How TheGateWay Method can heal the broken system of American public education
Statement of the Problem
As I elucidated last week, American Public Education is broken… not by the fault of any mass conspiracy or insidious plot… but as a natural consequence of turning over the education of our children to a government bureaucracy. The question that remains to us is: How can we fix it?
The Challenge
The bureaucracy will not surrender power willingly; government relies on dependency to maintain authority. Once we build a bureaucracy to serve a public purpose that bureaucracy will seek to grow in size and authority by taking on more responsibility for the “public good”. Bureaucratic positions become patronage jobs and in order to promote and advance careers in public service the agency must grow and create assistant directors and special assistants to the deputy director and so forth. What began as a public purpose will, inevitably, become a government purpose.
In the end the bureaucracy becomes bloated, top-heavy and self-justifying… and very difficult to overcome.
Charter Schools and a Voucher System
In Massachusetts, back in 2015, the state capped the number of independent charter schools at 72 even though they were considered to be the best in the nation. According to Stanford University, Massachusetts charter schools were doing more to close the achievement gap than any other group in the nation… so why cap the number that could be opened? Especially when they had 37,000 students on a waiting list??
A similar story can be seen playing out in New York and Los Angeles, where resistance from the public school bureaucracy and teachers unions is preventing the creation of more effective educational options. Their main complaint is that these schools drain money away from the public schools. But that argument falls apart when you consider the basic economics of it. Why do you need the funds to educate a child that isn’t there??
The same problem can be seen with a voucher system and free-market education solutions. TheState has regularly stepped in to erect barriers to protect the public school monopoly… to either prevent the money following the kids or prevent educational options from opening in the first place.
In a free-market environment, capital flows to the best businesses doing the best job and providing the most value. By opposing a free-market in education, the public schools are admitting that they KNOW they’re not doing the best job. If public schools were superior in Charter or Private schools they wouldn’t complain about losing money. The best schools would flourish, the best teachers would become wealthy and the kids and communities would benefit from superior service.
Home Schooling
In many states, mostly in the NorthEast, there are very high regulatory hurdles to homeschooling. Even in states with few barriers (Like Texas) you are still required to teach “State Mandated Subjects” and are subject to scrutiny from the local public school district. In New York you’re not required to be “certified” but must be a “competent instructor”… and guess who gets to decide if you’re “competent”. Also, you’re not permitted to “home school” your neighbor’s kids; even extended family can be problematic in some states. In other states you can teach someone else’s kids ONLY if you’re a “certified” tutor… and who sets the criteria for you to become “certified”.
It would require a deeper analysis than I’m (frankly) willing to indulge in here… but my guess is (if someone wanted to look into it)… that the more homeschoolers you have in a particular area, or the greater the demand for Charter Schools, the more restrictive the regulations are. Also, I’m guessing, that the more expensive it is to enroll your kids in private school, the more difficult it is to OPEN a private school in the first place.
As educational alternatives become a threat to the government monopoly you can expect to see efforts by TheState to protect the bureaucracy and limit the freedom of the citizens.
A REAL Solution
Since it seems inevitable that your child is going to be sitting in a public school classroom… and you’re going to be forced to be dependent on the schools… the only viable option is to help your child become an INDEPENDENT learner. You may be dependent on the schools to provide the educational environment, but your child doesn’t need to be dependent on the teachers.
Don’t get me wrong, many teachers are outstanding, not just good at their job… but good people who want to help your child… but some aren’t. It’s not their fault, it’s another natural consequence of our dependency on a broken system… but I talked about that last week.
If you want your child to have the best chance of getting the maximum benefit of their educational experience it’s vital that they are not dependent on the teacher in the front of the room telling them what they need to know and how they need to learn. It’s critical that they have the tools they need to process information from text resources and create notes that facilitate the acquisition of knowledge. They need an organizational system to keep those notes readily at hand as well as effective time management skills to avoid being overwhelmed. They also need to be able to effectively collaborate, communicate and set their own goals. Most importantly, they need critical thinking and problem solving skills that will benefit them for their entire lives.
If your child doesn’t NEED an adult at the front of the room directing their learning then they will ALSO be equipped to continuously increase their knowledge base once they graduate. If your child is capable of directing their OWN learning they will be prepared for a lifetime of learning and be better equipped to adapt to an ever changing marketplace.
When your child sees the classroom teacher as a resource instead of THE source they will be empowered to surpass any expectation that the bureaucracy might set. If you worry about the knowledge the grade takes care of itself… if you only worry about the grade… you won’t learn a thing.
Learning isn’t as difficult as it seems if you follow a series of simple, mechanical steps that anyone can do to process information, self-assess and leverage the strengths of a learning team to overcome your individual weaknesses.
That’s what TheGateWay Method is all about.