sprout & co's blogdispatches from the future of learning2014-05-28T18:31:28-04:00http://thesprouts.org/sprout & co.us@thesprouts.orghttp://thesprouts.org/blog/how-children-whatHow Children What?2014-05-18T00:00:00-04:002014-05-18T00:00:00-04:00sprout & co.http://thesprouts.org/<p>
In 1967, <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Holt_(educator)">John Holt</a> published <a href="http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00ADO79QQ"><em>How Children Learn</em></a>. In 2013, <a href="http://www.paultough.com/">Paul Tough</a> published <a href="http://www.amazon.com/dp/B0070ZLZ1G"><em>How Children Succeed</em></a>.
</p>
<p>
Holt was following up on the publication of his 1964 book, <a href="http://www.amazon.com/dp/0201484021"><em>How Children Fail</em></a>. Beginning in 1952, Holt taught elementary and middle school—first in Colorado, then Boston. For eleven years, Holt kept a journal of his experiences. This journal grew into his first books, <em>How Children Fail</em> and <em>How Children Learn</em>. The first explored how children, <a href="/img/blog/how_children_learn_preface.png"
>"used their minds badly."</a> The second explored what it looked like for children to <a href="/img/blog/how_children_learn_preface.png">"act as bold, effective learners."</a> Both were grounded in Holt's own, concrete stories and experiences. The fundamental thesis of both is that learners' <em>motivation</em> is essential and that because this cannot be forced, we must trust learners, working <em>with</em> them and their interests if they are to grow into empowered adults. Semiotically, Holt now parses as hippie, especially given his position as <a href="http://www.johnholtgws.com/">father of the United States homeschooling movement</a>.
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Tough is a journalist who has covered education, child development, and poverty for the past decade. Tough has never taught. After writing about Geoffery Canada's <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harlem_Children%27s_Zone">Harlem Children's Zone</a> in <a href="http://www.amazon.com/dp/B003JTHWDW"><em>Whatever It Takes</em></a>, he felt dissatisfied with his understanding of why only <em>some</em> children go on from such programs to succeed. Tough sought out researchers, economists, neuroscientists, psychologists, doctors, and the occasional teacher or administrator to find his answer. The fundamental thesis of <em>How Children Succeed</em> is that kids will be more successful in school and more secure in life if we focus on developing their 'non-cognitive skills,' like the ability to persevere or maintain healthy emotional hygiene. Semiotically, Tough parses as a pragmatic journalist uncovering heroic possibilities for education reform.
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<p>
As snapshots of the 'conversation around education reform,' this juxtaposition highlights two transitions: (1) in focus, a move from "learning" to "success," and (2) in disposition, a move from "craftsmanship" to "scientism." Taken together, these transitions mean <em>How Children Succeed</em> emerges as complicit in our society's social and economic stratification.
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<h4 id="from-craft-to-scientism">From craft to scientism</h1>
<p>
Holt tells stories. Tough cites studies. Holt talks about the skills and dispositions of individual teachers and students, about tactics and anecdotes and the nitty gritty of a day-to-day schoolteacher. Tough talks about the hippocampus and cognitive behavioral therapy and "the research" which tells us about the correlates of lifetime material security.
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<p>
<em>How Children Succeed</em> begins by calling out <a href="/img/blog/cognitive_hypothesis.png">"the cognitive hypothesis"</a>—<em>i.e.</em> the notion that it is IQ and the activities associated with high-IQ which matter most. Having set up "the consensus" Tough proceeds, TED style, to promise he will "[overturn] conventional wisdom with something new and mysterious." And with continued TED-flair, Tough tells us about Heckman, a Nobel laureate economist so disconnected from reality that he was floored to learn that a GED is not functionally equivalent to a high school diploma. In the year of our Lord two-thousand-and-ten. Tough goes on to suggest that perhaps culture—or no, something intrinsic to learners, an ineffable go-get-'em-and-stick-with-it-ness—has something to do with it.
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This setup is recapitulated at every scale in <em>How Children Succeed</em>:
<ol>
<li>Set up a straw man argument about what people "believe" about education</li>
<li>Introduce an expert authority (a Nobel laureate or recent MacArthur grantee) who can slam the brakes on our conventional wisdom</li>
<li>Locate hope in the manufactured whiplash between this contrarian result and our intuitions & institutions.</li>
<li>Close by swaddling the contrarian pressure in a traditional authority: science. <a href="/img/blog/cold_hard_science.png">"It's not warm and fuzzy, it's cold, hard science."</a></li>
</ol>
</p>
<p>
Policy rhetoric must be simple—no, that's not right—it must be concise. This <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RlL2Jj-kCNU">constraint of concision</a> is what creates the sense of increasingly superficial acceleration in venues like TED. But this requirement for concision is not simply a matter of medium. Reform efforts of all stripes—and education reform in particular—often fall prey to the implicit demand they <em>scale</em>. Either they must work for everyone, or roll out in the next five years, or work regardless of the population involved, or…
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Because reform efforts target big problems, because policymaking is the primary logic with which big problems are confronted, and because the knobs and levers that policymaking offers are coarse, the rhetoric surrounding policy cannot admit nuance, because nuance acknowledges and accommodates difference, militating against the <em>scale</em> at which your idea can apply.
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Specifically: any non-fiction <em>New York Times</em> bestseller making claims about our children needs to offer a silver bullet in one way or another. The claims need to be clear and striking, the implicit bias toward <em>scale</em> discourages nuance and subtlety. As both purveyor and consumer of big ideas, you want to know that the time you're spending reading about <em>How Children Succeed</em> will mean that at the next dinner party, you'll have something topical and just a bit contrarian to say and that Science has your back. We don't have a scientific method for creating good movies or good books or even matching people in online dating, but there's no need to worry because we <em>do</em> have a method with which we can create good schools and good students. And because it is Science, it is True, and can be implemented at scale.
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So backwards is Tough's focus that he finds it impossible to process deep and impressive learning experiences in anything but the faux scientific language of neurobiology and psychology, drizzling jargon over his anecdotes to bring them into the tent of grit <em>et al</em>,
<blockquote>
<p>
Spiegel [an extraordinarily successful chess instructor in the Bronx, profiled in <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tFzUYRC3_H8">the 2012 documentary <em>Brooklyn Castle</em></a>] often defied my stereotype of how a good teacher should interact with her students […] You may recall that KIPP's dean, Tom Brunzell, said he considered his approach to be a kind of cognitive behavioral therapy. When his students were flailing, lost in moments of stress and emotional turmoil, he would encourage them to do the kind of big-picture thinking—the metacognition, as many psychologists call it—that takes place in the prefrontal cortex: slowing down, examining their impulses, and considering more productive solutions to their problems […] Spiegel had simply developed a more formalized way to do this.
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</blockquote>
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Tough needs jargon and science to justify the age old common sense, "Get someone to slow down and think about what they are doing." And this common sense is construed as "cognitive behavioral therapy" <em>retrospectively</em>—sure, Spiegel is an expert <em>who's actually done the work sans cognitive behavioral therapy</em>, but Paul Tough has got a theory about her chess teams' reflective process and he is on it!
To be clear, I've nothing against reflection or science or even cognitive behavioral therapy. What I want to highlight is the need to bring every successful, cultural phenomenon under the tent of "Science" (really, scientism) in order to bolster the relevance of those apparently scientific modes and ideas to the design and management of education. So rather than ask how school can become more like Spiegel's award-winning chess team, Tough observes that there are some resonances between cognitive behavioral therapy and the successful chess team <em>and</em> between cognitive behavioral therapy and the grit-peddlers.
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Tough makes the straight-faced claim, <a href="/img/blog/how_to_motivate.png">"This is the problem with trying to motivate people. No one really knows how to do it well."</a> Despite not only a bevy of anecdotal counterexamples (ranging from ones <em>he</em> provides like Spiegel, to the broad range in popular culture—<em>e.g.</em> the Marine Corps), but an entire world of sociological and organizational research. What I think Tough <em>means</em> when he says, "No one knows how to motivate people" is that, "No recognized, scientific authority has given us a method by which we can reliably synthesize motivated students in a school which can accept arbitrary human inputs."
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And the unarticulated expectation that all educational innovations scale means that those reforms are pushed to be teacher- and student-proofed, moving the focus from design principles to procedures, from people to protocols, from craft to scientism. Seymour Papert <a href="http://www.papert.org/articles/ACritiqueofTechnocentrism.html">said it best</a>:
<blockquote>
<p>
By scientism, I mean the attitude that sees all questions as scientific ones, as resolvable by scientific studies. This point of view evaluates educational methods by measuring their effect on test scores. Scientism makes the study of education appear easy: We will do little experiments to see whether this or that approach is better, experiments that isolate just one factor and keep everything else the same. Many people are enamored of these tiny experiments because they are statistically rigorous and seem to provide the kind of hard data one finds in physics. But that approach isn't feasible if you are thinking about radical change in education. These kinds of studies do help to answer certain kinds of questions. If you are thinking about a small change — Is it better to paint the walls of the classroom green or white? — you can do a little experiment. You can leave everything else the same and just change the color of the wall and see what happens. Even if you are asking whether it is better to reward success or punish failure, you can do a little experiment. But we cannot decide by such measurements whether we want an open society or a totalitarian one. You cannot do a scientific experiment to decide whether you would like empowered citizens or instructed, disciplined automata. This is not a matter of science; it is something much deeper than that.
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</blockquote>
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Which brings us back to a/the basic question, "What's the point of school?"
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<h4 id="from-learning-to-success">From learning to success</h1>
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Holt focuses on learning as instrumental to self-actualization. Tough focuses on school as instrumental to social and financial security. This distinction is emblematic. Learning is an activity of an individual. School is an institution of mandatory treatment. Holt cares about learning because he sees it as a basic part of any reasonable definition of the good life. Tough cares about school because he sees it as a far-reaching set of levers with which to redress fundamental social and political inequities, mitigating the effects of poverty, violence, malnourishment, the Drug War, and so on.
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At the very outset of <em>How Children Succeed</em>, Tough sets up "the cognitive hypothesis"—again, the notion that it is IQ and the activities associated with high-IQ which matter—and knocks it down. But there is a total absence of discussion of how actual learning and teaching happen throughout his book. In its stead, there is a focus on the personality traits and disposition of character which best serve the poor and dispossessed and what types of institutions can inculcate them.
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This represents a tremendous narrowing of scope and ambition when it comes to the historical mandate of a public—much less liberal—education. But school is no stranger to that narrowing. In 1841, Homer Bartlett <a href="http://library.uml.edu/clh/All/bhom.htm">wrote</a> in response to a query from <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horace_Mann">Horace Mann</a> ("father of the U.S. public school system"),
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I have never considered mere knowledge, valuable as it is in itself to the laborer, as the only advantage derived from a good Common School education. I have uniformly found the better educated as a class possessing a higher and better state of morals, more orderly and respectful in their deportment, and more ready to comply with the wholesome and necessary regulations of an establishment. And in times of agitation, on account of some changes in regulations or wages, I have always looked to the most intelligent, best educated and the most moral for support, and have seldom been disappointed. . .But the ignorant and uneducated I have generally found the most turbulent and troublesome, acting under the impulse of excited passion and jealousy.
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The former appear to have an interest in sustaining good order, while the latter seem roe reckless of consequences. And, to my mind, all this is perfectly natural. The better educated have more and stronger attachments binding them to the place where they are. They are generally neater, as I have before said, in their persons, dress, and houses; surrounded with more comforts, with fewer of "the ills which flesh is heir to." In short, I have found the educated, as a class, more cheerful and contented,— devoting a portion of their leisure time to reading and intellectual pursuits, more with their families, and less in scenes of dissipation.
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The good effect of all this is seen in the more orderly and comfortable appearance of the whole household, but nowhere more strikingly than in the children. A mother who has had a good common-school education will rarely suffer her children to grow up in ignorance.
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As I have said, this class of persons is more quiet, more orderly, and, I may add, more regular in their attendance upon public worship, and more punctual in the performance of all their duties.
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Even at the birth of public education, school was to be primarily concerned with the formation of social and emotional habits. Incredibly, Tough not only freely acknowledges this, but goes on to cite one of the classics establishing that historical consensus: Bowles & Gintis's <a href="http://www.amazon.com/dp/1608461319"><em>Schooling in Capitalist America</em></a>. When I saw that, I thought, "Oh thank goodness! Now we'll get a mature handling of at least the counterpoint: that maybe our schools shouldn't be preoccupied with creating a gritty underclass."
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Tough then spends all of one page summarizing the argument, acknowledges that this social engineering function of school is, <a href="/img/blog/importance_of_character.png">"a resounding demonstration of the importance of character to school success,"</a> and then proceeds to elide any acknowledgement of political or moral dimensions to the situation. There's no sign Tough understands Bowles & Gintis to represent a profound obstacle to his framing and thesis or to the roll-out of 'character education' and its ilk. Without exaggeration, the entire issue is laid to rest with, <a href="/img/importance_of_character.png">"And when it comes to self-control, Marxist economists are not the only people who are skeptical of its value."</a> From there, Tough proceeds to talk about academics who worry that "self control" can descend into "compulsive restraint."
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The near-miss is breathtaking. Consider just one facet of the sociological line of inquiry Bowles & Gintis have come to represent: the poorer you are, the more likely you are to emphasize <a href="/img/blog/good_manners.png">"good manners, neatness, honesty, and obedience."</a> The wealthier your children, students, or employees, the more likely you [as parent, teacher, manager] are to emphasize creativity, curiosity, and responsibility. The classist undertones of "character development" seem germane to Tough's work—after all, he is advocating that we de-emphasize academics in favor of grit for exactly those who have struggled with traditional education environments. But somehow, he does not imagine this relevant.
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And that dearth of moral and intellectual imagination goes to the heart of Tough's vision of school as a managed institution, which by virtue of its size and scope can be used to mitigate the social and economic ills of an inequitable society by making it slightly more profitable or less painful to start life as poor, black, or brown. This cuts directly against the grain of the inspiring notion that public education should not <em>serve</em> the public, but <em>create</em> a public. And here, it is Postman that <a href="/img/blog/create_a_public.png">said it</a> best,
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<p>
The question is not, "Does or doesn't public schooling create a public?" The question is, "What kind of public does it create?" A conglomerate of self-indulgent consumers? Angry, soulless, directionless masses? Indifferent, confused citizens? Or a public imbued with confidence, a sense of purpose, a respect for learning, and tolerance? The answer to this question has nothing whatever to do with computers, with testing, with teacher accountability, with class size, and with the other details of managing schools. The right answer depends on two things and two things alone: the existence of shared narratives and the capacity of such narratives to provide an inspired reason for schooling.
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</blockquote>
</p>
<h4 id="engineering-an-underclass">Engineering an underclass</h1>
<p>
Over the past five years since the 2008 crash, the 'recovery' has been a recovery for corporations first and the wealthy second. Worse, over the past twenty years, there has been steady growth in very low skill (<em>i.e.</em> low pay) and very high skill (<em>i.e.</em> high pay) jobs (<em>cf.</em> <a href="http://www.researchgate.net/publication/4981174_The_Polarization_of_the_U.S._Labor_Market/file/9fcfd50bd66be2418b.pdf">Autor <em>et al</em></a>). Not only has the middle class household been cut out of productivity gains, but structurally, the very possibility of a middle class <em>job</em> has become rarer. And these trends are accelerating. And <em>How Children Succeed</em> is complicit in the small and emblematic in the large.
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<p>
Now may be a good time for me to step back and observe that I agree deeply with the one line summary of <em>How Children Succeed</em> most might toss off, "Success in life depends more on your personality and your ability to persevere than whether you aced conic sections." Most curricula are aggressively irrelevant and disconnected from anything of interest or use to students. The curricula are useful to the extent they are prerequisites for other curricula whose associated institutions (<em>i.e.</em>, college) are highly [socially] capitalized and act as the gatekeeper to many of life's finer stations. The capacity to be curious, to persevere, to bring impeccable emotional hygiene to high stress situations—all of these "non-cognitive abilities" and more are in fact more important than the academics we often tell students school is "about." But we cannot talk about cultivating the ability to be curious or persevere without talking about <em>what</em> someone is curious about and <em>why</em> they might persevere. And it is there that I think Tough should slow down to consider what social, economic, and cultural conditions push <em>How Children Succeed</em> to the top of the bestseller list.
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<hr />
<p>
In 1824, James Hardie <a href="https://archive.org/stream/101167316.nlm.nih.gov/101167316_djvu.txt">wrote</a> of a new punishment designed for prisoners,
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<p>
It is constant and sufficiently severe; but it is its monotonous steadiness and not its severity, which constitutes its terror, and frequently, breaks down the obstinate spirit.
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</blockquote>
Hardie was talking about the treadmill. Down the street from where I work, people pay for that same privilege at Boston Sports Club. The difference is not in the machine, but in the context. It may be worth differentiating the 'grit' necessary to overcome Kafkaesque demands on your attention and the 'grit' necessary to overcome natural adversity or obstacles attendant to goals of your own selection.
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Consider the juxtaposition of the following, four scenes:
<ul style="list-style-type: none; padding: 0px; margin: 0px; margin-bottom: 1em;">
<li style="padding: 0px; margin: 0px; display: inline-block; float: left;">
<iframe width="385px" height="217px" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/IH8i13V-kuM?showinfo=0&controls=0&modestbranding=1&autohide=1" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
</li>
<li style="padding: 0px; margin: 0px; display: inline-block;">
<iframe width="385px" height="217px" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/M_LMNsTxr6M?showinfo=0&controls=0&modestbranding=1&autohide=1" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
</li>
<li style="padding: 0px; margin: 0px; display: inline-block; float: left;">
<iframe width="385px" height="217px" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/KV1Ot656tkg?showinfo=0&controls=0&modestbranding=1&autohide=1" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
</li>
<li style="padding: 0px; margin: 0px; display: inline-block;">
<iframe width="385px" height="217px" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/5Dy_dNDoxPE?showinfo=0&controls=0&modestbranding=1&autohide=1" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
</li>
</ul>
Only one of these is non-fiction. But for each one, take a moment to answer three questions:
<ol style="list-style-type: decimal; margin-top: 0.5em; line-height: 1.25em;">
<li>Why are the character(s) working so hard?</li>
<li>Can you envision a grit class which would develop that motivation?</li>
<li>Is it a worthwhile research agenda to develop alternative curricula and models exploring the plausibility of translating the characteristics of these environments to more traditionally academic (and remunerative) skills?</li>
</ol>
</p>
<p>
Most who sink in the time and energy to research and articulate opinions about education reform—much less design and implement interventions and alternatives—have the best of intentions. Understandably, this means that claims about the potentially oppressive consequences of various policies, rhetoric, and trends get stuck in the craw pretty easily. We respect teachers and care about our schools and are easily shamed by the achievement gaps that mock the very American brand of egalitarianism whose pursuit is so central to our love of public schools.
</p>
<p>
Despite this, whether it's the Great Society or New Math or charter schools as originally championed by the American Federation of Teachers, there's a long list of reforms which in one way or another, many feel have not only fallen short but been corrupted. Pundits injecting fresh rhetoric into the conversation can and should be attentive to how robust their intended message is to the ebb and flow of pressures and incentives in education.
</p>
<p>
With that in mind, let's turn to four more artifacts. For each, imagine what the world would look and feel like with each of these taken to their extreme:
<ul>
<li>Presidio Middle School's <a href="http://vimeo.com/19271416">"An Algebra Class Uses the iPad"</a></li>
<li>Khan Academy's <a href="//www.youtube.com/embed/52ZlXsFJULI">"Adding and subtracting fractions"</a></li>
<li>Congressional Budget Office's <a href="http://inequality.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/01/change-in-real-family-income-by-quintile-and-top-5-percent-1979-2009.png">"Change in Share of Income by Income Percentile"</a></li>
<li><a href="http://civilrightsproject.ucla.edu/research/k-12-education/integration-and-diversity/a-multiracial-society-with-segregated-schools-are-we-losing-the-dream">"A Multiracial Society with Segregated Schools: Are We Losing the Dream?"</a></li>
</ul>
Now, consider what a book like <em>How Children Succeed</em> does when introduced to this mix. Worry, for a moment, about the various ways that the purest, most generous frame of "non cognitive skills training" might be perverted in this context. Is it possible that we'll end up with rows upon rows of struggling students, preparing for a standardized state test on their Android tablets, overseen by a classroom manager with job security and training two steps above temp labor's, hired in by <a href="http://www.amplify.com/">Amplify</a>, tracked by <a href="https://www.inbloom.org/">inBloom</a>, and lining the coffers of a company like <a href="http://newscorp.com/business/amplify/">News Corp</a>? After every couple hours of Khan Academy and test prep (sorry, those are <a href="https://www.khanacademy.org/sat">the same now</a>), they take a break during which the <a href="https://jobs.lever.co/udacity/e5044839-9b63-491d-ac5d-04d5ce4c528d">classroom manager</a> and a <a href="http://thetalentcode.com/2013/11/08/good-ideas-the-character-coach/">character coach</a> work together to run programs focusing on emotional control and perseverance whose implicit message is now nothing more than a psychological treadmill.
</p>
<p>
And in this dystopia—which doesn't feel too far off for districts struggling to simultaneously chase buzzwords and save money—consider what the parallel experience at Exeter or even in just the 85th household income percentile suburb will look and feel like. Do you honestly think folks in those contexts are going to see "character development classes" standing in for academic and creative explorations as a positive development? Not to mention their children probably won't be labeled as 'needing' them. Given that, isn't is possible—likely, even—that the excitement of Tough <em>et al</em> unintentionally accelerates a progression toward an apartheid educational system where everyone goes to "school" but for some, that "school" looks more and more like a re-education camp?
</p>
<p>
Fundamentally, none of this is Paul Tough's fault—these issues go to the very foundation of the frame of school as a mechanism for righting inequality. Which sounds great. And may even work. But because we think of school as something that happens to an individual, this frame makes it very easy for "School will fix <em>X</em>" to turn into "Those who suffer from <em>X</em> need treatment <em>Y</em> to overcome it." Which can too easily turn into a thinly veiled form of blaming the victim. <em>How Children Succeed</em> unwittingly plays accompaniment to this tune, proposing policies and a frame for education which—if taken seriously—will accelerate the already central role school plays in cultivating an underclass in America. And that impulse is understandable—school is <em>everywhere</em> and has access to enormous, formative time and experiences [not to mention resources].
</p>
<p>
But increasingly, we overload our omnipresent social institutions with the responsibility to synthesize an emotionally, intellectually healthy world within the institution. Whether it's wraparound services in school or social medicine in our hospitals, many of our best intentioned programs attempt to bring more and more of life under the State's purview. And there's a big difference between being or becoming a citizen and being or becoming a ward.
</p>
<hr />
<p>
In 1990, Steve Jobs <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6kalMB8jDnY&t=3m31s">said</a>,
<blockquote>
<p>
I think one of the things that really separates us from the high primates is that we're tool-builders. I read a study that measured the efficiency of locomotion for various species on the planet. The condor used the least energy to move a kilometer. And humans came in with a rather unimpressive showing about a third of the way down the list; it was not too proud of a showing for the crown of creation. So, that didn't look so good. But then somebody at <em>Scientific American</em> had the insight to test the efficiency of locomotion for a man on a bicycle. And a man on a bicycle—or a human on a bicycle—<em>blew</em> the condor away, completely off the top of the charts. And that's what a computer is to me. What a computer is to me is, it's the most remarkable tool that we've ever come up with. And it's the equivalent of a bicycle for our minds.
</p>
</blockquote>
</p>
<p>
In 2013, Sal Khan <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LiPQuOFVHl4&t=18m23s">said</a>
<blockquote>
<p>
You had a first wave in the late nineties, early two-thousand's, it was kind of obvious, the internet's about disseminating information, hey education! […] Well the PC, I mean Steve Jobs famously, originally, thought that the personal computer was going to be a treadmill for the brain.
</p>
</blockquote>
</p>
<p>
And so in the twenty-three years since the creation of the World Wide Web, "a bicycle for the mind" became "a treadmill for the brain."
</p>
<p>
One helps you get where you want under your own power. Another's used to simulate the natural world and is typically about self-discipline, self-regulation, and self-improvement. One is empowering; one is slimming. One you use with friends because it's fun; the other you use with friends because it <em>isn't</em>. One does things <em>to</em> you; one does things <em>for</em> you.
</p>
<p>
A mind is something human. A brain is an organ, something biological. We care about brains because they are the seat of our minds. You fall in love with someone's mind. You gamify someone's brain. Minds meet. Brains collide. You do things <em>with</em> one. You do things <em>to</em> another.
</p>
<p>
In 1824, when James Hardie <a href="https://archive.org/stream/101167316.nlm.nih.gov/101167316_djvu.txt">wrote</a> about the mechanism underlying the treadmill's efficacy as a punishment, he commented not just on its monotony, but its simplicity and economy and versatility, too:
</p>
<blockquote>
<ol style='list-style-type: none; padding: 0px; margin: 0px;'>
<li>1st. No skill or time is requisite to learn the working of it.</li>
<li>2d. The prisoners cannot neglect their task, nor do it remissly, as all must work equally, in proportion to their weight.</li>
<li>3d. It can be used for every kind of manufactory, to which water, steam, wind or animal power is usually applied, and especially to the grinding of grain, for which every prison is at a great expense.</li>
<li>4th. As the mechanism of a Tread-Mill is not of a complicated nature, the regular employment, which it affords, is not likely to be often suspended, for want of repairs in the machinery, and should the supply of grain, at anytime, fail, it is not necessary, that the labour of the prisoners should be suspended j nor can they be aware of the circumstance; the supply of labour may, therefore be considered as unfailing.</li>
<li>5th. It is constant and sufficiently severe; but it is its monotonous steadiness and not its severity, which constitutes its terror, and frequently, breaks down the obstinate spirit.</li>
</ol>
</blockquote>
<p>
These juxtapositions are unfair; they're gotchas. They're also relevant. Our tools and services increasingly do things <em>to</em> us, not <em>for</em> us. And they <em>certainly</em> aren't about helping us to do things <em>with</em> them. There are few places this is clearer than our children—or more precisely, our students.
</p>
http://thesprouts.org/blog/rendering-learners-legibleRendering <br> Learners Legible2013-04-06T00:00:00-04:002013-04-06T00:00:00-04:00sprout & co.http://thesprouts.org/<div class='img' style='height: 390px; background: url("/img/blog/GeorgeOrwell.gif")'>
<div class='caption'>
"The fallacy is to believe that under a dic­ta­torial government you can be free <em>inside</em>." <br> — George Orwell, <a href="http://wintermute10.tripod.com/AIP19.htm">'As I Please'</a>
</div>
</div>
<p>
<a href='https://inbloom.org/'>inBloom</a>'s mission is to "inform & involve each student & teacher with data & tools designed to <em>personalize</em> learning." Focus on that word, "personalize." At the moment, this is an exciting word for many people in education. In this crowd, there is a common distinction between 'transmission' and 'construction' as metaphors for teaching (construed as transmitting information) & learning (construed as constructing a mental model).
</p>
<p>
Framing teaching in terms of 'transmission' makes it a problem of communication and information. You become naturally concerned with clarity and structure and prerequisites. Issues like classroom management or student engagement become constraints that buttress or obstruct the primary focus: communicating to students.
</p>
<p>
Although this in fact is what typically happens in many classrooms, the party line of graduate schools of education and the broader world of educational theory is that transmission's no good. So, you'll often see teachers' email signatures cite Yeats' <a href="http://thinkexist.com/quotation/education_is_not_filling_a_bucket-but_lighting_a/15313.html">"Education is not filling a bucket, but lighting a fire."</a> or Hutchins' <a href="http://thinkexist.com/quotation/the-objective-of-education-is-to-prepare-the/538254.html">"The objective of education is to prepare the young to educate themselves throughout their lives."</a> before going back to a classroom where they stand at the front.
</p>
<p>
Framing learning in terms of "construction" makes it a problem of giving students puzzles, projects, and experiences that develop their mental models. You become naturally concerned with engagement and epistemology and ideas' expressive power. Issues like curriculum or assessment become constraints that buttress or obstruct the primary focus: surfacing & iterating learners' models.
</p>
<p>
If this happens in classrooms, you'll see it under the banner of 'project-based learning' or 'learning by doing' or 'hands-on.' But as with any words, these can and have been corrupted and diluted, often to denote their precise opposite, for myriad reasons—most driven by the gap between our nominal values and our functional priorities for education.
</p>
<p>
While progressive educators have reached nominal consensus that 'construction' trumps 'transmission,' that is not the point I'm trying to make. I just want to highlight the distinction these two, broad, rhetorical camps offer; I think it has a lot to teach us about personalization.
</p>
<p>
But before considering personalization in education, it is instructive to look around and consider 'personalization' in other domains. We should be suspicious any time we notice that classic trick of marketing something whose inverse is unimaginable—after all, who <em>wouldn't</em> want personalized education? If you cannot invert the reform and find something someone reasonable might disagree with, you have a platitude on your hands. And platitudes that front for reforms corrupt their language and often end up running defense for other, more obscure dynamics.
</p>
<h4 id="watch-tv-shows-movies-anytime-anywhere.">"Watch TV shows & movies anytime, anywhere."</h4>
<p>
Netflix doesn't talk much about personalization—they've had an incredibly consistent focus on becoming the <a href="http://web.archive.org/web/19990117011532/http://www.netflix.com/">"best way to rent a movie"</a> since they began in 1999. Now, their value proposition is, <a href="http://netflix.com">"For one low monthly price, Netflix members can watch as much as they want, anytime, anywhere, on nearly any Internet-connected screen. Members can play, pause and resume watching, all without commercials or commitments."</a> You have to dig around a bit to find mention of their ratings system, <a href="https://signup.netflix.com/MediaCenter/HowNetflixWorks">"It's only Members can rate the movies and TV shows they’ve watched through their TV or on the Netflix website. Netflix takes these ratings and pairs them with billions of other ratings by other Netflix members to accurately predict movies and TV shows members will enjoy."</a> This despite the fact that they famously hosted <a href="http://www.netflixprize.com/">a million-dollar competition</a> to improve the accuracy of their predictions.
</p>
<p>
So, what problem is personalization solving for Netflix? Well Netflix wants people to watch more movies. Finding movies that people want to watch is a natural solution to this. Sometimes, people don't know what they want to watch or what they'd like. So a matching algorithm helps them <em>find something customers want</em>.
</p>
<h4 id="happy-birthday">"Happy Birthday!"</h4>
<p>
Imagine it's your girlfriend's birthday. You want to get her a gift. Do you get her a personalized gift? "Well, sure." But you probably don't use that language unless you're monogramming or tailoring it. (Set those examples to the side; we'll be seeing more like them.) We assume gifts are personalized unless they're giveaway swag. How do you personalize your gift? Well, hopefully you know them well enough to simulate whether they'd like a given trinket. Sometimes we need help brainstorming trinkets, but rarely—at least with those girlfriends we know well—do we need help deciding whether they'll like it. To brainstorm, you might browse their Pinterest or keep a list of things they want or head to their <a href="https://www.google.com/search?q=social+wishlist&aq=f&oq=social+wishlist&aqs=chrome.0.57j0l3j62l2.2627j0&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8">social wishlist</a>.
</p>
<p>
So, what problem is this process of personalization solving for you? It's helping you <em>find something they want</em>.
</p>
<h4 id='im-looking-for-someone'>"I'm looking for someone who can read my profile and write an intelligent message and isn't a serial killer"</h4>
<p>
Imagine you're single. And 26. Most of your friends from college have moved on. You've just finished your graduate program and are quickly discovering you never actually learned how to make friends. Much less find a date. Luckily, there's <a href="http://www.okcupid.com/">an app</a> for that. So you fill out your OKCupid profile, answer their hundred-question personality test, and start browsing. When you use OKCupid's <a href="http://www.okcupid.com/help/your-matches">special blend</a> or <a href="http://www.okcupid.com/help/quiver">Quiver</a> features, you're getting personalized dating advice and matchmaking.
</p>
<p>
But unlike our examples so far, it's subtler than "helping you find what you want." Sure, you can search for "single, straight, very attractive blond, measurements <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rrBx6mAWYPU&t=48s">36-24-36</a>, looking for casual sex in my area" but that's not what OKCupid is <em>for</em>. In OKCupid, personalization is a mix of matching and satisfying you. OKCupid aspires to find <em>people you want</em> whom you have some better-than-average chance of <em>getting</em> whom <em>also want you</em>.
</p>
<h4 id="does-this-make-me-look-fat">"Does this make me look fat?"</h4>
<p>
Imagine you're shopping for a shirt. You walk into the department store and an associate comes up to help you. At their best, you might say they're working to 'personalize' your shirt—helping you find one appropriate for a given occasion or one that'll complement your wardrobe or accommodate your tummy. But there's a big difference between the personalization something like <a href="http://www.blanklabel.com/">Blank Label</a> provides (tailored fit) and something like <a href="http://www.spreadshirt.com/custom-clothing-C3744">spreadshirt</a> (customized prints). Blank Label is <em>matching you</em>—i.e. personalization is helping you <em>find something appropriate for your body</em>. spreadshirt is matching <em>your desires</em>—i.e. personalization is <em>customization</em>. In both cases you 'want' the shirt (and indeed, even Blank Label offers customization through choice of pattern and fabric), but in one case you're asking someone to treat you and in the other to serve you. Keep this distinction in mind, we'll come back to it.
</p>
<h4 id="im-ready-to-up-my-weight">"I'm ready to up my weight."</h4>
<p>
Imagine you walk into the gym with your weightlifting partner. You lie down on the bench, and they begin loading up your regular load—180lbs. But last time, your partner saw that you were having a pretty easy time of it. As he puts on the last 10lb weight he pauses to ask, "You want to bump up your weight? You seemed ready for it last time." Now if the bench press had automatically suggested this to you based on measuring your impedance and completion rate, you wouldn't be surprised to see the inevitable Valley startup's page lead with, <em>Helping you personalize your weight training experience</em>. So what is your friend doing? It's a little more complicated than our other examples. They're helping you find a weight that's appropriate for you (in this way they are personalizing things as Blank Label does), but there are a bunch of other functions they serve: e.g. egging you on. Unfortunately, these affective components of your experience don't really have a rhetorical home in discussions of personalization. But [un]luckily for you, <a href="http://www.bogost.com/blog/gamification_is_bullshit.shtml">"gamification"</a> has got that covered.
</p>
<p>
Anyway, let's return to education. What type of problem is personalization solving in education? I can't speak for advocates of personalization or even its target audiences, but I see one, overarching theme tying together personalization efforts. If we look at what school does rather than what graduate schools of education say, we might model 'education' as a process of exposing students to the right information at the right time and in the right order, 'personalization' becomes the process of defining 'right' and making the implementation of more correct answers scalable. Which <em>almost</em> sounds like our earlier analogies' mix of matching and satisfaction. Except there's a tension when we look more closely at the structure of whose desires and constraints are being satisfied. And that tension points to the driving force behind personalization: its promise to render learners <em>legible</em>.
</p>
<h3 id="rendering-learners-legible">Rendering learners legible</h3>
<p>
James C. Scott's <a href="http://www.amazon.com/dp/0300078153"><em>Seeing Like a State</em></a> is one of my very favorite books. In it, Scott walks through half a dozen "schemes to improve the human condition" that have failed. Whether introducing permanent last names to lubricate tax collection or subdividing land into plots to support industrial agriculture or centralizing planning in high modernist cities like Brasilia to increase efficiency, Scott tells a compelling story about the pressure to render resources—human and natural—"legible." Scott paints "legibility" as a primary force in the practice of statecraft specifically and modernism more broadly because of its role as precursor to control and value extraction. In doing so, Scott beautifully articulates a terrifying warning against the combination of institutional hubris and authoritarian structures. Planners of all stripes not only assume they understand the systems they tweak (whether natural or political) but that abstract, interchangeable elements comprise these systems (whether trees or citizens). The resulting design errors and ripples of unintended consequences become either the systems' undoing, or are seen as cause for even broader mandates to tweak and engineer systems, piling intervention atop intervention.
</p>
<p>
These failures are tragedies in the purest sense. Not only do they originate in hubris, but are also motivated by optimistic and altruistic views of progress and humankind. Scott traces these tragic dimensions back to a common set of characteristics, many of which are germane to our investigation. Consider the following juxtapositions (here, I quote Scott directly):
</p>
<p>
<ul>
<li>
<em>Another student, another user</em>— "The lack of context and particularity is not an oversight; it is the necessary first premise of any large-scale planning exercise. To the degree that the subjects can be treated as standardized units, the power of resolution in the planning exercise is enhanced."
</li>
<li>
<em>What's missing is access to the right information at the right time—it's all about information transmission</em>— "The clarity of the high-modernist optic is due to its resolute singularity. Its simplifying fiction is that, for any activity or process that comes under its scrutiny, there is only one thing going on. In the scientific forest there is only commercial wood being grown; in the planned city there is only the efficient movement of goods and people; in the housing estate there is only the effective delivery of shelter, heat, sewage, and water; in the planned hospital there is only the swift provision of professional medical services."
</li>
<li>
<em>'Average' teachers & students need our help</em>— "What is perhaps most striking about high-modernist schemes, despite their quite genuine egalitarian and often socialist impulses, is how little confidence they repose in the skills, intelligence, and experience of ordinary people."
</li>
<li>
<em>If students are not doing what they should, we can make them</em>— "If such schemes have typically taken their most destructive human and natural toll in the states of the former socialist bloc and in revolutionary Third World settings, that is surely because there authoritarian state power, unimpeded by representative institutions, could nullify resistance and push ahead."
</li>
<li>
<em>Personalization will disrupt a broken industry</em>— "[Reforms'] power, it is worth remembering, was least contested at those moments when other forms of coordination had failed or seemed utterly inadequate to the great tasks at hand: in times of war, revolution, economic collapse, or newly won independence."
</li>
<li>
<em>Technology will unlock students' potential and provide great education to all</em>— "That these tragedies could be so intimately associated with optimistic views of progress and rational order is in itself a reason for a searching diagnosis."
</li>
</ul>
</p>
<p>
Some domains—like movie recommendations—are amenable to simplifying assumptions. The unarticulated reasons underlying this are many, but consider: the screen you need doesn't change depending on the movie you show; all movies are files; most movies occupy similar roles in your day-to-day (i.e. they are a two hour endeavor in the evening); Netflix doesn't need to care about why you want a movie to give it to you effectively; the list goes on.
</p>
<p>
But many of these advantages can be summed up simply: movies and movie-watchers are <em>legible</em>. And while there's a fascinating discussion to be had connecting the modernist efforts Scott explores with the internal structure & logic of school, that's not what I want to focus on. I want to highlight that each of these overlaps—abstraction, techno-utopianism, information centricity, and so on—is deeply driven by or complicit in a need to render students legible in an effort to create a system at scale. And that need to create a system at scale is driven by our desire—rightly or wrongly—to impose a will on students to fix "a social problem."
</p>
<p>
Personalization accelerates and lubricates this process of rendering students legible. To see this unvarnished, we must examine the language of those advocating personalization. And in that language, if you listen for power dynamics you will find a very different landscape than what you heard in our earlier work exploring analogies to personalization. As you read these excerpts from <a href="https://inbloom.org/about-inbloom">inBloom</a> and <a href="https://www.khanacademy.org/about">Khan Academy</a>, ask yourself what the analogous statements from the weight trainer or birthday buyer or Netflix executive would look like.
</p>
<blockquote>
<p>
"With access to the right information, educators can gauge student performance, develop insights, and act quickly to help students achieve their goals"
</p>
</blockquote>
<p>
Read that again. Whose are 'their' goals?
</p>
<blockquote>
<p>
"Coaches, parents, and teachers have unprecedented visibility into what their students are learning and doing on the Khan Academy."
</p>
</blockquote>
<p>
Read that again. Given the option, how many students would naturally give well-meaning "Coaches, parents, and teachers" that visibility, if the choice were students'?
</p>
<blockquote>
<p>
"Every time you work on a problem or watch a video, the Khan Academy remembers what you've learned and where you're spending your time. We keep all of this data private but expose powerful statistics to each user and their coaches. You get at-a-glance information about everything you've been learning and whether or not you've been hitting your goals."
</p>
</blockquote>
<p>
Read that again. For every minute a "coach" spends looking at that data, how many minutes do you think the average learner will spend—of their own volition—doing the same?
</p>
<blockquote>
<p>
"You're joining millions of Khan Academy students from all over the world who learn at their own pace every single day."
</p>
</blockquote>
<p>
Read that again. Is the average student more or less excited to join the millions of Khan Academy students than the average "<em>coach</em>" is excited to join the thousands of Khan Academy coaches?
</p>
<p>
Returning to our earlier examples of personalization—the weight trainer and birthday buyer and Netflix customer—what does it mean that there is no such tension in those examples? I think that's quite significant. If you aren't convinced, two more examples of personalization—if you'll bear with me—will make that clear.
</p>
<h4 id='more-open-and-connected'>"more open & connected"</h4>
<p>
Facebook's mission is to make the world more open and connected. <a href="http://www.quora.com/What-percent-of-Facebook-revenue-is-from-Facebook-platform-and-what-percent-is-from-facebook-ads">85% of Facebook's revenue</a> comes from advertising. Which means Facebook's users are not its customers. And you can hear that tension in everything Facebook says and does. Even in Zuckerberg's <a href="http://s3.documentcloud.org/documents/358408/fbprospectus052212.pdf">letter to investors</a>, it takes a few paragraphs to get to the money shot: > "As people share more, they have access to more opinions from the people they trust about the products and services they use. This makes it easier to discover the best products and improve the quality and efficiency of their lives. > One result of making it easier to find better products is that businesses will be rewarded for building better products - ones that are personalized and designed around people. We have found that products that are "social by design" tend to be more engaging than their traditional counterparts, and we look forward to seeing more of the world's products move in this direction."
</p>
<p>
Notice how sloppily Facebook slips between customers and users, between 'being advertised to' and 'keeping up with my friends,' between 'providing product recommendations' and 'making the world more open and connected.'
</p>
<h4 id='manage-your-attention-better'>"manage your attention better"</h4>
<p>
But Facebook is not alone. Google’s mission is "to organize the world’s information and make it universally accessible and useful." <a href="http://investor.google.com/financial/tables.html">96% of <em>their</em> revenue</a> comes from advertising. But you could be forgiven if you were to browse <a href="https://www.google.com/about/company/">their about page</a> and miss that. Which notably, begins with the rhetoric of personalization, "Larry Page, our co-founder and CEO, once described the 'perfect search engine' as something that 'understands exactly what you mean and gives you back exactly what you want.'
</p>
<p>
The first hint that Google's users are not its customers is buried a couple paragraphs down, "[Making it as easy as possible for you to find the information you need and get the things you need to do done] means showing you when your friends like an ad or a search result, so that you know it might be valuable." In 2010, Bradley Horowitz, VP of Product Marketing at the time, described Google Buzz as 'a Google approach to sharing' and a tool that will 'help you manage your attention better.' The most generous possible interpretation is in fact, "Advertisers will hire us to help you manage your attention better." Notice again the easy slippage between customers and users, between attention and ads, between helping and selling.
</p>
<p>
Now, let's return to inBloom: <em>"With access to the right information, educators can gauge student performance, develop insights, and act quickly to help students achieve their goals."</em> Read that again. That glib slippage between the interests of students and teachers is central to the rhetorical trick pulled by 'personalization.' It manifests as the conflation of teaching and learning, of learning and assessment, of process and product. The reason this slippage happens is simple: without it, Facebook, Google, and Khan Academy would need to admit that they are <em>extracting value from their users</em> by rendering them <em>legible</em> to other parties (i.e. advertisers, educators). This is the <em>fundamental</em> difference between Reed Hastings and Sal Khan. Netflix makes money when they deliver value to you. inBloom makes money when they deliver value to <em>state departments of education</em>, whose goal is not uncomplicated—at their best they want to help students, but the truer statement (and weaker claim) is that they want to <em>treat</em> them. inBloom helps them control and manage the treatment process.
</p>
<p>
To control a process you must first observe it. And you must be able to intervene in it, capitalizing on your observations to nudge the system in your desired direction. Ultimately, this is the promise of legibility—by watching what students do and how they do it at a fine enough grain, we will be able to carefully move them along <a href="http://www.corestandards.org/">our curriculum</a> (Latin for <a href="http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/curriculum">"race course"</a>), <a href="https://www.khanacademy.org/exercisedashboardt">our ontology</a>.
</p>
<p>
When you hear "personalization" ("I will help you find and do what <em>you</em> want") turn into "self-paced" ("I will help you find and do what <em>I</em> want you to do, in my order, but don't worry—at your own pace."), what are we to think? Ford said, <a href="http://books.google.com/books?id=QwckAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA72&dq=%22Any+customer+can+have+a+car+painted+any+colour+that+he+wants+so+long+as+it+is+black.%22&hl=en&sa=X&ei=t7hgUcneCs6s0AGi14H4Ag&ved=0CDkQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=%22Any%20customer%20can%20have%20a%20car%20painted%20any%20colour%20that%20he%20wants%20so%20long%20as%20it%20is%20black.%22&f=false">"Any customer can have a car painted any colour that he wants so long as it is black."</a> That homogenization increased the efficiency and scalability of his revolutionary manufacturing techniques. This is worth keeping in mind when we <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hQc0Zu1K_F8">listen to Sal Khan</a>:
<blockquote>
<p>
"If I said, 'personalized education' hundred years ago, well there's private tutors, it's gonna be very very expensive. . .And there <em>were</em> attempts, <a href="http://www.amazon.com/dp/1455508381">the book</a> talks a lot about them, over the past hundred years, actually trying to do personalized education. […] And they actually had very good results. I mean, these were peer-reviewed studies, very very good results, but it was just logistically hard to do. If you wanted to do self-paced education without computers you'd have to have these worksheets going around, the teachers would have to do all of this logistics and information management. What's exciting now, the technology, it's not there—and I'm very clear on this in the book—the virtual education, the software isn't there to replace physical schools. It's there to empower schools, so they can finally do <em>personalized</em> education, in a scalable way."
</p>
</blockquote>
</p>
<p>
Maybe my dystopic visions of banks of students swiping at shoddy Android tablets running skinned versions of crappy, free courses authored by <a href='http://www2.ed.gov/programs/innovation/index.html'>i3</a>-driven content farms 'collaborating' with Google via their <a href="https://code.google.com/p/course-builder/">Course Builder</a>, overseen not by teachers but by "classroom managers" whom the kids (who are inevitably mostly poor, black, and brown—their white, upper middle class counterparts get 'personalized' education in the form of, well, people. i.e. teachers at the local progressive school) call "wardens" behind their back is just my phobias writ large on the arc of technological progress.
</p>
<p style='margin-bottom: 0.375em;'>
And though I worry…
</p>
<p>
<iframe src="http://player.vimeo.com/video/19271416" width="100%" height="52.5%" frameborder="0" webkitAllowFullScreen mozallowfullscreen allowFullScreen></iframe>
</p>
<p>
…I really do hope I'm wrong. I hope this is all much simpler than I'm making it out to be. But if "personalized education" neither resembles traditional school nor learning in the real world, whose interests drive that divergence? What answers to that question would scare us? Excite us? The question, "Can personalized education work?" is much less important to me than, "Whom will be hurt how by the ways that personalized education will fail?" It is essential that reforms not simply 'work' but be robust to all sorts of ways of <em>not</em> working. And frankly, I'm not sure that an honest Sal Khan would be comfortable taking <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hippocratic_Oath">the Hippocratic Oath</a>, to commit to first do no harm, with which I will close, in excerpt:
<blockquote>
<p>
I will prescribe regimens for the good of my patients according to my ability and my judgment and never do harm to anyone. […] I will preserve the purity of my life and my arts. […] I will leave this operation [in which I am not expert] to be performed by practitioners, specialists in this art. […] In every house where I come I will enter only for the good of my patients […] If I keep this oath faithfully, may I enjoy my life and practice my art, respected by all humanity and in all times; but if I swerve from it or violate it, may the reverse be my life.
</p>
</blockquote>
</p>
http://thesprouts.org/blog/some-observations-on-habitSome Observations <br> on Habits2013-03-24T00:00:00-04:002013-03-24T00:00:00-04:00sprout & co.http://thesprouts.org/<p>
Every morning, I brush my teeth. "One, two, three, four, five, six, seven." I brush in multiples of seven. I shift the toothbrush over one tooth. "One, two, three, four, five, six seven." And I repeat. I do the same for the insides and tops of my teeth. "One, two, three, four, five, six, seven." Then I spit and brush my tongue. "One, two, three, four, five, six, seven." I take a gulp of water, swish seven times, and spit it out. Every morning.
</p>
<p>
This is a habit. I formed it intentionally. While I'm brushing my teeth—despite the fact I keep count—my mind wanders…to my dreams, the day ahead, the day behind. This habit serves to <em>free</em> my attention; it lets me <em>focus</em> on other things while I brush my teeth.
</p>
<p>
Every evening (except for Saturday), I draft a wilt. "wilt" stands for "what i learned today." It's an email with five bullet points. Three of those bullet points are observations about what I thought or learned that day. Two of them are wirts, i.e. "what i read today." I send this email out to the same people, every day.
</p>
<p>
This is a habit. I formed it intentionally. While I'm wilting, however, I am thinking about nothing else; I am processing my day and doing occasionally hard thinking to communicate a new idea. This habit serves to <em>focus</em> my attention; it lets me <em>ignore</em> other things while I write.
</p>
<p>
I brush my teeth because the health of my teeth matters to me. I don't want bad breath. I want to avoid dental bills. I want to avoid being having ugly teeth.
</p>
<p>
I wilt because of certain ideas I have about my intellectual development. I want to actively reflect on my experience. I want to keep in touch with the small group with whom I wilt. I want to set up a structure encouraging me to read something meaty every day.
</p>
<p>
Embedded in each of these habits is a set of values. By engaging in these habits, I privilege certain values. I am pushed to embrace those things which pay respect to those values—or even better, make these habits easier. "Cleanliness" or "intellectual rigor" or "easily documented" or "interesting to my friends" or "attractive to others"—each of these, with different weights and emphases, inform and are informed by my habits.
</p>
<p>
The arrow of causation can go both ways—not only does each habit carry with it a utility, each habit can inculcate the value of that utility in us. Anyone who has gone to Mass or boot camp can attest to this.
</p>
<p>
Moreover, adopting a habit normalizes certain expectations about how you handle "that type of thing." Personal hygiene is seen as a collection of small habits like brushing my teeth. Successful first dates, not so much. We think it's reasonable that 'staying healthy' require an hour a day of food and exercise considerations—even if most of us fall short of that. But, most wouldn't think an hour a day of mental health care would be healthy unless it were reframed as something like meditation or family time.
</p>
<p>
I'd like to suggest that we can bring this lens of "freeing" and "focusing" habits and the expectations they normalize to our experiences as students. Consider the average school day. And in particular, consider its schedule. Few think about patriotism during the Pledge of Allegiance. Few think about obedience when a teacher calls out, <a href="http://www.proteacher.net/discussions/showthread.php?t=510">"Give me five!"</a> Some think about algebra during algebra class.
</p>
<p>
What about the schedule? What messages are embedded in the tempo of a buzzer every forty-seven minutes? Well, many—e.g. there's a <a href="http://www.amazon.com/dp/0465097189">long history</a> of critique digging into the economic and sociological forces defining the institutional logic of a 'period.' But actually, I'd like to set aside the various questions about what good learning looks like and what's "necessary" to teach effectively in "today's world." I'd instead like to focus on a single, concrete side effect: the message we implicitly communicate about the nature of intellectual work. For at least eight years—just under nine thousand hours in school—the overwhelming majority of examples and experiences students have 'learning something' suggest that 'learning' happens in consistent, well-managed chunks of small, steady applications of effort to do something that someone else has laid out for you. This is the precise opposite of the deep work and focus that we know accompanies real learning.
</p>
<p>
Again, at the moment I am not concerned with pedagogy—i.e. with what 'effective teaching' looks like. Instead, I'd like to suggest a simple exercise: think through—minute by minute—a school day. (If you have a child of your own, even better—think through <em>their</em> day.) And don't think about what the schedule <em>says</em> people do—i.e. don't think, "Algebra class"—think about what you'd see if you could set up a videocamera and lay over the student's thought-track for their day.
</p>
<p>
Now when I run into a challenging question, my muscle memory tells me to ⌘-tab to something easier. Sometimes it's twitter, sometimes it's my email, and most of the time I intercept the impulse. That's what you'd see on my thought track (with a boring video of me staring at my computer, occasionally straightening my posture, and bobbing my head to a beat). These tiny vagaries give my time a texture. So be sure to think about that texture of each minute you imagine—is it spent deep in thought? Listening? Making something? Talking to someone? Thinking about a crush? Worrying about grades? Worrying about food?
</p>
<p>
Imagine integrating that habit over time, day-in and day-out, for one thousand days (about how long we spend in 6-12th grade). And importantly, imagine that you <em>never</em> see any other examples of learning. "Sure, ice skaters and actors and cellists quit school to pursue their craft," you think, "But a) they're nuts, b) that's like 0.1% of folks, and c) my parents would <em>never</em> go for that."
</p>
<p>
Now, consider the following juxtapositions. And for each of these, ask yourself, "If I were to turn each of these into a habit, what would that feel like? What habits would I develop or need? Following directions? Being playful? Skimming? Working together? Thinking deeply? Do I spend thirty minutes on a page or thirty seconds?"
</p>
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<div id='juxtapositions'>
<div class='juxtaposition-container'>
<div class='img' style='height: 437px; background:url("/img/blog/kinglear.png")'>
<div class='caption'>William Shakespeare's <a href='http://www.amazon.com/dp/161382338X'><i>King Lear</i></a></div>
</div>
<div class='img' style='height: 437px; background:url("/img/blog/spark_kinglear.png")'>
<div class='caption'>Barnes & Noble's <a href='http://www.sparknotes.com/shakespeare/lear/section3.rhtml'>SparkNotes on <i>King Lear</i></a></div>
</div>
</div>
<p>Or this one:</p>
<div class='juxtaposition-container'>
<div class='img' style='height: 542px; background:url("/img/blog/sicp.png")'>
<div class='caption'>Sussman & Abelson's <a href='http://mitpress.mit.edu/sicp/'><i>Structure & Interpretation of Computer Programs</i></a></div>
</div>
<div class='img' style='height: 542px; background:url("/img/blog/sams.png")'>
<div class='caption'><a href='http://www.amazon.com/dp/0672313030'><i>Sams Teach Yourself Visual C++ 6 in 24 Hours</i></a></div>
</div>
</div>
<p>Or this one:</p>
<div class='juxtaposition-container'>
<div class='img' style='height: 321px; background:url("/img/blog/tangrams.png")'>
<div class='caption'><a href='http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tangram'>Tangrams</a></div>
</div>
<div class='img' style='height: 321px; background:url("/img/blog/khan.png")'>
<div class='caption'>Khan Academy on <a href='https://www.khanacademy.org/math/geometry/similarity/triangle_similarlity/e/similar_triangles_1'>similar triangles</a></div>
</div>
</div>
<p>Or this one:</p>
<div class='juxtaposition-container'>
<div class='img' style='height: 507px; background:url("/img/blog/lego.png")'>
<div class='caption'><a href='http://aboutus.lego.com/en-us/lego-group/the_lego_brand/'>LEGO</a></div>
</div>
<div class='img' style='height: 507px; background:url("/img/blog/make.png")'>
<div class='caption'>O'Reilly's <a href='http://makezine.com/04'><i>MAKE Magazine</i></a></div>
</div>
</div>
</div> <!-- ends div#juxtapositions -->
<p>
And finally, if you aren't tired of the exercise yet, let's turn it around. Choose a texture of time and activity you would be proud to see yourself (or your child) adopt as their own. Are they sitting in an overstuffed chair smoking a pipe considering Aristotle? Are they waking up at 4A every day to train for a marathon? Are they making sure to get home by 6P every day so they can spend some quality time with <em>their</em> child? Look at their day to day experiences now and consider how (or whether) there's any connection at all.
</p>
<p>
The rhetoric of school centers on of 'preparation.' Students are immersed in prerequisites for future courses, many of which are unknown. Their participation in classes are themselves an act of preparation for more classes in college or for the workforce. Because cooking dinner is different than eating dinner, it is simple to conclude that <em>preparing</em> for a rich intellectual life should look and feel different than <em>living</em> a rich, intellectual life. But cooking and living are not the same. And just as spending too much time planning your kids' activities can change your relationship to them, we should not forget that these habits of preparation do not spin along in a vacuum—they change us. And that means we should have some very persuasive stories lined up which we can honestly deploy every forty-seven minutes, after each buzzer.
</p>
<blockquote style='margin-bottom: 2em;'>
<p>
Watch your thoughts for they become words. <br>
Watch your words for they become actions. <br>
Watch your actions for they become habits. <br>
Watch your habits for they become your character. <br>
And watch your character for it becomes your destiny. <br>
What we think, we become. <br>
</p>
<div class='attribution'>
— Lao Tse, author of the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tao_Te_Ching"><i>Tào Té Chīng</i></a>
</div>
</blockquote>
<blockquote>
<p>
[Discussing <a href="http://books.google.com/books?id=LcpLPKOL6XYC&printsec=frontcover&dq=schooling+in+capitalist+america&hl=en&sa=X&ei=_W5PUf34DrPl4APngoGYAw&ved=0CDgQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=meyer%20factor%20analysis&f=false">a factor analysis</a> of student performance in <a href="http://epm.sagepub.com/content/37/1/125.short">Edwards <i>et al</i></a>] Our theory would predict that at the high school level submission to authority would be the best predictor of grades among personality traits. […] This prediction was confirmed. […] The temperament and IQ variables made no independent contribution.
</p>
<div class='attribution'>
— Herbert Bowles & Samuel Gintis in <a href="http://www.amazon.com/dp/1608461319"><i>Schooling in Capitalist America</i></a>
</div>
</blockquote>
<p class='acknowledgements'>
Thanks to Shaunalynn Duffy for reading drafts of this post. The good parts are her fault; the bad parts mine.
</p>http://thesprouts.org/blog/a-place-for-small-things-to-growOn Needing a Place for Small Things2013-02-23T00:00:00-05:002013-02-23T00:00:00-05:00sprout & co.http://thesprouts.org/<p>
Biodiversity helps evolution find new, better solutions faster. And evolution is especially good at finding solutions to multidimensional problems which haven't proven susceptible to analysis. "Education" is one of these. Unfortunately, biodiversity is not a priority among reformers. Funding patterns and the hype cycle, among other influences, insure most focus on The Next Big Thing.
</p>
<p>
In evolution, reproduction is what matters. So what's the analogue of 'reproductive success' for education? Answering that involves an essential discussion about the values and goals of education which I am going to sidestep entirely. Instead, I'm going to talk about something that—within our analogy—is more like 'running fast.' That is, I want to talk about an activity which we would all agree is adaptive and which we should all hope our educational systems are getting better at nurturing: knowledge work.
</p>
<p>
In 1957, Peter Drucker <a href="http://www.amazon.com/dp/1560006226">wrote</a> (<strong>emphasis</strong> mine):
<blockquote>
<p>
In the United States, where most of the young people in the metropolitan areas go at least to high school, the assembly line is already obsolete. The labor necessary to run it is becoming scarce. Young people with a high school education do not want to work as human machine tools. […] How new these expectations are is shown in the field of personnel management. Only forty years old-it began in World War I—the discipline is already outdated in its concepts and its assumptions. Its principles, its rules, its practices and procedures all represent a distillation of experience with unskilled or semiskilled machine workers, largely from the metalworking industries. <strong>Today the majority of the personnel employed even in manufacturing industries are no longer of this kind, are rather people doing knowledge work</strong>, however unskilled. How far our personnel management theories really applied even to yesterday's machine workers is an open question. For managing tomorrow's employees, the products of the educated society, they are likely to be quite inadequate.
</p>
</blockquote>
</p>
<p>
"Knowledge work" is work whose main capital is not physical output or labor, but 'knowledge', broadly construed. "Knowledge workers" are people who think for a living, and they dominate our economy. Think technologists and engineers and designers and executives. At its best, school is—quite literally—filled with 'knowledge work.' So why do the org charts of tech companies and schools look so different?
</p>
<div class='img' style='width:770px; height: 750px; background: url("/img/blog/bigtech_orgcharts.png")'>
<div class='caption'><a href='http://www.bonkersworld.net/organizational-charts/'>Manu Cornet's</a> meditation on corporate structure at the big tech companies, via <a href='http://www.alexrainert.com/post/7044083618/teradome-organizational-charts-for-tech'>Alex Rainert</a>.</div>
</div>
<div class='img' style='width:770px; height: 380px; background: url("/img/blog/school_orgcharts.png")'>
<div class='caption'>What most school org charts look like, <a href='https://www.google.com/search?tbm=isch&q=school+(%22org+chart%22+OR+%22organizational+chart%22)'>according to Google</a>.</div>
</div>
<p>
More to the point, why do Google and high school <em>feel</em> so different? Well, Silicon Valley is not the Department of Education. It's OK if the #1 tech company is <a href="http://www.wolframalpha.com/input/?i=(AAPL+profit)%2F(AAPL+operating+expenses)%2F((GOOG+profit)%2F(GOOG+operating+expenses))">five times more profitable than its nearest competitor</a>. But our democratic conscience would not brook the same inequality in our educational system. And a white, tech guy in his thirties is not a poor, brown girl in her teens. Differences abound. Regardless—if we believe school supports knowledge work—we should be able to simultaneously acknowledge those differences and explain <em>why</em> school looks and feels the way it does.
</p>
<p>
There will always be constraints like equity. But saying our educational system will be "equitable" tells us no more about how it will look and feel than telling your girlfriend your new haircut's "not too short." If we are to design an educational system to support knowledge work, it might make sense to begin with the simple question, "What is knowledge work like?"
</p>
<p>
Knowledge work is rarely about <em>process</em>. Knowledge work is characterized by the <em>absence</em> of routine…by a need for changing ratios of creative, convergent, & divergent thinking…by a combination of working alone and together…by a <em>resistance</em> to quantitative metrics…by a focus on brainstorming and iteration and revision…above all, by open-ended questions and uncertainty and risk.
</p>
<p>
So how does the tech sector—an epitome of knowledge work—handle this?
</p>
<p>
The basic answer is that we are still figuring that out. While there are clearly some themes in how these tech companies support and manage their employees—an emphasis on intrinsic motivation, flexible work schedules, a focus on small teams and rapid iteration, and so on—there is still tremendous diversity and turnover in management thinking here. Plenty has been written about the variety and novelty of management structures and philosophies that the past thirty years of high tech industry have created. But I think there's an even more important, easy-to-agree upon, meta-lesson here: that diversity is <em>healthy</em>.
</p>
<p>
Cornet's orgchart cartoon is mostly tongue-in-cheek. But every technologist or employee at one of these companies will recognize the kernels of truth in the lampoon. And even simply among the six heavy-hitters you see enormous differences. And that is regarded as <em>healthy</em>—at no stockholders' meeting would you hear the claim that there's A Universal Org Chart. Minimally, the claim is that collectively, the <em>biodiversity</em> of management structures, product strategy, company culture and so on contribute to a healthy organic process evolving more effective companies.
</p>
<p>
So what about high schools? How do they accommodate knowledge work?
</p>
<p>
Well, despite being a much larger, older institution than multinational tech companies with much less control over the problems they're tasked with solving—high schools have basically homogeneous org charts. Of course, these org charts don't necessarily reflect reality. And many of them are legally mandated, in one form or another. I don't know what the 'right' org chart is—if there even is such a thing. But I <em>do</em> know that it's important for those of us interested in new models of learning to be able to tell a story about <em>why</em> the space of solutions we've explored looks the way it does so far. And more importantly, why do most schools look and feel the same?
</p>
<p>
Ultimately, if that story doesn't tie back to claims about how people learn or what school is for, then perhaps there's a new type of reform work to be done. Perhaps there are ways we can change the <em>types</em> of conversations we have instead of simply trumpeting a new message more loudly. This is no simple task. There are many boundary conditions that define the look and feel of school which implicitly define how we talk about school. I'm going to scratch the surface of just one: the schedule.
</p>
<div class='img' style='width: 770px; height: 599px; background: url("/img/blog/school_timetable.png")'>
<div class='caption'><a href='http://www.edline.net/pages/flhs'>Fairfield Ludlowe High School</a>'s timetable, via <a href='http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/School_timetable'>Wikipedia</a>.</div>
</div>
<p>
Knowledge work often requires large, contiguous blocks of time to grapple with open-ended issues and uncertainty. It is trite to complain about the schedule cuts up students' and teachers' days. It is trivial to point to burgeoning literature on optimal conditions for learning and productivity and decry the school bell. But <em>why</em> does the schedule look like it does? There are many explanations for this—<em>e.g.</em> it mimics the factory floor schedule, it is a necessary consequence of 'covering the curriculum,' and so on. I'd suggest that all of these reasons stem from exactly two needs: the need for [evidence of] <em>controllability</em> and the need for [evidence of] <em>observability</em>.
</p>
<p>
I've lifted these terms from the field of control theory (or simply 'controls'): a branch of mathematics and engineering that helps us design dynamic systems we can control and regulate. It's responsible for your cruise control, your thermostat, and making sure the robotic arms that assemble your car don't overshoot when they're placing the passenger door. "Controllability" and "observability" are two of the fundamental aspects of a system with which controls engineers concern themselves when looking at a new problem.
</p>
<p>
"Controllability" refers to our ability to move a system from one state into another (given certain constraints, like power density or efficiency). So if we were talking about your car's cruise control, some can cars can get from zero to sixty miles per hour in six seconds, some in three. A Corvette's cruise control looks different than a Beetle's. "Observability" refers to our ability to look into a system and know what's going on, to <em>find out</em> we're going fifty so that the cruise control can decide what to do with our gas pedal. So in this cruise control analogy, what's school's 'speed?'
</p>
<p>
Well, <em>curriculum</em> is <a href='http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?term=curriculum&allowed_in_frame=0'>Latin for race course</a>.
</p>
<p>
Schools are tasked—minimally—with implementing a <em>curriculum</em>. A curriculum is made up of <em>facts</em> and <em>skills</em>. The school's job (pedagogically speaking) is to inculcate these facts and skills into students. But remember, schools are governed and managed at scale. So we must acknowledge that school's job often reduces to <em>documenting</em> the performance of the curriculum. There are exactly two ways to do this. We can point to the inputs to school and take schooling's efficacy on faith. Or, we can point to the outputs of school and take your measurement's accuracy on faith. Of course, schools do a combination of these, documenting seat time or credits (inputs) <em>and</em> test scores or GPA (outputs).
</p>
<p>
Even when we transcend questions of academic development, the boundary conditions of the conversation around what school looks and feels like is remarkably constant. Consider a recent (heartbreaking) <a href='http://www.thisamericanlife.org/radio-archives/episode/487/harper-high-school-part-one'>pair of episodes</a> of <a href='http://www.thisamericanlife.org/'><i>This American Life</i></a> exploring <a href='http://www.harperhighschool.org/'>Harper High School</a> on the South Side of Chicago. In particular, the episodes explore the deeply destructive effects of gun violence and modern gang culture on youth, staff, and the community at large. Listening to it, it's hard to understand why 'school' is even in the picture; what you hear sounds more like a refugee camp or shelter for battered folks than an educational institution. Yet, in discussing the importance of the <a href='http://www.isbe.net/apl/pdf/ipz/proposals/cps_turnaround_lead.pdf'>turnaround funds</a> the state had provided to Harper High School, the entirety of the focus is on the inputs to the system. What follows is an excerpt from the episode wherein the principal discusses the effect of the turnaround funds on their efforts. I've <em>highlighted</em> every effect mentioned.
<blockquote>
<p>
One former district official involved in Harper's turnaround told me that Secretary of Education Arne Duncan, who used to run Chicago's schools, he said to his former colleagues, with these new turnaround initiatives, like the one at Harper, he wanted to, quote, "take the issue of money off the table," in other words, give them whatever they need. So the plan was pretty much boost the school with a lot of federal, state, and city money, then as the changes took hold, slowly ramp down the money.
</p>
<p>
And then five years later, the funding would go back to normal. That's next year. Next year is when the money goes away.
</p>
<p>
In the fall, I sat down with Principal Sanders and the school's operations manager to talk about all this. They told me the money has done so much. There's a new <em>culinary learning room</em>, new <em>computer equipment</em>, small stuff like a <em>new ID machine</em>.
</p>
<p>
Principal Sanders talks about the first year of turnaround like it was amazing. There were <em>four assistant principals</em>, <em>reduced class sizes</em>. There was the kind of support staf—social workers and counselors—in numbers that other schools only dream of.
</p>
</blockquote>
</p>
<p>
This is the entirety of the discussion of the aggregate efficacy of the turnaround program. I do not mean to critique Harper High or even question the efficacy of the interventions Principal Sanders lauds. Not only do I have nothing against new computer equipment, but I even suspect it helped! I do, however, mean to highlight the <i>rhetoric</i> that dominates the conversation. For some set of folks—certainly for the elite, upper middle class folks that flow through <i>Teach for America</i> whose ilk will dominate policy and decisionmaking circles—<i>This American Life</i> is a reasonable place to look for the mainstream conversation. This focus on inputs would make sense under a constant theory of change. <i>e.g.</i> if the Red Cross talks about how useful bandages and bottled water and doctors are, we don't balk because we have a deeply held (and widely corroborated) model of what 'disaster relief' looks like. As such, when we doubt institutions like the Red Cross, we doubt their stewardship, management, and efficiency—not their strategy.
</p>
<p>
Yet, just a few minutes earlier in the program, a social worker at Harper confesses that it doesn't seem like anything has changed in the past twenty years:
<blockquote>
<p>
<span style='font-weight: bold;'>Alex Kotlowitz</span> Crystal's been working towards a second master's degree, and in one of her classes this year has been reading a book I wrote over 20 years ago called <a href='http://www.amazon.com/dp/0385265565'><i>There Are No Children Here</i></a>, where I follow two brothers living in the projects on Chicago's West Side. For a couple of years, I followed the boys as they grappled with violence, poverty, and the gangs. And Crystal wonders if reading it isn't adding to her stress.
</p>
<p>
<span style='font-weight: bold;'>Crystal Smith</span> It was really interesting, though. To think that 20 years later, nothing has changed, that's the scarier part.
</p>
</blockquote>
This feeling of stasis makes the focus on inputs all the more striking.
</p>
<p>
Let's set aside any doubts about either the efficacy of our methods or measurements and take a moment to notice how the system of grade levels, curricula, grades, class periods, and credits make it extraordinarily easy to <em>document</em> our inputs and outputs. If you had a pile of skills and facts that you had to disburse at a certain rate in a certain order and document that process, you can see how easily we might make an argument for the current schedule structure. This also gives us some insight into the enthusiasm with which 'flipping the classroom' and 'data-driven education' and 'personalized learning' have been taken up by education reformers. Each of these efforts—in their own way—renders the learning process legible while simultaneously making the management of schooling easier. There's very little tying any of these structures—including the traditional class schedule—to the needs of learners. There is a great deal tying these structures to the needs of the school.
</p>
<p>
And so now we have plenty of reform wherein the party line—say, "Learning happens through curricula which are broadcast through classes"—is never articulated, but assumed. Then, vigorous debate and innovation and incubation are encouraged <em>within</em> those boundaries. And perhaps, more than Another Big Thing, we simply need a lot more space to grow some Small Things that needn't satisfy those boundary conditions, <em>a priori</em>.
</p>
<p>
I will finish with <a href="http://moreintelligentlife.com/story/david-foster-wallace-in-his-own-words?page=full">David Foster Wallace</a>,
<blockquote>
<p>
There are these two young fish swimming along and they happen to meet an older fish swimming the other way, who nods at them and says "Morning, boys. How's the water?" And the two young fish swim on for a bit, and then eventually one of them looks over at the other and goes "What the hell is water?"
</p>
<p>
This is a standard requirement of US commencement speeches, the deployment of didactic little parable-ish stories. This story turns out to be one of the better, less bullshitty conventions of the genre, but if you're worried that I plan to present myself here as the wise, older fish explaining what water is to you younger fish, please don't be. I am not the wise old fish. The point of the fish story is merely that the most obvious, important realities are often the ones that are hardest to see and talk about. Stated as an English sentence, of course, this is just a banal platitude, but the fact is that in the day to day trenches of adult existence, banal platitudes can have a life or death importance, or so I wish to suggest to you on this dry and lovely morning.
</p>
</blockquote>
<p class='acknowledgements'>
Thanks to Shaunalynn Duffy & Will Bosworth for reading drafts of this post. The good parts are their fault; the bad parts mine.
</p>
</p>
http://thesprouts.org/blog/tools-as-cargo-cult-pedagogyTools as Cargo Cult Pedagogy2013-01-29T00:00:00-05:002013-01-29T00:00:00-05:00sprout & co.http://thesprouts.org/<p>
Too often, school reframes learning as skill- and fact-acquisiton. At best this creates a blindspot to the various metacognitive dispositions and disciplines which define good learning. At worst, it leaves learners predisposed to externalize all difficulties ("My teacher sucked.") or internalize all difficulties solely in the language of skills ("I never was a math person.") Both leave the learner disabled. Despite the fact that school has mostly failed to integrate computation into its world, in the course of our work we stub our toe on the projection of students' notions of 'how learning works' all the time.
</p>
<blockquote>
<p>"But I heard C++ was the best programming language!" he said.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>
And it is <em>always</em> a he. Typically, he hasn't really ever <em>made</em> anything with computers, yet. And often, he doesn't even know know anyone who has. Although, his dad usually works in some sort of technical-cum-corporate role…maybe as a CIO or CTO or computer science professor. Importantly, it's rare that his father has written a real piece of code in years. Regardless, this guy has made sure that his son grows up conflating 'hard' & 'good.' The honest oversimplification, "Some use C++ when optimizing performance," seals the deal. <em>This</em> ten year old, this aspiring software engineer, is going to learn to program in C++, because those things which are fast and hard and somewhat brutal are good (or at least, they're for boys, and they're certainly for <em>this</em> boy).
</p>
<p>
Needless to say, he hasn't found his way <em>into</em> programming, yet. Perhaps he's downloaded <a href="http://unity3d.com">Unity</a> because he read a review that said it was a big deal in game development. Or maybe he persuaded his dad to buy him Microsoft Visual Studio for Christmas and spent the morning installing the 10GB IDE. And maybe he even got "Hello World!" out of the deal. But for the most part, he's a consumer—like the rest of us—though perhaps a little more assiduous a consumer of computer <em>culture</em>, too.
</p>
<p>
But despite all of this, computers are <em>hugely</em> important in his world. He's grown up around them. He sees them at the center of culture near (in video games, which also matter deeply to him) and far (in the Pixar films or Facebook IPO on CNN he sees with his family). That is, he has fallen in love with <em>the idea of computers</em>. Unfortunately, actual computer culture offers pretty slim pickings [for kids]—even nowadays. And so now, after a few years of modding his computer case and finagling <a href="http://www.maximumpc.com/">Maximum PC</a> from his mom when they go to the grocery store and competitively reciting features & acronyms from Apple's latest product release, he's ended up in a room with me and a handful of other kids. And we're making stuff, on computers. Sometimes its <a href="http://www.amazon.com/dp/0262510375">art</a>, sometimes its <a href="http://www.amazon.com/dp/0262510375">math</a>— Usually with <a href="http://scratch.mit.edu/">Scratch</a> or <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Logo_(programming_language)">LOGO</a> or <a href="http://processing.org/">Processing</a> or <a href="http://nodebox.net/">NodeBox</a>; it doesn't really matter how. And inevitably, in the face of difficulty, the complaint bubbles to the surface, "This isn't working because [the tool] sucks. Why can't we use C++? Isn't that the best?"
</p>
<p>
If the kids are young enough, I'm a compelling enough character to persuade them that their search for 'the best programming language' is meaningless. Sometimes I can pull out <a href="http://www.rollingstone.com/culture/news/steve-jobs-in-1994-the-rolling-stone-interview-20110117?print=true">Steve Jobs</a>, or if they're really invested, <a href="http://norvig.com/21-days.html">Pete Norvig</a> or <a href="http://paulgraham.com/langdes.html">Paul Graham</a>. But more often than not, it takes another kid—someone explicitly <em>not</em> technical, often a <em>she</em>—to deprogram this fixation. When <em>she</em> makes a more interesting game or solves a problem <em>he</em> struggled with or maybe just obviously complains less than him, something clicks. And at that moment, he's in a very fragile place. His ego is vulnerable & open. He can reject the situation—calling it 'dumb' or 'just for kids' or a 'waste of time'—or he can embrace it. And ultimately, that's a big part of my job.
</p>
<blockquote>
<p>
<a class='full-link' href='http://lua-users.org/lists/lua-l/2008-02/msg00247.html'>
A language is an interface between programmers and hardware, so it has social/psychological/pedagogical features which are just as important as its formal properties. If a language can't be efficiently ported on regular hardware, it's the language that sucks, not the hardware. Similarly, if it doesn't interface properly with its communities of coders (fails to build up standard coding practices, good libraries, trust…), the language sucks, not the people. Ergo Lisp sucks. Many Lisp zealots dismiss the language's failures as "merely social", but that's missing the purpose of a language entirely: failing socially is just as bad as failing technically.
</a>
</p>
</blockquote>
<p>
So ultimately, computer languages are tools. Meaning the cultural barriers to entry surrounding those tools matter just as much as the affordances the tools themselves provide. And it is amidst the ramifications of this fact that most of the interesting and important work expanding our computational fluency is to be done. Take video games. Video games are incredibly prominent in the world of children (<em>i.e.</em> boys). This has meant that video games have become a real entry point to computation for many [boys].
</p>
<p>
We should not be looking to 'bring [the poor, the brown, the female] to computation.' We should be bring computation to the ideas and problems and cultures which matter <em>to them</em>. Seymour Papert was trumpeting this idea <a href="http://www.amazon.com/dp/0465046746">in 1980</a>. Writing about Brazil's <em>samba schools</em>[community dancehalls where dancing is a community practice]:
<blockquote>
<p>
There are problems with the image of samba schools as the locus of education. I am sure that a computational samba school will catch on somewhere. But the first one will almost certainly happen in a community of a particular kind, probably one with a high density of middle-income engineers. […] But as an educational utopian I want something else. I want to know what kind of computer culture can grow in communities where there is not already a rich technophilic soil.
</p>
<p>
[…] The obstacle to the growth of popular computer cultures is cultural, for example, the mismatch between the computer culture embedded in the machines of today and the cultures of the homes they will go into. And if the problem is cultural the remedy must be cultural.
</p>
<p>
The research challenge is clear. We need to advance the art of meshing computers with cultures so that they can serve to unite, hopefully without homogenizing, the fragmented subcultures that coexist counterproductively in contemporary society. For example, the gulf must be bridged between the technical-scientific and humanistic cultures. And I think that the key to constructing this bridge will be learning how to recast powerful ideas in computational form, ideas that are as important to the poet as to the engineer.
</p>
</blockquote>
</p>
<p>
The opportunities have only grown since then.
</p>
http://thesprouts.org/blog/on-intellectual-craftsmanship"On Intellectual Craftsmanship"2012-12-31T00:00:00-05:002012-12-31T00:00:00-05:00sprout & co.http://thesprouts.org/<div class='img' style='background: url("/img/blog/CWrightMills.png")'>
<div class='caption'>C. Wright Mills <a href='http://www.gettyimages.com/detail/news-photo/american-sociologist-c-wright-mills-1960-news-photo/83924276'>on New Year's, 1960</a></div>
</div>
<p>
<span class='lede'>C. Wright Mills</span> was overwhelmingly concerned with the political, moral, & social responsibility of intellectuals in postwar America. In a preface to <a href='http://www.amazon.com/dp/0195133730' class='book'>The Sociological Imagination</a> titled "On Intellectual Craftsmanship," Mills lays out what he thinks defines Good Work in sociology. We find it pretty inspiring.
</p>
<p>
We are deeply interested in how people learn. We believe there's much to be gained from the ethnographer's lens. When we squint just right, we find that we're surrounded by dispatches from the future of learning.
</p>
<p>
And that's how these notes are intended: our attempts to pick out the bits and pieces from our day-to-day worth polishing up as we learn about learning. We thought it appropriate to kick off these notes with a bit of an homage to Mills—what follows is the result of liberally mixing, matching, excerpting, and tweaking "On Intellectual Craftsmanship."
</p>
<p>
Enjoy (and be sure to check out <a href='http://mym.cdn.laureate-media.com/2dett4d/Walden/PPPA/8115/12/On_Intellectual_Craftsmanship.pdf'>the original</a>)!
</p>
<blockquote>
<p>
To the <a href='http://thesprouts.tumblr.com/post/38192931792/but-utility-was-only-one-of-the-historical-reasons'>mathetic</a> designer who feels to be part of the classic tradition, designing learning tools & experiences is above all the practice of a <em>craft</em>. At work on problems of substance, you are among those who are quickly made impatient and weary by elaborate discussions of method-and-theory-in-general; so much of it interrupts your proper studies. It is much better, you believe, to have one account by a working student of how you are going about your work than a dozen 'codifications of procedure' by specialists who as often as not have never done much work of consequence. Only by conversations in which experienced thinkers exchange information about their actual ways of working can a useful sense of method and theory be imparted.
</p>
<p>
It is best to begin, I think, by reminding you that the most admirable thinkers within the community you have chosen to join do not split their work from their lives. They seem to take both too seriously to allow such dissociation, and they want to use each for the enrichment of the other. Of course, such a split is the prevailing convention, deriving, I suppose, from the hollowness of the work in general now done. But you will have recognized that you have the exceptional opportunity of designing a way of living which will encourage the habits of good workmanship. Scholarship is a choice of how to live as well as a choice of career; whether they know it or not, the intellectual worker forms their own self as they work toward the perfection of his craft; to realize their own potentialities, and any opportunities that come their way, they construct a character which has at its core the qualities of the good workman.
</p>
<p>
What this means is that <em>you must learn to use your life experience in your intellectual work</em>: continually to examine and interpret it. In this sense craftsmanship is the center of yourself and you are personally involved in every intellectual product upon which you may work. To say that you can have experience, means, for one thing, that your past plays into and affects your present, and that it defines your capacity for future experience. As a mathetic designer, you have to control this rather elaborate interplay, to capture what you experience and sort it out; only in this way can you hope to use it to guide and test your reflection, and in the process shape yourself as an intellectual craftsman. But how can you do this? One answer is: you must set up a blog, which is, I suppose, a designer's way of saying: keep a journal. Many creative writers keep journals; your need for systematic reflection demands it.
</p>
<p>
In such a blog as I am going to describe, there is joined personal experience and professional activities, studies under way and studies planned. In this blog, you, as an intellectual craftsman, will try to get together what you are doing intellectually and what you are experiencing as a person. Here you will not be afraid to use your experience and relate it directly to various work in progress. Your blog encourages you to capture 'fringe-thoughts:' various ideas which may be byproducts of everyday life, snatches of conversation overheard on the street, or, for that matter, dreams. Once noted, these may lead to more systematic thinking, as well as lend intellectual relevance to more directed experience.
</p>
<p>
You will have often noticed how carefully accomplished thinkers treat their own minds, how closely they observe their development and organize their experience. The reason they treasure their smallest experiences is that, in the course of a lifetime, modern man has so very little personal experience and yet experience is so important as a source of original intellectual work. To be able to trust yet to be skeptical of your own experience, I have come to believe, is one mark of the mature workman. This ambiguous confidence is indispensable to originality in any intellectual pursuit, and the blog is one way by which you can develop and justify such confidence.
</p>
<p>
By keeping an adequate blog and thus developing self-reflective habits, you learn how to keep your inner world awake. Whenever you feel strongly about events or ideas you must try not to let them pass from your mind, but instead to formulate them for your files and in so doing draw out their implications, show yourself either how foolish these feelings or ideas are, or how they might be articulated into productive shape. The blog also helps you build up the habit of writing. You cannot 'keep your hand in' if you do not write something at least every week. In developing the blog, you can experiment as a writer and thus, as they say, develop your powers of expression.
</p>
<p>
One of the very worst things that happens to educators is that they feel the need to write of their plans' on only one occasion: when they are going to ask for money for a specific piece of research or 'a project.' It is as a request for funds that most 'planning' is done, or at least carefully written about. However standard the practice, I think this very bad: It is bound in some degree to be salesmanship, and, given prevailing expectations, very likely to result in painstaking pretensions; the project is likely to be presented, rounded out in some arbitrary manner long before it ought to be; it is often a contrived thing, aimed at getting the money for ulterior purposes, however valuable, as well as for the research presented. A practicing mathetic designer ought periodically to review the state of their problems and plans. A young investigator, just at the beginning of their independent work, ought to reflect on this, but they cannot be expected—and shouldn't expect themselves—to get very far with it, and certainly they ought not to become rigidly committed to any one plan.
</p>
<p>
Any working designer who is well on his way ought at all times to have so many plans, which is to say ideas, that the question is always, which of them am I, ought I, to work on next? And you should keep a special little file for your master agenda, which you write and rewrite just for yourself and perhaps for discussion with friends. From time to time you ought to review this very carefully and purposefully, and sometimes too, when you is relaxed.
</p>
<p>
Some such procedure is one of the indispensable means by which your intellectual enterprise is kept oriented and under control. A widespread, informal interchange of such reviews of 'the state of my problems' among working mathetic designers is, I suggest, the only basis for an adequate statement of the leading problems of mathetic design. It is unlikely that in any free intellectual community there would be and certainly there ought not to be any 'monolithic' array of problems. In such a community, were it flourishing in a vigorous way, there would be interludes of discussion among individuals about future work. Three kinds of interludes—on problems, methods, theory—ought to come out of the work of mathetic designers, and lead into it again; they should be shaped by work-in-progress and to some extent guide that work. It is for such interludes that a professional association finds its intellectual reason for being. And for them too your own blog is needed.
</p>
<p>
Under various topics in your blog there are ideas, personal notes, excerpts from books, bibliographical items and outlines of projects. It is, I suppose, a matter of arbitrary habit, but I think you will find it well to sort all these items into a master blog of 'projects,' with many subdivisions. The topics, of course, change, sometimes quite frequently. In fact, the use of the blog encourages expansion of the categories which you use in your thinking. And the way in which these categories change, some being dropped and others being added-is an index of your intellectual progress and breadth. Eventually, the blog will come to be arranged according to several large projects, having many sub-projects that change from year to year.
</p>
<p>
All this involves the taking of notes. You will have to acquire the habit of taking a large volume of notes from any worth-while book you read—although, I have to say, you may get better work out of yourself when you read really bad books. The first step in translating experience—either of others' writing—or of your own life, into the intellectual sphere, is to give it form. Merely to name an item of experience often invites you to explain it; the mere taking of a note from a book is often a prod to reflection. At the same time, of course, the taking of a note is a great aid in comprehending what you are reading.
</p>
<p>
But how is this blog—which so far must seem to you more like a curious sort of 'literary' journal—used in intellectual production? The maintenance of such a blog <em>is</em> intellectual production. It is a continually growing store of facts and ideas, from the most vague to the most finished.
</p>
<p>
In the intellectual condition of the learning sciences today, there is so much to do by way of initial 'structuring' (let the word stand for the kind of work I am describing) that much 'empirical research' is bound to be thin and uninteresting. Much of it, in fact, is a formal exercise for beginning students, and sometimes a useful pursuit for those who are not able to handle the more difficult substantive problems of social science. There is no more virtue in empirical inquiry as such than in reading as such. The purpose of empirical inquiry is to settle disagreements and doubts about facts, and thus to make arguments more fruitful by basing all sides more substantively. Facts discipline reason; but reason is the advance guard in any field of learning.
</p>
<p>
Although you may never be able to get the money with which to do many of the empirical studies you design, it is necessary that you continue designing them. For once you lay out an empirical study, even if you do not follow it through, it leads you to a new search for data, which often turn out to have unsuspected relevance to your problems. Just as it is foolish to design a field study if the answer can be found in a library, it is foolish to think you have exhausted the books before you have translated them into appropriate empirical studies, which merely means into questions of fact.
</p>
<p>
Empirical projects must promise, first, to have relevance for the first draft, they have to confirm it in its original form or they have to cause its modification. Or to put it more pretentiously, they must have implications for theoretical constructions. Second, the projects must be efficient and neat and, if possible, ingenious. By this I mean that they must promise to yield a great deal of material in proportion to the time and effort they involve. But how is this to be done? The most economical way to state a problem is in such a way as to solve as much of it as possible by reasoning alone.
</p>
<p>
By reasoning we try (a) to isolate each question of fact that remains; (b) to ask these questions of fact in such ways that the answers promise to help us solve further problems by further reasoning. To take hold of problems in this way, you have to pay attention to four stages; but it is usually best to go through all four many times rather than to get stuck in any one of them too long. The steps are:
</p>
<ol>
<li>
the elements and definitions that, from your general awareness of the topic, issue, or area of concern, you think you are going to have to take into account;
</li>
<li>
the logical relations between these definitions and elements; building these little preliminary models, by the way, affords the best chance for the play of the sociological imagination;
</li>
<li id='elimination-of-false-views'>
the elimination of false views due to omissions of needed elements, improper or unclear definitions of terms, or undue emphasis on some part of the range and its logical extensions
</li>
<li>
statement and re-statement of the questions of fact that remain.
</li>
</ol>
<p>
The <a href='#elimination-of-false-views'>third step</a>, by the way, is a very necessary but often neglected part of any adequate statement of a problem. The popular awareness of the problem—the problem as an issue and as a trouble—must be carefully taken into account: that is part of the problem. Scholarly statements, of course, must be carefully examined and either used up in the re-statement being made, or thrown out.
</p>
<p>
I know we will agree that we should present your work in as clear and simple language as your subject and your thought about it permit. But as you may have noticed, a turgid and polysyllabic prose does seem to prevail in the learning sciences. I suppose those who use it believe they are imitating 'physical science,' and are not aware that much of that prose is not altogether necessary. It has in fact been said with authority that there is 'a serious crisis in literacy'—a crisis in which learning scientists are very much involved. Is this peculiar language due to the fact that profound and subtle issues, concepts, methods, are being discussed? If not, then what are the reasons for it?
</p>
<p>
Such lack of ready intelligibility, I believe, usually has little or nothing to do with the complexity of subject matter, and nothing at all with profundity of thought. It has to do almost entirely with certain confusions of the academic writer about their own status.
</p>
<p>
In many academic circles today anyone who tries to write in a widely intelligible way is liable to be condemned as a 'mere literary man' or, worse still, 'a mere journalist.' Perhaps you have already learned that these phrases, as commonly used, only indicate the spurious inference: superficial-because-readable. The academic man in America is trying to carry on a serious intellectual life in a social context that often seems quite set against it. His prestige must make up for many of the dominant values he has sacrificed by choosing an academic career. His claims for prestige readily become tied to his self-image as a 'scientist.' To be called a 'mere journalist' makes him feel undignified and shallow. It is this situation, I think, that is often at the bottom of the elaborate vocabulary and involved manner of speaking and writing. It is less difficult to learn this manner than not. It has become a convention—those who do not use it are subject to moral disapproval. It may be that it is the result of an academic closing of the ranks on the part of the mediocre, who understandably wish to exclude those who win the attention of intelligent people, academic and otherwise.
</p>
<p>
To write is to raise a claim for the attention of readers. That is part of any style. To write is also to claim for oneself at least status enough to be read. Young academics are very much involved in both claims, and because they feel their lack of public position, they often put the claim for their own status before their claim for the attention of the reader to what they are saying. In fact, in America, even the most accomplished men of knowledge do not have much status among wide circles and publics. In this respect, the case of education has been an extreme one: in large part habits of style stem from the time when educators had little status even with other academic men. Desire for status is one reason why academics slip so readily into unintelligibility. And that, in turn, is one reason why they do not have the status they desire. A truly vicious circle—but one out of which any mathetic designer can easily break.
</p>
<p>
To overcome the academic <em>prose</em> you have first to overcome the academic <em>pose</em>. It is much less important to study grammar and Anglo-Saxon roots than to clarify your own answers to these three questions:
</p>
<ol>
<li>
How difficult and complex after all is my subject? (<em>Very difficult, but not very complex at all. After all, everyone learns!</em>)
</li>
<li>
When I write, what status am I claiming for myself? (<em>Just that of another learner and occasionally another designer who has spent some time paying attention to how people learn and how we might better support learning.</em>)
</li>
<li>
For whom am I trying to write? (<em>First of all, for others working to create compelling learning experiences. And secondly, for learners and the people who care about them.</em>)
</li>
</ol>
<p>
From what I have said, you will understand that in practice we never 'start working on a project;' we are already 'working,' either in a personal vein, in the files, in taking notes after browsing, or in guided endeavors. Following this way of living and working, we will always have many topics that we want to work out further. After we decide on some 'release,' we will try to use our entire blog, our browsing in libraries, our conversation, our selections of people—all for this topic or theme. We are trying to build a little world containing all the key elements which enter into the work at hand, to put each in its place in a systematic way, continually to readjust this framework around developments in each part of it. Merely to live in such a constructed world is to know what is needed: ideas, facts, ideas, figures, ideas.
</p>
<p>
Thinking is a struggle for order and at the same time for comprehensiveness. We must not stop thinking too soon—or we will fail to know all that we should; we cannot leave it to go on forever, or we will burst. It is this dilemma, I suppose, that makes reflection, on those rare occasions when it is more or less successful, the most passionate endeavor of which the human being is capable.
</p>
<p>
Perhaps I can best summarize what I have been trying to say in the form of a few precepts and cautions:
</p>
<ol>
<li>
<em>Be a good craftsman: Avoid any rigid set of procedures. Above all, seek to develop and to use the sociological imagination.</em> Avoid the fetishism of method and technique. Urge the rehabilitation of the unpretentious intellectual craftsman, and try to become such a craftsman yourself. Let every man be his own methodologist; let every man be his own theorist; let theory and method again become part of the practice of a craft. Stand for the primacy of the individual scholar; stand opposed to the ascendancy of research teams of technicians. Be one mind that is on its own confronting the problems of man and society.
</li>
<li>
<em>Urge upon yourself and upon others the simplicity of clear statement.</em> Use more elaborated terms only when you believe firmly that their use enlarges the scope of your sensibilities, the precision of your references, the depth of your reasoning. Avoid using unintelligibility as a means of evading the making of judgments upon society-and as a. means of escaping your readers' judgments upon your own work.
</li>
<li>
Examine in detail little facts and their relations, and big unique events as well. But do not be fanatic: relate all such work, continuously and closely, to the level of historical reality. Do not assume that somebody else will do this for you, sometime, somewhere. Take as your task the defining of this reality; formulate your problems in its terms; on its level try to solve these problems and thus resolve the issues and the troubles they incorporate. <em>And never write more than three pages without at least having in mind a solid example.</em>
</li>
<li>
<em>Do not study merely one small milieu after another; study the social structures in which milieu are organized.</em> In terms of these studies of larger structures, select the milieux you need to study in detail, and study them in such a way as to understand the interplay of milieux with structure. Proceed in a similar way in so far as the span of time is concerned. Do not be merely a journalist, however precise a one. Know that journalism can be a great intellectual endeavor, but know also that yours is greater! So do not merely report minute researches into static knife-edge moments, or very short-term runs of time. Take as your time-span the course of human history, and locate within it the weeks, years, epochs you examine.
</li>
<li>
<em>Realize that your aim is a fully comparative understanding of mathetics that have appeared and that do now exist in world history.</em> Realize that to carry it out you must avoid the arbitrary specialization of prevailing academic departments. Specialize your work variously, according to topic, and above all according to significant problem. In formulating and in trying to solve these problems, do not hesitate, indeed seek, continually and imaginatively, to draw upon the perspectives and materials, the ideas and methods, of any and all sensible studies of man and society. They are your studies; they are part of what you are a part of; do not let them be taken from you by those who would close them off by weird jargon and pretensions of expertise.
</li>
<li>
<em>Know that you inherit and are carrying on a tradition of classic social analysis</em>; so try to understand man not as an isolated fragment, not as an intelligible field or system in and of itself. Try to understand men and women as historical and social actors, and the ways in which the variety of men and women are intricately selected and intricately formed by the variety of human societies. Before you are through with any piece of work, no matter how indirectly on occasion, orient it to the central and con- tinuing task of understanding the structure and the drift, the shaping and the meanings, of your own period, the terrible and magnificent world of human society in the second half of the twentieth century.
</li>
<li>
<em>Do not allow public issues as they are officially formulated, or troubles as they are privately felt, to determine the problems that you take up for study.</em> Above all, do not give up your moral and political autonomy by accepting in somebody else's terms the illiberal practicality of the bureaucratic ethos or the liberal practicality of the moral scatter. Know that many personal troubles cannot be solved merely as troubles, but must be understood in terms of public issues -and in terms of the problems of history- making. Know that the human meaning of public issues must be revealed by relating them to personal troubles-and to the problems of the individual life. Know that the problems of social science, when adequately formulated, must include both troubles and issues, both biography and history, and the range of their intricate relations. Within that range the life of the individual and the making of societies occur; and within that range the sociological imagination has its chance to make a difference in the quality of human life in our time.
</li>
</ol>
</blockquote>