April 1998

Teacher Magazine, Vol. 09, Issue 07
Education Opinion That's Edutainment!
A teacher "swims with the sharks" at Microsoft and concludes that 'vast and essential differences' separate schools and the software industry.
Jennifer New, April 1, 1998
11 min read
Education Opinion Science Superstar
Eulogizing the late Carl Sagan as 'America's best science teacher.'
Ian De Silva, April 1, 1998
5 min read
Education Letter to the Editor Letters

March Of Folly


Peter Berger is right to criticize those who use portfolios inefficiently and unfairly. ["Portfolio Folly," March.] Portfolios, after all, are not for teachers; they are for students. The goal of educators should not be "to teach and assess," but "to encourage and guide students in their learning." Too often, we leave the students in the dust as we cling to our fad-driven whirlwind of initiatives, committees, and new practices. It seems that no matter how hard we struggle, no one is satisfied with the results. Evaluation of student writing can never be objective. The quality of a piece of writing cannot be measured in numbers or letters any more than joy or anger or amazement over a new discovery can be. Such judgments serve only to discourage students from the act of writing—and teachers from the act of assigning it. But by re-seeing this complex etching of emotion on paper over time in a portfolio, students learn that writing matters, and skills evolve. And teachers learn that students care and can think. Naturally, more writing will happen—because it is valued, not because it is measured. Teachers spend so much time and energy on teaching strategies, trends, and assessment that we allow students to sit back and relax, unaccountable, while we, ironically, sweat and learn the most.
April 1, 1998
1 min read
Education Opinion Rewriting History
I expect we can all agree that historical fiction should be good fiction and good history.
Anne Scott Macleod, April 1, 1998
16 min read