Is The Outcome of Public School a Generalized or a Specialized Education? The Answer is Yes.

An old question arises constantly and though we try to make firm, theory- and research-based responses, the issue still haunts the work of public educators. Are we to familiarize children with a broad veneer of background knowledge and skills so they can say “I know something about that?” Or are we to educate children with a depth of knowledge and understanding of specific concepts and skills they can apply in their life and work with a degree of excellence?

Put in educational outcomes language, is it our goal given what we know about the future real-world needs of our children that

  1. all students read every chapter in their grade-level texts, solve every math problem, dabble in the arts, and achieve a basic score on an end-of-year test, or
  2. all students do close reading and deeper analysis of information in selected chapters of selected texts, are highly proficient in essential math processes, create a quality performance or object in the arts, and achieve a proficient score or better on an end-of-year test?

Today, teachers in America do not have a clear answer to this question. National leaders are more interested in power struggles with higher education, deconstructing the Department of Education, and rewriting the American story in their own image. State leaders know that education is a reserved power in the Constitution delegated to the states, yet they mire in petty partisan issues and pass the authority to educate to local school boards. Our representatives like to legislate but they avoid accountability for outcomes. Local boards of education try their hardest with ever decreasing funding to provide the schools demanded by local constituents. Public education in the United States is our nation’s longest standing institution; however, its compass direction today is decided in thousands of classrooms by individual teachers. Our educational mission is adrift.

What do we know?

We know the nature of educational design is theoretical, opinionated, and tenuous.

Put a dozen educators in a room, ask their opinion of “shall we make our children into generalists or specialists,” and expect a split decision. There are strong cases for either. Then, when the air clears, most educators settle into a T- or inverted triangular-shaped design for public education. All children should have a broad academic base of general education and the opportunity to delve deeply into subjects of their personal interest. At least, in principle.

Then, we put children in the classroom and teaching gets real. Children have their own agenda on what they want and need to learn. Some children want to generalize, and others want to specialize. And we educators, who are supposed to educate each child to their fullest potential, decide to generalize all children when they are young and provide specialization for children who want it when they are older. Of course, some children specialize early, and others prefer to stay generalists through graduation. Public education is a messy proposition, so we settle for a Hippocratic-like solution of “do no harm to any student” and avoid the blame game. Today, without any other imperatives, we provide a generalist education for all and hope that graduates will specialize after high school.

For the generalists –

E.D. Hirsch taught us the importance of knowing a little about a lot. He wrote in Cultural Literacy: What Every American Needs to Know (1987) that background knowledge provides us with content ideas to read and think about. Second, reading and thinking about facts creates a student’s encyclopedic knowledge. Further, when we all share a level of mutual understanding of communal information, we are bound together as a nation (or state). He said the role of public education is to “enculturate” children with their national story and thereby strengthen a continuity of our American society. In the end, cultural literacy prepares us to play the game of Jeopardy and win.

David Epstein, Range – Why Generalists Triumph in a Specialized Word (2019), also favors a generalized background. He believes that students who specialize have more difficulty connecting disparate ideas and adapting new learning to what they already know. Specializing creates a commitment to what has been learned and a resistance to changing that knowledge base. Conversely, children with a generalized knowledge are not burdened in learning unfamiliar information and adapt it into their overall knowledge base more efficiently.

And, in school most children hear from their school counselor the importance of experiencing as much academics, arts, activities, and athletics as possible to find their true interests and aptitudes. America has a tradition of providing a liberal education in high school plus early collegiate years. Specialization for many is relegated to the junior and senior years of college, and post-graduate years of education.

For many classroom teachers, generalization only makes sense. A school curriculum responds to the loudest voices speaking to the school board. And school board members are lay leaders with little to no professional training in education. Their sole interests are in doing what is best for children, satisfying their constituents, and staying within a finite budget. Hence, school curriculum expands and never contracts. An addition to a grade level or course curriculum is not accompanied with more school days, hence every other thing in the syllabus is diminished to make room for what is new.

For the specialists –

But WAIT! In every other decade since the 1960s politicians in the United States have concluded that children in America are falling behind the academic achievements of their international peers. Political leaders believe that educational outcomes are a matter of national security. In the 60s the Elementary and Secondary Education Act funneled federal funding into math, science, and foreign language so that the United States could respond to Sputnik and be first to the moon. The Nation at Risk report (1983) gave official warning that children in America were being undereducated. Reforms abounded. In the early 2000s No Child Behind Left Behind legislation generated the Common Core Standards in reading and mathematics. NCLB mandated that all children must pass tests of their abilities to read and write and resolve math problems. Large scale, high stakes assessments were administered in all public schools and disaggregated achievement scores were published. Penalties were prescribed for underperforming schools and teachers. With heavy hands, our nation pushed specialized learning in reading, language arts, and higher-level mathematics to the detriment of all other academics, as well as arts and athletics.

With no surprise, universal and high stakes testing did not significantly increase our students’ achievement on international assessments, like PISA. And any improvements were substantively lost during the pandemic.

Government was not alone in its attempts to strengthen educational outcomes. Higher education groups beefed up teacher preparation with more intellectual rigor and exacting pedagogical training. The Holmes Group of college deans and chief academic officers proposed teacher training that resembled medical and legal professionals – the license is awarded at the master’s degree level after intensive pedagogical examination. Admission to the undergraduate college of education was more restrictive to create a more select and elite class of teacher candidates. Some aspects of the Holmes proposals were adopted by higher education accrediting agencies, but most have been nullified by the current shortage of public-school teacher candidates. Our current reality is that teacher licensing requirements are being liberalized to place a licensed adult in every classroom.

What not to do?

First, to paraphrase Rita Mae Brown (Sudden Death, 1983), “Continuously doing the same things expecting different results is a definition of idiocy.” The trending data on educational achievement looks like the same old, same old data or slightly worse. What we are doing is not achieving international competitiveness, a positive return of educational investments, or satisfying our students still in the public education pipeline.

Public education suffers annual student attrition. More students transfer to private or home schooling each year. They find secondary education in our public schools to be too unfocused. Parental choice allows parents, guardians, and 18-year-old students to choose private, parochial, cooperative, or home schooling. However, instead of changing public school programs to retain or reclaim students, we complain and make few substantive changes to K-12 education.

Second, we really know what to do but lack the courage to do it. Anyone who takes a public stand to change long standing tradition gets bloodied. Every living American is a product of traditional K-12 education, either as a graduate or as a transfer to another educational format. Love it or leave it, what we have is what we know.

Third, public educators have been made thin-skinned. In the last decade, it is increasingly common for parents to make loud and frequent complaints to their school board. The say “My child’s teacher is a task master and is too hard on kids.” Or “My child’s teacher is too easy, and kids get by without learning.” A parent may not like the teacher’s choice of books for children to read or the music literature they are to perform. A parent may think the teacher’s grading scale is too strong and her child deserves a higher, unearned grade. And parents have learned that school boards do not want to hear such complaints repeatedly. The result is most teachers acquiesce and their teaching and curriculum moves toward the middle ground of complacency.

What to do.

  • Mean what we say. Most school mission statements include the word “excellence” but do not define the term. School boards must decide the degree and rate of learning achievements that are excellent in their schools and set those as non-negotiable standards. Further, make these definitions public and then live up to them.

Our schools know what excellence looks like, but we do not want to belittle any child whose performances are not excellent. The result is we praise our champions and award-winners and wait for the next time we have a champion or award-winner. We need to treat all children as award winners in the making and teach them to be winners. Praise not just the award winners but also praise the “climbers” who are approaching excellence. Mediocracy or average is not an acceptable standard.

  • Stop acceptable failure. Too many schools adopt the 80% Rule – 80% of the children will achieve a score of 80% or better in 80% of the curriculum 80% of the time. This rule accepts that 20% of the children will not meet your standard for 20% of the curriculum 20% of the time. Use and mean the words “All students” instead of 80%. If not, how do you start a lesson when accepting that 1 in 5 students will not learn the lesson successfully? We can do better.

A principle of outcome-based education should become our rule. “Given enough time and resources, we can teach every child to succeed in their learning.” We really do have the time and resources if we believe that principle is true. If we do not believe the principle, what are we doing in education?

  • Accept the T model of generalized/specialized education and ensure that all students are proficient in all the foundational curricula. “Knowing about” or a “basic understanding” is not an acceptable level of predecessor knowledge upon which children can later specialize.

For example, no student advances to Algebra 1 without fluency in basic operations, order of operations, number sense, number properties, exponents, variables, equalities, expressions and equations, ratios and proportions, and knowledge of a coordinate plane. Why do we push children into courses we know they are not prepared to pass? Stop doing that.

Create a similar advancement requirement in ELA, science, and the social studies. All predecessor knowledge will be at Bloom’s Applying and Analyzing levels educational goals not at Remembering and Understanding. Recalling and explaining background information will not get children to excellence. Working with background knowledge in new situations and finding connections between ideas will get them there.

The concept of a Maker Lab is not just for technical education; it also applies to academic learning. Create multiple vertical legs in the T model. We currently have adequate AP and IB courses for students who want to learn more deeply in academic subjects. Our advanced academics begin in middle school and culminate with an AP or IB test. Create advanced learning sequences in each category of career education. Teach a multi-year deep, performance-based learning in each of the following curricular areas”

  • Agriculture, Food, and Natural Resources
  • Business and Information Technology,
  • Family and Consumer Sciences
  • Health Science
  • Marketing, Management, and Entrepreneurship
  • Technology and Engineering

The Big Duh!

We need a new educational model if we want to achieve different results. The answer to whether we should cause all children to achieve a general or a specialized education is “yes” to A and B in the second paragraph above. However, instead of talking about a T-model, we need to execute a T-model.

During the ages of pre-K and into middle school, all children must achieve memory, understanding, application, and analysis skills in reading, ELA, math, science, and social studies, art, music, world language, and technical education. We will teach each child until each child achieves mastery of these four levels of learning goals. This is where “no child can be left behind” really applies.

In middle school through grade 12, all children must achieve given standards in their chosen field of academic and/or career education advanced learning sequences. Children may enroll in more than one field. Attainment standards in advanced learning will be the earning of articulated college or technical college credit while in high school and/or employment as an apprentice or trainee in a Career and Technical Education field of study.

High school graduation will be a clear linkage to post-high school education and/career.

Excellence in American education must mean more than daycare and universal literacy. A proactive construction of T-modeled generalized and specialized educations based on mastery of background knowledge and deeper learning in specialized subjects will redefine and re-establish our nation’s educational excellence.

Relevant Background Knowledge Is The Glue of Our Conversations

A finalist on American Idol on site in Hawaii watched military planes fly overhead and commented that that there seemed to be more military planes in Hawaii than in the skies over his home in New York state. His companion said, “The Pearl Harbor base is nearby”. Without hesitation, the contestant said, “I though that was a movie”.

The historian in me winced. This man should know the stories of Pearl Harbor and “the Day in Infamy”. How could he not?

The educator in me wondered. What is the relevance of details from US History, the story of Pearl Harbor and what occurred 50 years before his birth, to a man in his mid-20s scratching a living as a vocal instructor in Phoenix, AZ?

Background knowledge is the residual content information of what we learn and experience. Our ability to access background knowledge is the glue that allows us to participate in the conversations of our lives. Relevance is the stickiness in our personal glue. How does a person build personal relevance for the retention of cultural literacy? Is relevance universal? And, the laws of forgetfulness tell us that if we don’t access our memory of content information, over time we will lose it regardless of its original relevance.

What Do We Know

More and more stuff happens everyday. Just observe the breaking news pop-ups on your personal device. Listen to the news on broadcast media. News, news everywhere and none that is newsworthy enough to demand that we remember it. (Does that line bring back Coleridge’s “Water, water everywhere, Nor any drop to drink” from the Rime of the Ancient Mariner?) Absent a national event like 9/11 or a local event involving disaster, death or economic upheaval, most people do not practice the intellectual filtering that sifts the daily events to isolate the few events that will affect their lives. Most current events are background noise not background knowledge. A good overstatement – without filters, the daily bombardment of news is background noise not background information. So, what should we know?

We each have developed our built in filters that alert us to information that is important to us. As we pay attention to sirens blaring and lights blazing of emergency vehicles, specific types of information immediately catch our attention while other information is just traffic. These preconditioned sensors perk up if we are highly interested in sports scores, the stock market, national politics, local events or the lives of celebrities. Our preconditioned sensors quickly analyze what we hear, see and experience and connect this immediate information to what we already know.

Background information or cultural literacy also must be refreshed and nourished if it is to be retained in our memory. One of the several purposes of a public K-12 education is to build background knowledge and cultural literacy in our population. The sequencing and spiraling of school curriculum is designed to build up content knowledge. That is why children learn US History in 5th, 8th and 10th grades in most schools and why mathematics builds its algebraic ladder for solving problems with unknown values.

On the plus side, 84.1% of the children in each year’s K-12 cohort (entering kindergarten and passing on to 12th grade in 13 years) graduates from high school. The diploma verifies the accomplishment of a background knowledge.

https://www.edweek.org/ew/section/multimedia/data-us-graduation-rates-by-state-and.html

Then, life happens. Without reinforcement, 85% of the information we learn in school will be forgotten by the time of our 20th high school class reunion. This is a fact and it is irrefutable. Without accessing what we once learned, we forget it.

In terms of how well our background knowledge of US history and government persists over time, the result is this: Only four in ten (40%) citizens in the US can pass a citizenship test of multiple choice questions surveying United States history and government, the informations we learned in 5th, 8th and 10th grade plus senior government. Reverse the numbers. 60% of US citizens cannot pass a US citizenship test.

https://woodrow.org/americanhistory/

Take Away

Relevance is situational and relevance is significant. Line up ten people and ask them what is important to them and you will find that each has a set of personally relevant topics and a depth of knowledge about these topics. Relevance is personal, interest-building and self-reinforcing for each of us. Ask the same ten people to take the citizenship test and only four will pass. The detail of citizenship information has little daily impact on how most engage in their world although the principles of US history and government are what make that engagement possible. Relevance is the lynch pin to accumulating and renewing background knowledge.

In the bigger scheme of things, Jeopardy-winning knowledge is not necessary for every day life. While we marvel at the recall speed and breadth of knowledge displayed by Ken Jennings, king of Jeopardy game winners, most people will identify Judge Judy before they will name a member of the US Supreme Court and usually only those who have appeared will know the name of a local district court judge. Naming the moons of Jupiter or the elemental number of magnesium are not common knowledge and easily forgotten, if learned.

Relevance of details diminish over time as the relevance of major issues increases over time. As we are exposed to millions of details, we need to pay attention to the larger questions. It is easy to argue about the truth and accuracy of minutia and those arguments often cause us to abandon our attention to the major issue. Global warming is caught in this dilemma. Those who want to argue that daily weather patterns are just trends that come and go every several years will not conceptualize the changes to our ecosphere. Start large and work to the small. If we start with major climactic changes, such as why our grandchildren will not see glaciers in Glacier National Park, then we can work backwards through the reasons for this.

Why Is This Thus

Nothing is more relevant than a heart attack (or fill in your health crisis of choice). Persons who experience a health crisis quickly seek information and learn to sort through the relevance of all the information available about cardiac care. Cardiac arrest, cancer, stroke, pulmonary disease, paralyzing injury all get our attention and keep it.

Short of a life-threatening event, how we seek and build adult background knowledge is idiosyncratic and susceptible to on-demand change. Career choices point us toward relevancy. I read voraciously in educational topics. The interests of our spouses and mates point us toward their relevancies. I read along with my wife’s strong interest in religion. The needs and developmental choices of our children make their relevancies ours. Our grandchildren are competitive ice skaters, swimmers, gymnasts, soccer and baseball players. Because of grandchildren I can recognize a triple axel, understand the dynamics of a butterfly stroke, and the controlled tension of performing on the balance beam. Next year, their interests may change and tug my attention in their wake. Such is life.

Life focuses what we need to know and expands the opportunities of what we want to know. When I meet with people in my township, the immediate interests focus on road maintenance and property taxes. When I talk with other golfers, we focus on golf club technology and whatever advantage swing dynamics can give us on our scorecards. When I talk with fellow retirees, everyone focuses on the better places to eat and health care. Each pool of people causes me to invest in knowing something about our common interests so that I can remain in the conversation.

General knowledge allows us to connect enough informational clues to be in the conversation. If there are no clues, the conversation is meaningless. The Idol contestant was immediately out of the loop if the conversation moved from planes overhead to December 7, 1941. We tend to avoid meaningless conversations. Hence, the cycle of personal relevance self-perpetuates what we want to know and lack of relevance shuts us off from what we might know.

To Do

As educators, we can assist the children we teach by:

Engaging in frequent reviews of what children have learned. We cannot assume “once learned, always known”. Take the time to review the most significant facts and concepts that children will need to know to be conversant in their educational future and post-school life. Frequency means a review session at least every four weeks or after every two units of study; at least every quarter of the school year; and, before the end of the school year. A review is more than just a “drive by” of what was learned; it is a discussion of concepts supported by facts. If it was important to learn in the first place, it is important to review with frequency for recall.

Slow down the speed of things. The amount of curriculum is not static, it grows with time. However, increased quantity should not mean less quality. Spend quality time in the study of the most enduring information. The number of each amendment to the Constitution is good to know, but not as enduring as a sound learning of the principles of the Bill of Rights and an understanding of the freedoms we enjoy.

Reading is essential for building background knowledge. Reading accesses stories from the past and from distant places that the reader cannot personally experience. Use class time for reading as a balancing and primer for children to continue to read after school. Discuss what is read. Ask children two fundamental questions: What do you think about this? How do you feel about this? These two questions build intellectual relevance.

Travel and personal experience builds visual and sensory connections with information. School field trips have value. We believe that all children in Wisconsin are familiar with farms, yet 80% of children have not set a foot on farm land. An understanding of the importance of agriculture to the state economy becomes relevant when school children go to a farm and talk with a farmer. The same is true of manufacturing and e-commerce. Personal experience builds relevance.

Suggest subjects for exploration for all children. As the adult in the room, teachers have an objective perspective of how a child approaches a new subject. Many times, if the subject is not exciting for a child’s friends, it is not exciting to the child. A teacher who observes a personal connection can overcome the group mentality and ignite a child’s personal passion.

Lastly, every now and then check what you think you know and what you may have forgotten. E. D. Hirsch made a splash in the 90s speaking about cultural literacy and what every person should know. Take a cultural literacy test (keep the results to yourself). If you find that unreinforced information has slipped away from your memory or lost its accuracy, relearn it.

Cultural Literacy: What Every American Needs To Know, E. D. Hirsch (1998)

Background knowledge is important for everyday living. However, it is not sacred nor is it self-labeling if a person does not know a fact or detail. Relevance is the key how a person addresses what they know and what they want to know. While we specialize it what we need to know, generalizing in what can know helps us to participate in the conversations of our life and times.