Cuban, Larry. (2009). Hugging the Middle: How Teachers
Teach in an Era of Testing and Accountability. NY: Teachers
College Press
Pp. 104 ISBN 978-0-8077-4936-4
Reviewed by Whitney McComis
June 19, 2009 As a follow-up study to How Teachers Taught, Larry
Cuban addresses four new questions (over four chapters) about the
current state of American schools in Hugging the Middle: How
Teachers Teach in an Era of Testing and Accountability. Using
a variety of research methods and resources, including
qualitative data, teacher surveys, and even yearbook classroom
photos, Cuban examines three different school systems: that of
Arlington, Virginia; Denver, Colorado; and Oakland, California.
“Hugging the Middle” refers to Cuban’s
thesis—that today’s teachers largely hug the middle
of a continuum ranging from teacher-centered pedagogy to the more
progressive student-centered teaching practices. Cuban has been
a professor of education at Stanford University, and spent
fourteen years in high school classrooms and seven years as a
district superintendent. The reader can rest assured that Cuban
certainly knows his stuff. A commitment to the improvement of public education is evident
in Cuban’s heartfelt prose, even as he maintains an
objective stance throughout the text. He concludes,
“Surely, I have my preferences for the kinds of teaching
and schooling that honor students’ strengths…While
the temptation to make up facts may be strong at times, I am
investigating phenomena that have consequences in people’s
lives—the policy-to-practice paradox of teachers being both
the problem at the solution to an enduring educational
crisis” (p. 68). In Hugging the Middle, Cuban wants to know
if teaching practices, student grouping, and classroom furniture
arrangements have changed in response to standards-based reform
and increased testing and accountability. He is equally
concerned with whether or not low-income and minority students
receive more teacher-centered instruction during these times
(which has been a fairly loud and consistent assumption), since
most practitioners agree that student-centered instruction is far
more successful at engaging students and motivating them to
learn. Cuban goes on to acknowledge that since the early
1990’s, districts have begun investing heavily in
technology for classrooms, but questions whether or not teachers
and students are reaping the benefits. And finally, he asks
whether or not particular pedagogies are correlated to student
outcomes. While Cuban addresses these four different questions
over the same number of chapters, the central question that acts
as the glue for his research is whether or not pedagogy is
shifting in response to increasing accountability.
One cannot deny that the questions Cuban asks are
important, because they challenge fairly dominant notions that
pedagogy is deteriorating as a direct result of mandated
standardized testing. One conclusion he draws is especially
intriguing—his research demonstrates that low-income and
minority students are not automatically subject to boring,
traditional, teacher-centered methods. He warns against
“unequivocal statements from policymakers, researchers, and
practitioners who claim that teaching practices are determined on
the basis of race and class” (p. 41). His
research effectively disproves the blanket statement that poor
and minority kids receive consistently worse pedagogical
practices. While Cuban’s study is interesting, this
second question—about whether or not minority and
low-income students receive more teacher-centered
pedagogy—seems almost irrelevant. After all, what good is
the possibility of student-centered pedagogy (in the form of
small groups and untraditional seating) in low-income, minority
classrooms, when we know that these same students receive
teachers with, on average, far fewer years of experience and
lesser credentials? (Darling-Hammond, 1997, p. 276). Rookies and
long-term substitutes are teaching America’s urban poor, so
whether or not they seat students in rows or groups, for example,
seems insignificant. Cuban’s second question, while
popular in this era of accountability, seems to be the wrong
one. It was also troubling to me that the focus of the study was on
pedagogy, rather than content. A central assumption from the
accountability era is that teachers are “teaching to the
test,” or only instructing students on the material that is
likely to show up on the state exam. It appears that Cuban
focused most of his energy on what is easily
measurable—floor plans and student grouping, for
example—which may not be the best markers for good
teaching. He notes, “…the reader who remains
unconvinced may question whether the three markers I used
(teacher’s floor plans, their grouping of students, and
their use of particular classroom activities) are, indeed, valid
proxies for student-and teacher-centered practices. Precisely
because these are markers for pedagogical traditions, what I
analyzed misses the content of what teachers taught, the
classroom climate, teacher beliefs, and student outcomes”
(p. 40). Hugging the Middle addresses another timely
concern—are teachers effectively making use of technology
that is being provided for their students? Since the mid
1990’s, school districts large and small have been
allocating funds to increase the ratio of computers to students,
add SMART boards for classrooms, and even provide document
cameras for teachers, in recognition that a new global economy
requires technology literacy for the next generations of
Americans. The question if of interest to Cuban, because the use
of classroom technology is considered a kid-friendly,
student-centered pedagogical practice. Cuban’s research
indicates that the use of technology in classrooms for the
purpose of student learning is spotty at best. He smartly
remarks, “Teacher and student use of ICT (information and
communication technology) at home and in school is widespread in
doing assignments, preparing lessons, Internet searches, and
email but lags far behind in routine use for classroom
instruction” (p. 45), suggesting that districts are wasting
their money by investing so heavily in technology as a band-aid
for student disengagement. The writing is clear and free of excessive field-specific
language, making the text approachable for those new to
education. When jargon is used, he takes the time (like a true
teacher) to quickly and succinctly support the reader in his or
her understanding. An example is his detailed but concise
description of Open Court, which is a curriculum being used in
many school districts: “Heavily scripted toward
teacher-directed phonics instruction to the whole group, the
teachers manual recommends that teachers arrange the classroom
furniture into a square where students face one another and
organize reading, math, and writing workshop centers for small
groups to follow up on earlier instruction—all indicators
of student-centeredness” (p. 31). Cuban also consolidates
his data into clean, easy to read tables—something sure to
be appreciated by practitioners and education majors who squirm
at the sight of too many numbers. Finally, the organization of the text is user-friendly in that
each of Cuban’s questions receives its own brief chapter,
complete with a summary chapter that serves to tie together the
text into a cohesive argument. An Appendix at the end provides
the details of the design and methodology of his study. Cuban is
refreshing as he points out his research’s flaws and
limitations. He simply states, “Truth in advertising
demands that I be clear about what this follow-up study does and
does not do” (p. 76). Cuban’s forthcoming nature
allows the reader to relax criticism and simply learn from what
his research provides. Darling-Hammond, Linda. (1997) The Right To Learn: A
Blueprint for Creating Schools that Work. San Francisco:
Jossey-Bass. About the Reviewer Whitney McComis is a Masters student at the Stanford University School of Education, studying Policy, Organization, and Leadership Studies. She is also a Teach For America alum. Her research interest is in teacher recruitment, training, and retention. |
Friday, August 1, 2025
Cuban, Larry. (2009). Hugging the Middle: How Teachers Teach in an Era of Testing and Accountability. Reviewed by Whitney McComis, Stanford University
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