Enough is Enough: The Crisis in Education

March 19, 2009 · Leave a Comment

Last month I attended a conference that Yale School of Management put on called Creating Levers of Change in education. NYC School Commissioner Joel Klein gave the keynote address. In it, he made three points:

1. We have a crisis in public education.

2. We don’t have to have a crisis in public education.

3. If we keep having the same dialogue, we won’t change the reality.

The difference between this education crisis and other national crises, like the threat of terrorism or the failing economy, he says, is that we’re not all in this one together. Skin color, popularity, and zip code determine the quality of education kids receive. 

I love Klein’s points – especially the third one, as it reminds me of the work of David Cooperrider who says that, “Human systems move in the direction of the questions they ask.” What questions do we ask regarding the state of our schools?  I have one:

If an alien came from Mars and dropped into a school, what would they report? That kids come, half awake, to watch adults work?

Is it no wonder that school often feels bad for kids?

As a student, I often felt I wasn’t good enough: who I was and what the world expected me to be were at odds. As a result, I felt marginalized and alone at school. I felt voiceless.  Only later did I learn that feelings of “not being good enough (or smart enough, or good looking enough, or whatever enough)” were too common for school children.

And then I became a teacher. Finally! On the other side of the desk. A dream I had since as long as I could remember. But there, much to my chagrin, I saw many students—and teachers and parents with similar plights: sad, alone, and depressed—rat-racing, getting by—not enough.

So I wonder: what answers can positive psychology offer? It is after all, the reason I was drawn to this discipline. If we can positively influence the way people think and behave, we can change the culture of schools.  

Stay tuned for more on how I think this can happen . . .

Portions of this originally published by Louis Alloro on Positive Psychology News Daily.

Categories: Leadership · Positive Education · Positive Learning Approaches · Positive Psychology in the Classroom

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