Published in Journal of Educational Change, Volume 18, Issue 1, February 2017, Pages 1-19.

Download Full Article in PDF (personal copy, please do not distribute).

This medicine can reduce fever, but it can cause a bleeding stomach. When you buy a medical product, you are given information about both its effects and side effects. But such practice does not exist in education.

“This program helps improve your students’ reading scores, but it may make them hate reading forever.” No such information is given to teachers or school principals.

“This practice can help your children become a better student, but it may make her less creative.” No parent has been given information about effects and side effects of practices in schools.

“School choice may improve test scores of some students, but it can lead to the collapse of American public education,” the public has not received information about the side effects of sweeping education policies.

Educational research has typically focused exclusively on the benefits, intended effects of products, programs, policies, and practices, as if there were no adverse side effects. But side effects exist the same way in education as in medicine. For many reasons, studying and reporting side effects simultaneously as has been mandated for medical products is not common in education.

In this article just published in the Journal of Educational Change, I discuss why education must learn the important lesson of studying and reporting side effects from medical research. Side effects in education occur for a number of reasons.

First, time is a constant. When you spend time on one task, you cannot spend the same amount on another. When a child is given extra instruction in reading, he/she cannot spend the same time on arts or music. When a school focuses only on two or three subjects, its students would not have the time to learn something else. When a school system only focuses on a few subjects such as reading and math, students won’t have time to do other and perhaps more important things.

Second, resourses are limited. When it is put into one activity, it cannot be spent on other. When school resources are devoted to the common core, other subjects become peripheral. When schools are forced to only focus on raising test scores, activities that may promote students’ long-term growth are sidelined.

Third, some educational outcomes are inherently contradictory. It is difficult for an educational system that wishes to cultivate a homogenous workforce to also expect a diverse population of individuals who are creative and entrepreneurial. Research has also shown that test scores and knowledge acquisition can come at the expense of curiosity and confidence.

Fourth, the same products may work differently for different individuals, in different contexts. Some people are allergic to penicillin. Some drugs have negative consequences when taken with alcohol. Likewise, some practices, such as direct instruction may work better for knowledge transmission, but not for long term exploration. Charter schools may favor those who have a choice (can make a choice) at the costs of those who are not able to take advantage of it.

American education faces many uncertainties today. But one thing is certain: we will see a slew of new policy proposals as states implement the Every Student Succeeds Act and whatever actions the new administration may take, in addition to the mind-boggling number of products, programs, and services already vying for the attention (and money) of parents, schools, and education systems. When making decisions about policies and products, we should ask for information about their adverse effects in addition to evidence of effects.

What works can hurt!

Article info:

Volume 18, Issue 1, February 2017, Pages 1-19

Download Full Article in PDF (personal copy, please do not distribute).

13 responses to “What Works Can Hurt: Side Effects in Education”

  1. Indrani Solomon Avatar
    Indrani Solomon

    True to every word!

    Like

  2. Interesting read: What Works Can Hurt: Side Effects in Education | From experience to meaning... Avatar

    […] my first chapter – already read by my publishers – has quite some in common with this new blog post and article by Yong Zhao: What Works Can Hurt: Side Effects in […]

    Like

  3. […] What Works Can Hurt: Side Effects in Education […]

    Like

  4. […] Education in the Age of Globalization » Blog Archive » What Works Can Hurt: Side Effects in Educat… […]

    Like

  5. […] can preview the article for a short time on Zhoa’s site here. Share this:TwitterLinkedInFacebookGoogle Posted on February 21, 2017 by yancyunger Leave a […]

    Like

  6. Larry Kahn Avatar
    Larry Kahn

    Just as, due to our unique differences, personalized medications will be quickly coming our way, we can only hope that we will truly be able to personalize learning for each student.

    Like

  7. The Effects of Authority, Compliance, and Pathologizing Students – Ryan Boren Avatar

    […] third is great longform by Yong Zhao on side effects in education. But side effects exist the same way in education as in medicine. For many reasons, studying and […]

    Like

  8. […] What Works Can Hurt: Side Effects in Education Yong Zhao, Education in the Age of Globalization […]

    Like

  9. […] very interesting problem about education research, which hadn’t occurred to me until I read an article about it recently, is that we seem to have completely overlooked the possibility that interventions […]

    Like

  10. […] read an interesting article by Yong Zhao the other day entitled What Works Can Hurt: Side Effects in Education where he discussed A simple reality that exists in schools and districts all over. Basically, […]

    Like

  11. Spring Avatar
    Spring

    I would agree with the author, every coin has two sides, so does the education policy, it is important to aware of each side of the effects. I remember Immanuel Kant has described antinomies in his book The Critique of Pure Reason, and there is a self-contradictory phrase such as “There is no absolute truth”, it may help to understand the third reason that the author provides. And it reminds me some facts and policies I have learned before, for example, the Chinese education focuses more on the “standard answer” in the examination, so that there is no space for training the critical thinking and creativity (related to the first reason). Moreover, the Arizona state implement the SEI model instead of the bilingual education based on the state situation, but there are some states like Texas still providing instructions to non-English speaker in their native language (related to the last one).

    Like

Leave a reply to Articles of Interest February 17th, 2017 « National Creativity Network Cancel reply

More about Yong Zhao

Dr. Yong Zhao is a Foundation Distinguished Professor in the School of Education at the University of Kansas. He previously served as the Presidential Chair, Associate Dean, and Director of the Institute for Global and Online Education in the College of Education, University of Oregon, where he was also a Professor in the Department of Educational Measurement, Policy, and Leadership. Prior to Oregon, Yong Zhao was University Distinguished Professor at the College of Education, Michigan State University, where he also served as the founding director of the Center for Teaching and Technology, executive director of the Confucius Institute, as well as the US-China Center for Research on Educational Excellence. Additionally, he worked as a professor of educational leadership in the Faculty of Education at University of Melbourne and senior researcher at the Mitchell Institute of Victoria University in Australia. He was a visiting Global Professor at University of Bath and a visiting scholar at Warwick University in the UK.