Re: Responding to students' hashkafa questions
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Re: Responding to students' hashkafa questions

March 02, 2017 08:53AM
Rabbi Wallace Greene writes: "sadly the Jewish community still does not value trained limudei kodesh teachers. They would not hire an unlicensed general studies teacher, but it's OK to hire a seminary graduate a year out of high school or a kollel student whose only credential is that he needs a job."

What does "trained" mean in this context? I certainly agree that teachers should be quite knowledgeable regarding their subject matter. In addition, some teaching experience, perhaps in a youth group or camp setting, is quite helpful. Furthermore, mentoring at the hands of a senior teacher can be invaluable. However, use of the term "unlicensed" implies that the key is having a teacher's degree. If so, Rabbi Greene's complaint assumes a strong correlation between getting a teacher's degree and effective teaching. I question the accuracy of that assumption. Let us begin with anecdotal evidence and sevarot before moving on to scientific studies. In my twenty four years as a full time educator, I have not noticed that those with a teacher's degree come significantly more prepared to teach successfully. Those peers of mine who did get such a degree (I did not) have not affirmed that it was important for them to so with the exception of the resultant salary increase. It is much easier to give a good shiur on Humash than to give a good shiur about how to give a good shiur on Humash. Experience in the classroom matters much more than training. Would you rather hire a teacher with two successful years under his or her belt but no teaching degree or someone straight out of a MA program in education? Most limudei kodesh teachers in the Dati Leuumi schools in Israel do have a teacher's degree. Is there any sense that, as a result, education in Israel is much more professional and effective than in American yeshiva high schools? I would be curious to hear the impressions of others in the field regarding these questions.

For those who prefer statistical studies, see the chapter entitled "Most Likely to Succeed" in Malcolm Gladwell's What the Dog Saw. Among other things, he cites the research of Thomas J. Kane (see [educationnext.org]).

Here is one of Kane's important paragraphs.
<<
The results of our study of New York City public school teachers confirm a simple truth: some teachers are considerably better than others at helping students learn. For example, elementary-school students who have a teacher who performs in the top quartile of all elementary-school teachers learn 33 percent of a standard deviation more (substantially more) in math in a year than students who have a teacher who performs in the bottom quartile. Yet as we embrace this piece of conventional wisdom, we must discard another: the widespread sentiment that there are large differences in effectiveness between traditionally certified teachers and uncertified or alternatively certified teachers. The greatest potential for school districts to improve student achievement seems to rest not in regulating minimum qualifications for new teachers but in selectively retaining those teachers who are most effective during their first years of teaching.
>>

Yitzchak Blau



Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 03/02/2017 08:57AM by mlb.
Subject Author Posted

Responding to students' hashkafa questions

Norman Meskin January 29, 2017 09:24PM

Re: Responding to students' hashkafa questions

Yitzchak Blau January 29, 2017 09:27PM

Re: Responding to students' hashkafa questions

Zvi Grumet January 29, 2017 09:30PM

Re: Responding to students' hashkafa questions

Chaya Sima Koenigsberg January 30, 2017 05:33PM

Re: Responding to students' hashkafa questions

Russell Jay Hendel January 31, 2017 07:51AM

Re: Responding to students' hashkafa questions

Shalom Z. Berger January 31, 2017 08:47AM

Re: Responding to students' hashkafa questions

Prof. Yitzchok Levine January 31, 2017 02:32PM

Re: Responding to students' hashkafa questions

Wallace Greene February 01, 2017 04:22PM

Re: Responding to students' hashkafa questions

Elisha Paul February 01, 2017 08:00PM

Re: Responding to students' hashkafa questions

Yitzchok Levine February 06, 2017 02:24PM

Re: Responding to students' hashkafa questions

Tzvika Kanarek February 07, 2017 07:06AM

Re: Responding to students' hashkafa questions

Pesach Sommer February 08, 2017 07:40PM

Re: Responding to students' hashkafa questions

Yitzchok Levine February 19, 2017 07:18PM

Re: Responding to students' hashkafa questions

Wallace Greene February 23, 2017 08:13AM

Re: Responding to students' hashkafa questions

Shmuel Silberman March 01, 2017 09:03PM

Re: Responding to students' hashkafa questions

Yitzchok Levine March 01, 2017 09:09PM

Re: Responding to students' hashkafa questions

Yitzchak Blau March 02, 2017 08:53AM

Teacher training

Daphna Ansel March 18, 2017 08:22PM

Teacher training

Moshe Simkovich March 05, 2017 08:05PM

Teacher training

Elisha Paul March 05, 2017 08:09PM

Teacher training

Wallace Greene March 05, 2017 08:13PM

Teacher Licensing

Samuel Kapustin March 19, 2017 01:24PM

Re: Responding to students' hashkafa questions

Shalom Carmy February 09, 2017 06:54AM

Re: Responding to students' hashkafa questions

Shmuel Silberman February 09, 2017 08:38PM



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