- CONFEDERACY OF DUNCES:
- THE TYRANNY OF COMPULSORY
SCHOOLING
- by John Taylor
Gatto
-
- Reprinted from The
Sun:
-
- Twenty-six years of
award-winning teaching have led John Gatto to some troubling
conclusions about the public schools.
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- A seventh-grade teacher,
Gatto has been named New York City Teacher of the Year and New
York State Teacher of the Year. Praised by leaders as diverse as
Ronald Reagan and Mario Cuomo, he's a political maverick whose
views defy easy categorization.
-
- Gatto is also a local legend
on Manhattan's Upper West Side, where he grows garlic, plays
chess, writes songs - and once won a Citizen of the Week Award for
coming to the aid of a woman who had been robbed. A collection of
his essays - Dumbing Us Down: The Hidden Curriculum Of Compulsory
Schooling - was published earlier this year by New Society
Publishers.
-
- Gatto has appeared twice
before in The Sun: "Why Schools Don't Educate" [Issue 175]
and "A Few Lessons They Won't Forget" [Issue 186]. Nothing
else we've printed has generated as many reprint
requests.
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- Let me speak to you about
dumbness because that is what schools teach best. Old-fashioned
dumbness used to be simple ignorance: you didn't know something,
but there were ways to find out if you wanted to.
Government-controlled schooling didn't eliminate dumbness - in
fact, we now know that people read more fluently before we had
forced schooling - but dumbness was transformed.
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- Now dumb people aren't just
ignorant; they're the victims of the non-thought of secondhand
ideas. Dumb people are now well-informed about the opinions of
Time magazine and CBS, The New York Times and the
President; their job is to choose which pre-thought thoughts,
which received opinions, they like best. The élite in this
new empire of ignorance are those who know the most pre-thought
thoughts.
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- Mass dumbness is vital to modem
society. The dumb person is wonderfully flexible clay for
psychological shaping by market research, government policymakers;
public-opinion leaders, and any other interest group. The more
pre-thought thoughts a person has memorized, the easier it is to
predict what choices he or she will make. What dumb people cannot
do is think for themselves or ever be alone for very long without
feeling crazy. That is the whole point of national forced
schooling; we aren't supposed to be able to think for ourselves
because independent thinking gets in the way of "professional"
think-ing, which is believed to follow rules of scientific
precision.
-
- Modern scientific stupidity
masquerades as intellectual knowledge - which it is not. Real
knowledge has to be earned by hard and painful thinking; it can't
be generated in group discussions or group therapies but only in
lonely sessions with yourself. Real knowledge is earned only by
ceaseless questioning of yourself and others, and by the labor of
independent verification; you can't buy it from a government
agent, a social worker, a psychologist, a licensed specialist, or
a schoolteacher. There isn't a public school in this country set
up to allow the discovery of real knowledge - not even the best
ones - although here and there individual teachers, like guerrilla
fighters, sabotage the system and work toward this ideal. But
since schools are set up to classify people rather than to see
them as unique, even the best schoolteachers are strictly limited
in the amount of questioning they can tolerate.
-
- The new dumbness - the non
thought of received ideas - is much more dangerous than simple
ignorance, because it's really about thought control. In school, a
washing away of the innate power of individual mind takes place, a
"cleansing" so comprehensive that original thinking becomes
difficult. If you don't believe this development was part of the
intentional design of schooling, you should read William Torrey
Harris's The Philosophy of Education. Harris was the U.S.
Commissioner of Education at the turn of the century and the man
most influential in standardizing our schools. Listen to the
man.
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- "Ninety-nine [students]
out of a hundred," writes Harris, "are automata, careful to walk
in prescribed paths, careful to follow the prescribed custom."
This is not all accident, Harris explains, but the "result of
substantial education, which, scientifically defined, is the
subsumption of the individual." Scientific education subsumes the
individual until his or her behavior becomes robotic. Those are
the thoughts of the most influential U.S. Commissioner of
Education we've had so far.
-
- The great theological scholar
Dietrich Bonhoeffer raised this issue of the new dumbness in his
brilliant analysis of Nazism, in which he sought to comprehend how
the best-schooled nation in the world, Germany, could fall under
its sway. He concluded that Nazism could be understood only as the
psychological product of good schooling. The sheer weight of
received ideas, pre-thought thoughts, was so overwhelming that
individuals gave up trying to assess things for themselves. Why
struggle- to invent a map of the world or of the human conscience
when schools and media offer thousands of ready-made maps,
pre-thought thoughts?
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- The new dumbness is
particularly deadly to middle and upper-middle-class people, who
have already been made shallow by the multiple requirements to
conform. Too many people, uneasily convinced that they must know
something because of a degree, diploma, or license, remain so
convinced until a brutal divorce, alienation from their children,
loss of employment, or periodic fits of meaninglessness manage to
tip the precarious mental balance of their incomplete humanity,
their stillborn adult lives.
- Listen to William Harris again,
the dark genius of American schooling, the man who gave you
scientifically age-graded classrooms:
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- The great purposes of school
can be realized better in dark, airless, ugly places than in
beautiful halls. It is to master the physical self, to transcend
the beauty of nature. School should develop the power to withdraw
from the external world.
-
- Harris thought, a hundred years
ago, that self-alienation was the key to a successful society.
Filling the young mind with the thoughts of others and surrounding
it with ugliness - that was the passport to self-alienation. Who
can say that he was wrong?
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- II
-
- I want to give you a yardstick,
a gold standard, by which to measure good schooling. The Shelter
Institute in Bath, Maine will teach you how to build a three
thousand square-foot, multi-level Cape Cod home in three weeks'
time, whatever your age. If you stay another week, it will show
you how to make your own posts and beams; you'll actually cut them
out and set them up. You'll learn wiring, plumbing, insulation,
the works. Twenty thousand people have learned how to build a
house there for about the cost of one month's tuition in public
school. (Call Patsy Hennon at 207/442-7938, and she'll get you
started on building your own home.) For just about the same money
you can walk down the street in Bath to the Apprentice Shop at the
Maine Maritime Museum [now in Rockport - ed.] and sign on
for a one-year course (no vacations, forty hours a week) in
traditional wooden boat building. The whole tuition is eight
hundred dollars, but there's a catch: they won't accept you as a
student until you volunteer for two weeks, so they can get to know
you and you can judge what it is you're getting into. Now you've
invested thirteen months and fifteen hundred dollars and you have
a house and a boat. What else would you like to know? How to grow
food, make clothes, repair a car, build furni-ture, sing? Those of
you with a historical imagination will recognize Thomas
Jefferson's prayer for schooling - that it would teach useful
knowledge. Some places do: the best schooling in the United States
today is coming out of museums, libraries, and private institutes.
If anyone wants to school your kids, hold them to the standard of
the Shelter Institute and you'll do fine.
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- As long as we're questioning
public schooling, we should question whether there really is an
abstraction called "the public" at all, except in the ominous
calculations of social engineers. As a boy from the banks of the
Monongahela River in western Pennsylvania, I find the term
insulting, a cartoon of social reality. If an institution that
robs people of their right to self-determination can call itself
"public", if being "public" means it can turn families into agents
of the state, making parents spy on and harass their sons and
daughters because a schoolteacher tells them to; if the state can
steal your home because you can't pay its "public" school taxes,
and state courts can break up your family if you refuse to allow
the state to tell your children what to think - then the word
public is a label for garbage and for people who allow themselves
to be treated like slaves.
-
- A few weeks is all that the
Shelter Institute asks for to give you a beautiful Cape Cod home;
a few months is all Maine Maritime asks for to teach you
boat-building and rope-making, lobstering and sail-making, fishing
and naval architecture. We have too much schooling, not too
little. Hong Kong, with its short school year, whips Japan in
every scientific or mathematical competition. Israel, with its
long school year, can't keep up with Flemish Belgium, which has
the shortest school year in the world.
-
- Somebody's been lying to you.
Sweden, a rich, healthy, and beautiful country, with a spectacular
reputation for quality in everything, won't allow children to
enter school before they're seven years old. The total length of
Swedish schooling is nine years, not twelve, after which the
average Swede runs circles around the over-schooled American. Why
don't you know these things? To whose advantage is it that you
don't?
-
- When students enroll in a
Swedish school, the authorities ask three questions: (l) Why do
you want to go to this school? (2) What do you want to gain from
the experience? (3) What are you interested in?
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- And they listen to the answers.
Can you build a house or a boat? Can you grow food, make clothing,
dig a well, sing a song (your own song, that is), make your own
children happy, weave a whole life from the everyday world around
you? No, you say, you can't? Then listen to me&emdash;you have no
business with my kid.
-
- In my own life, with my own
children, I'm sorry I lacked the courage to say what Hester
Prynne, the wearer of the scarlet letter, said to the Puritan
elders when they tried to take away her daughter. Alone and
friendless, dirt poor, ringed about by enemies, she said, "Over my
dead body." A few weeks ago a young woman called me from
Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania to tell me the state had just insisted
she stop home-schooling her little girl, Chrissie. The state was
going to force her to send Chrissie to school. She said she was
going to fight, first with the law, although she didn't know where
the money would come from, and then by any means she had. If I had
to bet on this young, single mother or the State of Pennsylvania
to win, I'd bet on the lady because what l was really hearing her
say was, "Over my dead body." I wish I'd been able to say that
when the state came to take my own children. I didn't. But if I'm
born again I promise you that's what I will say.
- A few days ago I got a call
from a newspaper that wanted some advice for parents about how to
launch their children into school. All the reporter wanted was a
sound byte from a former New York State Teacher of the Year. What
I said was this:
-
- Don't cooperate with your
children's school unless the school has come to you in person to
work out a meeting of the minds - on your turf, not theirs. Only a
desperado would blindly trust his children to a collection of
untested strangers and hope for the best. Parents and school
personnel are just plain natural adversaries. One group is trying
to make a living; the other is trying to make a work of art called
a family. If you allow yourself to be co-opted by flattery,
seduced with worthless payoffs such as special classes or
programs, intimidated by Alice in Wonderland titles and degrees,
you will become the enemy within, the extension of state schooling
into your own home. Shame on you if you allow that. Your job is to
educate, the schoolteacher's is to school; you work for love, the
teacher for money. The interests are radically different, one an
individual thing, the other a collective. You can make your own
son or daughter one of a kind if you have the time and will to do
so; school can only make them part of a hive, a herd, or an
anthill.
-
- III
-
- How did I survive for nearly
thirty years in a system for which I feel such disgust and
loathing? I want to make a confession in the hope it will suggest
strategy to other teachers: I did it by becoming an active
saboteur, in small ways and large. What I did resolutely was to
teach kids what I'm saying here - that schooling is bad business
unless it teaches you how to build a boat or a house; that giving
strangers intimate information about yourself is certainly to
their advantage, but seldom to your own.
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- On a daily basis I consciously
practiced sabotage, breaking laws regularly, forcing the fixed
times and spaces of schooling to become elastic, falsifying
records so the rigid curricula of those places could be what
individual children needed. I threw sand in the gears by
encouraging new teachers to think dialectically so that they
wouldn't fit into the pyramid of administration. I exploited the
weakness of the school's punitive mechanism, which depends on fear
to be effective, by challenging it in visible ways, showing I did
not fear it, setting administrators against each other to prevent
the juggernaut from crushing me. When that didn't work I recruited
community forces to challenge the school - businessmen,
politicians, parents, and journalists - so I would be given a wide
berth.
- Once, under heavy assault, I
asked my wife to run for school board. She got elected, fired the
superintendent, and then punished his cronies in a host of
imaginative ways.
-
- But what I am most proud of is
this: I undermined the confidence of the young in the school
institution and replaced it with confidence in their own minds and
hearts. I thumbed my nose at William Torrey Harris and gave to my
children (although I was well into manhood before I shook off the
effects of my own schooling) what had been given to me by the
green river Monongahela and the steel city of Pittsburgh: love of
family, friends, culture, and neighborhood, and a cup overflowing
with self-respect. I taught my kids how to cheat destiny so
successfully that they created a record of astonishing success
that deserves a book someday. Some of my kids left school to go up
the Amazon and live with Indian tribes to study on their own the
effects of government dam-building on traditional family life;
some went to Nicaragua and joined combat teams to study the
amazing hold of poetry on the lives of common people in that land;
some made award-winning movies; some became comedians; some
succeeded at love, some failed. All learned to argue with Fate in
the form of social engineering.
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- IV
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- I hope you saw the news story a
while back about a national milk price-rigging scheme in schools
from Florida to Utah. Fifty-six arrests have already been made in
a caper that's existed most of this century. Schools pay more for
milk than any other bulk buyer. Does that surprise you? Ask your
own school administrator what unit price he pays for school milk
and he'll look at you like your marbles are gone. How should he
know, why should he care? An assistant principal once said to me,
"It's not your money. What are you getting excited
about?"
-
- What if I told you that he was
the second best school administrator I met in thirty years? He
was. That's the standard we've established. The waste in schools
is staggering. People are hired and titles created for jobs nobody
needs. There's waste in services, waste in precious time spent
moving herds of children back and forth through corridors at the
sound of a horn. In my experience, poor schools waste much more
than rich schools, and rich schools waste more than you could
believe.
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- The only public aspect of these
places is that they function as a jobs project, although large
numbers of these jobs are set aside as political patronage. Public
schools can't understand how the average private school can make
profit on a per-seat cost less than half the "free" public charge;
they can't understand how the average religious school makes do on
even less. Homeschooling is the biggest puzzle of all. A principal
once said to me, "Those people must be sick to spend so much time
with children and not get paid for it!"
-
- Consider the fantasy of teacher
certification. Teachers are licensed and paid as though they are
specialists, but they rarely are. For example, a science teacher
is almost never actually a scientist - a man or woman who thinks
about the secrets of nature as a private passion and pursues this
interest on personal time. How many science classes in this
country actually make any serious attempt to discover anything or
to add to human knowledge? They are orderly ways of killing time,
nothing more.
-
- Kids are set to memorizing
science vocabulary, repeating well-worn procedures certain to
work, chanting formulas exactly as they have been indoctrinated to
chant commercials from TV. The science teacher is a publicist for
political truths set down in state-approved science
textbooks.
-
- Anyone who thinks school
science is the inevitable precursor of real science is very
innocent, indeed; of a piece, I think, with those poor,
intelligent souls who, aware that television destroys the power to
think by providing pre-seen sights, pre-thought thoughts, and
unwholesome fantasies, still believe somehow that PBS television
must be an exception to the rule.
-
- If you would like to know how
scientists are really made, pick up a wonderful book called
Discovering, published in 1989 by Harvard University Press.
In it you'll learn from a prominent scientist himself that not one
major scientific discovery of this century, including exotica like
superconductivity, came from an academic laboratory; or a
corporate or govemment laboratory, or a school laboratory. You
could have guessed the last, but I surprised you with the others,
didn't I? All came from garages, attics, and basements; all were
managed with cheap, simple equipment and eccentric, personalized
procedures of investigation. School is a perfect place to turn
science into a religion, but it's the wrong place to learn
science, for sure.
-
- HARRIS THOUGHT, A HUNDRED YEARS
AGO, THAT SELF-ALIENATION WAS THE KEY TO A SUCCESSFUL SOCIETY. WHO
CAN SAY THAT HE WAS WRONG?
-
- The specialists in English,
math, social studies, and the rest of the rainbow of progressive
subjects are only marginally more competent, if at all. If three
million teachers were actually the specialists their licenses
claim, they would be a major voice in national life and
policy-making; if we are honest, we must wonder how it is
possible for an army so large to be so silent, of such little
consequence, in spite of the new hokum being retailed about
"schoolbased management." Don't misunderstand me: teachers are
frequently good people, intelligent people, talented people who
work very hard. But regardless of how bright they are, how
gracefully they "schoolteach," or how well they control children's
behavior (which is, after all, what they are hired to do; if they
can't do that, they are fired, but if they can, little else really
matters) - the net result of their efforts and our expense is
surely very little or even nothing indeed, often it leaves
children worse off in terms of mental development and character
formation than they were before being "taught." Schools that seem
to be successful almost always are made to appear so by selective
enrollment of self-motivated children.
-
- The best way into the strange
world of compulsory schooling is through books. I always knew real
books and schoolbooks were different, but I didn't become
conscious of the particulars until I got weary one day of New York
City's brainless English curriculum and decided to teach Moby
Dick to mainstream eighth-grade English classes. I discovered
that the White Whale is too big for the forty-five-minute bell
breaks of a junior high school. I couldn't make it "fit." But the
editors of the school edition of Moby Dick had provided a package
of prefabricated questions and nearly a hundred interpretations of
their own. Every chapter began and ended with a barrage of these
interventions. I came to see that the school edition wasn't a real
book at all but a disguised indoctrination. The book had been
rendered teacher-proof and student-proof.
-
- VI
-
- This jigsaw fragmentation,
designed to make the job site safe from its employees, is usually
credited to Frederick Taylor's work of sinister genius,
Scientific Management, written at the turn of this century.
But that is wrong. The system was really devised before the
American Revolution, in eighteenth-century Prussia, by Frederick
the Great, and honed to perfection in early nineteenth-century
Prussia after its humiliating defeat by Napoleon in 1806. A new
system of schooling was the instrument out of which Prussian
vengeance was shaped, a system that reduced human beings during
their malleable years to reliable machine parts, human machinery
dependent upon the state for its mission and purpose. When
Blucher's Death's Head Hussars destroyed Napoleon at Waterloo, the
value of Prussian schooling was confined.
-
- By 1819, Prussian philosophy
had given the world its first laboratory of compulsory schooling.
That same year Mary Shelley wrote Frankenstein, the story of a
German intellectual who fabricated a monster out of the parts of
dead bodies: compulsory schooling was the monster she had in mind,
emblemized in the lurching destruction caused by a homeless,
synthetic creature seeking its maker, a creature with the infinite
inner pain that ambiguous family brings.
-
- In the nineteenth century, ties
between Prussia and the United States were exceedingly close, a
fact unknown these days because it became embarrassing to us
during the World Wars and so was removed from history books.
American scholarship during the nineteenth century was almost
exclusively German at its highest levels, another fact
conveniently absent from popular history. From 1814 to 1900, more
than fifty thousand young men from prominent American families
made the pilgrimage to Prussia and other parts of Germany to study
under its new system of higher education based on research instead
of "teaching." Ten thousand brought back Ph.D.'s to a
then-uncredentialed United States, preempting most of the
available intellectual and technical work.
-
- Prussian education was the
national obsession among American political leaders,
industrialists, clergy, and university people. In 1845, the
Prussian emperor was even asked to adjudicate the boundary between
Canada and the United States! Virtually every founding father of
American compulsory schooling went to Prussia to study its
clockwork schoolrooms flrsthand. Horace Mann's Seventh Report To
The Boston School Committee of 1844 was substantially devoted to
glowing praise of Prussian accomplishments and how they should
become our own. Victor Cousin's book on Prussian schooling was the
talk of our country about the same time. When, only a
quarter-century later, Prussia crushed France in a brief war and
performed the miracle of unifying Germany, it seemed clear that
the way to unify our immigrant classes - which we so desperately
sought to do - was through Prussian schooling.
-
- By 1905, Prussian trained
Americans, or Americans like John Dewey who apprenticed at
Prussian-trained hands, were in command of every one of our new
institutions of scientific teacher training: Columbia Teacher's
College, the University of Chicago, Johns Hopkins, the University
of Wisconsin, Stanford. The domination of Prussian vision, and the
general domination of German philosophy and pedagogy, was a fait
accompli among the leadership of American schooling.
-
- You should care about this for
the compelling reason that German practices were used here to
justify removal of intellectual material from the curriculum; it
may explain why your own children cannot think. That was the
Prussian way - to train only a leadership cadre to
think.
-
- Of all the men whose vision
excited the architects of the new Prussianized American school
machine, the most exciting were a German philosopher named Hegel
and a German doctor named Wilhelm Wundt. In Wundt's laboratory the
techniques of psychophysics (what today we might call
"experimental psychology") were refined. Thanks to his work, it
took only a little imagination to see an awesome new world
emerging - for Wundt had demonstrated convincingly to his American
students that people were only complex machines!
-
- Man a machine? The implications
were exhilarating, promising liberation from the ancient shackles
of tradition, culture, morality, and religion. Adjustment became
the watchword of schools and social welfare offices. G. Stanley
Hall, one of Wundt's personal protégés (who as a
professor at Johns Hopkins had inoculated his star pupil, John
Dewey, with the German virus), now joined with Thorndike, his
German-trained colleague at Columbia Teacher's College, to beat
the drum for national standardized testing. Hall shrewdly
sponsored and promoted an American tour for the Austrian doctor
Sigmund Freud so that Freud might popularize his theory that
parents and family were the cause of virtually all maladjustment -
all the more reason to remove their little machines to the safety
of schools.
-
- In the minds of disciples of
German educational thought, scientific education was primarily a
way of forcing people to fit. With such a "technical" goal in
mind, the future course of American schooling was determined, and
with massive financial support from the foundations - especially
those of the Rockefeller and Carnegie families - new scientific
colleges to share teachers were established. In Prussia these were
aptly called "teacher seminaries," but here secular religionists
were more discreet: a priesthood of trained professionals would
guard the new school-church and write its canonical text into
state law. Thus the Torah of twentieth century compulsory
schooling was in its Ark by 1895, one third of the way through the
reign of William Torrey Harris as U.S. Commissioner of
Education.
-
- Teacher training in Prussia was
founded on three premises, which the United States subsequently
borrowed. The first of these is that the state is sovereign, the
only true parent of children. Its corollary is that biological
parents are the enemies of their offspring. When Germany's Froebel
invented Kindergarten, it was not a garden for children he
had in mind but a garden of children, in which
state-appointed teachers were the gardeners of the children.
Kindergarten is meant to protect children from their own
mothers.
-
- The second premise of Prussian
schooling is that intellectual training is not the purpose of
state schooling - obedience and subordination are. In fact,
intellectual training will invariably subvert obedience unless it
is rigidly controlled and doled out as a reward for obedience. If
the will could be broken all else would follow. Keep in mind that
will-breaking was the central logic of child-rearing among our own
Puritan colonists, and you will see the natural affinity that
exists between Prussian seeds and Puritan soil - from which
agriculture our compulsory schooling law springs. The best-known
device to break the will of the young, practiced for centuries
among English and German upper classes, was the separation of
parent and child at an early age. Here now was an institution
backed by the police power of the state to guarantee that
separation. But it was not enough to compel obedience by
intimidation. The child must be brought to love its synthetic
parent. When George Orwell's protagonist in 1984 realizes that he
loves Big Brother after betraying his lover to the state, we have
a dramatic embodiment of the sexual destination of Prussian-type
schooling; it creates a willingness to sell out your own family,
friends, culture, and religion for your new lover, the state.
Twelve years of arbitrary punishment and reward in the confinement
of a classroom is ample time to condition any child to believe
that he who wields red pen-power is the true parent, and they who
control the buzzers must be gods.
-
- The third premise of Prussian
training is that the schoolroom and the workplace shall be dumbed
down into simplified fragments that anyone, however dumb, can
memorize and operate. This solves the historical dilemma of
leadership: a disobedient work force could be replaced quickly,
without damage to production, if the workers required only habit,
not mind, to function properly. This strategy paid off recently
during the national strike of air traffic controllers, when the
entire force of these supposed "experts" was replaced overnight by
management personnel and hastily trained fill-ins. There was no
increase in accidents across the system! If anyone can do any
particular job there's no reason to pay them very much except to
guarantee employee loyalty and dependency - a form of love which
bad parents often extort from their young in the same
way.
-
- In the training ground of the
classroom, everything is reduced to bits under close management
control. This allows progress to be quantified into precise
rankings to track students throughout their careers - the great
irony being that it's not intellectual growth that grades and
reports really measure, but obedience to authority. That's why
regular disclosures about the lack of correlation between
standardized test scores and performance do not end the use of
these surveillance mechanisms. What they actually measure is the
tractability of the student, and this they do quite accurately. Is
it of value to know who is docile and who may not be? You tell
me.
-
- Finally, if workers or students
have little or no idea how their own part fits into the whole, if
they are unable to make decisions, grow food, build a home or
boat, or even entertain themselves, then political and economic
stability will reign because only a carefully screened and
seasoned leadership will know how things work. Uninitiated
citizens will not even know what questions should be asked, let
alone where the answers might be found.
-
- This is sophisticated pedagogy
indeed, if far from what mother and father expect when they send
Junior to school. This is what the religious Right is talking
about when it claims that schooling is a secular religion. If you
can think independently of pre-thought thoughts and received
wisdom, you must certainly arrive at the same conclusion, whatever
your private theology. Schooling is our official state religion;
in no way is it a neutral vehicle for learning.
-
- The sheer craziness of what we
do to our children should have been sufficient cause to stop it
once the lunacy was manifest in increased social pathology, but a
crucial development forestalled corrective action: schooling
became the biggest business of all. Suddenly there were jobs,
titles, careers, prestige, and contracts to protect. As a country
we've never had the luxury of a political or a religious or a
cultural consensus. As a synthetic state, we've had only economic
consensus: unity is achieved by making everyone want to get rich,
or making them envy those who are.
-
- Once a splendid economic
machine like schooling was rolling, only a madman would try to
stop it or to climb off its golden ascent. True, its jobs didn't
seem to pay much (although its contractors did and do make
fortunes), but upon closer inspection they paid more than most.
And the security for the obedient was matchless because the
institution provided the best insurance that a disturbing social
mobility (characteristic of a frontier society) could finally be
checked. Horace Mann, Henry Barnard, William Harris, Edward
Thorndike, William James, John Dewey, Stanley Hall, Charles Judd,
Ellwood Cubberly, James Russell - all the great schoolmen of
American history - made endless promises to industrialists and
old-line American families of prominence that if the new Prussian
scheme were given support, prospects of a revolution here would
vanish. (What a great irony that in a revolutionary nation the
most effective motivator of leadership was the guarantee that
another one could be prevented!)
-
- Schools would be the insurance
policy for a new industrial order which, as an unfortunate
by-product of its operations, would destroy the American family,
the small farmer, the landscape, the air, the water, the religious
base of community life, the time-honored covenant that Americans
could rise and fall by their own efforts. This industrial order
would destroy democracy itself, and the promise held out to common
men and women that if they were ever backed into a corner by their
leaders, they might change things overnight at the ballot
box.
-
- I hope you can see now that
this Prussian theory of workplaces and schools isn't just some
historical oddity, but is necessary to explain customary textbook
structure and classroom procedures, which fly in the face of how
people actually learn. It explains the inordinate interest the
foundations of Rockefeller and Camegie took in shaping early
compulsory schooling around a standardized factory model, and it
sheds light on many mysterious aspects of modem American culture:
for instance, why, in a democracy, can't citizens be automatically
registered at birth to vote, once and for all?
-
- Compulsory schooling has been,
from the beginning, a scheme of indoctrination into the new
concept of mass man, an important part of which was the creation
of a proletariat. According to Auguste Comte (surely the godfather
of scientific schooling), you could create a useful proletariat
class by breaking connections between children and their families,
their communities, their God, and themselves. Remember William
Harris's belief that self-alienation was the key to successful
schooling! Of course it is. These connections have to be broken to
create a dependable citizenry because, if left alive, the
loyalties they foster are unpredictable and unmanageable. People
who maintain such relationships often say, "Over my dead body."
How can states operate that way?
-
- Think of govemment schooling as
a vast behavior clinic designed to create a harmless proletariat,
the most important part of which is a professional proletariat of
lawyers, doctors, engineers, managers, government people, and
schoolteachers. This professional proletariat, more homeless than
the poor and the sub-poor, is held hostage by its addiction to
luxury and security, and by its fear that the licensing monopoly
might be changed by any change in governance. The main service it
renders - advice - is contaminated by self interest. We are all
dying from it, the professional proletariat faster than anyone. It
is their children who commit literal suicide with such regularity,
not the children of the poor. ...
-
- VII
-
- Printing questions at the end
of chapters is a deliberate way of dumbing down a text to make it
teacher-proof. We've done it so long that nobody examines the
premises under the practice or sees the permanent reduction in
mental sovereignty it causes. Just as science teachers were never
supposed to be actual scientists, literature teachers weren't
supposed to be original thinkers who brought original questions to
the text.
-
- In 1926, Bertrand Russell said
casually that the United States was the first nation in human
history to deliberately deny its children the tools of critical
thinking; actually Prussia was first, we were second. The school
edition of Moby Dick asked all the right questions, so I had to
throw it away. Real books don't do that. They let readers actively
participate with their own questions. Books that show you the best
questions to ask aren't just stupid, they hurt the intellect under
the guise of helping it, just as standardized tests
do.
-
- Well-schooled people, like
schoolbooks, are very much alike. Propagandists have known for a
century that school-educated people are easier to lead than
ignorant people - as Dietrich Bonhoeffer confirmed in his studies
of Nazism.
-
- It's very useful for some
people that our form of schooling tells children what to think
about, how to think about it, and when to think about it. It's
very useful to some groups that children are trained to be
dependent on experts, to react to titles instead of judging the
real men and women who hide behind the titles. It isn't very
healthy for families and neighborhoods, cultures and religions.
But then school was never about those things any-way: that's why
we don't have them around anymore. You can thank govemment
schooling for that.
-
- VIII
-
- I think it would be fair to say
that the overwhelming majority of people who make schools work
today are unaware why they fail to give us successful human
beings, no matter how much money is spent or how much good will is
expended on reform efforts. This explains the inevitable
temptation to find villains and to cast blame - on bad teaching,
bad parents, bad children, or penurious taxpayers.
-
- The thought that school may be
a brilliantly conceived social engine that works exactly as it was
designed to work and produces exactly the human products it was
designed to produce establishes a different relation to the usual
demonologies. Seeing school as a triumph of human ingenuity, as a
glorious success, forces us to consider whether we want this kind
of success, and if not, to envision something of value in its
place. And it forces us to challenge whether there is a "we," a
national consensus sufficient to justify looking for one right way
rather than dozens or even hundreds of right ways. I don't think
there is.
-
- IX
-
- Museums and institutes of
useful knowledge travel a different road than schools. Consider
the difference between librarians and schoolteachers. Librarians
are custodians of real books and real readers; schoolteachers are
custodians of schoolbooks and indentured readers. Somewhere in the
difference is the Rosetta Stone that reveals how education is one
thing, schooling another.
-
- Begin with the setting and
social arrangement of a library. The ones I've visited all over
the country invariably are comfortable and quiet, places where you
can read rather than just pretend to read. How important this
silence is. Schools are never silent. People of all ages work side
by side in libraries, not just a pack of age-segregated kids. For
some reason, libraries do not segregate by age nor do they presume
to segregate readers by questionable tests of reading ability.
Just as the people who decoded the secrets of farming or of the
forests and oceans were not segregated by age or test scores, the
library seems to have intuited that common human judgment is
adequate to most learning decisions.
-
- The librarian doesn't tell me
what to read, doesn't tell me the sequence of reading I have to
follow, doesn't grade my reading. Librarians act as if they trust
their customers. The librarian lets me ask my own questions and
helps me when I need help, not when the library decides I need it.
If I feel like reading in the same place all day long, that seems
to be OK with the library. It doesn't tell me to stop reading at
regular intervals by ringing a bell in my ear. The library keeps
its nose out of my home, too. It doesn't send letters to my mother
reporting on my library behavior; it doesn't make recommendations
or issue orders on how I should use my time spent outside of the
library.
-
- The library doesn't have a
tracking system. Everyone is mixed together there, and no private
files exist detailing my past victories and defeats as a patron.
If the books I want are available, I get them by requesting them -
even if that deprives some more gifted reader, who comes a minute
later. The library doesn't presume to determine which of us is
more qualified to read that book; it doesn't play favorites. It is
a very class-blind, talent-blind place, appropriately reflecting
our historic political ideals in a way that puts schools to
shame.
-
- The public library isn't into
public humiliation the way schools seem to be. It never posts
ranked lists of good and bad readers for all to see. Presumably it
considers good reading its own reward, not requiring additional
accolades, and it has resisted the temptation to hold up good
reading as a moral goad to bad readers. One of the strangest
differences between libraries and schools, in New York City at
least, is that you almost never see a kid behaving badly in a
library or waving a gun there - even though bad kids have exactly
the same access to libraries as good kids do. Bad kids seem to
respect libraries, a curious phenomenon which may well be an
unconscious response to the automatic respect libraries bestow
blindly on everyone. Even people who don't like to read like
libraries from time to time; in fact, they are such generally
wonderful places I wonder why we haven't made them compulsory -
and all alike, of course, too.
-
- Here's another angle to
consider: the library never makes predictions about my general
future based on my past reading habits, nor does it hint that my
days will be happier if I read Shakespeare rather than Barbara
Cartland. The library tolerates eccentric reading habits because
it realizes that free men and women are often very eccentric.
-
- And finally, the library has
real books, not schoolbooks. Its volumes are not written by
collective pens or picked by politically correct screening
committees. Real books conform only to the private curriculum of
each writer, not to the invisible curriculum of some German
collective agenda. The one exception to this is children's books -
but no sensible child ever reads those things, so the damage from
them is minimal.
-
- Real books are deeply
subversive of collectivization. They are the best known way to
escape herd behavior, because they are vehicles transporting their
reader into deep caverns of absolute solitude where nobody else
can visit: No two people ever read the same great book. Real books
disgust the totalitarian mind because they generate uncontrollable
mental growth - and it cannot be monitored!
-
- Television has entered the
classroom because it is a collective mechanism and, as such, much
superior to textbooks; similarly, slides, audio tapes, group
games, and so on meet the need to collectivize, which is a central
purpose of mass schooling. This is the famous "socialization" that
schools do so well. Schoolbooks, on the other hand, are paper
tools that reinforce school routines of close-order drill, public
mythology, endless surveillance, global ranking, and constant
intimidation.
-
- That's what the questions at
the end of chapters are designed to do, to bring you back to a
reality in which you are subordinate. Nobody really expects you to
answer those questions, not even the teacher; they work their harm
solely by being there. That is their genius. Schoolbooks are a
crowd-control device. Only the very innocent and well-schooled see
any difference between good ones and bad ones; both kinds do the
same work. In that respect they are much like television
programming, the function of which, as a plug in narcotic, is
infinitely more powerful than any trivial differences between good
programs and bad.
-
- Real books educate, schoolbooks
school, and thus libraries and library policies are a major clue
to the reform of American schooling. When you take the free will
and solitude out of education it becomes schooling. You can't have
it both ways.
[This is the text of a
speech Gatto delivered several years ago at the University of Texas
in Austin. A friend from Texas sent it to me.
Ed.]