Content-Specific Marketing

cc licensed Flickr photo by neptunecanada

I read this article today on CNN’s Schools of Thought Blog: “Want more kids to take calculus? Convince mom first,” by Jamie Gumbrecht. In the post, there is research stating that involving parents in talking points about math and science electives will be more likely to influence kids to choose those classes:

“These are the critical years in which mathematics and science courses are elective, and our results indicate that parents can become more influential in their children’s academic choices if given the proper support,” the study says.

How simple was that support? Just a couple of brochures, a web site and a little guidance about how to use the information.

My initial reaction after reading was one of wanting to push back.

First, as some of you know, I tire of the constant push for more STEM, more STEM, more STEM. Please don’t misunderstand. I love math and science! When I had the options in school to select electives, I chose calculus and advanced science classes. As a teacher, I get all geeked out with my students when we stumble upon interesting activities that involve math and/or science (read “geeked out” as getting extremely excited about all the amazing learning possibilities). [photo credit: Science Lab by neptunecanada]

BUT… shouldn’t we be concerned about pushing certain content areas at the expense of others? What about the kids who really don’t have an interest in pursuing careers in math, science, engineering, etc? I believe in exposing kids to many areas so they can discover what they don’t know they don’t know, as well as to start to put the pieces together to understand the world around them.

And how about the misguided information from those who form education policy stating that we don’t have enough scientists or engineers? Read:

Do We Really Have A Scientist Shortage?

US Pushes for more scientists, but the jobs aren’t there

(There are many more… I’d be glad to link them here if you add them to the comments section.)

 

We know that what is valued eventually becomes policy. And in current US education, that also means what is assessed. Again, placing too much emphasis upon certain content areas does so at the expense of other areas… and at the expense of kids.

My oldest daughter graduated high school in 2007. She liked science, and declared biology as her major at university. After almost two years of that, she called me and was rather upset. She felt she needed to change her major to English. After a long discussion reassuring her 1) that changing her major was not a horrible thing and 2) that she should do what she loves, she promptly changed her major. She adores writing and editing and is now an assistant editor for a local publication company. After the fact, I asked her why she was so upset about changing her major. She said she felt pressured to go into something “more academic,” and she was worried about availability of jobs for a BA in English. Science and math classes were heavily encouraged in her high school.

Now to argue with myself – sometimes “marketing” helps kids to see themselves in a future they didn’t realize was possible. This could be due to stereotypes based in race, gender, status. My favorite way to ‘combat’ the stereotypes is to share examples with my students of strong role models who cross those lines. Is that enough, though?

Marketing can go horribly wrong, though, as evidenced here: How not to market science to girls

(That’s fodder for another blog post.) Moving right along…

Another question I  am still wondering and have blogged about before: why do we continue to teach content areas only in isolation? I agree that there are concepts that probably should be taught separately to avoid confusion and to allow deeper exploration. However, if we want kids to be able to think about what they want to learn and how they will apply that to a career or lifestyle, they must see how those concepts apply in their world. Content areas must overlap, because that’s what they do in everyday life.

In other words, in order to specialize later, they must see how everything fits together at an early age. We are  not doing this in most schools.

So again… having mom and dad sit you down with a glossy brochure (as noted in the calculus/science article I mentioned at the beginning of the post) essentially marketing math and science classes… is that really where we want to take our kids? Aren’t they already get enough marketing thrown at them every single day?

I’m not sure exactly how to feel about this. I do know I sat with my own kids when they were filling out their choices or class schedules. We talked a lot about options and how those choices could possibly shape where they wanted to go in their learning adventures.

Help me, please… share your thoughts.

 

 

8 thoughts on “Content-Specific Marketing

  1. Carol @missmac100

    The part that bothers me the most is that they say we need to “convince Mom” which really means: “convince Mom to convince child.” Good parents will naturally want to help their child with educational decisions after discovering their child’s interest. Why are we not worried that the child is waiting on the parent to make their decisions? I agree, what if they do not need a heavy math/science background. Most have a common core that has a nice representatives of all disciplines anyway. I agree with you: why don’t we allow students to “see” how all disciplines fit in
    the real world. Then they will see their passions in it and move toward that goal with out being convinced into the decision. I would make a terrible doctor but I make a great teacher. It was what I was meant to do and no one needs to convince me otherwise.

    • Michelle Baldwin

      Thanks, Carol.

      Perhaps if children had opportunities to see integrated content areas throughout their K-12 education, they would have enough exposure to many areas… and then would recognize their passion? I don’t know. I’m still trying to work this out.

      I definitely didn’t like the idea of “convincing mom.”

  2. Leslie Whittington

    Michelle, I completely agree with you, but feel it necessary to get on my soapbox. 😉 The idea that kids need to specialize in something early on is absurd. The same thing happens with extracurricular activities. That is one of the reasons we chose private education. The school is small enough to try everything and pursue all interests. One of my favorite pictures of my son is him practicing the piano in his baseball uniform.
    We don’t need to look far to see where kids get their preconceived ideas about STEM being more academic than English, or that Band is for only for geeks. We create these ideas when we place importance on one thing over another. I read a report a few years ago that said boys STEM scores actually went down after the big push for girls in STEM began, while reading scores continued to show boys consistently lower than girls. This is an all around bad deal for the boys! The first mistake was to put so much credence in the tests, the second mistake was to shift importance to a certain demographic. In my perfect world, we would give all students a foundation in all “subjects” intertwined together and expose them to a world of possibilities as we guide them to find their own strengths and interests.

    • Michelle Baldwin

      Leslie, I think you’ve described a huge issue… and that’s the bias in our country toward what is perceived to be academic versus what is “fluff.” We do our children a huge disservice by essentially mocking art, music, dance, theater, physical education, and health/wellness as less important than math, science, reading, and writing. I know people will argue with me on this, but those perceived “core skills & concepts” mean nothing without context.

      I WISH the school I attended had pushed me more to understand nutrition, physical fitness, personal finance… and less chemistry, calculus, AP History, etc. While I’m glad I had those experiences, my life has been negatively impacted over the last 25 years due to my lack of understanding of personal finance and wellness. At least I had a great arts education. That has helped me immensely.

  3. Philip Cummings

    I agree that we need a much more integrated curriculum where the “subjects” are truly interconnected as they are everywhere but school. There is definitely a time when we need to teach kids “to think like a scientist,” “research like a historian,” or “to write like a journalist” but it’s not every day. I’m also with you on your “enough with STEM” sentiment. It seems a liberal arts approach has historically served us pretty well.

    • Michelle Baldwin

      Thanks, Philip!

      I also wonder what would happen if we asked kids to “think like an artist” when they approached a math problem, or “create like an inventor” in a language arts project. We do that at Anastasis, but I know that I still need to do a better job of letting the kids find that space with less involvement from me.

  4. Carol @missmac100

    I wish I could see more examples of integrated content in all grades. Lower primary seem to have an easier time with this. The higher you go, the more “specialized” the teachers are and they do not even seem to talk about how they connect to another content area.

    • Michelle Baldwin

      Talk to music and art teachers. Many of them do that integration thing well… every single day. However, there are just as many who are concentrating on what rating they’ll get at music contest or which projects to showcase at the art show. 🙁

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