Welcome to another edition of Education News This Week. This week I’ll share why LA Unified School District teachers (and a lot of us other teachers) are not happy about mandated discipline changes, What Congress has heard about mental health issues in school (will they finally listen?) and How ChatGPT has a sister AI being born that is supposed to be better for students. All this and my commentary right after this. Stay tuned.
Hope your summer is off to a fabulous and restful start. As I was going through recent news stories, I came across this story about LAUSD Teachers who are not happy about changes to Discipline. This resonated with me because so many of my teacher friends are also not pleased.
All of us in education are aware that discipline is probably the biggest key to making sure students can function in a classroom. If students are acting up or being disrespectful, it takes time away from lessons while the teacher has to stop and deal with whatever issue is causing the distraction. Then it’s time wasted while we refocus the kids while hoping that no one has unknowingly videotaped the whole incident so that it can be blown out of proportion on some social media websites that the news monitors.
Suspending Suspensions
LAUSD is a good example of how this is going in schools all over. LAUSD was the first in California to ban suspensions for defiance and roll out restorative justice as an alternative.
Restorative Justice, MTSS (Multi-tiered System of Supports), and PBIS (Positive Behavior Intervention and Supports) are the buzzy new ideas that school districts have been adopting in order to change how the school reacts to discipline issues. It has been well documented that suspensions and other consequences that remove students from classrooms do not do much to change behaviors and are often used more on students of color and contribute to the school-to-prison pipeline.
“All of us in education, let’s be honest, are aware that discipline is probably the biggest key to making sure all students can function in a classroom.”
A study done by the American Institutes for Research showed findings that underscore suspending students does little to reduce future misbehavior for the disciplined students or their peers. Suspensions did not result in improved academic achievement for peers or their perceptions of a positive school climate. Plus, the more severe the exclusionary discipline, the greater its negative effects were on a student’s future academic performance, attendance, and behavior. LAUSD had a 90% minority enrollment rate, with 60% considered economically disadvantaged.
Where’s the training?
But to the teachers, research results do little to aid with the current problems associated with switching to different discipline requirements. The complaints are the common ones that plague most schools when they roll out something new. Not enough training!
With this new policy, schools are not allowed to suspend unless it is for things outlined under California Education Code 48900. Suspendable offences are conducting violent crimes, possessing drugs or weapons, stealing, harassing, hazing, acting obscenely, threatening to inflict bodily harm, or destroying school property
So what are teachers supposed to do with students who are disrupting class and then tell a teacher to “fuck off” or “get out of my face”? This has happened to teachers, I know. What message are you sending to the rest of the class when the only thing a teacher can do in many cases is tell the student to sit down?
Discipline Data
Schools have to keep track of suspension rates and report them. But the numbers are dubious. What happens to students who are sent to the office? Some are sent home, but that doesn’t necessarily get reported as suspensions. I saw this happen at the school I taught at. It just feels like Admin is “cooking” the books to make it seem like things are under control when they actually aren’t. Some schools are calling the police to handle things, but the police cannot do anything because “willful defiance is not a crime.” Wanna know if this type of policy is making things better? Go sit in classrooms or ask your teacher friends what they think. Because no one else is asking for their opinions.
Teachers feel that the http://transparencyinteaching.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/joshua-hoehne-wWkCAnmFF20-unsplash-1-526×296-1.jpeg is pushing the burden of discipline on teachers. Just one more thing teachers have to do besides handling the curriculum. And with little or no training, it’s no wonder teachers are not feeling all warm and fuzzy towards these new ways of handling discipline.
In LA, for example, a high amount of trained staff leave. Some get let go because money runs out (take that Covid funding), and in one case, 10 of the 11 teachers who were trained for the restorative justice task force left the campus.
A lot more training needed
Only 307 of the 900 campuses have received training on how to implement these new programs. Last year the district budgeted funds for five restorative justice counselors! How is this even enough to support the 500,000 students in the district? This year the district added 20 more costing $7.2 million. This only covers less than a ⅓ of LA’s schools. This stuff is expensive! That’s still not enough to support the number of students who need help.
Look, we all want what is best for students. And yes, students are disciplined for very silly, frivolous things. But if we really want to change how we do things, then we have to go slow to go fast. Require training and pay teachers to attend. If they refuse, move them to another school or pay those who comply more. You can’t change the entire system overnight. If you don’t get buy-in, it will never work because this type of discipline needs a shared vision and consistency across the campus and support from parents too.
Teachers have so much on their plates already. You can’t keep putting more straws on the already stressed-out camel’s back. You have to allow schools to do what works for them until the PROPER training can be completed and rolled out correctly. I feel your pain LAUSD teachers.
Superintendent Tells U.S. Senators About Mental Health
Ed News now recounts how Joshua Garcia, the superintendent of the Tacoma district in Washington state, testified before the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee (HELP) on June 8, 2023. He talked about students’ worsening mental health. Garcia was one of several authorities who spoke to the committee. Another was U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy, who has declared that the worsening mental health of the nation’s youth is the “defining public health issue of our time.
Garcia highlighted the Tacoma Whole Child Initiative. He shared how the district has found a way to sustainably work with students to continuously support their well-being rather than focusing on helping students only when a crisis occurs.
Social media is to blame. We know it’s linked to loneliness, isolation, and lack of community engagement. There’s also the trauma many students deal with regarding family and other living situations, not to mention world challenges, such as climate change, gun violence, racism, political polarization, and economic instability. These are all considered significant drivers of the youth mental health crisis. Makes me think of how different the world was when I was growing up. Thank goodness cell phones were not a part of my life and the life of my kids. I really do believe they are the major cause of all of this nonsense.
To this point, Surgeon General Murthy urged senators to expand access to high-quality, affordable, and culturally competent mental health care for children and also work to tackle the causes of mental health problems, such as social media and trauma caused by gun violence.
Mental Health Means More Money
The speakers suggested that schools could decrease the ratio of students to school psychologists and mental health workers by using federal funding made available during the COVID-19 pandemic. But then what happens when that money is no longer available? Do those mental health providers disappear, too?
“I really do believe that cell phones and that all the things that come with them are the major cause of all of this mental health nonsense.”
Limiting access is tricky
It’s nothing new that Lawmakers have Suggested Social media is dangerous and needs to have more restrictions imposed. They’d like to see that those under 13 do not have access to it at all, and those 13 – 17 have to get parental permission. They want Social Media to stop using algorithms that promote addiction and targeted advertising until users are 18.
I have no idea how to put these restrictions in place in a way that will work. I’m telling you, kids are very savvy at getting around blocked apps. Right now, it’s as easy as changing the year you were born on the sign-up page.
Sorry parents, but I feel this one is on you. (No politician is going to say that because it won’t get them elected). Parents, you have control over what your kids are doing. You’re paying for the cell phone and as such can control how much time kids spend on their phones. You can determine what they can use their phones for. (I’ll post a link to an article from Consumer Reports. It explains what parents can do to have more control over what their kids have access to on their phones.) Bottom line, it’s your job to be nosy. Do your job. (Good thing I’m not running for office!)
A Student Friendly Replacement for ChatGPT
Next in Ed News we turn to developments in the area of AI. Get ready for “Stretch,” a chatbot currently under development specifically for K-12 educators.
Instead of absorbing information from the entire internet to train its artificially intelligent brain, Stretch is only learning from materials that have been developed or vetted by ISTE and ASCD. Eventually, the tool may include information from other education and tech organizations that ISTE partners with.
Safer Place to Ask Questions?
They hope that this will avoid the problems with ChatGPT and similar chatbots. These often include inaccurate or outdated information in their output. I’ve used ChatPGT to help with writing articles. I always double-check any stats or references it gives. I have on multiple occasions found that these often do not exist. It helps with writer’s block, but it is very undependable for research and fact-finding. It does, after all, pull from the entire web. We all know how much junk and misinformation is out there.
Stretch cites its sources, giving it another layer of accountability, developers said. It notifies the user if it’s asked something outside of its expertise. Unlike ChatGPT, it will say it can’t help with the question instead of making something up, like ChatGPT sometimes does.
Limiting information
Stretch is one of the first so-called “walled garden AI” tools. This means it’s trained on a limited, carefully curated pool of information to serve a specific community in education-related areas.
Here’s a problem I can see coming. Since the information is going to be curated, It will just be a matter of time before someone starts complaining. They’ll say the materials are “biased. The indoctrinators and the groomers are picking and choosing what students see. Am I getting cynical? Hmmm, how can this be???
Anyways, this wraps another edition of “Ed New This Week.” I hope you’ve learned something that will improve your teaching, or your attitude. Maybe give you something to share over a cocktail. Leave us your ideas about these stories and what stories you want to know about. Here’s wishing you an awesome week, and until next time
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