In a lecture I heard from the John Danner, CEO of Rocketship Schools, in one of my graduate school classes, he related the current state of the teaching profession to what the medical profession previously looked like. As it turns out that like the current teaching profession, doctors were primarily generalists. They would go door to door for little pay trying to provide their services. Given that they faced so many different situations and lacked the technology, medical outcomes were unsurprisingly not very good. However, given advances in science, pharmaceuticals, technology, and city infrastructure, the profession shifted towards greater specialization and medical outcomes improved.
Education is faced with a similar opportunity. With technology tools developing that will help individualize education for students, there is an opportunity to rethink our approach to the roles we utilize in staffing a school. Given that this development will likely change how much of a curriculum is delivered and how students are assessed, there will be an opportunity to have educators move from being generalists to focus their energy on going deep across a limited set of skills.
While there are a growing number of schools that are implementing new models that are starting to personalize education for students, these new approaches are still quite new. Yet, there are already new focused roles that are starting to develop in schools. I’ve presented a few examples below and cite the skills (full list in my last blog post) that they emphasize.
Thus, these new roles allow for a more focused approach to jobs as an educator. There are a number of potential positive impacts from rethinking human capital. First and foremost, students have the potential to be served more effectively. By catering what adults do to the personalization of curriculum delivery, there is a much better chance that students won’t be left behind. Second, specialization has the potential to further professionalize teaching. Teachers will be able to more effectively differentiate themselves based on their particular skills and abilities. If the trend continues towards schools having more budgetary and hiring control, this should allow wages to become more differentiated based on the value teachers are adding towards gaining student outcomes. Thus, stronger performers will be rewarded for their achievements. Finally, it should help teachers remain in the profession longer. If teachers are able to focus on developing a narrower set of skills early on, they are more likely to feel successful and there will be less likelihood of burnout.
While it is clear that it will take some time for these new models to develop and establish a definitive sense of what ultimately works, it is important to not think of human capital as an afterthought. By rethinking and reconstructing how schools are staffed, there is a great opportunity to achieve greater efficiency and effectiveness in educating students with these
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