WITH GROWING EVIDENCE THAT STUDENTS ARE SUFFERING FROM
THE INTENSE COMPETITION FOR COLLEGE ADMISSION, SCHOOLS AROUND THE COUNTRY ARE
RETHINKING EVERYTHING FROM TESTS TO CLASSES TO START TIMES
By NIKHIL GOYAL | Wall Street Journal | http://on.wsj.com/1QEfccV
Feb. 12, 2016 1:28 p.m. ET :: Last
year, at the West Windsor-Plainsboro Regional School District in central New Jersey,
superintendent David Aderhold decided that students had had enough. District staff
had recommended mental-health assessments for more than 120 middle- and
highschool students for depression, anxiety and suicidal thoughts—a pronounced
increase from the previous year. In a letter to parents last fall, he wrote, “I
cannot help but think that we may be failing [our students] by reinforcing an
educational system that perpetuates grades at the expense of deep and
meaningful learning.”
Mr. Aderhold isn’t alone in questioning the high-pressure
environment at many schools.
With growing evidence that students are suffering from
the intense competition for college admission, schools around the country are
rethinking everything from tests to classes to start times.
Mr. Aderhold, whose district near Princeton University
includes 9,800 students, has enacted reforms. He abolished midterms and final
exams and instituted a no-homework policy during breaks and some weekends. It
hasn’t all gone smoothly. Some parents have complained, worried that the
changes will leave their children unprepared for elite colleges.
Other schools are making similar changes. Last year, the
board of education of Montgomery County Public Schools in Rockville, Md., one
of the largest and highest-ranking districts in the U.S., voted to eliminate
high-school final exams and to replace them, starting next fall, with in-class
projects and tasks. Some schools have scrapped Advanced Placement classes,
saying that they contribute to academic pressure.
Others are aiming to give students more opportunities to
explore their passions, work on real-world projects and collaborate and learn
from other students of all ages. The idea is that education must be for life
and “school needs to stop getting in the way of curiosity,” said Ira Socol, an
educator at Albemarle County Public Schools in Charlottesville, Va.
The Albemarle district has added music studios and spaces
for hackers and “makers” to its middle and high schools in the past several
years so that students can take charge of their own learning and do
interdisciplinary, hands-on work. At one middle school, students built tree
houses in the cafeteria, learning problem-solving and technical skills along
the way. Students can now sit in the tree houses to eat lunch, congregate and relax.
The schools have also begun to gravitate away from traditional exams and toward
portfolio-based assessments.
To deal with the problem of sleep deprivation, some
schools have adopted later start times. In 2014, researchers at the University
of Minnesota examined data collected from more than 9,000 students at eight
high schools in Minnesota, Colorado and Wyoming that had made this shift. The
study found that when schools started at 8:30 a.m. or later, teenagers reported
lower rates of depression and substance use, fewer car crashes, less absenteeism
and tardiness, and higher test scores. In November, the Seattle School Board
voted to require city high schools to move start times from 7:50 to 8:45 a.m., making
it one of the largest districts in the country to implement the change.
College and university administrators have started to
take notice as well. In January, a report from the Harvard Graduate School of
Education called for a fundamental reimagining of college admissions. Endorsed
by more than 80 college presidents, deans, professors and high-school
administrators—including every Ivy League admissions dean—the report argued
that colleges must value ethical and intellectual engagement, “deflate undue
academic performance pressure” and “redefine achievement in ways that create
greater equity and access for economically diverse students.”
The recommendations included: discouraging students from
overloading on AP or International Baccalaureate classes; asking candidates for
admission to describe only two or three meaningful extracurricular activities
on their applications, to show that the colleges value quality over quantity;
and evaluating whether the SAT and ACT standardized tests should be optional.
The reformers hope that these steps will ease the
high-stakes achievement culture. As Mr. Aderhold of West Windsor-Plainsboro
told me, “We’re not producing widgets. We’re producing citizens of the world.”
—Mr. Goyal is the author of “Schools on Trial: How Freedom and Creativity Can Fix Our Educational Malpractice,” to be published Feb. 16 by Doubleday.
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