V
irginia
C
apitol
C
onnections
, W
inter
2016
28
When Jesse Stuart, the
Kentucky writer and educator,
was a young teacher in a one-
teacher rural high school in
Kentucky in the 20s or 30s, he
believed that he could hike over
the mountains to his parent’s
home in the dead of winter. He
wanted to do two things. First,
he needed to bring back more
books for his students whose
intellectual skills were stretching
both his abilities and resources. Also, he felt their
academic performance was so impressive that he believed
they could compete academically with the big flagship
county high school. He had a proposal to make about such
a competition to the school superintendent whom he knew
he could find in his office on Saturday morning. Stuart
didn’t anticipate getting lost on top of the mountains in
a blizzard with sub-zero temperatures. Had it not been
for the dry clothes he was carrying in his suitcase and the
shelter of several fodder shocks he found in a deserted
corn field, he might have frozen to death. Ah, the hubris
of youth.
This story is one of the many anecdotes that Stuart
included in his bestselling, award-winning book
The
Thread that Runs So True
that was published in 1949. I
was fifteen when I first read this book. I was impressed
with the sacrifices Stuart was willing to make to help his
students, and I was thrilled that his risk paid off. When I
finished the book, I committed myself, in prayer, to a life
of service and teaching, particularly in the Appalachian
region. I achieved my goal. The world of teaching and
learning that I saw myself going into at that time, is harder
to find these days, but young people still go into teaching
believing they see and feel the commitment that I saw so
many years ago.
In order to help our committed teachers continue
their good work, they need help from everyone
in the
neighborhood:
parents, students, and politicians. There
are many things in schools—e.g., the emphasis on that
which is mundane, repetitive, and routine driven by high stakes
testing— that need to change. But for sure, we must communicate
to all students that though learning can be difficult, it can also be
joyful and thrilling. Getting to a point where this kind of positive
experience can be achieved often requires ridiculously hard work.
Students at all levels must be convinced, motivated, taught, and
told that their job is to learn whatever their parents, teachers, and
scholars say they should be learning in order to move forward.
Most readers would not disagree with what I have just said.
However, what is to be done when some students choose not
to do what they are asked or expected to do. There should be
consequences. In my day, such consequences were being grounded,
being denied something I wanted until I adjusted my behavior,
or being spanked—not beaten. Today, there is still a need for
consequences, but often there aren’t any. The reason why there
aren’t consequences goes back about 30 years. At that time due to
fears of litigation, corporal punishment disappeared in Virginia’s
schools. Nothing was created to take corporal punishment’s place.
As a result, to this day, if students say no, that is often the end of
what educators can do.
Whatever direction we go, when a pronouncement is made,
a law passed, and a policy created, the problem has not been
solved. All constituents—students, parents, educators, scholars,
politicians—must keep talking about and evaluating what is
important and keep at it continually and forever. The method and
mode of learning is constantly shifting, and we must all keep up.
We have to agree upon that which is truly right, that which is truly
wrong, and that which is truly needed. I can tell you this with
certainty— to improve schools and learning, we need more than
just data. We need consequences beyond test scores to hold students
accountable. Once we figure out what the accountability should be,
then maybe we can figure out how to truly measure the successes
and failures of all involved.
Herb Thompson is a Professor Emeritus of Education at Emory
& Henry College, Emory, VA. He is currently President of the
Association of Teacher Educators –Virginia.
Students
Cannot Be Allowed
To Choose Not To Learn
By Edgar H. Thompson
V