To the Editor:
The 2009 results from the Program for International Student Assessment, or PISA, show average scores in reading, science, and math for American students (“U.S. Rises to International Average in Science,” Education Week, Dec. 7, 2010). These findings are another wake-up call that the status quo is no longer acceptable. The United States built the greatest economy in history by leading the world in education. If we want to reclaim that position, we must lead the way again and adopt proven policies that will move us forward.
Before rushing to judgment about the next steps needed to improve our schools, we should look at comparable, successful nations and try to learn from their experience. Examining the PISA results in more detail gives an intriguing insight into how other nations boost student learning and performance and underscores the importance of elevating the teaching profession.
Canada, ranked in the top five on PISA, has strengthened teacher preparation, raised salaries, and given teachers more autonomy to be instructional leaders. Canada’s policymakers significantly increased professional development and welcomed teachers as partners in reform. Meanwhile, U.S. practitioners fend off efforts to deprofessionalize teaching, with repeated calls for shortcut routes into the classroom and limiting pay for advanced degrees. And our teachers are subject to prescriptive mandates like the No Child Left Behind Act that limit instruction to basic-level skills.
Teacher professionalism matters. In a on international examples of successful education systems, the global firm McKinsey & Co. found they are “characterized by more highly skilled educators (and) provide only loose guidelines on teaching and learning processes because peer-led creativity and innovation inside schools becomes the core driver for raising performance at this level.”
We need to focus on what leading countries are doing to improve public education, and take an honest look at the respect and support that we give to our nation’s teacher corps.
Dennis Van Roekel
President
National Education Association
Washington, D.C.