WARNING: the following response could be seen as a rant. It probably is.
I read the Cochran-Smith & Lytle article with some trepidation. One of the hard things about being a teacher-librarian in 2013 is that I expect any day now that some policymaker is going to make me redundant. Ouch. So when I read this quote about the latest developments in Core Curriculum making and standardized testing, I actually felt reassured:
Part of what these developments have in common is a set of underlying assumptions about school change that de-emphasizes differences in local contexts, de-emphasizes the construction of local knowledge in and by school communities, and de-emphasizes the role of the teacher as decision maker and change agent. (Cochran-Smith and Lytle, 1999, p. 22).
That paragraph could have been written yesterday and still had as much impact! Here we are 14 years later still battling to be treated as professionals or at least to be taken seriously…losing the battle to locally develop solutions for our students. I know I’m atypical, but people ask me all the time why I’m doing my M.Ed. now….there’s no financial advantage, I don’t dream of being a principal or superintendent…I love learning. I research because I want to know more about how to solve systemic problems that are preventing students from achieving better results. I read this paragraph out loud to my husband this morning saying that I feel sometimes that being a teacher-librarian and an agent of change is like painting a big target on my back and I do sometimes feel like retreating back into an autonomous classroom. But now that the veil has been lifted, and I can see clearly the larger perspective of how many compromises we’re making in public education at the expense of our students, I can’t go back. I can’t stop trying to be heard. I only hope that through research and my own discovery that my voice will somehow become more valid in the eyes of policymakers.
References
Cochran-Smith, M., & Lytle, S. L. (1999). The teacher research movement: A decade later. Educational researcher, 28(7), 15-25.
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