Why Tough Teachers Get
Good Results
By
Joanne Lipman
I had a teacher once who
called his students "idiots" when they screwed up. He was our
orchestra conductor, a fierce Ukrainian immigrant named Jerry Kupchynsky, and
when someone played out of tune, he would stop the entire group to yell,
"Who eez deaf in first violins!?" He made us rehearse until our
fingers almost bled. He corrected our wayward hands and arms by poking at us
with a pencil.
Today, he'd be fired.
But when he died a few years ago, he was celebrated: Forty years' worth of
former students and colleagues flew back to my New Jersey hometown from every
corner of the country, old instruments in tow, to play a concert in his memory.
I was among them, toting my long-neglected viola. When the curtain rose on our
concert that day, we had formed a symphony orchestra the size of the New York
Philharmonic.
I was stunned by the
outpouring for the gruff old teacher we knew as Mr. K. But I was equally struck
by the success of his former students. Some were musicians, but most had
distinguished themselves in other fields, like law, academia and medicine.
Research tells us that there is a positive correlation between music education
and academic achievement. But that alone didn't explain the belated surge of
gratitude for a teacher who basically tortured us through adolescence.
We're in the midst of a national wave of self-recrimination over
the U.S. education system. Every day there is hand-wringing over our students falling
behind the rest of the world. Fifteen-year-olds in the U.S. trail students in
12 other nations in science and 17 in math, bested by their counterparts not
just in Asia but in Finland, Estonia and the Netherlands, too. An entire
industry of books and consultants has grown up that capitalizes on our
collective fear that American education is inadequate and asks what American
educators are doing wrong.
I would ask a different
question. What did Mr. K do right? What can we learn from a teacher whose methods
fly in the face of everything we think we know about education today, but who
was undeniably effective?
As it turns out, quite a
lot. Comparing Mr. K's methods with the latest findings in fields from music to
math to medicine leads to a single, startling conclusion: It's time to revive
old-fashioned education. Not just traditional but old-fashioned in the sense
that so many of us knew as kids, with strict discipline and unyielding demands.
Because here's the thing: It works.
Now I'm not calling for
abuse; I'd be the first to complain if a teacher called my kids names. But the
latest evidence backs up my modest proposal. Studies have now shown, among
other things, the benefits of moderate childhood stress; how praise kills kids'
self-esteem; and why grit is a better predictor of success than SAT scores.
All of which flies in
the face of the kinder, gentler philosophy that has dominated American
education over the past few decades. The conventional wisdom holds that
teachers are supposed to tease knowledge out of students, rather than pound it
into their heads. Projects and collaborative learning are applauded;
traditional methods like lecturing and memorization—derided as "drill and
kill"—are frowned upon, dismissed as a surefire way to suck young minds
dry of creativity and motivation.
But the conventional wisdom is wrong. And the following eight
principles—a manifesto if you will, a battle cry inspired by my old teacher and
buttressed by new research—explain why.
Psychologist K. Anders
Ericsson gained fame for his research showing that true expertise requires
about 10,000 hours of practice, a notion popularized by Malcolm Gladwell in his
book "Outliers." But an often-overlooked finding from the same study is
equally important: True expertise requires teachers who give
"constructive, even painful, feedback," as Dr. Ericsson put it in a
2007 Harvard Business Review article. He assessed research on top performers in
fields ranging from violin performance to surgery to computer programming to
chess. And he found that all of them "deliberately picked unsentimental
coaches who would challenge them and drive them to higher levels of
performance."
Rote learning, long
discredited, is now recognized as one reason that children whose families come
from India (where memorization is still prized) are creaming their peers in the
National Spelling Bee Championship. This cultural difference also helps to
explain why students in China (and Chinese families in the U.S.) are better at
math. Meanwhile, American students struggle with complex math problems because,
as research makes abundantly clear, they lack fluency in basic addition and
subtraction—and few of them were made to memorize their times tables.
William Klemm of Texas
A&M University argues that the U.S. needs to reverse the bias against
memorization. Even the U.S. Department of Education raised alarm bells,
chastising American schools in a 2008 report that bemoaned the lack of math
fluency (a notion it mentioned no fewer than 17 times). It concluded that
schools need to embrace the dreaded "drill and practice."
Kids who understand that
failure is a necessary aspect of learning actually perform better. In a 2012
study, 111 French sixth-graders were given anagram problems that were too
difficult for them to solve. One group was then told that failure and trying
again are part of the learning process. On subsequent tests, those children
consistently outperformed their peers.
The fear, of course is
that failure will traumatize our kids, sapping them of self-esteem. Wrong
again. In a 2006 study, a Bowling Green State University graduate student
followed 31 Ohio band students who were required to audition for placement and
found that even students who placed lowest "did not decrease in their
motivation and self-esteem in the long term." The study concluded that
educators need "not be as concerned about the negative effects" of
picking winners and losers.
What makes a teacher
successful? To find out, starting in 2005 a team of researchers led by
Claremont Graduate University education professor Mary Poplin spent five years
observing 31 of the most highly effective teachers (measured by student test
scores) in the worst schools of Los Angeles, in neighborhoods like South
Central and Watts. Their No. 1 finding: "They were strict," she says.
"None of us expected that."
The researchers had
assumed that the most effective teachers would lead students to knowledge
through collaborative learning and discussion. Instead, they found
disciplinarians who relied on traditional methods of explicit instruction, like
lectures. "The core belief of these teachers was, 'Every student in my
room is underperforming based on their potential, and it's my job to do
something about it—and I can do something about it,'" says Prof. Poplin.
She reported her findings in a lengthy academic paper. But she
says that a fourth-grader summarized her conclusions much more succinctly this
way: "When I was in first grade and second grade and third grade, when I
cried my teachers coddled me. When I got to Mrs. T's room, she told me to suck
it up and get to work. I think she's right. I need to work harder."
The rap on traditional education is that it kills children's'
creativity. But Temple University psychology professor Robert W. Weisberg's
research suggests just the opposite. Prof. Weisberg has studied creative
geniuses including Thomas Edison, Frank Lloyd Wright and Picasso—and has
concluded that there is no such thing as a born genius. Most creative giants
work ferociously hard and, through a series of incremental steps, achieve
things that appear (to the outside world) like epiphanies and breakthroughs.
Prof. Weisberg analyzed
Picasso's 1937 masterpiece Guernica, for instance, which was painted after the
Spanish city was bombed by the Germans. The painting is considered a fresh and
original concept, but Prof. Weisberg found instead that it was closely related
to several of Picasso's earlier works and drew upon his study of paintings by
Goya and then-prevalent Communist Party imagery. The bottom line, Prof.
Weisberg told me, is that creativity goes back in many ways to the basics.
"You have to immerse yourself in a discipline before you create in that
discipline. It is built on a foundation of learning the discipline, which is
what your music teacher was requiring of you."
In recent years,
University of Pennsylvania psychology professor Angela Duckworth has studied
spelling bee champs, Ivy League undergrads and cadets at the U.S. Military
Academy in West Point, N.Y.—all together, over 2,800 subjects. In all of them,
she found that grit—defined as passion and perseverance for long-term goals—is the
best predictor of success. In fact, grit is usually unrelated or even
negatively correlated with talent.
Prof. Duckworth, who started her career as a public school math
teacher and just won a 2013 MacArthur "genius grant," developed a
"Grit Scale" that asks people to rate themselves on a dozen
statements, like "I finish whatever I begin" and "I become
interested in new pursuits every few months." When she applied the scale
to incoming West Point cadets, she found that those who scored higher were less
likely to drop out of the school's notoriously brutal summer boot camp known as
"Beast Barracks." West Point's own measure—an index that includes SAT
scores, class rank, leadership and physical aptitude—wasn't able to predict
retention.
Prof. Duckworth believes
that grit can be taught. One surprisingly simple factor, she says, is
optimism—the belief among both teachers and students that they have the ability
to change and thus to improve. In a 2009 study of newly minted teachers, she
rated each for optimism (as measured by a questionnaire) before the school year
began. At the end of the year, the students whose teachers were optimists had
made greater academic gains.
My old teacher Mr. K
seldom praised us. His highest compliment was "not bad." It turns out
he was onto something. Stanford psychology professor Carol Dweck has found that
10-year-olds praised for being "smart" became less confident. But
kids told that they were "hard workers" became more confident and
better performers.
"The whole point of
intelligence praise is to boost confidence and motivation, but both were gone
in a flash," wrote Prof. Dweck in a 2007 article in the journal
Educational Leadership. "If success meant they were smart, then struggling
meant they were not."
A 2011 University at
Buffalo study found that a moderate amount of stress in childhood promotes
resilience. Psychology professor Mark D. Seery gave healthy undergraduates a
stress assessment based on their exposure to 37 different kinds of significant
negative events, such as death or illness of a family member. Then he plunged
their hands into ice water. The students who had experienced a moderate number
of stressful events actually felt less pain than those who had experienced no
stress at all.
"Having this history of dealing with these negative things
leads people to be more likely to have a propensity for general
resilience," Prof. Seery told me. "They are better equipped to deal
with even mundane, everyday stressors."
Prof. Seery's findings
build on research by University of Nebraska psychologist Richard Dienstbier,
who pioneered the concept of "toughness"—the idea that dealing with
even routine stresses makes you stronger. How would you define routine stresses?
"Mundane things, like having a hardass kind of teacher," Prof. Seery
says.
My tough old teacher Mr.
K could have written the book on any one of these principles. Admittedly,
individually, these are forbidding precepts: cold, unyielding, and kind of
scary.
But collectively, they
convey something very different: confidence. At their core is the belief, the
faith really, in students' ability to do better. There is something to be said
about a teacher who is demanding and tough not because he thinks students will
never learn but because he is so absolutely certain that they will.
Decades later, Mr. K's
former students finally figured it out, too. "He taught us
discipline," explained a violinist who went on to become an Ivy
League-trained doctor. "Self-motivation," added a tech executive who
once played the cello. "Resilience," said a professional cellist.
"He taught us how to fail—and how to pick ourselves up again."
Clearly, Mr. K's methods
aren't for everyone. But you can't argue with his results. And that's a lesson
we can all learn from.
Ms. Lipman is co-author, with Melanie Kupchynsky, of "Strings
Attached: One Tough Teacher and the Gift of Great Expectations," to be
published by Hyperion on Oct. 1. She is a former deputy managing editor of The
Wall Street Journal and former editor-in-chief of Condé Nast Portfolio.
A version of this article appeared September 28, 2013, on page
C1 in the U.S. edition of The Wall Street Journal, with the headline: Tough
Teachers Get Results.
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