I receive a newsletter every week titled Marshall Memo from Kim Marshall at Kim.Marshall8@verizon.net. It is an educational newsletter that is filled with great information on education and growing students and teachers, and many of the articles and information is very pertinant to coaching. Coaches, among many other roles, are teachers of the game of basketball. I love reading articles about education and using them to help myself grow as a coach, a teacher, a leader, and a man.
This article discusses the true goal of education and what we should be looking to get out of our students.
This article discusses the true goal of education and what we should be looking to get out of our students.
In
this Education Week article, author
Marc Prensky questions whether learning
is the best word for what we want from our schools. Learning is the right word
if our aspiration is that students graduate as learned scholars, but that’s not what most of us have in mind for
K-12 schools. Learning is important, of course, but it’s a means to an end.
“The real goal of education, and of school,” says Rose, “is becoming… Most of us would prefer our
children become the very best people they can be, capable of effective
thinking, acting, relating, and accomplishing in whatever field they enjoy and
have a passion for.”
“We
spend so much time and effort looking at test scores, averages, and other petty
measurements of ‘learning’ that we have little time or energy left to focus on
who our students are (or are not) as individuals,” he says, “what they love or
hate, or what drives them. We shouldn't be surprised, then, if they become
people we do not like or respect, or if we have concerns about their potential
contributions to society… There are probably billions of people in the world
who have finished school without becoming what they could have. Some may have
acquired knowledge and skills through their education, but have accomplished
little or nothing.”
Rather than constantly asking
how much students have learned and obsessing about how to measure learning,
Rose believes we should be asking, “What did you become that you weren't before? Have you moved in a positive direction to better yourself and society?”
He believes teachers should sit down a few times a year and write to students
and parents about what each student is becoming. And students should be asking
themselves, “Who am I becoming? Have I become a better thinker? If so, in what
ways? Am I able to do things I couldn’t before? What is important to me and
why? Can I relate comfortably to individuals, in teams and in virtual
communities? Can I make the world a better place?”
“If we had different
expectations,” Rose concludes, “who knows what our kids might become?”
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