Posts Tagged ‘content’

Even P21′s Action Agenda Lacks Content

Wednesday, September 2nd, 2009

We’ve read the Partnership for 21st Century Skills’ “National Action Agenda Principles,” and, for the most part, it’s something we could actually endorse. This is primarily because it doesn’t say much of anything substantive at all.

Who would disagree with the notion that “access to the skills and knowledge needed to succeed in today’s world is the right of every child…”?

Or that “the US comprehensively must address both of its educational achievement gaps – the gap between traditionally underserved communities and their more affluent peers – as well as the overall achievement gap between US students and many of their international peers.”?

There are good ways to work toward achieving these goals, but none of them have anything to do with teaching students to text message or figure out a way for everyone in the class to touch a soccer ball–examples of the kind of classroom activities P21 endorses.

Good education is about engaging all students in rigorous, meaningful learning – in the arts, sciences, math, writing, foreign languages, and history – that prepares them for college and work. This should be a national priority.

P21′s Content-Free “Content”

Tuesday, June 30th, 2009

Today, the Partnership for 21st Century Skills (P21) released two new “roadmaps” in geography and science. The maps provide a framework and resources for integrating technology and other 21st century skills into core subject areas. Last year, they put out maps for social studies and English/language arts. The new maps were created by P21 in consultation with the National Science Teachers Association and the National Council for Geographic Education.

What’s the problem? To begin, they include no content. We looked through each of the standards and activities for grades 4, 8, and 12 and could not find one specific reference to content knowledge students would learn by doing what P21 recommends. What we did find was a chart (pg. 16) highlighting the characteristics of 21st century learning, P21 style. It describes 21st Century standards and assessments as having less emphasis on “acquiring information” and on “assessing to learn what students do not know.” So, under P21’s plan, students will learn less and their knowledge gaps will go undetected.

Many of the activities P21 proposes are simply preposterous, especially when you consider that students would be doing these things without first “acquiring information”:

Science- 4th grade:

Students in the class role-play citizens in a town meeting where members of the community express different points of view about a local issue, such as the location of a new school, building a bypass for traffic, or a re-zoning of downtown to be “pedestrian only” without vehicles, etc.

Science- 8th grade:

Students view video samples from a variety of sources of people speaking about a science-related topic (e.g., news reporters, news interviews of science experts, video podcasts of college lectures, segments from public television documentaries, or student-made videos of parents and professionals in their community). Students rate the videos on the degree to which the person sounded scientific…

Geography- 12th grade:

To test the law of retail gravitation (i.e., the number of visits a resident makes to competing shopping centers is inversely proportional to the distances between residence and center and proportional to the size of the center), students work in small groups to conduct a community survey of a retail area’s “retail gravity” on a non-school attendance day….

Once again, P21 and their associates have it backwards. With strong content, quality teaching, and engaging lessons, students’ problem solving, critical thinking, creativity, and other related skills will develop as part of their learning.

West Virginia Education: It’s the Marketing

Friday, June 12th, 2009

P21 National Summit-Paine just mentioned that West Virginia has spent $300,000-$400,000 marketing “Global 21,” the state’s 21st century skills agenda.  The reason, according to Paine, is because the skills “message is not resonating with kids, parents, the business community, and others.”  Gee, it’s no surprise to us that citizens of a state that has performed near the bottom of NAEP would be concerned when the state decides to be among the first to embrace the latest education fad.  Smart folks.

Lynne Munson

West Virginia: “It’s Not Easy to Move Away from Content”

Friday, June 12th, 2009

P21 National Summit–Steve Paine from the West Virginia Dept of Ed just explained that it has been challenging for that state to be on the leading edge of the 21st century skills movement.  Why?  In Paine’s words:  “It is not easy to move away from content” and “traditional forms of assessment.”  “We’ve been out there on a whim” trying to implement the P21 rainbow framework, Paine explains, “and there are content v. skills wars” going on.  Glad to know that WV is getting push-back…