It’s all about the hype. The spin. The pundits. The experts. The talking heads. The facts. The data. The insight. The intangibles. The inside scoop. The interpretations. The trends. The analysis. The speculation. The predictions. The records. The historical contexts. The powers that be. The informed conclusions. Really?
No…not really.
Every Saturday morning here in the states college football experts fill hours of airtime making the case for who will win the games on the weekend schedule. They look at conferences, rankings, previous performances, position-by-position match-ups, who plays better at home or on the road, injuries, benchings, weather, scandals, human interest stories…if there’s a way to make the case for why certain teams will win today, it is made…convincingly.
Then at high noon eastern time the games begin. And all the posing and posturing about the result of every game in the country goes out the window. Some favorites win. Some underdogs surprise. And while some general statements can be made about the power conferences, the football factories and the haves and have-nots, there is only so much rhyme and reason as to the outcomes when they are reported out on Sunday morning. All the talk means nothing. Any given team can beat any other team on any given day. That’s why they play the games.
What does this mean for education? Well, we have a lot of experts and data and powers that be putting their spin on what is happening and what is going to happen in classrooms. They have a lot of money, power and influence on their side...access to media and entertainment and corporate resources…it can certainly appear and sound like they know what they’re talking about. But where does the rubber meet the road in public education? In the classroom. All the politicians and philanthropists and administrators and data analysts may have their say, but at the end of the day it is the teacher and student who make it happen.
What can we infer from this?
Make a difference in the moment. Right now. Nothing else matters. You have control over your oucome. No one else.
There’s a certain satisfaction with proving the soothsayers wrong. Truman defeating Dewey for the presidency. The Jets beating the Colts in Super Bowl III. Everyday citizens bringing down the Berlin Wall. It didn’t matter who had the perceived upper-hand or who predicted what…all that mattered was the outcome.
So…stop listening to the pundits. Get your game on, get back out there and give it everything you’ve got. Don’t let the voices on the sidelines get in your head. Sure they can have their say. But in the end, it’s up to you. You own the endgame.
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Walter_McKenzie, 2 years ago | FlagMamzelle I do believe that is the critical question! Do we have the wherewithal to reclaim our profession and lead the national dialog about education transforma tion? I have to believe we do, for if we don't the future of public education is very bleak.
Mamzelle_Adolphine, 2 years ago | FlagI definitelybelieve that teachers are in a position to determine the future of education. But do we have the conviction to do so? We would first have to take back policy making and implementa tion out of the hands of those who only know about education from a long-dista nce.
Walter_McKenzie, 2 years ago | FlagKim I'm so glad - timing may not be everything- but it sure helps!
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