Edutopia - August/September 2008 - (Page 58) “There’s a huge achievement gap,” says Debra Wexler, spokesperson for the NYC Department of Education. “Our approach comes from the realization that we have to try new things.’’ Paying for grades may fall short of the pedagogic ideal, but proponents rightly point out that middle-class parents do it all the time. They buy that Samsung ⇓ip phone for their sixth grader when she pulls a B in math up to an A, or they promise a Honda to their high school senior if he aces his AP exams. Learning for its own sake is laudable, but is it realistic? “Don’t come to me and say learning should all be intrinsic,’’ says Virginia Connelly, principal of JHS 123. “I’m in an area where there is no money. There is no allowance. Do I want learn- “Rewards produce only one thing: temporary obedience. They never help kids think more deeply.” ing to be an intrinsic value? Absolutely. But you know what? I got students excited about coming to school. College is years away. That’s a long time for them to stay at that high-pitched level of motivation. And I’m in competition with the streets. I’m in favor of anything that puts me on a level playing ⇒eld. Now students can earn some money at school, not just outside by stealing hubcaps and selling them to the chop shop.’’ Whether tangible incentives do, in fact, spark achievement is an open question. Enthusiasts at JHS 123 have no doubt. “It gives us motivation,’’ says seventh grader Ashley, who has racked up $230 so far. Yuli Gutierrez, Krizya’s mom and president of the school’s PTA, says, “It really pushes the kids to do better.” Psychology research, however, shows that although cash and prizes may boost compliance in the short term, over time they often decrease students’ interest in the tasks for which the kids are being rewarded, and may even decrease interest in activities that don’t win them anything. “Rewards, like punishments, produce only one thing: temporary obedience,’’ explains Al⇒e Kohn, author of Punished by Rewards: The Trouble with Gold Stars, Incentive Plans, A’s, Praise, and Other Bribes. “They never help kids think more deeply or become more enthusiastic about learning. I want to believe that at least the goal of these programs is admirable, even if the method is terrible. Sadly, however, schools often use these incentives not to promote meaningful learning but merely to raise scores on bad tests to make the adults look good.” But some school-based research suggests that a well-designed incentive program may bene⇒t students, especially when it is part of broader reform. A 2007 study of the AP incentive program in Texas found that participating schools not only boosted AP enrollment but also reported an approximate 30 percent increase in the number of students scoring 1100 and higher on the SATs and about an 8 percent increase in college matriculation. The researcher, C. Kirabo Jackson, an assistant professor of labor economics at Cornell University, says he believes the rewards alone weren’t directly responsible for a change in student behavior. Instead, they fed into a larger shift at schools, which began devoting money and staff to expand AP programs and to prepare students for more challenging academics. “The culture changed,’’ Jackson says. “The classes were more inclusive. And on the part of students, it was no longer uncool to take these courses.’’ When New York City education of⇒cials originally announced Spark, they set it up so that 40 schools could participate. They received 143 applications, necessitating an expansion of the program. Virginia Connelly saw the program as one more tool in her decade-long drive to remake the culture at JHS 123 and to rescue a failing school. “I wasn’t interested in the program as a magic bullet,’’ she notes. “There are no magic bullets.’’ JHS 123 has 565 students, 64 percent of whom are Hispanic and 35 percent of whom are black. English-language learners make up 17 percent of the student body, and 87 percent of kids are on the free-lunch program. Before Connelly arrived in 1998, parents avoided the place. As a review on Insideschools.org—an online guide to the city’s public schools—said of JHS 123, “Parents were scared off by tales of kids getting their heads dunked in toilets by gang members and students ripping ⇒xtures out of the walls and then hurling them from windows.” But Connelly changed things, reducing English and math class sizes to an average of sixteen students, hiring more teachers for core subjects (“I buy teachers—I don’t buy test coordinators,” she states), and switching to mastery grading. A year before Spark started, Connelly instituted a rewards system in which students earn play money, called Zone dollars, and spend it on tickets to school dances or on Yankees caps, stuffed animals, and other trinkets at a school store. Zone charts are posted all over the school, listing behaviors and their corresponding ⇒nancial rewards. Students who read and show respect for displays in the hallway earn one Zone dollar. If someone drops something, the student who picks it up and returns it gets two Zone dollars. Students love Zone bucks, but Connelly says their value lies in something deeper. “It’s about establishing a relationship in which I honor you, and you honor me,’’ she explains. “It’s about setting expectations, constantly communicating those expectations, and reinforcing them.” Raising expectations and reinforcing them—sometimes with rewards—yields payoffs. In the third quarter of this year, 230 students made honor roll, up from 180 in 2006–07 and 95 in 2005–06. Although the annual state test scores have not yet been announced, by Connelly’s reckoning, the results will see an overall rise of 35 percent in language arts and 50 percent or higher in math. How much Spark, or any tool, contributed to these outcomes is impossible to say. Connelly believes Spark has the biggest impact at the top and the bottom of the class. “It works really well for kids who can earn a lot,’’ she says. “And it works really well for kids who never get anything. It’s great that I can say, ‘I can give you bucks for showing up.’ If I don’t get them in here, I can’t teach them.’’ e Fran Smith is a contributing writer for Edutopia. 58 EDUTOPIA AUGUST/SEPTEMBER 2008 http://Insideschools.org
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of Edutopia - August/September 2008 Edutopia Contents Up Front Feedback Dispatches Sage Advice Ask Ellen Head of Class Cool Schools Design: Building on Disaster What's Next Full-Service Schools In the Trenches Moral Aptitude Serious Gaming Behaveyourself.com Media Is the Message The Way of the Wiki A Match Made in Cyberspace Hail to the New Chief Rise of the Robots Disrupting Class As Others See Us Heart & Soul Pop Quiz: Moby Edutopia - August/September 2008 Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Edutopia (Page Cover1) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Edutopia (Page Cover2) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Contents (Page 1) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Contents (Page 2) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Contents (Page 3) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Contents (Page 4) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Up Front (Page 5) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Up Front (Page 6) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Feedback (Page 7) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Feedback (Page 8) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Feedback (Page 9) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Dispatches (Page 10) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Dispatches (Page 11) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Sage Advice (Page 12) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Sage Advice (Page 13) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Ask Ellen (Page 14) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Ask Ellen (Page 15) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Ask Ellen (Page 16) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Head of Class (Page 17) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Head of Class (Page 18) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Head of Class (Page bindin1) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Head of Class (Page bindin2) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Head of Class (Page 19) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Head of Class (Page 20) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Head of Class (Page 21) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Head of Class (Page 22) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Head of Class (Page 23) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Cool Schools (Page 24) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Cool Schools (Page 25) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Cool Schools (Page 26) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Cool Schools (Page 27) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Design: Building on Disaster (Page 28) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Design: Building on Disaster (Page 29) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Design: Building on Disaster (Page 30) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Design: Building on Disaster (Page 31) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - What's Next (Page 32) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - What's Next (Page 33) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Full-Service Schools (Page 34) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - In the Trenches (Page 35) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Moral Aptitude (Page 36) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Serious Gaming (Page 37) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Behaveyourself.com (Page 38) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Behaveyourself.com (Page 39) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Media Is the Message (Page 40) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Media Is the Message (Page 41) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - The Way of the Wiki (Page 42) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - The Way of the Wiki (Page 43) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - A Match Made in Cyberspace (Page 44) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Hail to the New Chief (Page 45) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Rise of the Robots (Page 46) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Rise of the Robots (Page 47) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Disrupting Class (Page 48) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Disrupting Class (Page 49) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Disrupting Class (Page 50) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Disrupting Class (Page 51) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - As Others See Us (Page 52) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - As Others See Us (Page 53) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - As Others See Us (Page 54) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - As Others See Us (Page 55) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Heart & Soul (Page 56) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Heart & Soul (Page 57) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Heart & Soul (Page 58) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Heart & Soul (Page 59) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Pop Quiz: Moby (Page 60) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Pop Quiz: Moby (Page Cover3) Edutopia - August/September 2008 - Pop Quiz: Moby (Page Cover4)
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