[an address given to Odyssey Charter School on Feburary 25, 2010 to inaugurate a new school director]
We often talk about the hows of education: How should we teach writing? How should we teach mathematics? How should we teach science? And so forth. Curricula and pedagogies address the how of education. Hows are important, for without effective hows, we won’t be doing our job as educators.
But more important than the how of education is the why of education. The why of education has been largely forgotten, assumed, or has been appropriated by businesses and other special interests. And this is the real tragedy of our time, for without a compelling why, no matter how good the how is, we will not be sharing with our children their full human potential.
So I want to consider for a moment the question, “Why do we educate our children?” This may be an uncomfortable question if you’ve never done so.
I think there are many valid reasons we educate children, some of them obviously practical: so they can get a good job someday, so they can manage a household someday, so they don’t get ripped off when they do business with other people.
Other reasons may not be so obviously practical. Why take calculus if you’re not going into science or engineering? Why read Shakespeare if you only want to be an accountant? Why learn what Plato’s notion of the Good and the True were if you’re not going into philosophy? Why learn a Bach fugue when you have no musical inclinations? And why in the Dickens would you read Dickens if all you want to do in life is get a decent paying job and raise a family?
Aristotle showed us that all knowledge can be divided and categorized, and our educational system is still feeling the effects of this division and specialization. But real education comes when you understand that knowledge has far more power when you don’t cut it up, but instead follow all of its connections and secret passages, and see the beautiful patterns of the whole.
This is why the founders of Odyssey believe a classical education is special. Good things rub off on us when we spend time with the great thinkers and writers of history. You may not always agree with a great thinker, but once you sincerely attempt to address the great thinker’s arguments, you put yourself on a path to a higher plane of humanity. And by learning broadly—all things from chemistry to physics, Latin to philosophy, art to mathematics—you begin to acquire a taste for learning in general, and a sense of a higher purpose in life.
Odyssey Charter School was founded on the belief that a broad and classically-based education is the best way to form a young mind into something that will be able to know what to do with anything that is thrown at it in the future.
A man or woman with a mind able to analyze new information critically and fairly, along with whatever other gifts they may have, will not only be able to better discern truth from error, but will be a powerful and creative force for good in the world.
How many of today’s problems exist because as a society we never learned to write well and so we communicate poorly, causing deep misunderstandings? How many of us never learned to look outside of our own culture, making us self-centered and small-minded, and so we hastily judge and listen poorly to people who are different from us? Or how many of us are stymied when faced with challenging or complex problems and so throw up our hands in despair because we never learned to think well.
These are the ills and trends of our culture and our world that Odyssey Charter School exists to counter. By teaching our students the best that humanity has to offer, they will be far better equipped to reject error as they strive to create a higher, nobler and more virtuous world, starting with themselves.
But Odyssey cannot do it alone; we need parents who also believe in education and who understand that school is not day-care, and who know that real education is what happens in the home.
The purpose of the Board of Trustees of Odyssey Charter School is to ensure that the school is accomplishing its mission and goals, that each student become a life-long learner through a classically-based curriculum. The board does this by hiring a competent CEO and holding him or her accountable for the achievement of the school.
When Odyssey’s board began interviewing director candidates, the most important thing we were looking for was someone who understood what a classical education looked like and knew how to convey that kind of education to young minds. We were delighted when Mr. Lockhart interviewed for the position. It didn’t take long for us to realize that we had a candidate who not only knew how to run a school from a logistical standpoint, but also someone who has been schooled in the classics and himself a model of a continuous-learner.
Odyssey Charter School was founded on the belief that the great, ongoing conversation of thoughts, ideas, music, science, mathematics, and art is worth studying, preserving and passing on; that our students can understand, converse about, and become significant threads in this great tapestry we call human history. And we believe in Mr. Keith Lockhart’s ability to execute this mission passionately and competently. Welcome Mr. Lockhart.
I’ve been researching the effectiveness of flu vaccines lately, since everybody keeps asking me if I’m going to get one. I sometimes ask, “Are they effective?” and the response is always “Well, I got one last year and I didn’t get the flu.” After reading “How to read articles about health and healthcare”, I began to wonder if this flu vaccination thing smells right.
We hear endless news stories quoting doctors:
State Health Commissioner Dr. Karen Remley, a Virginia pediatrician, recommends the shot as basic prevention. She’s concerned about what it can cause.
“Flu is one of the leading causes of death in our country,” she says. “Over 36,000 people die every year in our country and it’s preventable by getting the flu shot.”
([cbn.com])[1]
We could really save 36,000 people’s lives if they only got the flu shot? That’s remarkable. What worries me when I hear news organizations quoting people who aren’t experts in the research they’re purporting to cover in their “story” is that everybody buys into it without thinking. “Look at me, I’m a trained physician with a white coat and stethoscope around my neck—I went to school and you can trust me!”
I worry in the back of my mind that the bulk of “science” out there has come from bad scientists. Odds are, it has. Odds are that most of the research out there was done by mediocre scientists or scientists who are looking to get published, and so they’ll do research trying to fit the data to existing studies, because that’s an easy way to get published: find existing research, copy it as best you can making sure the results match, submit to journals. “We can confirm that flu vaccination cuts the risk of death to those who received it in half, compared to those who didn’t.”
This reminds me of another recent article that turned the “lactic acid in muscles is bad for you” science upside down. True or false: When you work out, lactic acid builds up in your muscles. If too much builds up, you start getting fatigued.
It used to be true, but now it’s false, it turns out. Lactic acid is fuel your muscles use to create more energy. Who knew? (nytimes.com)
At any rate, the flu thing began to bother me in the same way.
The first thing I did was looked at studies or meta-studies of flu vaccine effectiveness: what is the measured benefit of flu vaccination in the real-world? We all know that polio and other (non-morphing) diseases have been virtually eradicated because of vaccination. This should work for flu, too, right?
Not entirely. The plain language summary for a 2007 metastudy concluded:
There is not enough evidence to decide whether routine vaccination to prevent influenza in healthy adults is effective.
The review of trials found vaccinations against influenza avoided 80% of cases at best (in those confirmed by laboratory tests, and using vaccines directed against circulating strains), but only 50% when the vaccine did not match, and 30% against influenza-like illness, in healthy adults. It did not change the number of people needing to go to hospital or take time off work.
([wiley.com])[2] (emphasis mine)
So, it’s effective against the precisely matching strain. How often does that occur? Here’s the CDC’s answer (read the second section carefully):
How is influenza vaccine effectiveness measured?
Vaccine efficacy and effectiveness studies use various endpoints or outcomes, which influence how we interpret the results. These endpoints may include the prevention of medically attended acute respiratory illness (MAARI), prevention of laboratory-confirmed influenza virus illness or hospitalization, prevention of influenza-like illness (ILI, such as illness with fever and cough or sore throat), or influenza-associated hospitalizations or deaths.
Studies that use outcomes such as an influenza laboratory-confirmed outcome provide the most specific estimates of the impact of the vaccine in preventing influenza. The more non-specific the outcome being measured (e.g., all pneumonia hospitalizations or influenza-like illness that include many illnesses not caused by the influenza virus), the lower the estimates of vaccine effectiveness. For example, a study by Bridges et al. (JAMA 2000) among healthy adults found that the inactivated influenza was 86% effective against laboratory-confirmed influenza, but only 10% effectiveness against all respiratory illnesses in the same population and year.
In other words, while 86% of the time you’ll avoid the strain you were vaccinated against, only 10% of the time you’ll avoid the flu. What’s really happening is this: there are dozens, possibly scores of viruses out there every year. Some are flu strains, most are not. Many of these viruses cause the same flu-like symptoms (fever, aches, chills, cough, sore throat, etc.) and your odds of resisting all of these in any given flu season with a flu vaccination is 1 in 10.
That’s not terribly effective.
This month’s The Atlantic came out with an interesting article that goes even further, citing a variety of reputable researchers who claim that all of the studies indicating that people who get the flu shot are half as likely to die as those who don’t get the flu shot are probably the effect of cohort bias (i.e., typically only health-minded people elect to get the flu shot; this group is already half as likely to die as those who aren’t health-minded).
Here’s one lone voice in the wilderness:
Nonetheless, in 2004, Jackson and three colleagues set out to determine whether the mortality difference between the vaccinated and the unvaccinated might be caused by a phenomenon known as the “healthy user effect.” They hypothesized that on average, people who get vaccinated are simply healthier than those who don’t, and thus less liable to die over the short term. People who don’t get vaccinated may be bedridden or otherwise too sick to go get a shot. They may also be more likely to succumb to flu or any other illness, because they are generally older and sicker. To test their thesis, Jackson and her colleagues combed through eight years of medical data on more than 72,000 people 65 and older. They looked at who got flu shots and who didn’t. Then they examined which group’s members were more likely to die of any cause when it was not flu season.
Jackson’s findings showed that outside of flu season, the baseline risk of death among people who did not get vaccinated was approximately 60 percent higher than among those who did, lending support to the hypothesis that on average, healthy people chose to get the vaccine, while the “frail elderly” didn’t or couldn’t. In fact, the healthy-user effect explained the entire benefit that other researchers were attributing to flu vaccine, suggesting that the vaccine itself might not reduce mortality at all. Jackson’s papers “are beautiful,” says Lone Simonsen, who is a professor of global health at George Washington University, in Washington, D.C., and an internationally recognized expert in influenza and vaccine epidemiology. “They are classic studies in epidemiology, they are so carefully done.”
The results were also so unexpected that many experts simply refused to believe them. Jackson’s papers were turned down for publication in the top-ranked medical journals. One flu expert who reviewed her studies for the Journal of the American Medical Association wrote, “To accept these results would be to say that the earth is flat!” When the papers were finally published in 2006, in the less prominent International Journal of Epidemiology, they were largely ignored by doctors and public-health officials. “The answer I got,” says Jackson, “was not the right answer.”
There’s tons more in this article I won’t spoil for you. The point is, that most scientists stink at doing real science. I didn’t really want to say that or believe it. I want to believe that the men and women in lab coats and protective eyewear are serious-minded people, who have turned their back on wealth and prestige for the greater good of research and knowledge.
But I’m beginning to see that they’re kind of like everybody else in the world: you have a tiny group of hard-core awesome passionate people who are willing to sacrifice their social standing for the sake of the truth, and a vast herd of group-thinkers smart enough to play the game but not smart enough to realize that the real game is one you play against yourself, and where everybody else wins because you play.
In a recent lecture, Paul Krugman, winner of the Nobel prize in economics in 2008, argued that much of the past 30 years of macroeconomics was “spectacularly useless at best, and positively harmful at worst.”
But precisely what was useless and harmful turns out to be Krugman’s own espoused Keynsian beliefs. John Cochrane explains:
Most of all, Krugman likes fiscal stimulus. In this quest, he accuses us and the rest of the economics profession of “mistaking beauty for truth.” He’s not clear on what the “beauty” is that we all fell in love with, and why one should shun it, for good reason. The first siren of beauty is simple logical consistency. Paul’s Keynesian economics requires that people make logically inconsistent plans to consume more, invest more, and pay more taxes with the same income. The second siren is plausible assumptions about how people behave. Keynesian economics requires that the government is able to systematically fool people again and again. It presumes that people don’t think about the future in making decisions today. Logical consistency and plausible foundations are indeed “beautiful” but to me they are also basic preconditions for “truth.”
Cochrane’s short paper is a really beautiful response to Krugman and his archaic, causality-reversing Keynsian answers to everything.
Paul, there was a financial crisis, a classic near-run on banks. The centerpiece of our crash was not the relatively free stock or real estate markets, it was the highly regulated commercial banks.
Ouch.
Certainly, texting while driving is one of the stupidest things a motorist can do. A study published in July by Virginia Tech Transportation Institute showed that drivers who text while driving increase their risk of a crash or near-crash 23-fold compared with those who do not. Reaching out for something moving inside the car represents a ninefold increase in risk; dialling, a sixfold increase; combing hair or putting on make-up raises the risk almost fivefold.
In a previous study, Virginia Tech found that 80% of crashes and 65% of near-crashes involved some form of distraction within three seconds of the incident. The most common distraction by far was using a hand-held phone.
I’ve been saying it for a while: students learn better with qualified, caring teachers and quality teaching materials than anything else, and One-Laptop-Per-Child is an expensive distraction from real education.
I think everyone who has been educated knows this instinctively. We can all point to a mentor (a teacher, a parent, a caring friend) who guided us, encouraged us, and cared enough about us to help us learn what is worth learning and what is not worth learning.
Giving a child a laptop does neither of these things. Some argue that simply having access to information will be the child’s ticket to a bright future, but now that the results are in, we can finally stop beating this dead horse.
You will always find exceptions: highly motivated students will learn no matter what you do to them, and giving them access to a computer will certainly give them an opportunity to get the information they want faster; but for the majority of students, giving them a computer will do little good, and will often do much harm, to their education.
The Internet is not a discriminator of information, and this is its chief problem. A classically-based education, as an example, imposes a hierarchy on knowledge. It says, “These things are more important than those things.” And when I say “it” I really mean a classically trained teacher guiding a student through a classical curriculum.
The Internet can’t do that for you by itself. You still need a guide, a mentor of some kind to help you know what’s worth learning. Autodidacts learn this early on and quickly learn which voices in life they want to trust (generally by way of books and other reading material), but the rest of us simply don’t know where to go.
And while we’re on the topic of online learning, did you hear of the recent meta-study by the US Department of Education? Everybody in the tech world is feeling validated, but they shouldn’t. It claims:
The meta-analysis found that, on average, students in online learning conditions performed better than those receiving face-to-face instruction.
Read the study and notice that it’s a meta-study, largely sampling the results of self-selecting, uncontrolled learning experiements. Highly-motivated students, the kind who opt to take online courses, will always perform better than unmotivated students, no matter what medium they’re using.
The abstract concludes:
Analysts noted that these blended conditions often included additional learning time and instructional elements not received by students in control conditions. This finding suggests that the positive effects associated with blended learning should not be attributed to the media, per se. An unexpected finding was the small number of rigorous published studies contrasting online and face-to-face learning conditions for K–12 students. In light of this small corpus, caution is required in generalizing to the K–12 population because the results are derived for the most part from studies in other settings (e.g., medical training, higher education).
(emphasis mine).
So don’t take this as a validation for K-12 computer learning. Additional studies over OLPC and K-12 computer learning aren’t encouraging:
Under the auspices of the No Child Left Behind Act, the U.S. Department of Education and Mathematica Policy Research recently completed a rigorous, two-year test of reading and math software (using programs that had at least some nonexperimental evidence that they “worked”) in dozens of school districts nationwide. With one minor exception, the studies found that children using the software scored no better than peers who did not have access to the software.
and this:
Economists Ofer Malamud and Cristian Pop-Eleches studied a program in Romania that distributed discount vouchers for the purchase of home computers to low-income families. When they compared the families that used the vouchers to acquire computers with families that were just above the income cut-off to receive the vouchers, they found that computers had a negative effect on students’ grades and educational goals.
and this:
(Leigh) Linden (an economist at Columbia University) also led one of the few experimental studies to show a positive impact from the use of computers — a project in India that provided computers and education software to schools and randomly assigned some schools to use the software during school hours and others to encourage computer use after hours. This study found that using computers during school hours-—essentially substituting computers for teachers—actually hurt learning, while using them after hours as a supplement to traditional classroom teaching had dramatic positive effects on the weakest students. Even this outcome doesn’t really support the OLPC mission, though; the software evaluated is very much in the “drill and practice” model that Negroponte has explicitly derided.
I won’t spoil all the fun of this article, but there are far, far better and less expensive ways to improve education than giving a child a laptop. In developing countries the list includes deworming children, providing tutors, and creating more private schools.
In the United States, computers in classrooms and schools should be removed and with the money not spent on technology, hire additional teachers or give the existing teachers a raise. I’m certain we’d get more of what we’re really looking for.
Too insulated from risk to fail
This article miffed me a bit:
In recent months such big banks as Bank of America (BAC), Citigroup (C), and JPMorgan Chase (JPM) have rolled out newfangled corporate credit lines tied to complicated and volatile derivatives. Others, including Wells Fargo (WFC) and Fifth Third (FITB), are offering payday-loan programs aimed at cash-strapped consumers. Still others are marketing new, potentially risky “structured notes” to small investors.
There’s no indication that the loans and instruments are doomed to fail. If the economy keeps moving toward recovery, as many measures suggest, then the new products might well work out for buyers and sellers alike.
But it’s another scenario that worries regulators, lawmakers, and consumer advocates: that banks once again are making dangerous loans to borrowers who can’t repay them and selling toxic investments to investors who don’t understand the risks—all of which could cause blowups in the banking sector and weigh on the economy.
I’m not so much concerned about the stupid products these banks are peddling. As the article states, these products may work out well in the end. What concerns me is that the article completely misses the obvious question that nobody seems to even ask anymore: is it the role of the US government (paid for by my taxes) to prop up bad businesses?
When giant corporations are backed by the good faith and credit of the United States Federal Treasury—no matter what—then these corporations have no incentive to curb risky behavior.
And today we have the same management teams that got us into this mess, still running strong. Goldman is doing better than ever, in fact.
We have a perfectly good way to deal with bad businesses in the US: let them fail. When an entity files for Chapter 11, the assests are sold off, often in pieces, to new management. This has worked for some extremely large businesses in the past, and perhaps if we could fix some of the mistakes we’ve made in the past and let financial institutions bear their own risks, they’d stop being stupid.
The financial industry borrowed their Dad’s Corvette, drove it off a cliff, then goes back home and asks for a new car. Dad gives them a new car with a “now don’t do that again!”
It’s not working for me.
Remember a few weeks ago when I griped about global warming? What bothered me wasn’t that we have fringe groups, conspiracy theorists, and “deniers.” These folks will always be with us in everything (sometimes they’re even right).
What bothered me was that there seems to be a legitimate case against the predominant view and few scientists in the mainstream are addressing it directly and scientifically. Almost nobody from the scientific “consensus” community are taking these people on, rather they’re using name-calling and ostracism to maintain their position. It also bothers me that scientists feel they have to stoop to “consensus” and PR smear campaigns to make their point.
Consensus is fine—great—for some things, but not in science:
If the brightest minds on Wall Street got suckered by group-think into believing house prices would never fall, what other policies founded on consensus wisdom could be waiting to come unraveled? Global warming, you say? You mean it might be harder to model climate change 20 years ahead than house prices 5 years ahead? Surely not—how could so many climatologists be wrong?
What’s wrong with consensuses is not the establishment of a majority view, which is necessary and legitimate, but the silencing of skeptics. “We still have whole domains we can’t talk about,” Dr. Bouchard said, referring to the psychology of differences between races and sexes.
(tierneylab.blogs.nytimes.com)
I would argue that there are even more things than psychology that aren’t being talked about, including climate change, because of this fear of consensus. Politicians and business-types are the kinds of people who look for consensus of opinion—that’s because they don’t actually know or do anything. They mobilize opinion to get other people to actually think or do. But scientists are different—they’re doers. Science is for observing, gathering, analyzing and interpreting data with confidence intervals. Maybe come up with a theory. Scientific disagreements should be about the data and its interpretation, not posturing and raspberry-blowing.
Scientists are of course entitled to have opinions as much as the next op-ed writer, but a scientist is expected to have some rigor and discipline when engaging in and refuting arguments. More importantly, a scientist is expected to be a thinker capable of ignoring the ridicule of his or her peers to get to the truth of a matter.
An article in the New York Times recently wrote about how Groupthink might be the culprit of our financial crisis (read: “collapse”):
In his classic 1972 book, Groupthink, Irving L. Janis, the Yale psychologist, explained how panels of experts could make colossal mistakes. People on these panels, he said, are forever worrying about their personal relevance and effectiveness, and feel that if they deviate too far from the consensus, they will not be given a serious role. They self-censor personal doubts about the emerging group consensus if they cannot express these doubts in a formal way that conforms with apparent assumptions held by the group.
(I think Peter Schiff would agree.)
When scientists bond together and form a consensus, science itself is imperiled. Because scientists are human and care about what their peers think, they take a big risk of stifling creative, scientific thought. Science is, at its core, the opposite of what we achieve by consensus. Science needs naysayers and village idiots every bit as much as the respectable, well-groomed, mainstream thinkers.
Paul Graham wrote an essay called “What you can’t say” that puts it even better:
Of course, we’re not just looking for things we can’t say. We’re looking for things we can’t say that are true, or at least have enough chance of being true that the question should remain open. But many of the things people get in trouble for saying probably do make it over this second, lower threshold. No one gets in trouble for saying that 2 + 2 is 5, or that people in Pittsburgh are ten feet tall. Such obviously false statements might be treated as jokes, or at worst as evidence of insanity, but they are not likely to make anyone mad. The statements that make people mad are the ones they worry might be believed. I suspect the statements that make people maddest are those they worry might be true.
Another way of putting it is Bob Sutton’s “strong opinions, weakly held.” Whatever we call it, it’s something more scientists need to learn apparently. We’re not in high school anymore, and any scientist who puts popularity and peer acceptance ahead of their scientific rigor, even in their spare time, is doing more harm than good.
Lest my readers think I’m a “denialist”, I post here a link to a great article about interpreting the numbers on global warming.
But while these recent posts have ostensibly been about climate change science, they’ve really been about the nature of science itself. For example, I’m still troubled by the heavy political language. Here we have someone skilled in statistical analysis using the same kind of browbeating against any dissent that Paul Krugman uses in his recent article:
And as I watched the deniers make their arguments, I couldn’t help thinking that I was watching a form of treason — treason against the planet.
Treason? That’s pretty strong language (but this is Prince Krugman—he can say whatever he wants and never be wrong, even as a non-scientist). I think all sensible people realize that things are warming up (even if there are local variations from year to year). The long-term indicators we can measure say that the globe is warming. We can accept that (though apparently some can’t—that’s fine too).
What is hard to stomach is the assertion that the near-universal scientific consensus about what is causing the warming to this this fantastically complex system we call Earth implies that there can be no more inquiry into the matter.
There is some dissent, and there is plenty of room for skepticism and rebuttal to the dissent. That’s the kind of science I’m talking about.
It is not science’s job to quash dissent through consensus. It is science’s job to welcome honest differences and to acknowledge places where we still lack data. A good scientist does the research, crunches the numbers, and gives the confidence intervals. Let the Op Ed writers push the policy.
Whenever you adopt science as your religion, you should be prepared to deal with the atheists, agnostics, and general skeptics with grace, civility, and respect. Those who fail to do this do not deserve the honorable title of scientist.
The world is full of plenty of things to believe and plenty to doubt, and a real scientist withholds judgement on both sides, knowing that the jury is always out in the face of new evidence.
Scientists who have signed up to turn climate change science into climate change dogma by ridiculing or ostracizing any nay-sayers are giving all true scientists a black eye. Science is about open and honest inquiry. Leave the political jockeying to lesser minds.
Wall Street Journal: Climate change is changing.
I work from home and to avoid too much familiarity (or just to get out), I go out to lunch a few times a week. One place I visit is a little pizzeria in downtown Pleasant Grove. They love making pizza and do a decent job. The biggest draw for me is that the owner has passion (I’ve overheard him get after an employee when I was the only patron in the store: “You don’t care about the food! You have to care about the food!”).
They all know my name when I come in. I don’t come that often, I thought, but perhaps two or three times a month qualifies me as a regular. I’m always careful to leave a generous tip here. I don’t know how much longer the place can stay in business the way things are going with the economy (I’m often the only customer at the hour I eat), but I hope they can pull through it, and so I contribute what I can because I value what they do here.
Which brings me to my point. My grandparents lived through the Great Depression and taught their children (my parents) to be frugal, to pinch their pennies and so forth. This is a good way to live in general, I think. On the other extreme, some people are just bad consumers: they spend their money on things that have no real value because they can’t control themselves, and often later they need help.
Between those extremes is one lesson that didn’t seem to come out of the Great Depression clearly enough: those who survived, those who had employment enough to feed their families did so because other people spent their money. People who had more means hired others to work for them and paid them money. Any fool can make money by putting his head down and working, making something that other people want, but the other side of that coin is that in hard times those with money should loosen up a little bit to help those who need a break.
Yes we should save some for hard times—it’s not right to burden others with our own problems when we could have avoided it, but when people hoard, everyone gets poorer. It’s a kind of sinister selfishness that spreads quickly and quietly. It says, “As long as I have a job, I’m ok. If a local business goes down, that’s not my problem.”
The antidote to this is, in part, to remember that money is a renewable resource, and more importantly, it’s only a representation of wealth; it is not wealth in itself. People are wealth: rather, people make wealth and have an infinite capacity to do so.
If you have a little means to help a brother out, do it. Yes, you’ll be helping someone who could use it, but you’re also turning the tide of selfishness and pessimism back to generosity and optimism.