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September 15, 2013

School Jargon for Parents: Parents Left Behind How public school reforms are turning American parents into dummies

Dahlia Lithwick:

We've been hearing for decades about all the ways our public school system is failing our children. They're falling further and further behind on international academic assessments, and it's not clear that efforts to remedy the situation are succeeding. Indeed, we pretty much know things have gotten worse. But all the focus on failing schools and failing students ignores the other consequence of American public education reform: The failing parents. Because if last night's open house night at my son's middle school was any indication of the inexorable decline of the American parent, we are truly doomed.

Now, to be clear, I am a big fan of public education. Maybe not quite as much as some of my colleagues, but I remain fundamentally sold on the public schools enterprise. But somewhere along the line I started failing. First in small, unnoticeable ways, and then in more irremediable ones. Until it became completely clear to me that I can no longer comprehend what happens in my children's schools.

It is now a distinct possibility that the unintended casualty of No Child Left behind is the parents who have been left behind in their stead.

I used to believe that public school open houses required little more than the obligatory clean shirt with buttons and a swipe of lip gloss. Possibly a list of semi-aspirational questions. A pen. As a parent you'd strive to show your child's teachers that they were inheriting your charming young scion and listen attentively to their plans for the year. But at this year's back to school night for my fifth-grader, I think it's fair to say that I failed on every single testable metric. Starting with not knowing it was back to school night in the first place. That sin was quickly followed by tardiness, lost-ness, and also failure to ask probing questions. But all of these minor failings were soon swallowed up by a complete and total inability to show mastery of either curriculum or academic goals. The evening passed in a blur of acronyms, test names, and emendations to last year's system. Which I also didn't understand. In fact, I think it's fair to say that I understood significantly less at this open house than I did at my sons' open house during a sabbatical last year, when it took place overseas and in a foreign language.

Posted by Jim Zellmer at September 15, 2013 4:25 AM
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