Helping
Children Succeed was reported and written with the generous support of five
philanthropic organizations: the CityBridge
Foundation, the Joyce Foundation,
the Raikes Foundation, the Bainum Family Foundation, and the S.D. Bechtel, Jr. Foundation.
–Paul Tough
Paul Tough has written a
new book that aspires to put into action a host of bad ideas that Tough
advocated in his 2012 book, How Children
Succeed: Grit, Curiosity, and the Hidden Power of Character. In that book, Tough outlined the eugenics-inspired
elitist dream to use schooling to alter poor children’s brains and nervous
systems so that they, essentially, become academically immune to the effects of
poverty—that corrosive malady that Tough’s wealthy patrons have no interest in
doing anything about. And why should
they if the segregated urban poor can produce the test scores that are required
to grow the wildly lucrative “no excuses” networks like KIPP, Achievement
First, Uncommon Schools, Mastery, Green Dot, Rocketship, etc.
Instead of suggesting that
some part of the billions in philanthropic dollars be used to attack the
problem of child poverty at its roots, Tough, in that 2012 book, focused,
instead, on the virtues of the “no excuses” charter reform schools to develop
“performance character,” which he claimed would provide enough grit, self-control,
and gratitude to neutralize the damaging effects of poverty on poor children’s
low test scores.
Tough’s first book fantasized
about exploiting the neural plasticity of children of the poor, and the KIPP
schools were held up as models of successful programs that grind out gritty
kids who excel in self-control, gratitude, zest, and the other corporate
character virtues that allow for high productivity among students and workers,
despite deplorable living and work conditions.
Like most fantasies, Tough’s 2012 book depended upon creating an
alternate reality to match his dystopian pipe dream of dredging new neural pathways
in children’s brains to improve their performance character, or work
habits.
In Tough’s gritty sci-fi
fantasy, he falsely equated higher test scores that KIPP’s unpaid child workers
generate under the soul-crushing tutelage of inexperienced teachers as an
indication that improved character (grit and self-control) had been
achieved. Like other measures used in the
myopic world of corporate education reform, Tough found the proof in the bottom
line, and as with other amoral enterprises aimed at increasing the bottom line,
the human costs for achieving the numbers did not matter. If test gains could be sustained by
emphasizing Tough’s preferred virtues of keeping-your-nose-the-grindstone grit
production and living in a behavioral straightjacket, then so much the better:
no expensive socioeconomic changes or politically costly sociological
alterations would be required.
Of course, we now know how
the KIPP Model schools use an accounting system based on avoiding the
liabilities of lower-scoring children, along with the application of a form of
pedagogical savagery that no middle class citizen would ever condone for anyone
other than the black and brown children of the poor.
While
these findings were never reported by the corporate media, a number of
disturbing high profile stories from these “no excuses” hell schools could not
be ignored. Problem children isolated and
locked in padded rooms, problem children collected together in basements as
influential guests toured the school, children forced to on sit the floor for a
week until they “earned” their desks, children choked and dragged by
administrators, children with scrapes and bruises from administrators, children
forced to bark like dogs and wear garbage cans on their heads, young children
whose work was thrown in the floor as teachers denounce their efforts, young
children forced to stand in front of the entirely school and apologize for
having to use the bathroom at the wrong time.
Most importantly, KIPP’s commissioned
Mathematica researchers ((Tuttle,
Gill, Gleason, Knechtel, Nichols-Barrer, & Resch, 2013) determined a year after Tough’s 2012 book came out that the extraordinary
renditions being used on KIPPsters were NOT, in fact, producing the “character” results that were being claimed by
Tough and the Seligman/Duckworth pseudoscience cabal upon which the “grit”
empire is built. Steinberg (2014) offers this summary of the Mathematica
findings that “were not so widely broadcast”:
They [students] weren’t more effortful or persistent. They didn’t have more favorable academic
self-conceptions or stronger school engagement.
They didn’t score higher than the comparison group in self-control. In fact, they were more likely to engage in
‘undesirable behavior,’ including losing their temper, lying to and arguing
with their parents, and giving teachers a hard time. They were more likely to get into trouble at
school. Despite the program’s emphasis
on character development, the KIPP students were no less likely to smoke,
drink, get high, or break the law. Nor
were their hopes for their educational futures any higher or their plans any
more ambitious (p. 153).
If
the new paternalists’ multi-billion dollar charter business was to continue
with the support of elite neoliberals who could not politically afford to
support such dehumanization in the name of schooling, a new public relations
campaign would be required and a new diversion created. Paul Tough’s new book signals the beginning
of the new PR campaign. In fact, Tough’s
new book can be downloaded as a pdf for free, and David Brooks and other paid
hacks have been moving attention away from the “no excuses” schools to a
“kinder gentler” form of school indoctrination as a way to neutralize criticism
of the dominant variety of charter schools still preferred by a system
based on racist and classist policies.
Tough’s new book, in fact,
brings word that white philanthropists are doubling down, once again, on
treating the symptoms of poverty, which are now acknowledged as low esteem,
lack of motivation, disconnectedness, and low academic achievement. The big story in Tough’s new book, Helping Children Succeed: What Works and
Why is of a sea change in the public relations messaging from the charter
industry and the elite paternalistic foundations that constitute the corporate
education reform movement. No longer are
the bare-knuckled segregated charter schools held up as models of corporate
effectiveness and efficiency, even though the U. S. now has thousands of these
hell schools operating across the urban landscape.
The new model is a kinder,
gentler form of corporate school, one in which children are relieved of the
caustic and dehumanizing environments of the “no excuses” catechism for an
“expeditionary” kind of project based
Common Core curriculum aimed, still, at creating levels of grit and self
control to neutralize the devastations of poverty and social neglect. Because Tough’s patrons have their eye on the
51 percent of the K-12 market who now qualify for free or reduced price lunch,
the new model will have to represent an alternative to the penal “no excuses”
charters that now house large swaths of black and brown urban school
children.
And if the first Tough vision
was of the creation of a black superchild with Booker T. Washington political
sensibilities, the second one is of no less compliant super social child that
is as likely to be white as black, an economically segregated child who gains
strength from his connectedness to other children of the disconnected. And children of the white poor, for sure, will
require another form of paternalism and manipulation to become gritty,
self-controlled, and grateful customers of Common Core. White parents would never allow the kinds of
treatment recommended for disadvantaged children of color, who are still
warehoused in the “no excuses” schools all across America.
So regardless of how much
Paul Tough’s patrons would like to shift the focus from the hellish “no
excuses” corporate reform schools that, thus far, have been celebrated as the
solution to educating the urban poor in segregated schools, the fact remains
that the majority of the 7,000 charters in this country are of the same brutal
variety that Tough and the billionaires have now begun to downplay.
It is with little fanfare,
then, that attention now moves away from the toxic KIPP Model schools. While Tough’s 2012 How Children Succeed… celebrated the KIPP Model with over ninety glowing
mentions of KIPP in just the first hundred pages, the 2016 Helping Children Succeed… includes exactly one mention of KIPP in
the entire book. No doubt, Tough’s book
allows us to see that charter industry is now concentrated on diverting
attention from the corrosive “no excuses” reform schools to a new educational
tool with a new method for re-wiring children to self-control and persist,
without question, in any required task.
Tough explains that the
solution new depends upon “deeper-learning strategies:”
Deeper-learning strategies
are often presented as a corrective to the no-excuses philosophy of education
associated with some of the earliest and best-known charter-school networks,
including KIPP, Uncommon Schools, and Achievement First. In their early years,
especially, those schools, which serve mostly low-income students and often
achieve standardized-test scores that are far above average for such students,
emphasized strict behavior codes, requiring students to comply with a rigorous
set of rules about how to dress and how to sit in the classroom and how to walk
through the hallways. At many of those schools, elaborate systems of incentives
and punishments were (and often still are) a central part of the strategy for
managing and motivating students.
But more recently, the
sharp dividing lines that once existed between no-excuses and deeper-learning
schools have begun to blur. In the fall of 2015, Elm City Preparatory
Elementary School in New Haven, Connecticut, one of the founding schools of the
Achievement First network, introduced a wholesale redesign of its curriculum
that includes an embrace of many of the beliefs and practices of deeper
learning, including an increased emphasis on experiential learning and student
autonomy. Students at Elm City (86 percent of whom qualify for free or
reduced-price lunch) now control their schedule and follow their own personal
interests in their learning much more than they used to, and they have more
autonomy in the subjects they study, including daily “enrichment” courses in
robotics, dance, and tae kwon do. Once every two months, Elm City teachers lead
students on a two-week “expeditionary” project in which they deeply study a
single subject, sometimes involving extensive time outside school visiting a
farm, museum, or historical site (pp. 125-126).
Can the dividing line
between punishing segregated test prep charters and “deeper learning” schools
be rubbed out by one Achievement First experimental school in New Haven?
Probably not, especially
when the Achievement First (AF) school most in the news since Tough published
his book is AF’s flagship upper school, which is also in New Haven, where
students (98% black) conducted a mass walkout on May 31 to demand a more
humane discipline system and more diversity among faculty members (75% white). How embarrassing.
a very informative post keep up the good work
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