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Wednesday, February 10, 2021

8 things to make our education better--following Charles Murray

 

Human abilitites vary radically.  A testing psychologist named Howard Gardner found 7 (and a few more are being discovered and described) Body-kinesthetic varies from someone who trips over his own feet to Nadia Comenici, Musical from tone-deaf to Mozart, Spatial from someone who gets lost 2 blocks from home to Kit Carson, Linguistic from someone who can’t talk complete sentences to Shakespeare, Logical-mathematical from someone unable to see cause and effect to Isaac Newton, Interpersonal autism to Bill Clinton, Intrapersonal from an undisciplined narcissist to Confuscious. Next understand many people will, even with much training not be able to be a Mozart or find their way through wilderness like Kit Carson. Although we can recognize many talents, 2 and a half of the above--Linguistic, Logical-mathematical, and (partially) spatial--correlate with much success in life and constitute what are termed Academic Abilities.  Those are the 3 most taught in schools although our schools should also provide outlets for the other talents like music and athletics. The academic abilities are valuable with every aspect of human life and are the basis of IQ, NAEP, and military intelligence tests. High academic ability often correlates with strong interpersonal and intrapersonal skills.

            Trouble is, many students are not very capable of doing all skills.  Teachers can teach rote things in math like multiplication tables, but “logical progression” is a skill that must be had to do even junior high math.  Literacy teachers can teach vocabulary and grammar but “inferential leaps” are needed to understand poetry.  And each of these abilities require basic skills of the other (inferential leaps require thinking logically in circumstances, for example). Schools get blamed for student inability but try being a teacher who attempts to teach math to people with severe lack of logical progression skills. No Child Left Behind? But all schools must leave some behind others. More homework? Won’t work if the curriculum is pitiful! Small class sizes? Not much help!

            Students come to school with differing abilities and we know certain things affect it.  Malnutrition depresses Africa perhaps 25 IQ points.  Early development also makes differences. IQ trends are set-in by age 6 to 10, so pre-school experiences are important. Yet nearly all the social programs of the 60s and 70s stressed raising intelligence by pre-school experiences.  Those succeed only temporarily. Gains are lost by second grade. In 1964, James Coleman studied the effects of inequality in schools vs. student performance. EVERYBODY (including Coleman) expected to find quality of schools = academic achievement. Nothing—facilities, money spent per student, credentials of teachers, curriculum—made a difference. Except one thing did, family background. Not waiting for the Coleman conclusions, Congress passed Title I to affect all the expected but wrong conclusions.  Measures of Title I have shown negative effects. Likewise, No Child Left Behind cheated the vast body of regular students. The result of all these programs has left us with falling test scores in some areas and a scapegoat paradigm of bad schools—violent classrooms, no standards, incompetent teachers, etc. Yet well under 10% of US students have a  failing school. So rescuing those students is not overwhelming. But it points out an important step #1 School Choice.  Private and charter schools have modestly higher math and reading scores.  What separates them are #2 Discipline--safe and orderly learning environments and #3 curricula with a core cultural learning. Those are the first 3 elements that any common education school must provide.

            Next we must understand that college doesn’t fit everybody.  It doesn’t impart the necessary skills of living and making a living and never did.  Going to work on time, working hard, being pleasant to work with, honest, reliable, looking for ways to further the business are those skills. College coursework is designed for IQ of 115 or greater, about 20% of the population.  The fact that we push 35% of students through college results in dumbing down the curriculum, substituting political propaganda for learning and indulging students to go 6 or 7 years for a bachelor’s degree. However, there is such a thing as a Core Learning important to function in a society. And that actually is a function of common education.  To function in any culture requires a core cultural knowledge, the glue that holds a society together.  This starts in grade 1.  Trouble is, many topics are not taught completely and often with considerable political encumbrance.  For example: historic slavery. Few high schoolers could tell the differences in indentured slavery vs. chattel slavery.  Why were mixed-race slaves often community leaders and why are there more in the Caribbean than in USA? Where were conditions best for a slave—Brazil, Caribbean or USA?  Why were slaves so few in 1787 that the Constitution sunsets the practice, but after 1820 so numerous they outnumbered Caucasians in the South? Why did race become a modern issue in USA but not in Brazil?  As a result of this anemic curricula,public schools often teach that all slaves were like the field slaves of the US South, creating a bitterness that does little to challenge personal growth and advancement among Afro-Americans. Let’s restate #3 again.  #3 Teach a robust core culture curriculum.

            Let’s return to common ed. When you learned and loved it, was it the time when you were challenged to do something your teacher sensed you were capable of or the time when you were challenged to do something you could not accomplish no matter how hard you tried?  I’ll bet it was the prior. Too many young adults are pushed into trying college.  They struggle, acquire a lot of debt, never finish or finish with a degree in a useless subject. High School counselors try to suggest college to a majority of students when they should say to the kid who likes to operate machinery, ”Do you realize you can make a lot more as a crane operator than a pizza delivery boy?” Few parents try to guide choice of major with their kids. Students don’t want to take broad survey classes in history, art, sciences, and so they have wide gaps in their education even after college. Finally, students think that a degree guarantees them a nice job--true only narrowly.  Employers don’t care if your Statistics I class was well-taught. They just see the degree as a screening device for entry level applicants.  College proves you can think. But among mature workers, being the best at your field is the Important Thing.  Love your work enough to be the best, not mediocre in a field that is somewhat a stretch for you.#4 Make it possible for each student to find a place and the average child should be taught how to make a good living. In order for that to happen, a one-size-fits-all system must not be in place and trusted teachers must have liberty from extreme oversight.  #5 Teachers must be free to teach.

            How would you answer this, “Does America need leaders with more integrity, prudence, self-discipline, moral courage, or just smarter ones?” Most people like the common sense, not the overeducated intellectuals.  But smarts is important too. You’ll want your physician to be smart as well as your CEO. But you also want them to be good and wise. We are talking about the upper 10%, “elites”.  Most elites spend their days reading, tapping on keyboards, listening and talking—verbal skills. Yet it is the verbal section of SAT and ACT scores that has seen the most decline—a clear indication that we fail to educate the verbally skilled. Rigorous is almost never used with the phrase,verbal expression, in schools today. It starts with correct spelling and grammar in elementary education and goes on to syntax and reasoning, evaluation of data and pattern recognition.  The last two are part of the widespread statistical illiteracy among today’s gifted. We don’t teach it because rarely does a teacher in the early grades start it and rarely does a college prof demand it!  Study of history as a sort of vicarious experience, also imparts wisdom.  Rigor in thinking about virtue is also vital.  There are certain issues so fundamental to the human condition that people must think about them. Western individualism inspires the young to risk to fulfill their potential and roil the established ways of doing things. Family relationships locate happiness in the matrix of human relations. Humility grows from being a failure usually more than once. We need to make sure the gifted know how it feels for the rest of humanity. But then hope grows from finding ways to get up again. A spiritual walk is important in a leader.  So, since the elites will lead our society, we had better teach wisdom and values. Hence education should #6 Push the gifted as fast as they can achieve until they find the limits of their ability but also #7 a liberal arts education for gifted is absolutely required. #8 Teach rigor and excellence in all things.

            This in a nutshell is what Charles Murray, a leading sociologist who specializes in IQ, thinks we need for education.

#1 School choice

#2 Safe and orderly learning environments

#3 Teach a robust core curriculum

#4 Place--each student to find a place and the average child should be taught how to make a good living.

#5 Teachers must be free to teach

#6 Push the gifted as fast as they can achieve until they find the limits of their ability

#7 Liberal arts education for gifted is absolutely required

#8 Teach rigor and excellence in all things

Tuesday, February 2, 2021

Oklahoma State of the State address plus statistics to magnify

 

Oklahoma! Following statistics for OK after Gov. Stitt’s State of the State.  The numbers are stunning of how well OK has done this year at least compared to others. OK numbers are from Stitt; I will add stats that compare. !0% of the state has been vaccinated just as happened nationally, but COVID19 new infections requiring hospitalization is down 45% from the December high.  10% of our students are virtually learning compared with 38% nationwide.  OK had 5 weeks of shutdown.  Half of states nationwide were shut down 8 of the last 10 months of 2020. The unemployment in OK is 4.9% compared with 6.7% nationally.  OK has 5th lowest unemployment in USA, underemployment (U6) is 40-% lower than USA.  Stitt  says OK Business Relief Program has distributed $143M helping 8661 small biz guys. 

Biden’s attempt to ban leasing fed lands for oil and gas leaves OK somewhat immune with only 2 % of our land being federal compared to NM with 75% federally owned (you can see why NM is mad as a hornet at him.) 67% of US natural gas and 51% is produced by fracking in 2017—shows how US production doubled and vaulted to energy independence.  Oklahoma invented hydraulic fracturing in 1949 and had a large part to play in its development in the 1990s.  Since 2007 when it became common, OK has gone from 1% of US oil reserves and 6% of gas to 5% and 12% respectively in 2019.  Crude production has doubled in that tie and natural gass has increased 40%.

Stitt had 3 thrusts for his SOTS.  First to make OK among the top ten for business, deliver more  service for each taxpayer dollar and spur investment in OK.  So GDP growth increased 2.1% in OK in 2020 while it declined -3.7% for USA.  OK saw low growth but no recession.  OKC ranks #3 in metros in USA to do business.  OK ranked #5 place to start a new business, so we have somewhat of a start on this.  The Gov wants more money for the Quick Action Closing Fund which Fallin started.  That would be $20M out of the $32M proposed  Commerce Dept. budget.  Last year, the state tried hard to land Tesla or at least their truck plant in Tulsa, but they chose Texas.  However, OKC managed to land the Cattleman’s Congress which would be responsible for $50M economic impact.  They were formerly in locked-down CO.  Much recruiting effort in CA.  He would also like to see school funding be revamped.  Due to the way the state allows districts to choose a former “good” year to get funding, there are 55,000 ‘ghost’ students—who are no longer in the district but still count.  (This out of 700,000+ students) Stitt wants to allocate money for real student populations only. (plan is controversial. Dept of Ed. Disagrees)  ODOT reports a national study that shows OK in the top 10 in bridge conditions.  We’ve come a long way from #50 in 2004. COVID19 hit the Rainy Day fund which still has $58M but needs to be rebuilt.  Last year’s spending was held to 78% of budget which really positioned the state well to not have a massive budget cut. Stitt wants changes in rules for DHS employees to allow more merit promotions and ability to hire better workers.  Re-do Medicaid healthcare deliver by making it managed care (privatization) which 40 other states do. Finally McGirt SCOTUS decision leaves our state with a lot of unknowns. The 5 tribes established compacts with OK in the early days that determine who gets what responsiblitiy.  Now we have to iron out questions: Who gets to tax, how are agriculture, water, energy and business regulated?  And if there is criminal activity (probably white collar crime) does the tribe and federal gov’t try this or does the state. ( Tribes and federals don’t have legal system that can handle some of these issues.  Will there need to be massive additions to federal laws to halp OK continue state functions?)