Sunday, October 4, 2015

TOMMIE SAYLOR: Look beyond the numbers to see why American education works


“Traditional education is based on facts and figures and passing tests – not on a comprehension of the material and its application to your life.”
-- Will Smith

By Tommie Saylor
Kennedy High School Principal

As the political season beings to “ramp up,” a prelude to the upcoming primaries, a summer of conventions and the general election, it is predictable that the American education system will soon become a target.  You will hear such bold statements as, “we need to return American public education back to being No. 1 in the world…”

What people do not seem to realize, is that American public education has never been No. 1 in the world, yet as a country we are world leaders. Even our president in known as the “Leader of the Free World.”

How can this be? How does a nation that ranks 20th to 30th in the world in public education, lead the world in most other aspects?

I believe the answer lies in how we raise our children in the public education system. Most countries have schools that only concern themselves with pure academia.  Students sit for hours in classrooms memorizing information, solving mathematical problems, reading, writing, and learning foreign languages. 

Sounds great? Not really.

Very little time is spent with practical application of what was learned, understanding the relevance of what was learned, and how to be creative using the information in ways never before explored.

I can memorize a flight manual, but does this make be a pilot? Or just someone who has a bunch of information?

In American schools we concentrate on teaching students how to learn, how to make practical use of what was learned, and how to creatively make connects between bodies of information. Knowing that many jobs that exist today did not exist 15 years ago, and that many jobs that will exist 15 years from now have not yet even been conceived, having students memorize a bunch of information does not necessarily prepare them for the future. 

But teaching them how to learn, and how to use what they have learned will prepare them for whatever comes their way in life.

American public schools place a value on athletics, the arts and performance that does not appear in most of the world’s schools.  Chinese schools don’t have art, band, athletic teams (football, basketball, baseball) or JROTC. They don’t celebrate Homecoming, Prom, nor do they have clubs and organizations or participate in community service programs. 

American schools believe in a well-rounded education, in augmenting academics with athletics and the arts; in teaching social, emotional, and imaginative lifelong lessons that serve our students well into adulthood.

Though some may argue our methods, they can’t argue with our results.  We are the No. 1 country in the world economically, politically and socially, due in no small part to the system that educated our populous.

So why do American students score so low on international tests?  I put forth that it is the tests that are flawed, not our educational system.  Most international tests are based on rote memorization, how much information have you been able to cram into your head just before taking the test. Yet if the tests were based on performance, ability to analyze information, ability to interpret information and the ability to use information, I’m willing to bet that American students would score well above the rest.

Those high scores being posted by other nation’s children look good on paper, but are meaningless in the context of the real world. That’s where American students are being taught skills that are easily extrapolated and transferred to the real world.

How and where will you lead them. Making Kennedy the school of choice. Excellence by design.

1 comment: