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also revitalized the notion that U.S. students were woefully inadequate compared to their international peers, a tale that has been told for decade after decade regardless of the United States’ economic progress or the happiness and well-being of its citizens.

      In the decades since A Nation at Risk, reports of the United States’ imminent educational demise have continued. Business RoundTable (2005) postulates that “the United States is in a fierce contest with other nations … but other countries are demonstrating a greater commitment to building their brainpower” (p. 1). Similarly, the New Commission on the Skills of the American Workforce (2006) states: “Whereas for most of the 20th century the United States could take pride in having the best-educated workforce in the world, that is no longer true. Over the past 30 years, one country after another has surpassed us” (p. 4). And the highly respected National Academy of Science (2007) says that “without a renewed effort to bolster the foundations of our competitiveness, we can expect to lose our privileged position. For the first time in generations, the nation’s children could face poorer prospects than their parents and grandparents did” (p. 13).

      The United States (as well as Canada) is not alone in this alarmism over assessment results. Just as sports enthusiasts look over league tables and box scores every morning, so too do many national governments pore over the minute details and rankings of their own tests and the Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA). Fearmongering and hand-wringing about education have become international pastimes.

      That fear has narrowed and impoverished our views of learning and teaching. We ratchet up curriculum standards and devise cut scores based on political considerations rather than educational outcomes (for an example, see Bracey, 2009). We come up with standardized test after standardized test after standardized test for our students. It’s not enough to have both end-of-year grade-level and graduation exams: we must also have numerous benchmarking tests during the year to make sure that students are on track for those final exams. We try to attach numeric data to everything we do, including not just academic performance but also social and emotional growth. We try to tie teacher evaluations to these student assessment results, which leads to such farces as physical education teachers facing sanctions because of mathematics scores for students they don’t even teach.

      As nations perceive their students are falling behind international peers and make specious links to national economic well-being, they focus on narrow academic achievement gaps rather than on empowering students broadly for life success. But, as David N. Perkins (2014) notes:

      The achievement gap asks, “Are students achieving X?” whereas the relevance gap asks, “Is X going to matter to the lives learners are likely to live?” If X is good mastery of reading and writing, both questions earn a big yes! Skilled, fluent, and engaged reading and writing mark both a challenging gap and a high-payoff attainment. That knowledge goes somewhere! However, if X is quadratic equations, the answers don’t match. Mastering quadratic equations is challenging, but these equations are not so lifeworthy. Now fill in X with any of the thousands of topics that make up the typical content curriculum. Very often, these topics present significant challenges of achievement but with little return on investment in learners’ lives. Here’s the problem: the achievement gap is much more concerned with mastering content than with providing lifeworthy content…. The achievement gap is all about doing the same thing better…. The relevance gap asks us to reconsider deeply what schools teach in the first place. (p. 10)

      It’s no wonder engagement, educator morale, teacher recruitment and retention, and parent satisfaction with schools are so low—and why little or no academic improvement seems to result (Brown, 2015). As Perkins (2014) asks, “What did you learn during your first twelve years of education that matters in your life today?” (p. 10). For many, the answer is “not as much as schools hope.” This disconnect that exists for so many of our graduates is just one of the many reasons we believe schools need to be different.

      In this book, we outline six key arguments for why schools need to be different. These are not the only six arguments one could make but are important ones that address our changing, increasingly connected world—and how most of our classrooms fail to change in response to it. If political and school leaders—whom we consider the major audiences for this book, along with teachers, concerned parents, and anyone with a stake in the future of education—want to adapt learning and teaching environments to the demands of the 21st century, it is imperative that they understand the real challenges that future graduates will face. To recognize where our educational policymaking conversations have gone wrong, we have to zoom out of the day-to-day realities of schools and instead look at the societal contexts in which our school systems operate. If we hope to prepare our students and graduates for the world around them, we must start by observing and understanding what that world is actually like.

      Our six arguments for making schools different are based on the following observations, each of which corresponds to the first six chapters.

      1. Our information landscape is becoming incredibly complex and students need the skills to navigate it effectively.

      2. Automation and global hypercompetition increasingly define the economy that our graduates are entering.

      3. The role of teachers as exclusive purveyors of information is obsolete.

      4. The tasks we ask students to perform are often undemanding and tedious, leading to boredom and a lack of critical thinking.

      5. Schools are doing too little to create a culture of educational innovation that can respond to evolving student needs.

      6. The digital tools students will require for future success are too often unavailable to traditionally disadvantaged groups.

      Many of the schools that are successfully tackling these problems and ensuring relevance for students are what the Hewlett Foundation (2017) calls deeper learning schools. In chapter 7, we examine their effectiveness and highlight the practices of a few exemplar deeper learning schools.

      These deeper learning schools and other innovative educational organizations are serious about addressing this book’s six arguments head-on. They recognize that if we want different learning and life outcomes for students, we have to design for them. Accordingly, deeper learning schools make most (and usually all) of the following four big shifts in their approaches to schooling.

      1. Higher-level thinking: The shift from an overwhelming emphasis on lower-level-thinking tasks, such as factual recall and procedural regurgitation, to tasks of greater cognitive complexity, such as creativity, critical thinking, problem solving, and effective communication and collaboration. In other words, this shift asks students to live more often on the upper levels of Benjamin S. Bloom’s (1956) taxonomy (or Norman L. Webb’s [2002] Depth of Knowledge model) than the lower ones. The shift away from lower-level thinking helps foster graduates’ citizenship skills, economic and college success, and life readiness.

      2. Student agency: The shift from classrooms that teachers overwhelmingly control to learning environments that enable greater student agency over what, how, when, where, who with, and why they learn. Student agency allows for greater personalization, individualization, and differentiation of the learning process. As a result, student disengagement diminishes because students have greater autonomy and ownership over more of their learning.

      3. Authentic work: The shift from isolated academic work to environments that provide students opportunities to engage with and contribute to local, national, and international interdisciplinary learning communities. This shift supports students’ motivation by helping them see direct connections between their learning and the world around them, and identify the content’s relevance to their future lives. It more directly connects students’ learning activities to the societal innovations that surround them, enabling schools’ instruction and curricula to be more contemporary.

      4. Technology

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