Wednesday, April 27, 2011

Christopher Bantick, and a few thoughts on education, provided I get to sack everyone in the common room I don't like ...


(Above: Molesworth's thoughts on and insights into education, found here).

Talk about being offensively sackable and a sackable offence.

Surely Christopher Bantick should be sacked for the logic on display in Make poor teaching a sackable offence, but who will step up to the plate and sack him? The editor of The Australian, responsible for the worst coverage in the known universe of national broadband and climate change? Fat chance ...

Training? Instruction? Improvement? Remedial work? Help teachers mend their ways as you might in turn expect teachers to help students improve their understanding of the world?

Nah, sack 'em, it's all their fault, ne'er do wells, bludgers, no hopers, dingbat unionists, oh and by the way "let loose the hounds."

There's nothing wrong with the concept of failure, and just as a certain bunch of students must be turned into factory fodder, taught they are losers, wastrels, dummies and drop kicks, given to a lumpenproletariat life of crime and dole bludging, so we must extend the process to their failed, drop kick teachers.

What's the point of having an elite with everybody in it?

Of course Bantick makes it easy for himself by quoting Greg Craven at the start of his piece:

This view informs the position of Greg Craven, vice-chancellor of the Australian Catholic University, who wrote on this page on April 13: "If you want brain surgeons and international lawyers to consider teaching as an option, then you are going to have to supplement altruism with cash."

Yes, yes, but only a doofus like Greg Craven could mount that simple-minded argument, as he did in You can't pay peanuts for good teachers.

What about the quality of the blithe argument in Bantick's own effort, which involves an injudicious amount of teacher and union bashing? Well it turns out if you scroll down to the bottom of the page, you learn that Bantick is a senior English teacher at Trinity Grammar School in Victoria, and a complacent, smug, self-satisifed one at that...

I wonder, is smugness and certitude a sackable offence?

Those who are incompetent, who are inadequately trained or are allowed to consolidate poor performance under union sanction, secure that they will be appraised continuously rather than sacked, are the malady of Australian education.

The only way to tell a teacher they are hopeless is to remove them, as in the case of every other job I know.

Yep, it's a sack 'em, sack 'em all theory of life, the universe, education and schooling, as reasoned and rational as 42.

What about those who deliver the inadequate training that somehow allows inadequately trained teachers to worm their way into the education system? Why surely it must be sack 'em, sack 'em all.

Bottom line of course Bantick's piece is just another paean of praise to the private system:

It is obvious what will improve teacher performance. Australian schools, particularly state schools, must be given the autonomy to hire and fire. The growth in independent school enrolments is in part related to the view held by parents that state school education in some areas is in serious decline and teacher quality is a lottery. They pay independent school fees for not having to gamble on incompetence. The problem is also who gets into teaching. This is unpleasant to say but many teachers are simply not high-flyers, something that the federal government partly understands.

Uh huh. Well he would say that, wouldn't he, seeing as how he's such a high flyer, and understands things more clearly than the federal government, and so is a guaranteed way for worried parents to avoid gambling on incompetence (hmm, memo to self, ask Trinity student I know about Mr. Bantick).

But then I began to read the comments, and hang on, dammit if some of the commentary didn't make more sense than Bantick's piece, and that's when I began to worry. Chris of Orange got agitated:

There'll be plenty of others to fill the positions left by the thousands of retiring teachers over the next ten years--oh, that's right: there actually won't be plenty of others.

And so did rob of glen iris:

A poorly performing maths teacher might be better than no maths teacher at all. Where's the pool of unemployed teachers to pick and choose from? There isn't one of course, and it's only going to get worse as a significant proportion of the workforce reach retirement age, hang up their whiteboard markers and breathe a sigh of relief. Sacking teachers is the easy option, beloved of private schools. Don't make any attempt to try to improve the performance of the individual. Just replace them by offering an above award salary courtesy of high parental fees. The same goes for seriously disruptive students and the disabled. Shift the responsibility onto the state system and then take the high moral ground. I'm glad I wasn't taught by the likes of Mr Bantick.

Guys, guys, it's simple. If you want an ample supply of brain surgeons and international lawyers to replace all the inadequate, hopeless, sacked dingbat state teachers, you just have to pay them more. Ask Mr Bantick, and he'll surely agree, it's the way forward, and why private school teachers get paid so handsomely.

Who knows, in a previous life, perhaps Mr Bantick himself was a brain surgeon ...

As a result, once the losers currently teaching in the outer western suburbs of the big cities get the chop, there'll be a surge of brain surgeons rushing to do the job.

A few readers tried reasoned arguments, backed by research, and one noted the thoughts of John Hattie, University of Auckland, in Teachers Make a Difference, available here as a pdf, as he sought to identify what are the major sources of variance in a student's achievements might be.

Amazingly he proposed that it wasn't sackable teachers so much as students themselves in the first instance:

Students -- which account for about 50% of the variance of achievement. It is what students brings to the table that predicts achievement more than any other variable. The correlation between ability and achievement is high, so it is no surprise that bright students have steeper trajectories of learning than their less bright students. Our role in schools is to improve the trajectory of all these students ...

Throw in a 5-10% variance for the effects of the home, 5-10% variance for schools (with Hattie including principals in the school effect), and 5-10% variance for peer effects, and then you have teachers jogging along, and accounting for about 30% of variance.

So teachers can play a significant role, but whenever you get complacent senior English teachers, and resentful public school teachers, you can get this kind of comment:

Chris, you teach at Trinity Grammar. The students and you are at the school for the same reason - to learn the subject you are teaching. Easy to criticize from that perspective. Try slogging it out for more than a decade with kids from homes who can't read and don't give a toss about anything except binge drinking for a good time. Yeah it'll be the teacher's fault that they can't turn those 125 students who he/she has contact with for less than 3% of the year (do the maths). Oh and then you need to divide that 3% by the 25 students to get the proportionate amount of time with each individual student. Chris, get a grip. You're not really in the real world, but keep writing for the Australian to get that journalism job you are chasing.

Indeed. The schools of western Sydney are standing by, waiting for Mr Bantick to descend and fix everything with a decent round of sackings ...

Meanwhile, it turns out that Mr Bantick is a regular scribbler for The Australian, and he has a reliably dullard and predictable mind, which runs along a very narrow path. The headers alone are enough to give the game away: What unions really fear about teaching to the test blazoned forth in February 2010, and then boldly strutting forth in March 2011 came My School mute on bad teachers (same song and lyrics as the current piece), and then there were a bold set of homilies set forth in Good teachers put students first.

Which concluded with this little vituperative outburst:

We don't need to wait until next year's World Teachers Day to celebrate professional teachers who put children first. Nor to expose the freeloaders, phonies, self-centred strikers and white-collar wannabes with blue-collar values who are not fit to be in a classroom.

Oh dear. Blue collar values. Quick, someone phone up Mr Howard's battlers so they won't get offended by this naked inner urban elitism ...

And so on and so forth. If you have hours to waste googling, you might find Mr Bantick disparaging preachers and interminable sermons in Hope and pray for a joke from the pulpit, or musing about memento and memorabilia in Tying the knot with the royal tea towel.

But perhaps the most astonishing news, at least for an English teacher, is that Mr Bantick is a vandal of the lowest kind, as revealed in When the pen is mightier than the type:

I have added my voice to books in marginalia where an author has caused me to be incandescent with bibliophilic rage. I noted in Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice, in a moment of undergraduate bile: "Does anything ever happen?" Later still, I scrawled in Peter Temple's The Broken Shore: "Overworked and indulgent tosh." Yes, I was cross, but felt liberated and secretively thrilled that I had vandalised a book and indulged my annoyance.

Nothing happens in Jane Austen, and most of all in Pride and Prejudice, and you sir an English teacher? Incandescent with bibliophilic rage at being forced to read Austen in your undergraduate days?

Wash out your mouth with a particularly vile soap, and stand in the corner for the rest of the class ...

But then it turns out that Mr Bantick values books for their decorative, coffee table, homely effect, as well as a certain cluttered mustiness, as you can discover in Books battle for their slice of real estate.

Which brings us back to his latest piece of teacher bashing and another comment:

Is there any other group, other than teachers, who are being constantly blamed for the ills of society? Who'd want to do such a low paying, long hours of work and be constantly vilified in the press?

Indeed. In a just and proper world, someone would help Mr Bantick move from the sheltered world of teaching at Trinity to scribbling for a living, and thereby save him from the ignominy of appraisals, or perhaps save his colleagues from an ominous lynch mob mentality:

Colleagues are aware of teachers who are failures. They all know who should go and why.

Yes, we have a little list, we've got a little list, and none of them will be missed.

We all know teachers who are self-satisfied, smug and foolish, but what's amazing is that some of them even head into the media to advertise the fact.

There is, however, a flickering of light today in the news with the story that David Gonski seems to be doing his work with enthusiasm, the wretched Peter Garrett is listening, and so Axe to fall on school funds deal.

It seems the biased regime that favours private schools in funding might finally be changed, and here's hoping it causes Mr. Bantick a little heartburn.

That's until you get to the line:

Both Ms Gillard and Mr Garrett have pledged that no school will lose a dollar under any changes they make.

So scientology and Exclusive Brethren and Catholic and Mr Bantick's beloved Trinity schools are safe, and everything will change so that nothing will change ...

No doubt we can look forward to a piece by Mr Bantick in The Australian explaining why this is so, just and proper, and everything actually is the fault of teachers, and if we just sacked pack of time wasters malingering in the state education system, everything will be for the best in the best of all possible worlds.

Thank the dear absent lord I stopped being a teacher a long time ago ...

There's the silly scribbles of Murdoch hacks,
I've got them on the list
English teachers who hate Jane Austen,
they never would be missed
they never would be missed

I have more empty spaces left but what is one to do?
the task of filling up the list I'd rather leave to you
But it really doesn't matter whom you put upon the list
for they'll none of them be missed!
They'll none of them be missed!

Chorus: You may put 'em on the list (You may)
You may put 'em on the list (Go ahead)
And they'll none of them be missed
They'll none of them be missed!
Little list!

(Below: more xkcd here).

7 comments:

  1. Oh, Dorothy: you know that sweet reason always tastes sour to the unreasonable.

    [PS. "We're gonna have to make a lot of changes 'round here if we want things to remain the same."]

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  2. It's about time, Christopher Bantick, you started standing up for the most holy faith to which you somewhat oddly say you are appendaged. If you really do want to knock, I suggest you do drop the name-tag .... though perhaps you have already (?) Re your chaplaincy comments: Do a bit of plain ordinary research (empiral if you can) without your own slant or ego so stridently colouring your vision. Yes, I too am bit confused as to whom/what you are knocking this time, (CRE?chaplaincy?) as is Ian Harper (The Australian 26/5: There's a place for spiritual and ethical guidance in the classroom). EVER seen or heard a public school chaplain at work in a state school? Happen to know any? Attended any of the morning teas, held to THANK them - attended by scores of (multi-faith)community- involved personel they have drawn into the schools' wider programs?(language improvement for new Chinese students, Rotary scholarships etc etc etc). It is patently obvious you have not. Be a good chappie and do get off your pompous high horse. Step out of your hallowed precincts and take an honest look at what is really happening in both primary and secondary state schools. Your smart rhetoric might just sound a little more convincing.

    ReplyDelete
  3. I thought I should let this comment run free, just so the anon scribbler understood this piece is about Christopher Bantick, not by Christopher Bantick.

    Here's hoping that school chaplains do their bit to improve literacy in students, because clearly it hasn't worked in the past ... perhaps explaining why people of a religious persuasion never really do understand the benefit of separating church and state ...

    http://www.thepunch.com.au/articles/thou-shalt-separate-church-and-state/

    ReplyDelete
  4. I am unsure who wrote this dribble, this haughty sanctimonious bile, but the source of this piece should visit our schools, particularly terrible state shools to see whathas been happening in engish classes, going back to the mid eighties.

    From my experience in state primary and secondary schools, we were never exposed to english re grammer, punctuation or sentence structure. These are the building blocks of any language, but instead we were given in spades of crappy self awarness classes and bull dust creative writing lessons. For us sturdents, creative writing lessons were a obvious cope out for teachers who knew nothing about the language, or worse, could not give a shit.

    If you do not have the rules and tools of a language taught in class, i.e the use of clauses, puntuation, how can you use the language in the written form, how can you succeed at higher education? Maybe this is why so few state school students ever get or succeed at university.

    During my 12 years on english education, nothing was done to teach logic in writting and as an extension, composition. I encountered state school english teachers more interested in who they could jump into bed with that night from the staff room, and who was next eligible for a junket study trip some where at tax payer expense, rather than giving quality teaching to the poor old student.

    Pity there are not more advocates like Mr Bantick in Australia, to expose the attrocious state of english teaching in this country.

    Instead of a frank assessment Australia's impoverished english classes, we have spin and hyperbole from prime ministers and premiers: and why, becasue they know the standard of schools and teaching of english so is appalling, they feel it can nto be saved, and they are to gutless to sack the shitty teachers, install discipline and get some one in who will do the job properly.

    It is all to tough so Rudd and others come up with jingo phrases like Education Revolution, while they let the poor student rot in the classroom.

    This nation MUST address the lack of syllabus and standards in english classes across public, and private schools. Create a syllabus with guts, that gives students the tools odf the language, and how to use them.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Let me guess. You're a satirical comedian hiding behind the pen name Paul Hickey.

    Or you think by parading attrociously bad spelling, a lack of logic, and an abusive tone, you're proving Mr. Bantick's case conclusively.

    But don't you think it might have been simpler, instead of blaming your teachers and your school, to hie yourself off to a remedial English class and learn some basic English?

    That way people would be spared reading your impoverished English when you feel the need to rant. At the moment it seems you're in the same position as your teachers, in not giving a shit.

    The pond recommends Sir Ernest Gowers' The Complete Plain Words, handily available for free here:

    http://www.ourcivilisation.com/smartboard/shop/gowerse/complete/index.htm

    It's never too late to learn ...

    ReplyDelete
  6. Used to call Mr Bantick Mr Homework as he gave more of the stuff than all the rest of the teachers put together. Then he wrote an article in The Age with the title How homework robs children of their childhood...or something similar....didn't claim to be a teacher at the bottom of that article I seem to recall. So don't believe a word. He's like a shock jock but with a pen.

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  7. I have been a student in Mr Bantick's class, and he is full of strong opinions, such as that Melbourne University is the only worthwhile University that his students should go to. He is very elitist, and he doesn't teach us in class, instead, he likes to set lots of essays, and then marks them on what he thinks of us as a student, and how well we have been able to expand on his ideas.

    ReplyDelete

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