- NINE ASSUMPTIONS OF
SCHOOLING -
- and Twenty-one Facts the
Institution Would Rather Not Discuss
- by John Taylor
Gatto
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-
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- I'll start off bluntly by
giving you some data I'd be shocked if you already know. A few
simple facts, all verifiable, which by their existence call into
question the whole shaky edifice of American government compulsion
schooling from kindergarten through college and its questionable
connection with the job market. The implications of this data are
quite radical so I'm going to take pains to ground it in the most
conservative society on earth, the mountain world of Switzerland.
You all remember Switzerland: that's where people put their money
when they really want it to be really safe.
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- The Swiss just like us believe
that education is the key to their national success, but that's
where our similarity ends. In 1990 about 60% of American secondary
school graduates enrolled in college, but only 22% did in
Switzerland; in America almost l00% of our kids go to high school
or private equivalents, but only a little over a fifth of the
Swiss kids do. And yet the Swiss per capita income is the highest
of any nation in the world and the Swiss keep insisting that
virtually everyone in their country is highly
educated!
-
- What on earth could be going
on? Remember it's a sophisticated economy which produces the
highest per-capita paycheck in the world we're talking about, high
for the lightly-schooled as well as for the heavily schooled,
higher than Japan's, Germany's or our own. No one goes to high
school in Switzerland who doesn't also want to go to college,
three-quarters of the young people enter apprenticeships before
high school. It seems the Swiss don't make the mistake that
schooling and education are synonyms.
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- If you are thinking silently at
this point that apprenticeships as a substitute for classroom
confinement isn't a very shocking idea and it has the drawback of
locking kids away from later choice of white collar work, think
again. I wasn't only talking about blue-collar apprenticeships -
although the Swiss have those, too - but white-collar
apprenticeships in abundance. Many of the top management of
insurance companies, manufacturing companies, banks, etc., never
saw the inside of a high school, let alone a college.
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- Is that possible? The highest
per capita income in the world and every single citizen also
trusted by government to own dangerous weapons. [I forgot to
tell you that the largely unschooled Swiss (by our standards) also
demand universal gun ownership.] Ownership. If it puzzles you
what connection I might be drawing between great prosperity,
freedom from forced schooling where it is clearly inappropriate,
and a profound mutuality, you think about it.
-
- Well, shocking is the word for
it, isn't it? I mean here you are putting away your loot in a
Swiss bank because it's safe over there and not so safe here and
now I've told you the bank president may only have a sixth grade
schooling. Just like Shakespeare did.
- As long as we're playing "did
you know?", did you know that in Sweden, a country legendary for
its quality of life and a nation which beats American school
performance in every academic category, a kid isn't allowed to
start school before the age of 7? The hard-headed Swedes don't
want to pay for the social pathologies attendant on ripping a
child away from his home and mother and dumping him into a pen
with strangers. Can you remember the last time you worried about a
Swedish Volvo breaking down prematurely or a Swedish jet engine
failing in the air? Did you know that the entire Swedish school
sequence is only 9 years long, a net 25% time and tax savings over
our own 12-year sequence?
-
- Exactly in whose best interest
do you think it is that the New York Times or every other
element of journalism, for that matter, doesn't make information
like this readily accessible? How can you think clearly about our
own predicament if you don't have it?
- Did you know that Hong Kong, a
country with a population the size of Norway's, beats Japan in
every scientific and mathematical category in which the two
countries compete? Did you know that Hong Kong has a school year
ten and one half weeks shorter than Japan's? How on earth do they
manage that if longer school years translate into higher
performance? Why haven't you heard about Hong Kong, do you
suppose? You've heard enough about Japan, I'm sure.
-
- But I'll bet you haven't heard
this about Japan. I'll bet you haven't heard that in Japan a
recess is held after every class period.
-
- Or did you know that in Flemish
Belgium with the shortest school year in the developed world that
the kids regularly finish in the top three nations in the world in
academic competition? Is it the water in Belgium or what? Because
it can't be the passionate commitment to government forced
schooling, which they don't seem to possess.
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- Did you know that three British
Prime Ministers in this century including the current one didn't
bother to go to college? I hope I've made the point. If you trust
journalism or the professional educational establishment to
provide you with data you need to think for yourself in the
increasingly fantastic socialist world of compulsion schooling,
you are certainly the kind of citizen who would trade his cow for
a handful of colored beans.
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- -2-
-
- Shortly into the 20th century
American schooling decided to move away from intellectual
de-velopment or skills training as the main justification for its
existence and to enter the eerie world of social engineering, a
world where "socializing" and "psychologizing" the classroom
preempted attention and rewards. Professionalization of the
administrative/ teaching staff was an important preliminary
mechanism to this end, serving as a sieve to remove troublesome
interlopers and providing lucrative ladders to reward allies and
camp followers.
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- Non-intellectual, non-skill
schooling was supported by a strange and motley collection of
fellow travelers: from unions, yes, but also from the ranks of
legendary businessmen like Carnegie and Rockefeller, Ford and
Astor; there were genuine ideologues like John Dewey, yes, but
many academic opportunists as well, like Nicholas Murray Butler of
Columbia; prominent colleges like Johns Hopkins and the University
of Chicago took a large hand in the deconstruction of American
academic schooling as well as a powerful core of private
foundations and think tanks. Whether they did this out of
conviction, for the advantage of private interests, or any hybrid
of these reasons and more I'll leave for the moment to others for
debate. What is certain is that the outcomes aimed for had little
to do with why parents thought children were ordered into schools;
such alien outcomes as socialization into creatures who would no
longer feel easy with their own parents, or psychologization into
dependable and dependent camp followers. Of what field general it
wasn't clear except to say that whoever could win undisputed
control of hiring and curriculum in a school district would have a
clear hand in selecting and arranging the contents of children's
minds.
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- In those early years of the
20th century a radical shift was well under way, transforming a
society of farmers and craftspeople, fishermen and small
entrepreneurs into the disciplined work-force of a corporate
state, one in which ALL the work was being sucked into colossal
governments, colossal institutions and colossal business
enterprises - a society whose driving logic was comfort, security,
predictability and consensus rather than independence,
originality, risk-taking and uncompromising principle. In the
gospels of social engineering this transformation was leading to a
future utopia of welfare capitalism. With the problem of
"production" solved, the attention of professional intellectuals
and powerful men of wealth turned to controlling distribution so
that a "rational" society, defined as a stable state without
internal or external conflicts, could be managed for nations,
regions and eventually the entire planet. In such a system, if you
behave, you get a share of the divvy and if you don't, your share
is correspondingly reduced. Keep in mind that a small farmer, a
carpenter, a fisherman, seamstress or Indian fighter never gave
undue attention to being well-behaved and you will begin to see
how a centralized economy and centralized schooling box human
behavior into a much narrowed container than what it normally
would occupy and you will begin to see why intellectual
development for all its theoretical desirability can never really
be a serious goal for a society seeking comfort, security,
predictability and consensus. Indeed, such a fate must be actively
avoided.
-
- Anyway, once this design was in
place - and it was firmly in place by 1917 - all that remained to
reach the target was a continual series of experiments on public
schoolchildren, some modest in scope, many breathtakingly radical
like "IQ tests" or "kindergartens", and a full palette of
intermediate colors like "multiculturalism", "rainbow" curricula
and "universal self esteem". Each of these thrusts has a real
behavioral purpose which is part of the larger utopia envisioned,
yet each is capable of being rhetorically defended as the
particular redress of some current "problem".
-
- But the biggest obstacle to a
planned society is parents. Parents have their own plans for their
own kids; most often they love their kids, so their motivations
are self-reinforcing, unlike those of schoolpeople who do it for a
pay-check, and unless held in check even a few unhappy parents can
disrupt the conduct of an educational experiment. The second
biggest obstacle to a planned society are religious sects, each of
which maintains that God has a plan for all human beings,
including children. And the third biggest obstacle is local values
and ethnic cultures which also provide serious maps for growing
up.
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- Each of these three is an
external force bidding for the loyalty of children against the
directions of the political State which owns the schools. One
final obstacle - and a colossal one - is the individual nature of
each particular child. John Locke pulled a whopper when he
maintained that children are blank slates waiting to be written
upon. He should have asked a few mothers about that. The fact is
that if you watch children closely in controlled conditions as I
did for 30 years as a school-teacher, you can hardly fail to
conclude that each kid has a private des-tiny he or she is pulling
toward wordlessly, a destiny frequently put out of reach by
schoolteachers, school executives or project officers from the
Ford Foundation.
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- In a planned society
individuality, cultural identity, a relationship with God or a
close-knit family are all elements which must be suppressed if
they cannot be totally extinguished. The Soviet Union was an
object lesson in this utopian undertaking and the United States
has been going down the same road, albeit with more hesitations,
at least since the end of the first world war. To accomplish such
a complex transformation of nature into mechanism the general
public must be led to agree to certain apparently sensible
assumptions - such as the assumption, for instance, that a college
degree is necessary for a high-status ca reer - even though Swiss
corporations and the British government are often run by managers
without college training. The security of the school institution
de-pends on many such assumptions, some which by adroit
concealments worthy of a card sharp seem to link schooling and
future responsibility, and some which serve to exalt the political
State, diminish essential human institutions like the family or
define human nature as mean, violent and brutish. I'd like to pass
nine specimens drawn from these latter categories of assumption in
front of your minds to allow each of you to gauge which ones you
personally accept, and to what degree.
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- -3-
-
- Nine Assumptions of
Schooling
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- 1. Social cohesion is not
possible through other means than government schooling; school is
the main defense against social chaos.
- 2. Children cannot learn to
tolerate each other unless first socialized by government agents.
- 3. The only safe mentors of
children are certified experts with government-approved
conditioning; children must be protected from the uncertified,
including parents.
- 4. Compelling children to
violate family, cultural and religious norms does not interfere
with the development of their intellects or
characters.
- 5. In order to dilute parental
influence, children must be disabused of the notion that mother
and father are sovereign in morality or intelligence.
- 6. Families should be
encouraged to expend concern on the general education of everyone
but discouraged from being unduly concerned with their own
children's education.
- 7. The State has predominant
responsibility for training, morals and beliefs. Children who
escape state scrutiny will become immoral.
- 8. Children from families with
different beliefs, backgrounds and styles must be forced together
even if those beliefs violently contradict one another. Robert
Frost, the poet, was wrong when he maintained that "good fences
make good neighbors."
- 9. Coercion in the name of
liberty is a valid use of state power.
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- -4-
-
- These assumptions and a few
others associated with them lead directly to the shape, style and
exercise of school politics. And these primary assumptions
generate secondary assumptions which fuel the largely phony school
debate played out in American journalism, a debate where the most
important questions like "What is the end that justifies these
means?" are never asked. I once had dinner in Washington at the
same table as Fred Hechinger, education editor of the New York
Times. When I raised the possibility that the Times
framed its coverage to omit inconvenient aspects of school
questions (such as challenging the presumed connection between
quantity of money spent and quality of education) Mr. Hechinger
became very angry and contemptuously dismissed my contention;
almost the same thing happened on a different occasion, also in
Washington, when I had dinner at the Council for Basic Education
at the same table with Albert Shanker of the AFT. With that
history of failure in opening a dialogue with some of the powers
and principalities of institutional education (and I could add
Lamar Alexander, Bill Bennett, Joe Fernandez, Diane Ravitch,
Checker Finn and many other luminaries who seemed to hear me with
impatience) I've been driven to trying to catch the ear of the
general public in meeting the assumptions schools rely upon with
contradictory facts open to formal verification - or the informal
variety grounded in common sense. What follows are 21 of these
disturbing contradictions raised for your
contemplation:
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- 21 Facts About
Schooling
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- 1. There is no relationship
between the amount of money spent on schooling and "good" results
as measured by parents of any culture. This seems to be because
"education" is not a commodity to be purchased but an enlargement
of insight, power, understanding and self-control almost
completely outside the cash economy. Education is almost
overwhelmingly an internally generated effort. The five American
states which usually spend least per capita on schooling are the
five which usually have the best test results (although Iowa which
is about 30th in spending sometimes creeps into the honored
circle).
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- 2. There is no compelling
evidence to show a positive relationship between length of
schooling and accomplishment. Many countries with short school
years outperform those with long ones by a wide
margin.
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- 3. Most relationships between
test scores and job performance are illegitimate, arranged in
advance by only allowing those testing well access to the work.
Would you hire a newspaper reporter because he had "A"s in
English? Have you ever asked your surgeon what grade he got in
meat-cutting? George F. Kennan, intellectual darling of the
Washington élite some while ago - and the author of our
"containment" policy against the Soviet Union - often found his
math and science grades in secondary school below 60, and at
Princeton he had many flunks, "D"s and "C"s. "Sometimes," he said,
"it is the unadjusted student struggling to forge his own
standards who develops within himself the thoughtfulness to
comprehend." Dean Acheson, Harry Truman's Secretary of State,
graduated from Groton with a 68 average. The headmaster wrote his
mother, "He is...by no means a pleasant boy to teach." Einstein,
we all know, was considered a high-grade moron, as were Thomas
Edison and Benjamin Franklin. Is there anybody out there who
really believes that grades and test scores are the mark of the
man? Then what exactly are they, pray tell? Q.E.D.
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- 4. Training done on the job is
invariably cheaper, quicker, and of much higher quality than
training done in a school setting. If you wonder why that should
be, you want to start, I think, by understanding that education
and training are two different things, one largely residing in the
development of good habits, the other in the development of vision
and understanding, judgment and the like. Education is
self-training; it calls into its calculations mountains of
personal data and experience which are simply unobtainable by any
schoolteacher or higher pedagogue. That simple fact is why all the
many beautifully precise rules on how to think produce such poor
results.
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- Schools can be restructured to
teach children to develop intellect, resourcefulness and
independence, but that would lead, in short order, to structural
changes in the old economy so profound it is not likely to be
allowed to happen because the social effects are impossible to
clearly foretell.
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- 5. In spite of relentless
propaganda to the contrary, the American economy is tending
strongly to require less knowledge and less intellectual ability
of its employees, not more. Scientists and mathematicians
currently exist in numbers far exceeding any global demand for
them or any national demand - and that condition should grow much
worse over the next decade, thanks to the hype of pedagogues and
politicians. Schools can be restructured to teach children to
develop intellect, resourcefulness and independence, but that
would lead, in short order, to structural changes in the old
economy so profound it is not likely to be allowed to happen
because the social effects are impossible to clearly foretell.
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- 6. The habits, drills and
routines of government schooling sharply reduce a person's chances
of possessing initiative or creativity - furthermore the mechanism
of why this is so has been well understood for centuries.
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- 7. Teachers are paid as
specialists but they almost never have any real world experience
in their specialties; indeed the low quality of their training has
been a scandal for 80 years.
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- 8. A substantial amount of
testimony exists from highly regarded scientists like Richard
Feynman, the recently deceased Nobel laureate, or Albert Einstein
and many others that scientific discovery is negatively related to
the procedures of school science classes.
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- 9. According to research
published by Christopher Jencks, the famous sociologist, and
others as well, the quality of school which any student attends is
a very bad predictor of later success, financial, social or
emotional; on the other hand the quality of family life is a very
good predictor. That would seem to indicate a national family
policy directly spending on the home, not the school.
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- 10. Children learn fastest and
easiest when very young; general intelligence has probably
developed as far as it will by the age of four. Children are quite
capable of reading and enjoying difficult material by that age and
also capable of performing all the mathematical operations
skillfully and with pleasure. Whether kids should do these things
or not is a matter of philosophy or cultural tradition, not a
course dictated by any scientific knowledge about the advisability
of the practice.
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- 11. There is a direct
relationship between heavy doses of teaching and detachment from
reality with subsequent flights into fantasy. Many students so
oppressed lose their links with past and present, present and
future. And the bond with "now" is substantially
weakened.
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- 12. Unknown to the public
virtually all famous remedial programs have failed. Programs like
Title I/Chapter I survive by the goodwill of political allies, not
by results.
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- 13. There is no credible
evidence that racial mixing has any positive effect on student
performance, but a large body of suggestive data is emerging that
the confinement of children from subcultures with children of a
dominant culture does harm to the weaker group.
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- 14. Forced busing has
accelerated the disintegration of minority neighborhoods without
any visible academic benefit as trade-off.
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- 15. There is no reason to
believe that any existing educational technology can significantly
improve intellectual performance; on the contrary, to the extent
that machines establish the goals and work schedules, ask the
questions and monitor the performances, the already catastrophic
passivity and indifference created by forced confinement schooling
only increases.
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- 16. There is no body of
knowledge inaccessible to a motivated elementary student. The
sequences of development we use are hardly the product of
"science" but instead are legacies of unstable men like Pestalozzi
and Froebel, and the military government of 19th century Prussia
from which we imported them.
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- 17. Delinquent behavior is a
direct reaction to the structure of schooling. It is much worse
than the press has reported because all urban school districts
conspire to suppress its prevalence. Teachers who insist on
justice on behalf of pupils and parents are most frequently
intimidated into silence. Or dismissed.
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- 18. The rituals of schooling
remove flexibility from the mind, that characteristic vital in
adjusting to different situations. Schools strive for uniformity
in a world increasingly less uniform.
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- 19. Teacher-training courses
are widely held in contempt by practicing teachers as well as by
the general public because expensive research has consistently
failed to provide guidance to best practice.
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- 20. Schools create and maintain
a caste system, separating children according to irrelevant
parameters. Poor, working class, middle class and upper middle
class kids are constantly made aware of alleged differences among
themselves by the use of methods not called for by the task at
hand.
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- 21. Efforts to draw a child out
of his culture or his social class has an immediate effect on his
family relationships, friendships and the stability of his
self-image.
-
- Well, there you have them: nine
assumptions and twenty-one assertions I think can be documented
well enough to call facts. How are we all as a society going to
get to a better place in schools than the one we've gotten to at
the moment? The only way I can see after spending 35 years in and
around the institution (53 if I count my own time as inmate) is to
put full choice squarely back into the hands of parents, let the
marketplace redefine schooling - a job the special interests are
incapable of - and encourage the development of as many styles of
schooling as there are human dreams. Let people, not bureaucrats,
work out their own destinies. That's what made us a great country
in the first place.
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