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Education policy maven Rick Hess of the think tank offers straight talk on matters of policy, politics, research, and reform. Read more from this blog.

School & District Management Opinion

Why Do Schools Cling to 鈥楽tupid鈥 Ideas?

Two education scholars explore that question in a new book
By Rick Hess 鈥 July 05, 2023 3 min read
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Rick Ginsberg and Yong Zhao are out with an intriguing new book, . The title refers to the mantra of 1950s-era school drills, back when a nation living under the threat of nuclear holocaust taught its children to 鈥渄uck and cover鈥 in the event of a Soviet attack.

As the authors explain in their introduction, 鈥淭he practice was simple. If there was imminent fear of a bomb hitting a school or landing in its vicinity, students were trained to dive under their desks and cover their heads with their hands.鈥 The implication, of course, was that kneeling under their desk would protect students from a nuclear blast. Spoiler: It wouldn鈥檛. But the Federal Civil Defense Program produced the 1951 film 鈥淒uck and Cover,鈥 anyway, in which Bert the cartoon turtle cheerfully taught a generation to 鈥渄uck and cover.鈥

As Ginsberg and Zhao drolly observe, 鈥淭his has to be one of the most stupid educational policies ever enacted.鈥 Why did so many policymakers and educators go along with a policy that terrified young students while doing nothing to protect them? Ginsberg and Zhao argue that policymakers and educators felt obliged to do something鈥攁nd, if something stupid was the only option, well, they鈥檇 do that. They offer this as a metaphor for many foolish, ineffectual policies in American schooling.

I鈥檓 a fan of both authors. Ginsberg is dean of education at the University of Kansas, former board chair of the American Association of Colleges of Teacher Education, a savvy observer of school reform, and an old friend. Zhao is a distinguished professor at Kansas and a refugee from communist China, whose contempt for bureaucracy and quasi-authoritarian meddling has made him one of the nation鈥檚 more heterodox education thinkers.

In the course of the book鈥檚 brisk 156 pages, Ginsberg and Zhao skewer a lot of sacred cows. The 19 chapters cover the educational waterfront: social-emotional learning (SEL), educational technology, college and career readiness, class size, dress codes, professional development, teacher evaluation, gifted education, testing, school board governance, and much more.

The breadth of topics hints at both the strengths and the weaknesses of this volume. Its great strength is its evenhanded willingness to say critical things about a lot of popular ideas. Readers of every ilk can rest assured that they鈥檒l find some things to delight them and others that infuriate them. In our polarized world, this marks a welcome departure from the familiar groupthink. The authors deserve kudos for that alone.

Their approach also allows them to cover a lot of ground, making a number of provocative observations and offering a number of useful cautions. But the trade-off is that they don鈥檛 spend a lot of time or energy making the case that a given idea is stupid. Most of the chapters didn鈥檛 offer parallels to 鈥渄uck and cover鈥 or so much as thumbnail sketches of the good, bad, and ugly of how these ideas work in practice.

Thus, when it comes to SEL, Ginsberg and Zhao note the pressure school leaders face from 鈥渆xperts and researchers, do-gooders, and sometimes snake-oil salespersons shopping their wares.鈥 They then sketch the rationale for SEL and a number of concerns about it, before offering some sensible advice about the need to move deliberately and clarify goals. This is all fine. But none of it really makes the case that SEL is a 鈥渄ubious practice鈥 (and I say this as someone who鈥檚 been of SEL). As a reader, given the promise of the book鈥檚 subtitle, central metaphor, and setup, this felt like less than I bargained for. This is pretty consistent throughout.

And I would鈥檝e liked to see them push harder when explaining how dubious ideas catch on and why we can be so reluctant to confront them. After all, I鈥檝e explored of school reform and more than others. Given that, I hoped for more than the broad reminder that 鈥渟chools actually implement a lot of different things鈥 and the observation that 鈥渄uck-and-cover policies persist because they aren鈥檛 questioned.鈥 At the outset, the book promises a bold exploration of folly; on this count, it delivers something less than that.

Ultimately, though, this is a timely and valuable contribution. Ginsberg and Zhao have penned a fair-minded survey of education policy, with a healthy emphasis on the need to think more deliberately about how things actually work. And that鈥檚 a worthwhile exercise and a much-needed reminder, one that educators, policymakers, and advocates should take to heart.

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