[NLA] building policy vision
Eileen Eckert
eileeneckert at hotmail.com
Sat Jan 25 09:58:43 EST 2003
While we make a final push to protect funding for the current fiscal year, I
have some thoughts and questions about building a long-term policy vision.
I've seen in the list archives, and participated in, a number of threads
concerning policy as it affects a specific issue or group of learners, and
I've seen general statements about themes that don't get very specific, but
I haven't seen much that puts the particulars into a larger framework.
We've talked about policy around learners dealing with crisis or trauma
(most recently). In that discussion, the teacher (and program)
characteristic of caring and respect for each learner was paramount, along
with the need for program-level policies that recognize the needs of
learners in crisis or dealing with the effects of trauma. In other
discussions, such as one around reading methodology, the affective component
of the teacher-learner relationship was not mentioned much (if at all).
There, the emphasis was on teacher knowledge and expertise around teaching
strategies, specifically phonemic awareness, with one contributor going so
far as to imply that not basing reading instruction on phonemic awareness is
educational malpractice. So what if you were a program administrator hiring
a teacher and you had to choose between a cold fish with a master's in
reading and all the "competencies" to teach phonemic awareness or a caring,
compassionate, engaging teacher with a bachelor's degree in English and a
willingness to learn? What if we had federal level policy that dictated your
decision, put in place because the specific discussion around needs of
low-level readers OR traumatized learners (as if people can't be both) was
generalized to the level of a federal mandate? What if we had state or
federal policies that elevated some teacher characteristics to the level of
necessities while ignoring others (as we do, of course)?
When you advocate for literacy policy, or make policy decisions yourself, is
there a big picture? Are there some unifying themes or underlying principles
that make specific policies complement each other? What are they, and how do
they work?
Thanks,
Eileen
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