Saturday, August 17, 2013

Individualization and the Culture of Standardization

Recently I attended a state training that addressed four major initiatives that public education in New Jersey has either already embarked upon, will embark upon this year or will embrace in a matter of a year’s time.  These include instruction based on the Common Core, teacher lesson evaluation based on a four point rubric, Student Growth Objectives and the PAARC assessment for students.  Without exaggeration, it may be stated that these four elements propose the largest changes to public education in its history.

A common theme among these areas is what Ken Robinson refers to as a Culture of Standardization.  At the national and state level there has been a pervasive mind set that uniformity of instruction and assessment will lead to improved outcomes.  As with any movement, there are both positive and negative aspects.  The recognition of essential elements of good instruction, the expectations for greater objectivity and consistency among teacher evaluators, the ability to define expectations for students skills along a developmental level and the ability to define a common assessment all appear to meet needs in our state’s public schools.  At the same time  there is a fear, an anxiety, perhaps even some dread that the individuality of students, the creativity of teachers and the goal of a truly balanced curriculum will be sacrificed along the way.

Among those who service students with special needs and students with disabilities there are familiar thoughts as to whether these students have been adequately considered in the formulation of these concepts.  Indeed there has been little attention drawn to students with individualized learning plans and how the educational approach for these students may be altered by competing priorities of the IDEIA and the current educational agenda.

I would propose that special educators are in a unique position to apply these initiatives within the context of an approach that keeps the individual student at the forefront, that continues to stress the personalization of learning, that promotes curiosity of students, which continues to require teacher creativity, that stresses strength based learning and preserves true partnership with the family in the learning process.  These aspects are, after all, the hallmark of what is special about special education.  Indeed, in the many years since 1975 and the advent of IDEIA, the educational community has evolved to see that the approach for students with identified special needs work well as an approach for all students.

The thirty-eight years which have ensued since the individualized concept of instruction was legislated has painstakingly moved many in the lager orbit of schooling to a point where Universal Design has been acknowledged as good educational practice.  The struggle for advocates of individualized instruction was made significant by an attitude, pervasive from the time of the industrial revolution, that schools be run in a lock-step factory-like manner where instruction was aimed toward the middle and little deviation occurred for individual differences.

I would therefore propose that special educators at both the instructional and administrative level bear the duty of ensuring these major initiatives do not forsake the achievements made by this generational journey.  Special educators must be the leaders at the district and school level to reconcile the personal approach to education and the standardization efforts currently underway, not only in New Jersey but throughout the country.