"Shark Tank" Competition Used To Select Education Tech
theodp writes "With support from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and the tech billionaire-backed NewSchools Venture Fund, the Silicon Valley Education Foundation used a competition based on the reality show Shark Tank to determine which educational technology entrepreneurs would win the right to have teachers test their technology on students for the rest of the year. 'Ten companies, selected from 80 original applicants,' reports Mercury News columnist Mike Cassidy, 'had three minutes to convince a panel of educators and then a panel of business brains that their ideas would be a difference maker in middle school math classes.' The winners? Blendspace, which helps teachers create digital lessons using Web-based content; Front Row Education, which generates individual quizzes for students and tracks their progress as they work through problems; LearnBop, which offers an automated tutoring system with content written by math teachers; and Zaption, which lets teachers use existing online videos as lessons by adding quizzes, discussion sections, images and text."
And who is ensuring that the companies aren't going to harvest, retain, and ultimately sell all of the data about those kids?
The answer, probably nobody.
Lost at C:>. Found at C.
but the simple method of firing 10% of the worst teachers and reassigning their students to the rest does more to improve schools than anything else.
Most teachers know who the worst of the worst are. Principals know.
If union rules make such an act impossible, keep these 10% worst teachers on payroll and have them sit around watching youtube, but send their students to better teachers.
One does have to ask in purity of education as a discipline--why involve business? I know businesses can be a important stakeholders in education, but are we losing sight of education as a whole when we involve businesses to defining principles for educators--I mean businesses' sole purpose is financial, which isn't exactly the same purpose of education (or according to Silicon Valley... it is).
Stack Ranking employees: the surest way to success!
All the winners are things that let teachers shit out more auto-generated homework, quizzes/tests, lessons, and tutoring.
Here's a solution: Hire teachers who know the subject and are willing to teach children. Pay them decently, and fire the teachers who can't teach. Tell the unions to fuck right on off.
While you're at it, fire the students who screw over other kids because they can't behave like a human being for a few hours a day. Tell their parents to fuck right on off, too. "You're child was expelled for being a fucking nuisance. Correct the behavior or have fun homeschooling the little shit yourself." And hold all the stupid kids back, too. "Your child failed to learn anything and will not advance to the next grade."
It's fucking simple and it'll fucking work, so it'll never fucking happen.
WTF? $30-40 is "barely scraping by"? $40k in the midwest is a damn good starting salary. Firmly middle class.
Big city markets and expensive cost-of-living areas also pay teachers more than that starting. My wife's first pay was $36k full-time in the midwest. My starting pay as a web developer was $38k. That $36 for my wife is for ~10.5 months of work. She actually made more than I did starting. And that's a programming tech job vs those "low paid teacher salaries".
And, of course, I paid $350 month for insurance and she paid nothing, until last year were she pays $30 for a high-deductible plan that was similar to mine. So, I was making less and spending more on benefits by about another $3,000.
The real difference is, my wife is still making about the same amount 5 years later, were I'm making $60 now, 8 years later.
My wife will have to get a masters degree and a PhD and do all kinds of other things to raise her pay scale.
But $40k is a good salary and can provide for a family. So this idiotic statement that $40k is a bad salary is just that.
More trades / tech schools
Or even a bigger push to go to Community College
wonder if they would stop bitchin' about teachers and then maybe teachers might bitch about why the parents are not spending enough time with the kids. Also, maybe if software engineers paid taxes rather than non-profits, there would be better budgets for public schools.
...Shark Tank?
XKCD:Xeric Knowledge Comically Dispen
...being "Shart Tank".
I think the authors are referring to the popular UK TV show "Dragon's Den", which has a poor-quality US spinoff named "Shark Tank".