2010 at 8:42 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
I’m a middle school teacher who was honored over recent years to attend the high school graduation of my former students as an “honor guard” in the ceremony. The graduates invited their former teachers to participate. And it was not necessarily because they remember acing a test or passing their benchmarks in that teacher’s class. It was because of a stronger sort of connection they made in the classroom. That connection is what Jim speaks of: love of learning, increased commitment to human (and animal!) rights, a little more confidence gained as they work out how they fit into this world. Focusing so much of our attention and measurement of success on standardized tests doesn’t fairly represent those students who are finding their own ways of learning. The students who don’t fit into a cookie cutter version of an A+ student but who change things up and make it a more interesting place to live.
Report thisBy jean gerard, July 15, 2010 at 9:56 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
Kerry rose: Well, actually, yes—many times over.
Those who speak against education are most often those who were cheated out of
Report thisit or were unwilling to take advantage of it when it was available to them.
By debdessaso, July 14, 2010 at 8:06 am Link to this comment
I fully agree with Jim. How far America has come from the time when, in 18th and 19th century America, even the common laborer could discuss Shakespeare as well the Bible with complete ease. Today, it’s hard to find people who can discuss either with any degree of integrity (and this includes Christians!)
I would, however, hesitate to blame everything on the No-Child-Left-Behind mindset that seems to permeate education these days. This situation started long before the legislation was passed as America saw itself slip from the ranks of highly educated nations and sought to play catch-up only through increasing its ability to manufacture stuff, thus creating today’s consuming-obsessed society in which only a few are expected to be creators while the rest of us merely wait for the next new gadget to come along.
It’s going to take more than a change in education policy to get Americans to want to think again, and we need to start where Jim left off—engaging students and, especially, parents who after all set the tone for their children in those all-important talks that take place within the four walls of home.
Report thisBy Bailey, July 13, 2010 at 7:35 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
“We are not helpless unless we want to be.” In reading Jim Mamer’s words to his
Report thisstudents, I’m reminded of the message historian and teacher Howard Zinn
imparted on us: “You can’t be neutral on a moving train.” As one of those college
students who was lucky, or stubborn, enough to take her time with five years at a
university packing in as many lit classes as she could, I am grateful for teachers
like Jim Mamer. They remind us to take pride in our love of learning for learning’s
sake and take action to make it that way for generations to come. And that’s quite
a lesson to be learned in this text-and-twitter environment of band-aid solutions
to enormous problems (in education and otherwise).
By bogi666, July 13, 2010 at 9:28 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
The current education system is to teach mindlessness which is why the so called “NO CHILD LEFT BEHIND” program is for to teach mindlessness from day one.Mindlessness is the inability to discern thought from fact. It started with Reagan in Calif., when running for governor, his stated campaign to destroy the State’s education system.He did. Before Reagan in the 50’s the purpose of school was to teach students to learn how to think, not to just recite the material given to students which were the means to an end, learning how to think. The means were just information meant to teach the 3 R’s, reading, writing, ‘rithmatic, parts of speech, punctuation, spelling learning to articulate thoughts derived from thinking and explaining what ws learned. Any Republican and many Democrats don’t want people to know they are only learning the means the reciting of rote facts fed to them, thereby crating and keeping a population of mindlessness. Mindfulness is not taught and students are not even told about mindfulness.Mindlessness is institutionized by the USG, business[ads], pretend christians with false doctrines which gives mindlessness legitimacy.It can be observed on TV daily, hourly, by the minute The only sense these institutions have and want is nonsense. It to the point now that nonsense has replaced common sense.
Report thisBy Tobysgirl, July 13, 2010 at 8:00 am Link to this comment
I get so sick of test scores and degrees being mistaken for education. I love the quote from Blake, and, yes, learning should help you find a world in a wildflower, but not if learning is alienated from life and the world around us.
We have ZERO interest in education, because an educated populace would not swallow all the bullshit dished up, including Barack Obama bringing us “hope and change.” I don’t want to hear Obama talking about education, a man who knows nothing of American history, a man who mistakes Harvard toadies (I’m sorry about the insult to toads, which are lovely creatures) for geniuses.
Report thisBy Old Man Turtle, July 13, 2010 at 5:27 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
The institutionalization by domesticated humans of what is, for every free wild species on Earth, a natural organic function of generational Life, could never’ve come to anything but what it has today. Compound this fundamental mistake by carrying “education” as an “expense” on societies’ cooked books, and the recipe for degradation and disaster is complete.
So why all the troubled surprise when the victims/perpetrators are choking to-death on the “product”? It is, after all, just one more symptom of the terminal phase of the “civilization” disease.
Report thisBy mindful, July 12, 2010 at 7:46 pm Link to this comment
What teachers are feeling in many places is their economic gains by Unions may be ending. They also are afraid bad test scores equate to bad teaching.
Nothing could be more misguided. You cannot teach a pig to fly. The problem is society and the belief
somehow everyone will be educated.
Today we have the internet, CDs, DVDs and distance learning. We have the technology, but not the interest to be educated.
To be educated is very much like a snow ball rolling down hill. It becomes larger, rolls faster.. so it is with learning. It isn’t the teacher, so much as it is the student. Garbage in and garbage out!
Report thisBy balkas, July 12, 2010 at 4:21 pm Link to this comment
If mamer wld have said: We have been taught to behave helplessly by teachers, media, clergy, and pols and we can now learn that we indeed have behaved powerlessly and helplessly.
That’s the step number one that: learn that u have been much less active in minding own business and w.o. u knowing that u had been conditioned just like pavlov dog to behave in certain way.
For a teach her to tell people that we are not helpless unless we want to, appears quite untrue.
As nobody in his/her mind wld want to be helpless. But in many countries, most people are just that, because they have been via schooling mostly rendered semaniticly blind first.
And then u can’t see the obvious! Ruling class needs above everything else obedience and meat form wars.
Report thisAnd the only way it can obtain that is thru conditioning over a lifetime but particularly in schools.
That’s why schooling is mandatory: catch them when they are still tabula rasa and fill them with lies.
And ur worries are over; u’v got serfs forever. tnx
By kerryrose, July 12, 2010 at 4:08 pm Link to this comment
It’s so true. The most valuable outcomes in education are immeasurable. Did learning help chart a course in your life? Did learning widen your perspective? Did learning help you empathize with another?
Did learning help you find a world in a wildflower? – William Blake
Report thisBy Tom Joad, July 12, 2010 at 3:12 pm Link to this comment
What a wonderful speech. Mr. Mamer beautifully articulates what so many of us in education are feeling right now.
Report this