Category Archives: Reform & Improvement

Playing Education Like A Professional Sport

What if the scene of professional sports applied to education? Education would see casual spectators, loyal fans, owners and agents, referees and commissioners, rules and regulations, plus a schedule of games to play.

But who would education play and how would it know it won? I guess in formal schooling there have always been competition: for the highest grade, awards and recognition, maybe even your name on a diploma. But that seems different.

When I think about education as a professional sport, I’m envisioning there is a goal or championship, a SuperBowl,  some record-breaking accomplishment, something that gets media attention and worthy of autographs.

So why isn’t education like that?  Surely there would be more prospects and recruits.  Another question: where would the stadium and arena be located?  And who would attend and why?

If you haven’t figured by now, there no answer, or one is not provided. But there is something more promising.  Thinking about education beyond the boring brick and mortar, and transforming it into exciting living and happening.

For those who are not satisfying with a non-answer, I offer this:  If playing education was like a professional sport, we would practice everyday, work on weaknesses, excel in our strengths, find others, tell others, and practice together until we came across the most important question: What’s our  ’fighting name?’

The Best Doctors. Lawyers, and Educators

Apologies if the title implies another top 10 list, since the intention was to comment about what makes the best doctors, lawyers, and educators. I’m honored to see medical doctors practicing in underdeveloped countries, helping the sick, instead of scheduling dates in opulent offices reached by appointment only.

They’re the best doctors: bringing medicine to the sick. Same with lawyers, when they offer legal advice or represent a client ‘for the good’ of the profession and legal system. But what makes the best educators? In the case of medical doctors, how good would they be, if they only cared for the healthy; the same with lawyers, if their only clients were those who knew the law well.

It follows that the best educators are those who provide education to the ones who need it. I caution to say uneducated, because unlike the sick or poorly represented, being uneducated assumes that a ‘fully’ educated exists.

It is probably this point, among others, that distinguishes the three professions. While medical doctors can make us healthier, if a patient dies, the doctor doesn’t die too. If the client is sentenced to jail, the lawyer doesn’t serve the same sentence. But if the learner fails, the educator fails as well.  Not just because of poor practices, doctors and lawyers can do that also, but in preparing learners to become the teachers of educators now and continuing.

In a way, the best educators are investors with a portfolio of healthy, law-abiding, and troubled assets; from grade school to retirement home;  rural and urban, and having scheduled appointments or not.

State of Continuing Education 2012

Presenting the ‘State of Continuing Education’ comes with at least two outdated and conflicting terms. Some changes have occurred, but many have not. We have been hopeful and disappointed, gone through set-backs and have led the way.

We see Education has taken many forms and have been used for different purposes. The challenge going forward will involve defining the education you need among multiple options. Some are costly, many are cheaper, a few are unnecessary, but all of them will teach.

Learning has also come into fashion, which makes it harder to determine its real impact. The shift has turned away from learning individually to learning as a group, with a community, or in a society.

It appears that problems will define what we decide to learn, instead of also curiosity. Although both are needed, the expectations for education and learning to provide solutions and credentials on a timeline, within a budget, for a job and trying to keep one, are trending increasingly higher.

What is getting better and expanding is that education is not just k-12, but throughout a lifetime.  What will be interesting to see is whether adults will capture all of their grade-school experiences, good and bad, and return back to these schools and improve them: Wouldn’t that be continuing education?

Let’s Salute Returning Veterans with Solutions

“Don’t give me a parade, give me a job” is a common cadence you will hear concerning the dismal employment options for returning military veterans. These kinds of statements are battle-cries to awaken the rest of Americans to honor these veterans by hiring them and offering more than the past.

In an earlier time, the G.I. Bill offered incentives for colleges and universities to open their doors and give educational access to our veterans. Back then, there was a certain expectation that a job would be there after earning a degree, even many government jobs were available. But in recent times, with the government shrinking, unemployment rising, and job options diminishing, going back to school for a degree seems pointless, since no future job will be waiting.

In these upcoming days, months, and years how can Americans still honor returning military veterans?

Perhaps this is a time to reassess or redefine education, learning, and employment. The experiences of war have given many veterans all of the required education needed for securing a job. However, these experiences are not easily documented or transferred into customary courses or resumes. The lessons many veterans have learned are worth more than college credit.

Yet there is an approach within some colleges called ‘prior learning assessments’ (PLA), which attempt to evaluate learning from experiences such as the military.  Traditionally, these assessments suggest academic credits when attending college. Although this is a good start, perhaps these assessments could provide more recommendations when searching for job openings too.

For example, there are other assessments such as the National Work Readiness Credential (NWRC) that attempts to score test-takers of their readiness for future employment. In a similar way, prior learning assessments could be transformed into future work assessments that could rival traditional resumes and other job-readiness exams.  Many of these evaluations look for reasoning, judgment, attention-to-detail, and other characteristics that many returning veterans already have; in addition to having character, integrity, and loyalty, which any future employer would value.

What I would like to see are more transition programs that would place veterans in work internships while improving any additional education and learning needed.  But instead of just the traditional skills and competencies, learners are given an opportunity to nurture their strengths and talents.  These programs would point veterans in the right direction in pursuing the most appropriate profession, equipped with an entrepreneurial knowledge and spirit to create their own jobs in the future.

In the end, what I’ve noticed about many returning military veterans is that they are committed to making a difference. All that Americans need to do, is to honor them by giving them something different; not just a welcome-home salute, but alternative solutions that they fully deserve.

Working Value of Education

“Who says you can’t put a value on education,” points a friend illustrating a chart by the US Bureau of Labor Statistics. The results favor the relationship that the higher the education, the lower rate of unemployment.  Yet, these numbers do not give any more comfort to those who may have a job with less education, and especially to those who are currently jobless or under-employed (educated with more schooling or not).

Yet this chart raises some important questions about the connection between education and work. So what can we learn about this issue?

First, maybe we need to start a different discussion. For example, some philosophers have questioned the ‘centrality of work’ and its dominating role in our society. Other thinkers see work as giving essential meaning to our personal lives.  Nevertheless, because many people still need to work, these kinds of discussions can come up empty if not tied to real-life solutions. 

Here is where the role of education is critical.  I would agree, it doesn’t help a jobseeker to hear that he or she must take more time, to spend more money, to get more education without any guarantee of a job waiting at the end. 

Therefore, there must be a closer link between education and the certainty of work. One of the drawbacks to selling the need of education is that it looks like an isolated pursuit, disconnected from the real world and current issues. More education requires a measure of time, patience, and money that appear unavoidable, yet conflicts with our technological, high-speed, microwave era.

Simply there’s no time. People want their degrees now, expressed as wanting to  learn what’s needed today-in-a-day. Offering alternatives may devalue the traditional process of education and undermine the efforts of those who have put in additional time and effort.

But what if education was apart of the job?  Not just continuing professional training for people with some level of experience and expertise; but rather positions for those with no experience, where jobs are created upon changing needs and connected to local schools, colleges, and universities for approved instruction and support.  

A suggestion in this different discussion would be for us to turn the old expressions such as ”hands-on-training” and “learning on the job” into serious strategic approaches to pursuing work while getting an education:  Sort of working internships for adults where a person who has a job, or looks for one, is fulfilling the needs for more education, satisfying the requirements for current credentials, and hopefully securing the paths for continued employment.