I
am sitting in the comfort of a rustling train as it bumpingly floats its way
through the winter-white Nova Scotia countryside, heading back home after four
days of work in a rural part of a neighbouring province.
I
am reading yesterday's Globe and Mail. The lead editorial headlines: “Those who
read well at 15 succeed”. And, the story is about a Canadian study reported by
the OECD that young people who can read well at age 15 tend to do well in life
and that young people who can not, do not. It also reports the truly amazing
finding (here I am being facetious) that those youth who study do better than
those who do not!
What insights! What revelations! What a
surprise! Teenagers who read well and study hard do well? This is news?
Well, the news here is that reading ability
is a good proxy measure for many problems. We have known for a long time that
the inability to read at grade level in grade three is predictive of poor
educational, social and vocational outcomes. Seems that is also the case at age
15. Reading is a complex skill. Reading difficulties can be the result of
psychosocial adversity, mental disorder, learning disability, or combinations
of many factors. Whatever the reason, reading ability is a “marker” that can be
used to identify young people who may need help in sorting out what the problem
is and then they can be given personal assistance in addressing the problem so
that they can become successful.
So why are we not doing this? Why are we not
assessing reading levels in grade three and at age 15 in every single school in
this country and using that assessment to identify young people and develop
personal interventions that can help them be as good as they can be? Why are we
wasting large amounts of money on building self-esteem and other similar
programs when the issue is not self-esteem? Why are so hesitant to put our
money and our efforts into those areas that are likely to bring the best
results, particularly for those who need it?
From what I have seen, one reason may be that
it is difficult and costly to provide the assessment and intervention services
that young people who are having difficulty need. So it is easier and perhaps
cheaper to provide programs for the many that do very little, than
interventions for the minority that may do a lot.
There is also a highly discriminatory
ideology at play – not manifest but latent. We do not want to “label” those who
need help so we do not identify them and we do not provide them with what they
need for success. You see, “labeling” would hurt their self-esteem and would
thus be unfair. Instead we shunt them aside in favour of “helping” everyone
(including mostly those who do not need any extra help). This of course is more
“fair” to those who need help as it denies them what they really need and sets
them solidly on the road to poor outcomes. “Oh well, at least they were not
labeled and their self-esteem did not suffer as a result”.
Is this fair? Is this the right thing to do?
Not in my book.
--Stan