FIGHTING
DEHUMANIZATION WITHIN PUBLIC SCHOOLS
Mark
Karadimos
Action
Plan
Updated
September 6th, 2005
Abstract
This action plan specifically
combats dehumanization that exists within public high schools through the
formation of committees and groups.
Educators at all levels, under humanistic research methods, create institutions
that are student-centered.
Hybrids of Kotter’s Eight-Stage Process with Dolan’s
constant maintenance are the strategies that are suggested for long-term
improvements. This is an open-ended
proposition that calls for a considerable amount of effort on behalf of the
implementers; however, simplified versions of the hybrid model can lead to
substantive improvements.
Although the work here specifically
mentions the problems that exist at certain high school in
Schools that are currently achieving
well beyond national and state averages may not find this action plan to be as
valuable as schools suffering from stereotypical urban problems. It focuses on those schools that wrestle with
dehumanizing standardization strategies imposed by state and national boards.
When status quo educational models
are producing less than exemplary results, it is imperative to make
changes. Creating humanistic,
student-centered environments within schools heightens the probabilities for
individual student success. This success
translates to preparedness for post-high school demands, a foundation for
lifelong achievement, and a healthy democracy.
Table of Contents
I.
Introduction
II.
Political Environment
III.
Status Quo
IV.
Background Information
V.
Proposal
VI.
Transforming the System
VII.
Timeline
VIII.
Conclusion
IX.
Notes
X.
Resources
I. Introduction
Proponents for change within education commonly speak of
our current educational institutions as factories with assembly line
curricula. Even though many
administrators, college professors, and educational gurus agree on this,
current high schools still suffer from these early 20th century models and
offer dehumanizing, often times unreal, doses of education to students on a
daily basis, which must be countered (Patterson, 1987).
I teach mathematics at a certain high school and this
action plan is set to solve the specific problems that exist there. The following details of the problem, methods
of research, proposed solutions and resources that follow will legitimize such
an action. It is my intent to also assist
other schools in adopting similar strategies of those that are presented here,
especially in the case of schools that are entering into major restructuring or
are at least considering it.
II. Political Environment
Locally there are problems that result from systems
centered on dehumanized education, in part due to state mandates that push
local schools in certain directions. Standards
imposed by the No Child Left Behind initiative for
According to a recent report to the State Board of
Education, researchers claimed part of the reason why standards have not been
raised is due to districts and schools either not knowing how to raise
standards or being satisfied with current standards (Stanhope, 2003). Yet, states like Illinois will receive these
studies as gospel despite the fact they erroneously set out to find connections
between standards initiatives and performances while also assuming failure is
based on not attaining standards. Proper
research does not search for a causal relationship between standards
initiatives and performances then assume unmet standards are the result of
improperly implemented standards because implementation is part of the
initiative itself.
The state places a considerable amount of pressure to
have districts institute dehumanizing standards and the results are troubling
at a certain high school. Educators are
trained to treat problems but never actually treat students. As a result, the facility where I teach
suffers from scheduling issues, students with no sense of direction or ability
to make connections across disciplines, and poor standardized test
results. Consequently, student-centered
education has waned.
All of these problems can be addressed by setting
educational systems to the needs of students.
The following names have been given to this focus: humanistic (Huitt,
2001), student-centered, learner-centered, holistic, and constructivistic. There are strategies for developing a system
into a more vibrant system geared toward students.
The school community has recently served the area by
producing mechanisms that have created an educational institution more
conducive to healthy change. The
school's history has allowed it to become acquainted with many fact-finding,
cooperative strategies, which may prove beneficial for this action.
III. Status Quo
Fighting dehumanization is not an anti-standards plan,
nor is it a plan to do nothing. If we
look at Illinois Standards Achievement results, we see many areas of need from
ISAT and PSAE testing: 1) deficient overall eighth grade reading skills, 2)
poor performance by non-Hispanic blacks and those from low-income families, 3)
low overall results for the whole state (ISBE, 2003).
Heading on a path of high standards while foregoing the
individuals educators serve is not progress.
The Committee of Ten report of 1893 believed all students should receive
the exact same rigorous curricula even though dropout rates remained high in
the era. Reformers, on the other hand,
sought to provide the youth with the options that come from meaningful, tailor-made
curricula (Education Week, 2000). It is
an old concern many modern institutions revisit over the years.
Status quo educational practice is detrimental to the
well being of society. If the dichotomy
of those who want to manipulate systems are allowed to battle those who want to
create individual opportunities for students, then no substantive improvements
will occur. This will not allow
institutions to make improvements affecting dropout rates, reading comprehension,
and numerous other areas of need and will negatively affect our democracy.
IV. Background Information
One goal is to take the existing dichotomy between
manipulating systems and focusing on individuals and move the argument to a
dialectic. Neither side fully
encapsulates the requirements of a healthy educational ideology. One without the other would do both the
individual and the system harm through stagnation, consequently spelling
disaster for those students who are currently enrolled in
This school's educators are attempting to form a
dialectic model. It has spent a
considerable amount of time moving educational practices toward collectivism
and has separated the school into small schools, called houses, to serve the
needs of each student. This school has
also acquiesced to the States demands of preparing students to pass
standardized tests. The dialogue between
teachers, administrators, school board members, parents and member of the
community must continue to be collegial to hone the system.
A.
Small schools claim to be more
humanistic. Indicators such as student
attachment, persistence and performance are stronger. There also seems to be better attendance
rates, lower dropout rates, and higher grade point averages (Gregory, 2000, p.
7).
Those gains have many schools scrambling to have
it restructured after a small school model.
However, even small school advocates like Michael Klonsky from the
The barriers to small schools include (1)
battling the old tradition of what a high school should be, (2) lack of time,
resources, and technical assistance, (3) system impediments such as laws,
district policies and one-size-fits-all curricula, and (4) cost concerns
(McRobbie, 2001, pp. 2-3). In fact,
small schools can cost 5% more than larger schools (Fording, 2003). Small school research is not a panacea, but
"a more-human scale is a potent antidote to student alienation"
(McRobbie, 2001, p. 3).
B.
In practice, a certain high school has
suffered from problems that have not been specifically mentioned in the
research. As the traditional high school
model is abandoned, a certain high school has: 1) not been able to properly
place students in courses, 2) created an atmosphere lacking of intimacy, and 3)
not offered electives to students.
A certain high school has not been able to
appropriately place students in classes, because counselors cannot perform
their duties with satisfactory results when their caseloads are abruptly
changed -- a consequence of restructuring to a small-school model [see section IX. Notes]. This quick change had counselors who are
unfamiliar with the new students they gained and made them practically unable
to determine course placement as a result of (a) summer school courses students
completed right before the onset of the school year and (b) night school
courses that students completed during the end of the last school year.
The result of this lack of intimacy is
staggering, even though the premise of small schools is a more human-centered
environment. Students become improperly
placed in classes. Then, these students
are eventually found and reorganized into newly created classes, sometimes
happening four to six weeks after the beginning of the school year, which also
disrupts the education of those who are not given new schedules. The irony of having a bureaucratic system,
when a humanistic one is the goal, is disconcerting.
The second reason why student placement in
courses becomes an issue is the inability to offer electives. When students are grouped in 'schools' that
are small, even if these schools rest within large high schools, the difficulty
in placing students in elective courses increases. The courses that may motivate students to
come to school and to increase their abilities (Ziegler & Wilt, 1999)
cannot be offered. The pool of students
who want to take specific courses dwindles, making those courses impossible to
run.
This inability to offer electives may run
parallel with state standardized guidelines that indirectly model what a high
school student must learn through a back-to-basics approach to education. However, this back-to-basics approach may
actually be dehumanistic to many students who live in socio-economically
deprived neighborhoods and who are extremely likely to be better serviced by also
offering them optional non-college preparatory courses.
Other findings, such as the
A survey of literature on high
school size reveals an optimal number of between 400 and 900 students. Schools
of this size seem to deliver a diverse and rich education at a reasonable cost,
when compared to schools with higher or lower numbers of students. ...
The answer is not apparent [on what to do with very small schools],
because the researchers found that school size had no clear relationship to
academic achievement.
The difference between unchanging academic
achievement made by the
When teachers examine student performance in
the classroom, they receive intimate clues regarding student ability. Teachers tend to view students in a human
fashion and assess accordingly. When
state standardized tests rate these same students for performance, they measure
with infinitely less compassion and usually report a numeric value that points
to much different kind of student.
When a teacher who intimately knows a student
performs an evaluation, there may be a tendency to rate a student with more
flexibility, which may allow Arkansas' findings to exist with Gregory's
findings even though the two appear on the surface to be opposite in nature.
Current research remains less than conclusive
regarding small schools. This makes the
task of restructuring schools extremely difficult, especially when the severity
of the restructuring remains high. It is
quite possible that future research will indicate why it is traditional high
schools kept certain long-standing principles for so long.
V. Proposal
There are existing deficiencies, some systemic others
procedural, within a certain high school that are easily identified. This
open-ended proposed action plan to bring humanism to a certain high school will
address those areas of need and include counseling, teaching pedagogy,
communication with state/federal agencies, curriculum, integration of
technology, and discipline.
Counselors, by definition of their job titles, must help
students navigate through academic waters so that students develop existing
talents, gain life skills, and sometimes assist students who undergo troubling
moments in their lives. It requires a
great deal of interaction to carry out their job in an effective manner. Ensuring involvement within education is
essential (ASCA, 1998) and could be done by having each student create and
present a four-year plan, detailing interests and goals that lead to specific
courses. As a basic counselor duty to be
done before each school year, counselors must review recent courses taken by
students they supervise to properly place students in courses.
Our curriculum director could confront the dehumanization
issue with a double strategy affecting pedagogy. Since students at the high school are deficient
with reading and writing, the director could encourage teachers to create
project-based, interdisciplinary assignments for each course; this would also
allow us to overcome another problem our students face, which is their
inability to acquire a collective, interwoven framework to house the skills and
information they receive. The second
prong would be to offer professional development on the Socratic Method and the
Montessori Method. It would allow
meaningful, humanistic, dialogue between students and teachers (
State boards of education across the nation should
receive feedback concerning the mandates they have enacted on local districts
and schools regarding standards-based testing.
Current evaluation of student performance in high school forces
educational institutions to forcibly adopt a teach-to-the-test mentality. Consequently, schools serving populations
that suffer from low reading and writing abilities must gear curriculum that
disenfranchises career and technical-bound students by not offering
electives. Standardized tests do not
specifically target information learned in electives courses; therefore, core
classes, such as math, English, and science, replace electives.
In order to encourage districts and schools to offer
electives while also meeting state mandates, electives courses can be more
rigorous. They could be made to
incorporate meaningful dialogue between students in the form of presentations. They could promote higher order thinking and
problem solving strategies through multi-step projects. They could also include the use of modern
office software, such as word processing, spreadsheets, web design, power
point, as well as other packages used in business and other sectors of society.
The arbiters of discipline within this high school are
not effectively consequencing
students. Students who frequently arrive
late to class or break similarly minor school policies are eventually given
in-school detentions. These students
miss classes, disabling them from learning.
It may be more educationally sound to have students serve Saturday
detentions, do community service, or perform other tasks that do not threaten their
instructional time.
The other deficient areas that are not as easily
identified (and even within the areas mentioned above that still remain
undetected by the author) will require a group effort to overcome. The details of those efforts will be
mentioned in the next section.
VI. Transforming the System
Long ago, educational theorists believed educational
systems should reflect the democratic society envisioned by the Founding Fathers;
consequently, schools reflect such a democracy.
There is a considerable amount of latitude given to teachers not shared
by other professionals. Delivering information
to students, many times of a politically sensitive nature, requires teachers to
operate under political asylum. Hence,
educational institutions have developed complicated teacher-management rules.
This special environment, although unique among many
professional environments, is the industry standard within school districts
across the nation. School districts
value open communication, reflection, and input. Some districts place teachers within teams to
initiate and manage the change process. Teams are more flexible than larger
organizational groupings because they can be more quickly assembled, deployed,
refocused, and disbanded, usually in ways that enhance rather than disrupt more
permanent structures and processes (Katzenbach and Smith, 1993).
This action plan relies on the use of a participatory
research model (Parks, 1993). It will
allow those who are most closely involved to be the researchers, which is a
common method for instituting change within educational facilities. This is the reason educational institutions
often identify and pursue change through long standing committees that
routinely handle situations as they arise.
In fact one approach to participatory research, called
co-operative inquiry, is humanistic in its origins. There are four phases of co-operative
inquiry: 1) agree upon an area in need and adopt a research proposition, 2)
initiate an agreed course of action while recording data, 3) develop reflective
thoughts concerning the gathered data, and 4) researchers conclude on the
effectiveness of the original proposition and revisit it if necessary (Reason,
2000).
The district has committees and groups in place that can
serve as initial starting points for this action research. Ed Council, two School Improvement Planning
Committees, departments by academic subject, and two Deans Advisory Committees
can assist with the co-operative inquiry.
There may be a need to collect members of the school community to form
new sub-groups if the long-standing committees mentioned above reflect
disproportionate representation of the entire educational community (to be
determined consensually).
Considering large schools like this certain school,
numerous committees are inevitable and committee management, communication, and
measuring progress within the action plan become difficult. It will be necessary to multilaterally launch
into co-operative inquiry within each committee. A framework for communication must be
established early on in the process along with a clear understanding of the
measuring tools that will be used to gauge success of propositions.
Some measuring tools could include less dropouts,
students doing better on standardized tests, and no need to form new classes
after the beginning of the semester. The
specific tools would be agreed upon by the members of the institution in this
open-ended mode of inquiry.
Committees must establish sets of ground rules before
moving into co-operative inquiry. Small
details concerning length of discussion, methods of conflict management, what
indicates consensus, and so on need to be established to create a healthy basis
for productive research. Roberts Rules
of Order (Robert, 1915) usually suffices but is extremely cumbersome.
Communication between groups and committees is essential
for successful research. Periodically,
groups need to provide updates.
Representatives must cross-articulate so that the focus of one group can
digest the direction of the change process.
For instance, if it is decided to have the School Improvement Committees
(SIP) steer the co-operative inquiry, then tasks being conducted by the
Educational Council must agree with those done by all academic
departments. The orchestra of events
must unfold in such a way that all participants are in tandem and this requires
numerous checks to occur within and throughout the educational institution.
Measuring progress is the hardest facet of the process to
determine. There are no clear-cut rules
concerning achievement, especially within education where the product -- the
student -- is a constant variable. Like
the foundation made for groups to exist within the onset of co-operative
inquiry, indicators should be predetermined and based upon the specific
parameters within each area undergoing change.
In order to specifically manage co-operative inquiry at this
school for large-scale changes, the Eight-Stage Process (Kotter, 1996) would be
an effective beginning point. Stage one
would use a faculty meeting to share test scores of previous years, state requirements
and possibly failure rates to motivate educators for a need to improve. Stage two would require the SIP Committees to
be the focal point of the change process and address the easily recognized,
general problem areas throughout the entire system. Stage three would continue with SIP,
revisiting vision statements and goals.
Stage four would entail having the results of stages 1-4 presented at a
faculty meeting and smaller department meetings.
As we enter broader-based changes, we would abandon the SIP
Committee as the focal point and use other groups. Stage five would enable the Educational
Council to lead curriculum changes, like creating courses, modifying existing
courses, and creating meaningful staff development for the faculty. This stage also includes alterations on
discipline by the Deans Advisory Committees and other groups within the
community. The initial work done within
stage five will lead to short-term gains for stage 6.
As we approach fundamental change within the school and
district, we must call the assistance of the Superintendent, the School Board
and the
While the Eight-Stage Process is being initiated, Dolan’s
model can also be implemented. Dolan’s
Systemic Model requires constant maintenance and communication after year
one. He believes each year should begin
with a look at old indicators, adding new measuring devices (meaning indicators
as well), and begin a self-auditing process.
At the completion of each year there should be a retreat, discussion,
preparation for a report card, and an evaluation of the years activities and
changes. It is an open model with no
clearly defined boundaries.
VII. Timeline
There are two different, non-disjoint avenues for this
co-operative inquiry. If a long-range
change to the educational system is the goal, the system can undergo routine,
yet fundamental, changes for continued success later on during the first
year. All the proposed changes mentioned
within section V above (save for the creation/alteration of existing courses)
could be accomplished within that year.
Team building, small diagnostic changes, and a plan for experimentation
can be achieved (Dolan, 1994).
The models studied for this action research differ after
the first year. Kotters Eight-Stage
Process would have large-scale changes happening later in the change
process. Dolan’s Systemic Model is an
ongoing one with no clearly defined ending.
He would no doubt attribute it to a life metaphor.
After year number one, Kotter's model would pick up with
stage six. It appears that stage seven
is as lengthy as stage six, being that involves hiring practices, entertaining
and implementing new themes, and a change of events. Stage eight is one that leads to contract
negotiations that would appear to be late by Dolan’s vision for change.
The tempo for change would have to be dependant on the
environment. One could develop
long-range goals for change; however, the change agents and community in
general have to be receptive and able to change for speedy results to happen
under mutually beneficial conditions.
The benefits would have to be evident from student results, teacher
acceptance, and administrators’ ability to hold vision and lead. There are too many invisible variables to
predict when calculating strict timetables concerning fundamental or even
simple long-range plans.
VIII. Conclusion
The district has experience with the change process, probably
making it a body that is receptive to change.
Committees have brainstormed issues and have done fact-finding
expeditions by visiting other districts and university think-tanks. Leaders have brought in Educational gurus, like
Patrick Dolan, have been brought in to foster change.
It is evident that educators and the entire community
desire a humanistic system. There are
numerous participants in the system who put in far greater time than their
paychecks report. When these same
leaders, teachers and sometimes parents create procedures that give rise to
dehumanistic environments, the procedures must be identified and changed.
Change has been a painful but necessary process that has
given rise to many results. The
countless hours spent in committees, union negotiations hearings, grievance
meetings and so forth, although absolutely necessary, is hard to handle at
times. However, when educators review
the true intended targets of these meetings, sometimes lucky enough to witness
student revelation and revolutions to the industry, it makes the change process
worthwhile.
Re-examining the status quo argument
from section III tells us the importance of action. Inaction breeds a spiral of consequences
leading toward dehumanization, and ultimately contributes to the decline of
student learning. This lack of learning
may equally well result in a lack of success in life, affecting the strength of
our democracy and way of life. We are
all tied to each other and as educators we have the ability to influence the
greatest degree of long-lasting change.
Fighting dehumanization is a logical means toward a desired end.
IX. Notes
The school must contend with scheduling problems for a
number of reasons that appear to be out of the control of educators in the
district. Students register late
because: a) students look to Chicago Public Schools for start-up times, which
are different from suburban times, b) the mobility rate is high, which forces
predictability and scheduling projections to have low confidence levels.
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