Khan Academy Pedagogical Perspective More Important Than User Needs?
I have been participating in a thread about a serious problem encountered by many KA users. (See: https://khanacademy.zendesk.com/hc/en-us/community/posts/115001114611-Reset-Unit-Tests) This thread has been active for 3 years, without any resolution and with only a single comment from a KA representative stating that the feature in question would not be implemented, because it is not in line with KA's "pedagogical perspective".
I am writing this post as general feedback to KA, to ask if KA's pedagogical perspective is really more important than the needs of KA users.
I am also curious where this "pedagogical perspective" comes from. Is this merely a bunch of KA employees imposing their personal opinions of how education should work on their users, like systems including Montessori and Waldorf? Is this "pedagogical perspective" informed by high quality studies and evidence based scientific knowledge? What is KA's pedagogical perspective? Is there a published document outlining this pedagogical perspective, and if not, why not? As a KA user and as someone who has used KA for the education of my own children, I would very much like to know exactly what this pedagogical perspective is, that is so important that KA feels it appropriate to straight up ignore 273 comments over 3 years, of people concerned that the platform is seriously interfering with learning, by an excessively antagonistic attitude toward failure that has lead to rather excessive punishment of failure in unit tests.
Further, I am curious and concerned about whether KA actually cares about its users and about its goal of providing a world class education anymore. I started using KA many years ago, and when I started, I felt like education quality was an important feature of the system. Now, I feel like KA has just adopted all of the poor education techniques and perspectives common in the U.S. education system. That's not world class. When I started using KA as part of the math curriculum for my children, they largely enjoyed it. Now, they don't like it, despite all of them being quite good at math, largely because the system has become more harsh in its treatment of failure. I started using KA years ago, with the initial goal of improving my ability to do math in my head. Again, it was an excellent platform for that when I started, but now there is so much focus on test driven learning and punishing failure that I find it incredibly frustrating. I am a very motivated learner, but after around 30 minutes of KA, my motivation is completely destroyed and takes weeks to return. At this very moment, I really want to try to complete the unit test for the section I am currently working on, but I just can't bring myself to even start the test, because the last three unit tests I did were so harshly punishing for just a single question missed.
Is this where KA is headed going forward? Is the plan to turn this into a learning system with all of the flaws in the U.S. education system that cause a majority of students to absolutely hate learning? Right now, I don't want to use KA for my children's education anymore, because I am afraid it is going to make them hate learning, which was the reason we were homeschooling in the first place.
Is KA really turning into just another U.S. school program that happens to be online but still does a crummy job of teaching and an excellent job of making students hate learning? Am I being too sensitive?
I feel like KA was heading in the right direction but then adopted the typical U.S. classroom pedagogy and now thinks that it is doing a good job when really it is just doing all of the stuff everyone else in the U.S. is doing that is resulting in a fairly well funded education system having very sub-par results. If this is where KA is heading, I am not sure it is worth continuing to use. I want the program KA promised to become, but I feel like it is going in the opposite direction.
And if KA really is trying to improve, where is the public discussion on KA's pedagogical perspective? As a KA user, as a student, as a parent of children who struggle with problems KA is blaming on its pedagogical perspective, as an education researcher, and as an educator myself, I feel like I should have a say in this. And if KA ever expects me to contribute funding to the program, I demand a say in KA's pedagogical perspective. My teaching is informed entirely by the needs of my students, and it bothers me that KA isn't even listening to its own students.
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