the hidden life of schools (young and levin)
TRANSCRIPT
From last time: bureaucracy as From last time: bureaucracy as the material consequence of our the material consequence of our
wantswants
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It is the “formative” It is the “formative” that makes thethat makes the
“normative” consequential“normative” consequential
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A reminder of purposeA reminder of purpose
Much of what we are doing in EDU 5263 involves the introduction and use of alternative descriptors for organization and administrative practice…
Q. Alternative to what?A. The normative and formative ideal type of bureaucracy.
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The Hidden Life of The Hidden Life of Schools:Schools:
Organizational Fact,Organizational Fact,Moral Value, and Moral Value, and
Administrative Administrative ConsequenceConsequence
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8zVG8aBglVA http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XmJVTao4X-Y
Teaching and Schooling are Teaching and Schooling are necessarilynecessarily moral enterprises moral enterprises
“To put it bluntly, inherent in any act of teaching [and schooling]…are moral judgments about what kind of persons we should be.”- Dwight Boyd, “The Teacher as Moral Agent…Or, Doing What Comes Necessarily,” p. 7
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Schooling as a moral claimSchooling as a moral claim“education itself is a moral claim, extended performatively through time via the activities and role of teachers.”
“Education…is a particular kind of moral instrument for the shaping of human persons.”- Dwight Boyd, “The Teacher as Moral Agent…Or, Doing What Comes Necessarily,” pp. 12 & 17
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Schooling as an Unavoidably Schooling as an Unavoidably Moral ActMoral Act
http://www.oct.ca/standards/ethical_standards.aspx
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But, “The best laid schemes o' But, “The best laid schemes o' mice an' men / Gang aft agley." mice an' men / Gang aft agley."
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Pressure on educators no excuse for cheating, Ontario Premier says
McGuinty reacts to reports that 10 public schools are under investigation for cheating and irregularities on standardized testsKaren Howlett St. Thomas, Ont. — Globe and Mail Update Published on Tuesday, Sep. 21, 2010 3:43PM EDT Last updated on Tuesday, Sep. 21, 2010 6:19PM EDT
And so the moral And so the moral life of schools life of schools remains an remains an
unresolved and unresolved and volatile reality andvolatile reality and
a continuing a continuing concernconcern
for those who for those who would administer.would administer.
Prespared by Dr. Martin Barlosky, Faculty of Education, University of Ottawa
Prespared by Dr. Martin Barlosky, Faculty of Education, University of Ottawa
Understanding Canadian Schools Understanding Canadian Schools ::(An Introduction to Educational Administration) (An Introduction to Educational Administration)
Administration as “Sense-Making”Administration as “Sense-Making”
An epistemological ethos:An epistemological ethos:“people must play an
active and critical role in creating their knowledge.”
-Jon Young & Benjamin Levin, Understanding Canadian Schools, Reader p. 13
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The Value of Questioning The Value of Questioning AssumptionsAssumptions
“Because schools have the potential to be much better places, for both teachers and students, we regard it as very important for everyone involved with education to understand the way in which our schools are organized and operated so that they can ask questions about, and propose changes to, current practices.”
- Jon Young & Benjamin Levin, Understanding Canadian Schools, Reader p.10
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Schooling: Power, Practices, and Schooling: Power, Practices, and StructuresStructures
“no one who is to be involved in schooling can afford to ignore the power exercised through these structures and processes.”
- Jon Young & Benjamin Levin, Understanding Canadian Schools, Reader p. 10
And, of course...And, of course...
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Jenny HolzerAbuse of Power Comes as No Surprise, 1984
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Understanding What Schools Understanding What Schools Are and Can BeAre and Can Be
“Rather than viewing current practice as somehow natural or obvious, we want to examine why things are the way they are, how they came to be the way they are, who benefits most from them, and how they might be otherwise.”
- Jon Young & Benjamin Levin, Understanding Canadian Schools, Reader p. 11
Koren, New Yorker 22 March 1999
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educationeducation and and schoolingschooling – – Two Very Different WordsTwo Very Different Words
“In everyday language, people slip easily from ‘education’ to ‘schooling’ as though the two words, if not synonymous, were at least mutually supportive…this blurring of concepts is not always helpful.”-Benjamin Levin and Jon Young, Understanding
Canadian Schools (Third Edition, 2002), Reader p. 12 (emphasis added)
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Learning Out of SchoolLearning Out of School
“Indeed, the great bulk of what people know, believe, and can do is not learned in schools.”
-Jon Young and Benjamin Levin, Understanding Canadian Schools: An Introduction to Educational Administration, Reader p. 13
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Goals of SchoolingGoals of Schooling
“We tend to take the goals of schooling as being relatively self-evident, but they are actually quite problematic… Schools have purposes that are rarely talked about in the official statements.”-Benjamin Levin and Jon Young, Understanding Canadian
Schools (Third Edition, 2002), Reader p. 13
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“This rhetoric masks the multiple functions that have been assigned to public schools since their establishment as compulsory institutions in Canadian society.”
-Benjamin Levin and Jon Young, Understanding Canadian Schools (Third Edition, 2002), Reader p. 13
Rhethoric – vs. – PracticeRhethoric – vs. – Practice
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Mark HolmesMark Holmes**::Six Functions of Canadian SchoolsSix Functions of Canadian Schools
1. Intellectual-Vocational2. Aesthetic3. Physical4. Custodial5. Socialization6. Allocative
*M. Holmes (1986), Curriculum Inquiry 15(1): 7-36
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Mary Metz on the allocative Mary Metz on the allocative purpose of schooling…purpose of schooling…
“Imagine what would happen if…the goals that educators and reformers officially seek were actually accomplished. All students would become top performers. All of them would make…perfect A records throughout their schooling. Chaos would ensue…”
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“Colleges would not have room for all, but would have little ground on which to accept some and reject others. Employers looking for secretaries, retail salespersons, waiters, busdrivers, and factory workers would have jobs unfilled as every student considered such work beneath his or her accomplishment…”
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“As long as education is used to rank young people and sort them into occupational futures that differ substantially in the money, status, power, and intrinsic rewards they can yield, good education, or students’ success at education, must remain a scarce commodity.”-Mary Metz, “Real School,” in Education Politics for a New Century, p. 85.
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1. What is it that Metz is trying to tell us about schools and society? Is she right?
2. What are the implications of her remarks for current school and classroom practices?
3. Is there any way for school administrators to circumvent the educational dilemma that Metz depicts?
3 Questions to Consider3 Questions to Consider
Three Challenges to Three Challenges to Those Who Would Those Who Would
AdministerAdminister1. Michele Foucault’s Epistemological Challenge2. Jean Anyon and the Challenge of Differential
Schooling3. Lisa Delpit and the Challenge of Diversity/Pluralism
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Focault’s Epistemological Focault’s Epistemological Conundrum:Conundrum:
A Challenge to AdministratorsA Challenge to Administrators“People know what they do;
they frequently know why they do what they do;
but what they don’t know is what but what they don’t know is what they do [their doing] doesthey do [their doing] does.”.”-Michel Foucault, Beyond Structuralism and Hermeneutics, Dreyfus & Rabinow (Eds.), p. 187
Jean Anyon and School Jean Anyon and School Difference:Difference:
all schools are not equalall schools are not equal
“the ‘hidden curriculum’ of school work is tacit preparation for relating to the process of production in a particular way.”(J. Anyon, “Social Class and the Hidden Curriculum of Work,” pp. 89-90)
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Schools & the Reproduction of Schools & the Reproduction of InequityInequity
“In the contribution to the reproduction of unequal social relations lies a theoretical meaning, and social consequence, of classroom practice…the…complex but not readily apparent connections between everyday activity in schools and classrooms and the unequal structure of economic relationships in which we work and live.”(J. Anyon, “Social Class and the Hidden Curriculum of Work,” p. 90)
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Lisa Delpit: Difference and Moral Lisa Delpit: Difference and Moral ActionAction
“Good liberal intentions are not enough.”(L. Delpit, Other People’s Children, p. 45)
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From “Racism without Racists: From “Racism without Racists: Institutional Racism in Urban Institutional Racism in Urban
Schools”Schools”“Massey, Scott, and Dornbusch found that under the pressures of teaching, and with all intentions of ‘being nice,’ teachers had essentially stopped attempting to teach black children. In their words: ‘We have shown that oppression can arise out of warmth, friendliness, and concern. Paternalism and a lack of challenging standards are creating a distorted system of evaluation in the schools.’”(L. Delpit, Other People’s Children, p. 45-6)
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Geoffrey Canada Geoffrey Canada The Harlem Children’s ZoneThe Harlem Children’s Zone
Administration as Philosophy-in-Administration as Philosophy-in-ActionAction
http://www.cbsnews.com/video/watch/?id=5914322n
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In Conclusion:In Conclusion:Two Thoughts to PonderTwo Thoughts to Ponder
one fromChristopher Hodgkinson
and one from Willard Waller
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Christopher Christopher HodgkinsonHodgkinson
An examination of the moral hazards of institutional life
Organizations as moral primitives…
And the administrative consequence.
Prespared by Dr. Martin Barlosky, Faculty of Education, University of Ottawa
“This does not necessarily mean that organizations are of necessity corrupting or degrading to the moral or value life of their members, but that they can work this subtly negative influence if their primitive imperatives are allowed to impose themselves, achieve dominance, or go unexamined.”-C. Hodgkinson, Educational Leadership: The Moral Art, p. 109
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Willard WallerWillard Waller
Ideas and Organizations
A perennial paradox and a recurring dilemma for Schools and for those who would administer them.
A reading from Waller’s 1932 seminal classic The Sociology of Teaching
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