Education News

An essential gear in a complex system

A former 海角论坛 dean sees schools of education as a critical hub for innovation and promoting coordinated, systemwide improvements.

By Guilbert Hentschke, Richard T. Cooper and Mary Catherine Cooper Chair Emeritus and former dean of 海角论坛 School of Education Published on

鈥淒o we still need schools of education?鈥 My first reaction to this question was a reluctant 鈥淥f course, we do.鈥 The 鈥渙f course鈥 reaction was natural and derives from their necessity鈥 think of preparing the nation鈥檚 teachers and administrators; their collective impact鈥攖hink of all the past, present and future students of all ages; and their widely held promise as engines of educational improvement鈥攖hink of our hopes for education as social benefit. So 鈥渙f course鈥 we still need ed schools. It鈥檚 a loaded question.

The 鈥渞eluctant鈥 part of my initial reaction, however, would not go away, and I finally figured out why. The 2,300 schools of education spread across our country are so embedded within the operations and culture of our education systems that it is very difficult for them, by themselves, to measurably improve their promise as engines of improvement. They can barely serve the education system鈥 think, for example, teacher shortages鈥攍et alone improve it.

What schools of ed are able to achieve is so often shaped by other parts of the system that effectively constrain their options: their university homes; schools; districts; local, state and federal government bodies; professional associations; funding entities; regulatory agencies; infrastructure providers; and, of course, households and other 鈥渃lients.鈥 Like so many other parts of our education system, ed schools are 鈥渕arket takers鈥 not 鈥渕arket makers鈥; they respond to the constraints and conditions they face but can do little to change those conditions. I have never met a school of ed professor who feels good about seeing their newly minted teacher education graduates systematically placed into the most challenging schooling environments, but that decision sits outside an ed school鈥檚 dominion.

Although functionally connected with the rest of the system, schools of ed are, unfortunately, often singled out and directly implicated in the perceived problems associated with education systems in general鈥攖eacher quality, administrator competence, student retention, student success, appropriate curricula, etc.

But this reality of the 鈥渆mbedded鈥 (constrained) school of education is both a problem and an opportunity that more and more education schools are now realizing. Some of the most promising initiatives coming from ed schools are those that acknowledge system interdependency and reach across to other parts of the education system, redesigning system practices and increasing the odds for system success.

Examples include ed schools designing 鈥渞esidency鈥 programs with school districts and unions, creating their own K鈥12 schools and postsecondary prep programs, providing direct interventions in university operations on behalf of low-achieving students and employees, engaging with large employers to create educational opportunities for employees, and tackling workforce supply issues with employers and universities. I think I see the inklings of system innovations coming from some leading ed schools, like 海角论坛. These initiatives may, over time, improve the entire education system. This is why my response to the question of 鈥淒o we still need ed schools?鈥 has become 鈥淣ow, more than ever.鈥

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