Horse Story (an analogy)
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Dr. Wendy Ghiora . Posting #129 . January
15, 2015
I find this
analogy applicable to several common practices employed by school
districts throughout our country.
Perhaps, as you read this, you will know exactly what this analogy is so eloquently
referring to.
Common
advice from knowledgeable horse trainers includes the adage, "If the horse
you're riding dies, get off."
Seems simple
enough doesn't it? Yet in education we don't always follow that advice.
Instead, we often choose from an array of other alternatives which include:
1.Buying a
stronger whip
2.Trying a
new bit or bridle
3.Switching
riders
4.Moving the
horse to a new location
5.Riding the
horse for longer periods of time
6.Saying
things like, "This is the way we've always ridden this horse
7.Appointing
a committee to study the horse
8.Arranging
to visit other sites where they ride dead horses more efficiently
9.Increasing
the standards for riding dead horses
10.Creating
a test for measuring our riding ability
11.Comparing
how we're riding now with how we did ten or twenty years ago
12.Complaining
about the state of horse these days
13.Coming up
with new styles of riding
14.Blaming
the horse's parents. The problem is often in the breeding.
15.Tightening
the cinch
Will we ever
learn?
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