by Yong Zhao
Table of Contents
More Praise for Who's Afraid of the Big Bad Dragon?
Title page
Copyright page
Dedication
About the Author
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Fatal Attraction: America's Suicidal Quest for Educational Excellence Notes
1: Fooling China, Fooling the World: Illusions of Excellence “China for a Day”
“The Beijing Consensus”
“Surpassing Shanghai”
“Be Afraid of the Friends Who Flatter You”
“A Very Large Gap”
Fatal Attraction: The Real China Threat
Notes
2: The Emperors' Game: A Perfect Machine for Homogenization The Fifth Great Invention
The Irony of Great Inventions
A Clever Ploy of Social Control
Change without Difference
Notes
3: Governance without Governing: The Retreat of Authoritarianism and China's Economic Boom The Peasants Who Saved China
The First Entrepreneurs
Let It Be (or Governance without Interference)
The Coke Battle
Déjà Vu?
Notes
4: Hesitant Learner: The Struggle of Halfway Westernization A Grand Experiment
Wishful Thinking
Self-Strengthening Movement Version 2.0
Harmony and Innovation
Notes
5: Fooling the Emperor: The Truth about China's Capacity for Innovation The Emperor's New Wishes
The Miracle Makers
Publish or Perish
It Pays to Publish
A Chinese Heart
More Inventions Than Young Edison
Little Cleverness and Junk Papers
By Design
The Emperor Is Fooled
Notes
6: Hell to Heaven: The Making of the World's Best and Worst Education One Heaven
One Small Heaven
One Gatekeeper to the One Small Heaven
The Hell to Heaven
Breaking the Spell
Notes
7: The Witch That Cannot Be Killed: Educational Reforms and Setbacks The Disaster of Mao's Revolution against Testing
Back to “Naked” Tests
The Witch That Cannot Be Killed
Another Witch That Refuses to Be Killed
The Prisoner's Dilemma
The Tragedy of the Commons
Bread and Butterfly
Notes
8: The Naked Emperor: Chinese Lessons for What Not to Do Illusions of Excellence and Equity
Romanticized Misery
Glorified Authoritarianism
Why Not Emulate Shanghai?
Notes
Bibliography
Index
End User License Agreement
List of Illustrations
Figure 1.1 Percentage of Americans Who Are Concerned about China's Military and Economic Strength
Source: “US Public, Experts Differ on China Policies,” Pew Research Center, Washington, DC. September 18, 2012, http://www.pewglobal.org/files/2012/09/US-Public-and-Elite-Report-FINAL-FOR-PRINT-September-18-2012.pdf. Reprinted with permission.
Figure 1.2 What Worries Americans the Most about China's Economy
Source: “US Public, Experts Differ on China Policies,” Pew Research Center, Washington, DC. September 18, 2012, http://www.pewglobal.org/files/2012/09/US-Public-and-Elite-Report-FINAL-FOR-PRINT-September-18-2012.pdf. Reprinted with permission.
More Praise for Who's Afraid of the Big Bad Dragon?
“Better understanding between the US and China is important not only for both nations, but for the world. Having spent the first half of his life as a student and teacher in China, and the second half as a scholar and innovator in the US, Zhao is a unique interpreter of where China's educational system has come from and where it needs to go. It should be read by caring educators around the world creating schools for the future of an uncertain world.”
—MILTON CHEN, senior fellow, The George Lucas Educational Foundation; chairman, Panasonic Foundation
“Zhao's extraordinary book turns all the popular and politically hyped assumptions about East-West educational relations back to front and inside out. Asia's not an educational mirror for the West, but is actually a hall of mirrors that distorts the West's view of it. China's not an authoritative exemplar of high achievement, but is an authoritarian imposer of it. Unexpected and outrageous, this is the book that no one will ignore or want to.”
—ANDY HARGREAVES, Brennan Chair of Education, Boston College; coauthor, Uplifting Leadership
“Yong Zhao's new work analyzes the origins, strengths, and failings of China's authoritarian education system. It is an important work—timely and concise, well-researched and well-argued—that will positively influence the debate over education reform in both the United States and in China.”
—JIANG XUEQIN, Chinese education reformer; author, Creative China
“In Catching Up or Leading the Way, Zhao challenged Americans to play to their strength rather than chase the myth of foreign excellence. In Who's Afraid of the Big Bad Dragon?, he focuses on the US obsession with China—which he knows better than anyone writing on education policy today. Chapter 8 (“The Naked Emperor: Chinese Lessons for What Not to Do”) is a devastating unmasking of the China Superiority Myth that lays responsibility at the door of PISA and lazy journalists.”
—GENE V. GLASS, regents' professor emeritus, Arizona State University; research professor, University of Colorado at Boulder; coauthor, 50 Myths and Lies That Threaten America's Public Schools
Cover Design: Faceout Studio, Charles Brock
Cover Illustration: © Connie Gabbert
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To my parents, who gave me the freedom to be me
About the Author
Yong Zhao, born and raised in China's Sichuan Province, taught English in China for six years before coming to the United States as a visiting scholar in 1992. He currently holds the first Presidential Chair at the University of Oregon, where he serves as director of the Institute for Global Education and professor in the Department of Educational Measurement, Policy, and Leadership. He is also a senior fellow at the Mitchell Institute of Victoria University in Australia.
Zhao's contributions to the education field are many. He has developed computer software, including the award-winning ZON (http://enterzon.com), the world's first massively multiplayer online role-playing game for studying Chinese. The college English learning system Zhao codeveloped, New Era Interactive English, has been used by millions of college students in China since its publication in 2004. Zhao also led the development of Education for Global Citizenship, an innovative bilingual, bicultural, and dual pedagogy program for early learning. He has won numerous awards for his contributions in research, leadership, and innovation.
A popular keynote presenter, Zhao has delivered speeches and workshops in over a dozen countries on six continents. He has been quoted or featured as an expert commentator in such media outlets as USA Today, the New York Times, the Washington Post, Parenting magazine, NPR, ABC, The Australian, Xinhua News Agency, and China's national television network, China Central TV.
Zhao is the author of more than one hundred articles and twenty books. His most recent publications include the books Catching Up or Leading the Way: American Education in the Age of Globalization (ASCD, 2009), The Handbook of Asian Education (edited; Taylor and Francis, 2011), and World Class Learners: Educating Creative and Entrepreneurial Students (Corwin, 2012).
Acknowledgments
The Acknowledgments section is always the most difficult part of writing a book because there is no way to list all the people who have made it possible. It's especially difficult for this book due to the time it took me to complete it and the number of people from whom I have benefited.
The idea of a book about Chinese education came to me over ten years ago when I first saw the spirit of Chinese education reincarnated in the No Child Left Behind Act. Instead of writing a book about China, I ended up writing a book about education in America: Catching Up or Leading the Way: American Education in the Age of Globalization. I never gave up the idea of writing about the Chinese system, but it was Marjorie McAneny, my editor at Jossey-Bass, who started me on this project again. Working with Margie has been one of the most enjoyable and productive intellectual trips I have taken. Her encouraging words, gentle nudging, professional insights, and expert editing are evident in this book.
The ideas in this book are the result of numerous conversations I have had with colleagues and friends all over the world. A few individuals have significantly contributed to my thinking and deserve special recognition: Kathe Kirby, executive director of the Asia Education Foundation in Australia; Tony McKay, chair of the Australian Institute for Teaching and School Leadership; Zhong Binling, president of the China Society for Education; Gao Chen, principal of Northeast Yucai Secondary School; Gilbert Choy, founder of Beijing 3e International Kindergarten; Xuyang Yao, CEO of Beijing Channel Consulting; Sun Qijun, director of Chaoyang Education Commission in Beijing; Liu Libing, deputy director of Chaoyang Education Commission; Ron Beghetto, associate professor at the University of Connecticut; and Richard Elmore, professor at Harvard Graduate School of Education. I also thank Wanyu Xiang for her assistance with the references, particularly translating the titles of the websites referenced.
As always, my wife, Xi Chen, has been a critical and encouraging reader of the first drafts. She has also pointed me to new sources and challenged me to think and write in different ways. My son, who works at the Arts Club of Chicago, has served as an excellent example of why passion and interest matter in education. My daughter, Athena, has been a great source of inspiration and smiles.
Introduction
Fatal Attraction: America's Suicidal Quest for Educational Excellence
In 2009 Beverly Hall, former superintendent of the Atlanta Public Schools, was named America's National Superintendent of the Year for “representing the ‘best of the best’ in public school leadership.”1 Hall was hosted in the White House by Secretary of Education Arne Duncan. In 2010, the American Educational Research Association honored her with its Distinguished Community Service Award, which “recognizes exceptional contributions to advancing the use of education research and statistics.”2 Also in 2010, President Obama appointed Hall to the elite National Board for Education Sciences.
In 2013, Hall was indicted by a grand jury in Georgia for “violation of Racketeer Influence and Corrupt Organizations Act, false statements and writings, false swearing, and theft by taking.”3 The Racketeer Influence and Corrupt Organization Act is a law typically used against Mafia leaders. If she is convicted, Hall faces forty-five years in prison.
What made Hall a national hero is precisely what brought about her downfall. She earned national recognition by significantly improving tests scores in the Atlanta Public Schools, one of America's largest urban school districts and one with a large proportion of minority students. These higher scores, it turned out, were not the result of improved student learning but of a conspiracy of teachers and school leaders. Together with Hall, thirty-four top administrators, principals, and teachers in Atlanta were indicted for “improving” student test results through cheating. The total number of individuals involved in the scandal was even larger: some 178 principals and teachers at nearly half of Atlanta's schools were reportedly in on the scam.
This case is just one of many unfolding national scandals in the United States. Celebrated heroes have been graced with honorary titles and rewarded generous cash bonuses for dramatically improving test scores—and then exposed for cooking the books. In 2012, Lorenzo Garcia, former superintendent of the El Paso Independent School District in Texas, was sentenced to three and a half years in prison for “improving” his schools by preventing low-performing students from taking the state test. Garcia had twice been nominated for Texas Superintendent of the Year. Michelle Rhee, former chancellor of the Washington, DC, public schools, was implicated in cheating scandals soon after the district's dramatic improvement sent her to national stardom—with a prominent spot in the influential documentary Waiting for Superman, on the covers of Time and Newsweek, and backed with millions of dollars for her new organization StudentsFirst.
Cheating scandals have been discovered in almost every major school district that has reported great improvements: Houston, Los Angeles, Philadelphia, and New York.4 The most obvious victims are the hundreds of thousands of innocent children directly affected by the unethical, immoral, and illegal activities of the adults working in their school systems. But millions more are affected. What about those students, teachers, and school leaders who did not cheat and were adversely affected by their lower test scores? Even the
instigators of these cheating scandals are victims in a sense. Sure, they may have been driven by greed for the cash prizes and promotions associated with improved test scores (or by the desire to avoid punishment for reporting poor test scores). But it's unlikely that these people entered the education profession intending to hurt children for their own gains.
The villain behind these cheating scandals is the accountability system itself, which is based on high-stakes testing. Ushered in by President George W. Bush's No Child Left Behind Act in 2001 and reinforced by President Barack Obama's Race to the Top initiative in 2009, test-based accountability that directly links student performance to educators' livelihood has become the yardstick of American education. By attaching lavish rewards and harsh punishment to student test scores, the system provides powerful incentives for cheating. Educators have far less control over student performance—and far less impact on its quality—than policymakers presume. And that's especially true for teachers working in impoverished communities.
When it comes to the harm done by high-stakes testing, rampant cheating is just the tip of the iceberg. As Sharon Nichols and David Berliner point out in their book Collateral Damage: How High-Stakes Testing Corrupts America's Schools, this “cooking of the books” is but one of many damages done by testing reported by parents, teachers, and researchers.5 Education historian Diane Ravitch warns in her book, The Death and Life of the Great American School System: How Testing and Choice Are Undermining Education, that high-stakes testing is one of the many symptoms of a virus threatening America's future.6
That virus is the rising tide of authoritarianism in the United States. In exchange for the comfort of knowing how their children are doing academically and that their schools are being held accountable, Americans welcomed high-stakes testing into public education. Without the benefit of historical experience with these kinds of high-stakes tests, however, Americans failed to recognize those benign-looking tests as a Trojan horse—with a dangerous ghost inside. That ghost, authoritarianism, sees education as a way to instill in all students the same knowledge and skills deemed valuable by the authority.