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Harriett Janetos's avatar

"The case for a common, knowledge-rich curriculum is all but unassailable, but the prescription is easier said than done. It invariably runs up against resistance due to philosophical, political, and practical factors."

I'm not resisting--just trying to deal with all the "practical factors". You have acknowledged that we teachers are mere mortals (thank you for this), so it's within the constraints of human limitation that I speak. After I read The Knowledge Gap, a gathering of immediate and extended family members (in which I was the only teacher) discussed our feelings about teaching the civil war to second graders as CKLA does. I pointed out that in California, this is a fifth grade social studies standard, and I'd rather have it align with that curriculum, both to ease the burden on the teacher as well as to help cement the facts and concepts through an interdisciplinary approach. Having just come off a second grade teaching assignment, I would have liked my ELA curriculum to align with my science and social studies standards at that grade level.

I began my teaching career as a high school English teacher, and my favorite class during teacher training was Teaching Reading in the CONTENT Areas, which emphasized the importance of every teacher understanding how to teach reading (and, I would argue, writing), which is not to stand in front of the class and lecture--it's through engaging, interactive teacher/student direct instruction as Zach Groshell describes in Just Tell Them. But my content area colleagues let me down and did not use best practices in reading and writing instruction in their classrooms. How do I know? I know because I taught at the high school I attended, and my former teachers were now my colleagues.

Getting this right is a great goal for all the reasons you provide--it really is--but I really wish that the outside forces could come together and align the curriculum--both in the standards and the materials produced to teach them--to make life easier for us mere mortals. And then provide coaching in how to teach these materials.

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John Droz's avatar

Robert: Since you appear to assert (here and elsewhere) that Critical Thinking can not be taught, how about the corrolary: Can Critical Thinking be learned?

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