
Introduction
Differing Paradigms
Ecological Paradigm
A Personal Odyssey

J. Myron Atkin
Rodger W. Bybee
George DeBoer
Peter Dow
Marye Anne Fox
(John Goodlad)
Jeremy Kilpatrick
Glenda T. Lappan
Thomas T. Liao
F. James Rutherford


Introduction
Differing Paradigms
Ecological Paradigm
A Personal Odyssey

J. Myron Atkin
Rodger W. Bybee
George DeBoer
Peter Dow
Marye Anne Fox
(John Goodlad)
Jeremy Kilpatrick
Glenda T. Lappan
Thomas T. Liao
F. James Rutherford

Introduction
Differing Paradigms
Ecological Paradigm
A Personal Odyssey
J. Myron Atkin
Rodger W. Bybee
George DeBoer
Peter Dow
Marye Anne Fox
(John Goodlad)
Jeremy Kilpatrick
Glenda T. Lappan
Thomas T. Liao
F. James Rutherford


|  | Beyond McSchool: A Challenge to Educational Leadership
(continued)
John I. Goodlad, Institute for Educational Inquiry A Personal Odyssey
In proceeding, I am faced with a choice between addressing what
research teaches us about a rather predictable cycle of
school-centered ecological renewal or venturing into personal
experience with it, a route that too readily verges on the unseemly. I
choose the latter, primarily because it offers to serve my purpose
more efficiently. I have been in and around the place called school as
pupil, teacher, teacher of teachers, and inquirer for seventy years,
and privileged for more than a decade to be part of one of those
initiatives in renewal of the kind referred to above. The latter has
served to bring into synthesis and perspective several lessons.
In 1985, a colleague and I came off a decade of studying school
change and schools as functioning entities and joined another in
creating at the University of Washington the Center for Educational
Renewal committed to the conclusion that schools and the education
of educators for them must be renewed simultaneously. A few
months later, Education Week announced our creation of the
National Network for Educational Renewal (NNER) consisting of
ten school-university partnerships, each in a different state and each
comprised of a university linked in potential collaboration with a
clutch of school districts.
We brought to what turned out to be a first iteration of the NNER a
carefully designed strategy based on lessons learned from relevant
research, our own inquiry, and several years of experience with the
school-university partnership we had created several years before in
southern California. Some of these new partnerships made gratifying
progress with the concept of simultaneous renewal, but the initiative
as a whole suffered from being overly permissive in its expectations,
among other shortcomings. It is painful to admit that we, like more
innocent venturers into school improvement, carried into the NNER
several naive assumptions, especially in regard to the "people"
process. We assumed that those making the commitment to
membership had carefully studied the mission statement and
discussed its implications. We assumed the common understanding
that "simultaneous renewal" means renewal for both sets of
institutions. We underestimated the tendency of self-interest to
dominate over the common good. We underestimated the degree to
which people view change as for somebody else. We particularly
underestimated the power and perversity of a major condition we
were seeking to understand and remedy: the gulf between school and
university cultures.
Meanwhile, we designed and conducted a study of teacher education
that matched in comprehensiveness our earlier studies of schooling.
The findings shook us: pieces of teacher education curricula scattered
across rigidly separated entities on university campuses, loose
connections with the schools providing student teaching,
long-standing turf wars between schools of education and
departments in the arts and sciences, low status of the teacher
education enterprise, insufficient interest on the part of most arts and
science departments to warrant serious consideration of what they
were providing for the many future teachers in their classes, teacher
education relegated to the periphery of importance in the top-ranked
schools of education, no joining of the conditions of schools and the
conditions of teacher education in reform reports on one or the other
from 1890 to 1986. We perceived in what we found and reported in
1990 a moral imperative that simply cannot abide continued
indifference in any quarter, especially that of the academy.
We asked all our NNER members to revisit their commitment in
anticipation of a new iteration to be effected within eighteen months.
There would be a revised, nonnegotiable agenda and a rigorous
admissions process required of both new members and those from
the first iteration seriously desiring to continue. The reconstituted
NNER of today is deliberately maintained at 16 settings in 14 states
(three of them comprising multiple institutions educating most of the
school student population and most of the teachers in their respective
states), embracing 34 colleges and universities, more than 100 school
districts, over 400 partner or teaching schools, and thousands of
individuals. It is among those renewal initiatives of national scope
credited with some success, and the only one deliberately addressing
schools and teacher education simultaneously. As before, the
technical support we provide is made possible by private
philanthropy (with the exception of one small grant from the NSF).
The NNER has grown increasingly robust since completion of the
reorganization more than five years ago. (The 15th and 16th settings
have since been added.) Two of the contributing factors loom large.
The first is the complex agenda, nonnegotiable but open to many
alternatives in its implementation to suit local circumstances. The
second is an intensive leadership training program put into place a
few months after the reorganization described was effected.
The agenda has provided, I think, a new and compelling educational
narrative that simultaneously embraces school and university people,
connects with their work, and elevates its professional and social
significance well above the technical instrumentalism charted by
business and political leaders for the past several decades. The
agenda consists of a four-part mission and nineteen sets of necessary
conditions stated as postulates. The language of justification identifies
education as an inalienable right and emphasizes its public purpose:
that of developing democratic character in and for a democratic
surround.
The four-part mission sets two aims for schooling--enculturating the
young in a social and political democracy and introducing them
comprehensively to the human conversation--and adds two for
teachers--caring pedagogy and moral stewardship. The nineteen
postulates embrace necessary conditions from institutional
commitment to student recruitment, to responsible faculty, to
coherent curricula, to exemplary teaching schools, to supportive state
policies. It is the mission that inspires and guides, the postulates that
mark progress.
Not only must there be an agenda and the gathering of a critical mass
of people and institutions around that agenda for there to be
progress, it must be sufficiently complex to engender a continuing
process of unpacking for meaning. Our leadership program is
designed to ensure that there will be key actors in the schools and
universities--both arts and sciences and education professors in the
latter--who possess deep understanding and promote the unpacking
of this agenda. Many of the more than one hundred leaders who
have come through our program are now busy replicating it in their
own settings. The principle of spreading the leadership and the
conversation widely is at work.
We have, I believe, entered that dangerous stage where the easy
way out beckons seductively: declare victory and the work done.
One of the most formidable obstacles, predictable from our research,
grows out of our nonnegotiable condition of tripartite collaboration
among players in the partner schools, the colleges of education, and
the arts and sciences departments, all as equal partners. Each of
these groups would like to exercise control, not necessarily be active
participants, and least of all do the work collaboratively. On the
positive side, largely because of the tripartite character of the
leadership program, the gulf between the culture of schooling and the
culture of higher education has begun to fill up with conversation
about common mission, shared commitment and responsibility, and
especially the moral dimensions of teaching.
Academics who have become sufficiently immersed in our agenda to
identify with the narrative tend to connect it to their professorial
calling, their teaching, and their discipline. They frequently hesitate,
however, to engage in the work as other than a service. Even though
most of the undergraduate curriculum of future teachers is in the
hands of professors in the arts and sciences and the students of these
teachers will soon be in their classes, they are reluctant to identify
with schools and teacher education. What we are asking of them in
the simultaneous renewal of schooling and the education of teachers
has not yet been institutionalized as part of their regular responsibility.
Even in the schools of education of research-oriented universities,
faculty members tend to regard involvement in school improvement
and teacher education as endangering their careers.
This must be changed, whether the language of persuasion be that of
moral responsibility or economic survival. We have asked the
American Council of Learned Societies to assist us in seeking to
legitimate the involvement of arts and sciences professors in
producing better teachers and better schools as a career
responsibility. Deans and department chairs such as Professor Leroy
Hood of the University of Washington must become the future norm
rather than the present rarity. And if he, as chairman of a department
of molecular biotechnology, can set expectations for his colleagues to
spend 5 percent or 10 percent of their time in such work, surely
expectations for professors of education to spend up to 50 percent
are not unreasonable.
A condition that seriously impedes school renewal was in part made
by the academy and can be corrected only by the extensive inclusion
of academics in the rescue crew. Many thousands of teachers are
insufficiently prepared in the subjects they teach to take advantage
more than cosmetically of the subject-oriented in-service workshops
and institutes currently available to them. For many, the standards
being articulated cannot be attached to daily teaching because, in
their own learning, the organizing elements were never brought
together to constitute the discipline: the ankle bones were never
connected to the shin bone, and the shin bone to the knee bone.
The recent report of the National Research Council, From Analysis
to Action, begins to provide some of the reasons and answers. I
hope you will join us in seeking to find paths through the woods now
blocking our way to the schools we must have. It is unlikely that we
will find the way without you.
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