It used to be fashionable to talk about how technology was going to solve all of our educational equity and excellence problems—bringing relevant, high-quality content to all students, scaffolding instruction to meet each student where he or she was, and engaging every student in meaningful learning, even if that student didn’t have access to excellent teachers…or any teachers. Maybe teachers weren’t necessary anymore, we argued. After all, students can reach out to Wikipedia and YouTube and online calculators and so on, to get any bit of information they might need. They can teach themselves! And, with new national standards, everyone will be learning the same things at the same pace, so…problem solved.
Ha, ha! Obviously, none of this has come to pass. Perhaps
less obviously, none of it even made sense.
With learning standards stuffed with more content than could
ever be taught in 20 years, much less the 12 we’re given, and standardized tests
focused on the low-DOK, low-Bloom levels of thinking that computers can easily
score, perhaps it was easy for some of us to think that the primary role of the
teacher was to disseminate information.
It is not. It never was.
Look at the great teachers of history. We don’t remember
Socrates because he told people a lot of things; we remember him because
he asked a lot of annoying questions that made people think about
things. Teachers do not simply hand out facts; they shape minds.
Please note: I did not say teachers should not
provide factual information to students. You can’t ask students to think about
literature, history, science, and mathematics if they don’t know any of those
things. And Googling a term is not the same thing as knowing something. Neither
is reading a textbook chapter.
So, what is the role of the teacher when it comes to using a
textbook? School districts spend millions of dollars adopting these things, and
school boards all over the country engage in fierce debates about which ones are
most appropriate for their students. Occasionally, we learn that a textbook
presents information in a way that one group of people or another objects to.
Or—worse—we learn that a publisher is presenting information differently in
different states, as this recent New York Times story
uncovered. Shockingly, we learned that the Texas and California versions of an
American history textbook differed slightly in what they chose to include, and
how they framed or presented that information—not only because of each state’s
learning standards, but also because of the partisan politics that informed
both the crafting of the standards and the adoption decision-making criteria of
the local school districts. Shocking!
Except…is it? Textbooks are written by actual people, not
machines—and some of those people, or their publishers, may have political
biases, agendas, and points of view. Some of them may even be hypocrites who
care only about making money. This makes textbooks different from every other
book ever written…how?
The only way in which this discovery could be truly shocking
is if we genuinely believed that textbooks (or any books) were supposed to be
completely neutral, objective, and bias-free—that they could and had to tell
the single, reliable, uncontestable “truth,” and that all a teacher had to do was
assign students to read a chapter and then answer the questions at the end.
That’s nonsense. Every text has an author; every text has a
point of view. That’s true even when an author tries not to have a point
of view.
This is why, where young people are involved, every text
needs a teacher. And every teacher has the right—the obligation, really—to take
a stance regarding that text and engage readers in a critical dialogue about
it—even if the extent of the dialogue is a single question, like, “How can we
know whether or not this statement is true?”
I know: textbooks were never meant to be objects of critical
debate. The whole point of a textbook was to take a tremendous amount of
complex information, boil it down into bite-sized chunks, and feed it as
effortlessly as possible into student brains, much the way a mama bird might
chew up a worm before feeding it to her chicks. That’s why textbooks are
invaluable if your goal is to cram students full of facts, and insufficient,
or even problematic, if your goal is to get students to think. But in this
hyper-partisan, fake-news, Russian-bot, deep-fake world, it is critically
important to get students to think about the content that is streaming
relentlessly into their brains. Even when that content comes from a textbook
publisher. In the end, it’s not what the text does that matters most; it’s what
you do with the text.
As Clare Basil recently argued,
in defense of Classical Education:
This approach requires
understanding our nation’s history, not only by reading a list of texts considered
crucial to our history, but inquiring after how those texts––the ideas they
embody and the movements they give rise to––shift how Americans define
themselves as a people.
How can teachers do this? Not by limiting what students read or see based on their own biases; and not by suppressing their own voice and silently feeding text to their students. Teachers can help students start to think critically about what they read, and see, and hear, by asking three little questions—every day, all the time:
- What do you think?
- Why do you think it? (in other words, how can you prove that you’re right?
- Why does it matter?
Or, if you want to get a little more complex, teachers can
build critical thinking by doing the following:
- Providing historical and cultural context and perspective
- Demonstrating how to evaluate textual evidence
- Eliciting and challenging student opinions
- Holding students accountable for defending their opinions with evidence
- Introducing new information that supports or contradicts the text
- Teaching students the basics of rational argument, and the rhetorical fallacies that poor arguments make use of.
You can do this with an essay, a novel, a movie, a song. You
can even do it with a textbook. You are not obligated to agree with every word
a student reads, just because the district paid a lot of money to obtain those
words. But you are obligated to engage with those words…especially if
you disagree with them.
Look: everything that comes into a classroom, in physical or
virtual form, is simply a resource for teachers to use. None of it can take the
place of that teacher. Not even if the publisher says it can. Not even if the
principal says it must.
Remember at the end of Dirty Dancing (if you’re old
enough), when Patrick Swayze says, “Nobody puts Baby in the
corner?” and pulls Jennifer Grey out onto the dance floor?
Well, I say: “Nobody puts Teacher in a corner.”
Grab that textbook and kick off your shoes. It’s time to
dance.
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