澳门跑狗论坛

Opinion
Teacher Preparation Opinion

Ed. Schools Face a Choice: Reform or Fade Away

If schools of education are to be revitalized, it will likely be red states leading the way
By Robert Maranto 鈥 October 15, 2024 5 min read
Illustration of a college campus fading away.
  • Save to favorites
  • Print
Email Copy URL

As the Rodney Dangerfields of higher education, education schools get no respect. Back in 1921, using the rough speech of the day, Harvard President Lawrence Lowell described his university鈥檚 then-new school of education as 鈥渁 kitten that ought to be drowned.鈥 Between then and now, few have stepped forward to applaud the institutions.

But with enrollments falling and many policymakers and parents seeking new types of schools, the 2020s and 鈥30s could bring opportunities to make schools of education better than they have ever been. Ironically, if the revolution happens, red states are likely to lead the way.

The problems go back more than a century. Yet through most of that time, education school failings were hidden by profound inequities that limited the employment prospects of college-educated women and African Americans: Most teachers had so much talent they succeeded despite poor training, pay, and treatment. The breakdown of very real systems of oppression in job markets has eroded K-12 teaching talent, exposing our failure to prepare educators for classrooms.

Elites could afford to be insensitive to the shortcomings of ed. schools. For example, presidents George H. W. Bush, George W. Bush, Barack Obama, and Joe Biden attended (and typically sent their children to) private schools employing uncertified teachers, most of whom never attended ed. school. The same can be said for presidential nominees Al Gore, John Kerry, and John McCain. (Donald Trump went to private schools, too, but his secondary school was closed, and I could not verify its employ of uncertified teachers when I made phone calls to check.) These school choices reflect distrust of the expertise we education professors claim.

While many academicians disparage schools of education for lacking intellectual rigor, other critics, including former dean of Teachers College, Columbia University, criticize us for failing to teach applied skills such as classroom management for teachers and personnel management for leaders. They say we produce too many teachers who misunderstand how children learn and too many leaders without a clue about how to hire, evaluate, coach, and when necessary, terminate teachers.

Nor have we improved equity, the word of the decade in schools of education. As David Marshall and I recently , the research out of ed. schools is strangely disconnected from the day-to-day needs of urban principals, focusing more on philosopher of education Paulo Freire than overcoming the COVID-19 attendance drops and learning losses, which devastated low-income communities. As American Public Media reporter Emily Hanford describes in , rock star professors at prominent ed. schools made small fortunes selling ways to teach reading that worsened inequities; for decades, we denied rather than trusted the science.

With enrollments falling and many policymakers and parents seeking new types of schools, the 2020s and 鈥30s could bring opportunities to make schools of education better than they have ever been.

But the winds of change are blowing鈥攎ost strongly from red states. The reflexive red-state distrust of university-based authorities has helped enable many governors and legislatures to remake schooling via new or expanded private and charter schools. (Even under a President Kamala Harris, the federal government seems unlikely to intervene in such changes.) Those new schools will need new systems for training educators. In 20 or more conservative states, this may require that existing education schools either thoroughly reform or fade away.

I see four broad reforms that should happen in all states and could save the schools from obsolescence even as enrollments shift to private and charter schools.

First, we should remake the undergraduate education major to incorporate applied fields with scientifically established knowledge and standards: psychology, biology (to understand child development), and statistics, along with classroom subject-matter knowledge. Such preparation could make new educators both more effective and more respected, justifying more pay.

Second, as more states and cities (including deep-blue New York City) mandate that public schools follow the 鈥渟cience of reading,鈥 it seems phonics have won the reading wars everywhere but in schools of education. Ed. schools that train teachers in practices drawn from the science of reading in accord with state mandates will be well positioned for the 2030s.

See Also

A parent and child looking at 2 different schools
DigitalVision/Getty

Third, our current approaches to civics education, which privilege activism over knowledge and skepticism over patriotism, seem to produce graduates lacking understanding of the rule of law, our 200-plus-year history of peaceful transfers of power (which Trump threatened in 2021), and even NATO (covered by civics standards in just 12 states). For decades, University of Virginia English professor E.D. Hirsch warned that ignorance of history would destroy U.S. democracy, . Accordingly, ed. schools should partner with organizations like Hirsch鈥檚 centrist and the conservative to prepare teachers to prepare citizens.

Finally, we in education schools continue to prepare educators as if there is one (often hazy) best way to educate children. Testifying at a recent congressional committee hearing on teacher preparation, Arizona State University education school dean Carole Basile complained that 鈥渙ur teacher-preparation programs have been designed essentially to mass-produce identical educators. 鈥 This tells us a lot about why so many credentialed teachers would rather do something else than teach.鈥 As Jal Mehta and Steven Teles in their groundbreaking essay, just as there are differing approaches or 鈥渟chools鈥 in fields like psychotherapy, elementary and secondary schools with distinct missions need educators with distinct training.

See Also

An elementary school principal sits in a circle of chairs with two students. She holds a clipboard as she waves a finger at a student.
iStock/Getty Images Plus

The growth of charter schools and education savings accounts as de facto vouchers will likely lead to a larger number of smaller schools of choice across red and purple states. Like many schools in , these academies will likely fill specific curricular and pedagogical niches, options very different from the large, bureaucratic, relatively nonacademic traditional public schools that did not serve me or my kids very well and which do even worse for the kids back in my hometown of Baltimore.

When those 100 flowers bloom, their educators will still need preparation. To meet those demands, schools of education should hire professors specializing in specific types of schooling (Montessori, classical, No Excuses, etc.), to prepare teachers and leaders for those missions. Education schools that diversify their faculty in this way will thrive into the 2030s and beyond.

No one likes change. But if we in education schools transform to support reasonable parent and policymaker demands, we can strengthen education rather than deconstruct it.

Related Tags:

Events

Artificial Intelligence K-12 Essentials Forum Big AI Questions for Schools. How They Should Respond鈥
Join this free virtual event to unpack some of the big questions around the use of AI in K-12 education.
This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of 澳门跑狗论坛's editorial staff.
Sponsor
School & District Management Webinar
Harnessing AI to Address Chronic Absenteeism in Schools
Learn how AI can help your district improve student attendance and boost academic outcomes.
Content provided by 
This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of 澳门跑狗论坛's editorial staff.
Sponsor
Science Webinar
Spark Minds, Reignite Students & Teachers: STEM鈥檚 Role in Supporting Presence and Engagement
Is your district struggling with chronic absenteeism? Discover how STEM can reignite students' and teachers' passion for learning.
Content provided by 

EdWeek Top School Jobs

Teacher Jobs
Search over ten thousand teaching jobs nationwide 鈥 elementary, middle, high school and more.
Principal Jobs
Find hundreds of jobs for principals, assistant principals, and other school leadership roles.
Administrator Jobs
Over a thousand district-level jobs: superintendents, directors, more.
Support Staff Jobs
Search thousands of jobs, from paraprofessionals to counselors and more.

Read Next

Teacher Preparation Q&A How This Teacher-Prep Program and District Aligned on the Science of Reading
In Tennessee, a small network of schools and universities are aligning future teachers' coursework with evidence-based literacy practices.
8 min read
Illustration of two cliffs with a woman on one side and a man on the other. Both of them are holding a half of a cog wheel and bringing the two pieces together to bridge the gap between them.
iStock/Getty
Teacher Preparation Then & Now Why We Still Haven't Solved Teacher Shortages (Despite Decades of Trying)
The teacher-shortage discourse has a long history鈥攁nd no perfect solutions.
6 min read
Conceptual image of drawing new graduates to the teaching workforce.
Laura Baker/澳门跑狗论坛 via Canva
Teacher Preparation Democrats and Republicans Agree Teacher Prep Needs to Change. But How?
Teacher-prep programs "have been designed essentially to mass-produce identical educators," a dean said at a congressional hearing.
7 min read
A 1st grade teacher at Capital City Public Charter School leads a lesson about bee colonies with her students.
A 1st grade teacher at Capital City Public Charter School leads a lesson about bee colonies with her students. At Sept. 25 congressional hearing focused on the quality of the nation's teacher-preparation programs.
Allison Shelley for All4Ed
Teacher Preparation Teachers' Unions Are Starting Teacher-Prep Programs. Here's What to Know
The Washington Education Association is pioneering a teacher residency for special education. Other unions are noticing.
10 min read
Patrice Madrid, left, leads a Functional Core Program for 3rd through 5th graders as part of a teacher residency program under the guidance of staff teacher Shannon Winthrow, right, at Star Lake Elementary in Kent, Wash., on May 7, 2024.
Patrice Madrid, left, leads a special education classroom for 3rd through 5th graders as part of the Washington Education Association's teacher residency program under the guidance of staff teacher Shannon Withrow, right, at Star Lake Elementary in Kent, Wash., on May 7, 2024.
Meron Menghistab for 澳门跑狗论坛