- SOME
LESSONS FROM THE UNDERGROUND
- HISTORY OF
AMERICAN EDUCATION
- BY JOHN
TAYLOR GATTO
-
- (This article first
appeared in a recent (2003) book entitled Everything You Know
Is Wrong: The Disinformation Guide to Secrets and Lies - by
Russ Kick (Editor) and Richard Metzger.)
Editor's note: John Taylor Gatto
was the New York State Teacher of the Year in 1991 and has been
named New York City Teacher of the Year three times.
-
- Footnotes appear in
red,
and are to be found at the end of the
article.
-
- EXTENDING CHILDHOOD
-
- From the beginning, there was
purpose behind forced schooling, purpose which had nothing to do
with what parents, kids, or communities wanted. Instead, it was
forged out of what a highly centralized corporate economy and
system of finance bent on internationalizing itself was thought to
need; that, and what a strong, centralized political State needed,
too. School was looked upon from the first decade of the twentieth
century as a branch of industry and a tool of governance. For a
considerable time, probably provoked by a climate of official
anger and contempt directed against immigrants in the greatest
displacement of people known to history, social managers of
schooling were remarkably candid about what they were doing. This
candor can be heard clearly in a speech Woodrow Wilson made to
businessmen before the First World War:
-
- We want one class to have a liberal
education. We want another class, a very much larger class of
necessity, to forgo the privilege of a liberal education and fit
themselves to perform specific difficult manual tasks.
-
- By 1917, the major administrative
jobs in American schooling were under control of a group referred
to in the press of that day as "the Education Trust." The first
meeting of this trust included representatives of Rockefeller,
Carnegie, Harvard, Stanford, the University of Chicago, and the
National Education Association. The chief end, wrote the British
evolutionist Benjamin Kidd in 1918, was to "impose on the young
the ideal of subordination."
-
- At first, the primary target was
the tradition of independent livelihoods in America. Unless Yankee
entrepreneurialism could be put to death, at least among the
common population, the immense capital investments that mass
production industry required for equipment weren't conceivably
justifiable. Students were to learn to think of themselves as
employees competing for the favor of management. Not as Franklin
or Edison had once regarded themselves, as self-determined, free
agents.
-
- Only by a massive psychological
campaign could the menace of overproduction in America be
contained. That's what important men and academics called it. The
ability of Americans to think as independent producers had to be
curtailed. Certain writings of Alexander Inglis carry a hint of
schooling's role in this ultimately successful project to curb the
tendency of little people to compete with big companies.
Overproduction became a controlling metaphor among the managerial
classes from 1880 to 1930, and this profoundly affected the
development of mass schooling.
-
- I know how difficult it is for most
of us who mow our lawns and walk our dogs to comprehend that
long-range social engineering even exists, let alone that it began
to dominate compulsion schooling nearly a century ago. Yet the
1934 edition of Ellwood P. Cubberley's Public Education in the
United States is explicit about what happened and why. As
Cubberley puts it:
-
- It has come to be desirable that
children should not engage in productive labor. On the contrary,
all recent thinking ... [is) opposed to their doing so. Both
the interests of organized labor and the interests of the nation
have set against child labor.
-
- The statement occurs in a section
of Public Education called "A New Lengthening of the Period of
Dependence," in which Cubberley explains that "the coming of the
factory system" has made extended childhood necessary by depriving
children of the training and education that farm and village life
once gave. With the breakdown of home and village industries, the
passing of chores, and the extinction of the apprenticeship system
by large-scale production with its extreme division of labor (and
the "all conquering march of machinery"), an army of workers has
arisen, said Cubberley, who know nothing.
-
- Furthermore, modern industry needs
such workers. Sentimentality could not be allowed to stand in the
way of progress. According to Cubberley, with "much ridicule from
the public press" the old book-subject curriculum was set aside,
replaced by a change in purpose and "a new psychology of
instruction which came to us from abroad." That last mysterious
reference to a new psychology is to practices of dumbed-down
schooling common to England, Germany, and France, the three major
world coal-powers (other than the US), each of which had already
gonverted its common population into an industrial proletariat
long before.
-
- This is the same Ellwood R
Cubberley, it should be noted, who wrote in his Columbia Teachers
College dissertation of 1905 that schools were to be factories "in
which raw products, children, are to be shaped and formed into
finished products ... manufactured like nails, and the
specifications for manufacturing will come from government and
industry."
-
- Arthur Calhoun's 1919 Social
History of the Family notified the nation's academics what was
happening. Calhoun declared that the fondest wish of utopian
writers was coming true: The child was passing from its family
"into the custody of community experts." He offered a significant
forecast, that in time we could expect to see public education
"designed to check the mating of the unfit." Three years later,
Mayor John F. Hylan of New York said in a public speech that the
schools had been seized as an octopus would seize prey, by "an
invisible government." He was referring specifically to certain
actions of the Rockefeller Foundation and other corporate
interests in New York City which preceded the school riots of
1917.
-
- The 1920s were a boom period for
forced schooling, as well as for the stock market. In 1928, a
well-regarded volume called A Sociological Philosophy of
Education claimed: "It is the business of teachers to run not
merely schools but the world." A year later, the famous creator of
educational psychology, Edward Thorndike of Columbia Teachers
College, announced: "Academic subjects are of little value." His
colleague at Teachers College, William Kirkpatrick, boasted in
Education and the Social Crisis that the whole tradition of
rearing the young was being made over by experts.
-
- THE GENETICISTS'
MANIFESTO
-
- Meanwhile, at the project offices
of an important employer of experts, the Rockefeller Foundation,
friends were hearing from president Max Mason that a comprehensive
national program was underway to allow, in Mason's words, "the
control of human behavior." This dazzling ambition was announced
on April 11, 1933. Schooling figured prominently in the design.
-
- Rockefeller had been inspired by
the work of Eastern European scientist Hermann Müller to
invest heavily in genetics. Müller had used X rays to
override genetic law, inducing mutations in fruit flies. This
seemed to open the door to the scientific control of life itself.
Müller preached that planned breeding would bring mankind to
paradise faster than God. His proposal received enthusiastic
endorsement from the greatest scientists of the day, as well as
from powerful economic interests.
-
- Müller would win the Nobel
Prize, reduce his proposal to a 1,500 word Geneticists'
Manifesto, and watch with satisfaction as 22 distinguished
American and British biologists of the day signed it. The State
must prepare to consciously guide human sexual selection, said
Müller. School would have to separate worthwhile breeders
from those slated for termination.
-
- Just a few months before this
report, an executive director of the National Education
Association announced that his organization expected "to
accomplish by education what dictators in Europe are seeking to do
by compulsion and force." You can't get much clearer than that.
-
- WWII drove the project underground
but hardly retarded its momentum. Following cessation of global
hostilities, school became a major domestic battleground for the
scientific rationalization of social affairs through compulsory
indoctrination. Great private corporate foundations led the way.
-
- PARTICIPATORY DEMOCRACY PUT TO THE
SWORD
-
- Thirty-odd years later, between
1967 and 1974, teacher training in the US was covertly revamped
through coordinated efforts of a small number of private
foundations, select universities, global corporations, think
tanks, and government agencies, all coordinated through the US
Office of Education and through key state education departments,
like those in California, Texas, Michigan, Pennsylvania, and New
York.
-
- Important milestones of the
transformation were: 1) an extensive government exercise in
futurology called Designing Education for the Future, 2)
the Behavioral Science Teacher Education Project, and 3)
Benjamin Bloom's multi-volume Taxonomy of Educational
Objectives, an enormous manual of over 1,000 pages which, in
time, impacted every school in America. While other documents
exist, these three are appropriate touchstones of the whole,
serving to make clear the nature of the project underway.
-
- Take them one by one and savor
each: Designing Education, produced by the Education
Department, redefined the term "education" after the Prussian
fashion as "a means to achieve important economic and social goals
of a national character." State education agencies would
henceforth act as on-site federal enforcers, ensuring the
compliance of local schools with central directives. Each state
education department was assigned the task of becoming "an agent
of change" and was advised to "lose its independent identity as
well as its authority" in order to "form a partnership with the
federal government."
-
- The second document, the
gigantic Behavioral Science Teacher Education Project,
outlined teaching reforms to be forced on the country after 1967
1.
The document sets out clearly the intentions of its creators -
nothing less than "impersonal manipulation" through schooling of a
future America in which "few will be able to maintain control over
their opinions," an America in which "each individual receives at
birth a multi-purpose identification number" which enables
employers and other controllers to keep track of underlings and to
expose them to direct or subliminal influence when necessary.
Readers learned that "chemical experimentation" on minors would be
normal procedure in this post-1967 world, a pointed fore-shadowing
of the massive Ritalin interventions which accompany the practice
of forced schooling at present.
-
- The Behavioral Science Teacher
Education Project identified the future as one "in which a
small elite" will control all important matters, one where
participatory democracy will largely disappear. Children are made
to see, through school experiences, that their classmates are so
cruel and irresponsible, so inadequate to the task of
self-discipline, and so ignorant that they need to be controlled
and regulated for society's good. Under such a logical regime,
school terror can only be regarded as good advertising. It is
sobering to think of mass schooling as a vast demonstration
project of human inadequacy, but that is at least one of its
functions.
-
- Postmodern schooling, we are told,
is to focus on "pleasure cultivation" and on "other attitudes and
skills compatible with a non-work world." Thus the socialization
classroom of the twentieth century's beginning - itself a radical
departure from schooling for mental and character development -
can be seen to have evolved by 1967 into a full-scale laboratory
for psychological experimentation.
-
- School conversion was assisted
powerfully by a curious phenomenon of the middle to late 1960s, a
tremendous rise in school violence and general school chaos which
followed a policy declaration (which seems to have occurred
nationwide) that the disciplining of children must henceforth
mimic the "due process" practice of the court system. Teachers and
administrators were suddenly stripped of any effective ability to
keep order in schools since the due process apparatus, of
necessity a slow, deliberate matter, is completely inadequate to
the continual outbreaks of childish mischief all schools
experience.
-
- Now, without the time-honored ad
hoc armory of disciplinary tactics to fall back on, disorder
spiraled out of control, passing from the realm of annoyance into
more dangerous terrain entirely as word surged through student
bodies that teachers' hands were tied. And each outrageous event
that reached the attention of the local press served as an
advertisement for expert prescriptions. Who had ever seen kids
behave this way? Time to surrender community involvement to the
management of experts; time also for emergency measures like
special education and Ritalin. During this entire period, lasting
five to seven years, outside agencies like the Ford Foundation
exercised the right to supervise whether "children's rights" were
being given due attention, fanning the flames hotter even long
after trouble had become virtually unmanageable.
-
- The Behavioral Science Teacher
Education Project, occurring at the peak of this violence,
informed teacher-training colleges that under such circumstances,
teachers had to be trained as therapists, they must translate
prescriptions of social psychology into "practical action" in the
classroom. As curriculum had been redefined, so teaching followed
suit.
-
- Third of the new gospel texts was
Bloom's Taxonomy of Educational Objectives,
2
in his own words, "a tool to classify the ways individuals are to
act, think, or feel as the result of some unit of instruction."
Using methods of behavioral psychology, children would learn
proper thoughts, feelings, and actions, and have improper
attitudes they brought from home "remediated."
-
- In all stages of the school
experiment, testing was essential to localize the child's mental
state on an official rating scale. Bloom's epic spawned important
descendant forms: mastery learning, outcomes-based education, and
"school to work" government-business collaborations. Each
classified individuals for the convenience of social managers and
businesses, each offered data useful in controlling the mind and
movements of the young, mapping the next adult generation.
-
- THE DANGAN
-
- In the first decades of the
twentieth century, a small group of soon-to-be-famous academics -
symbolically led by John Dewey and Edward Thorndike of Columbia
Teachers College, Ellwood P. Cubberley of Stanford, G. Stanley
Hall, and an ambitious handful of others, energized and financed
by major corporate and financial allies like Morgan, Astor,
Whitney, Carnegie, and Rockefeller - decided to bend government
schooling to the service of business and the political State, as
it had been done a century before in Prussia.
-
- Cubberley delicately voiced what
was happening this way: "The nature of the national need must
determine the character of the education provided." National need,
of course, depends upon point of view. The NEA in 1930 sharpened
our understanding by specifying in a resolution of its Department
of Superintendence that school served as an "effective use of
capital" through which our "unprecedented wealth-producing power
has been gained." Pronouncements like this mark the degree to
which the organs of schooling had been transplanted into the
corporate body of the new economy when you look beyond the
rhetoric of the left and right.
-
- It's important to keep in mind that
no harm was meant by any designers or managers of this great
project. It was only the law of nature as they perceived it,
working progressively as capitalism itself did for the ultimate
good of all. The real force behind school effort came from true
believers of many persuasions, linked together mainly by their
belief that family and church were retrograde institutions
standing in the way of progress. Far beyond the myriad practical
details and economic considerations there existed a kind of
grail-quest, an idea capable of catching the imagination of
dreamers and firing the blood of zealots.
-
- The entire academic community in
the US and abroad had been Darwinized and Galtonized by this time,
and to this contingent school seemed an instrument for managing
evolutionary destiny. In Thorndike's memorable words, conditions
for controlled selective breeding had to be set up before the new
American industrial proletariat "took things into their own
hands."
-
- The entire academic community in
the US and abroad had been Darwinized and Galtonized by this time,
and to this contingent school seemed an instrument for managing
evolutionary destiny. In Thorndike's memorable words, conditions
for controlled selective breeding had to be set up before the new
American industrial proletariat "took things into their own
hands."
-
- America was a frustrating petri
dish in which to cultivate a managerial revolution, however,
because of its historic freedom traditions. But thanks to the
patronage of important men and institutions, a group of academics
were enabled to visit mainland China to launch a modernization
project known as the "New Thought Tide." For two years Dewey
himself lived in China, where pedagogical theories were inculcated
in the Young Turk elements, then tested on a bewildered population
which had recently been stripped of its ancient form of
governance. A similar process was embedded in the new Russian
state during the 1920s.
-
- While the American public was
unaware of this undertaking, some big-city school superintendents
were wise to the fact that they were part of a global experiment.
Listen to H.B. Wilson, superintendent of the Topeka schools:
-
- The introduction of the American
school into the Orient has broken up 40 centuries of conservatism.
It has given us a new China, a new Japan, and is working marked
progress in Turkey and the Philippines, The schools...are in a
position to determine the lines of progress.
-Motivation of
School Work (1916)...
-
- Thoughts like this don't spring
full-blown from the heads of men like Dr. Wilson of Topeka. They
have to be planted there.
-
- The Western-inspired and
Western-financed Chinese revolution, following hard on the heels
of the last desperate attempt by China to prevent the British
government market in narcotic drugs there, placed that ancient
province in a favorable state of anarchy for laboratory tests of
mind-alteration technology. Out of this period rose a Chinese
universal tracking procedure called the "Dangan," a continuous
lifelong personnel file exposing every student's intimate life
history from birth through school and onward. The Dangan
constituted the ultimate overthrow of privacy. Today, nobody works
in China without a Dangan.
-
- By the mid-1960s preliminary work
on an American Dangan was underway as information reservoirs
attached to the school institution began to store personal
information. A new class of expert, like Ralph Tyler of the
Carnegie endowments, quietly began to urge collection of personal
data from students and its unification in computer code to enhance
cross-referencing. Surreptitious data gathering was justified by
Tyler as "the moral right of institutions."
-
- OCCASIONAL LEITER NUMBER
ONE
-
- Between 1896 and 1920, a small
group of industrialists and financiers, together with their
private charitable foundations, subsidized university chairs,
university researchers, and school administrators, spending more
money on forced schooling than did the government itself. Carnegie
and Rockefeller, as late as 1915, were themselves spending more.
In this laissez-faire fashion a system of modern schooling was
constructed without public participation. The motives for this are
undoubtedly mixed, but it will be useful for you to hear an
excerpt from the first mission statement of Rockefeller's General
Education Board as it occurred in a document called Occasional
Letter Number One (1906):
-
- In our dreams, people yield
themselves with perfect docility to our molding hands. The present
educational conventions [intellectual and character
education] fade from our minds, and unhampered by tradition we
work our own good will upon a grateful and responsive folk. We
shall not try to make these people or any of their children into
philosophers or men of learning or men of science. We have not to
raise up from among them authors, educators, poets or men of
letters. We shall not search for embryo great artists, painters,
musicians, nor lawyers, doctors, preachers, politicians,
statesmen, of whom we have ample supply. The task we set before
ourselves is very simple ... we will organize children ... and
teach them to do in a perfect way the things their fathers and
mothers are doing in an imperfect way.
-
- This mission statement will reward
multiple rereadings.
-
- INTELLECTUAL ESPIONAGE
-
- At the start of WWII, millions of
men showed up at registration offices to take low-level academic
tests before being inducted. 3
The years of maximum mobilization were 1942 to 1944; the fighting
force - both those inducted and those turned away - had been
mostly schooled in the 1930s. Eighteen million men were tested;
17,280,000 of them were judged to have the minimum competence in
reading required to be a soldier-a 96 percent literacy rate.
Although this was a 2 percent fall-off from the 98 percent rate
among voluntary military applicants ten years before, the dip was
so small it didn't worry anybody.
-
- WWII was over in 1945. Six years
later another war began in Korea. Several million men were tested
for military service, but this time 600,000 were rejected.
Literacy in the draft pool had dropped to 81 percent even though
all that was needed to classify a soldier as literate was
fourth-grade reading proficiency. In the few short years from the
beginning of WWII to Korea, a terrifying problem of adult
illiteracy had appeared. The Korean War group received most of its
schooling in the 1940s; it had more years in school with more
professionally trained personnel and more scientifically selected
textbooks than the WWII men, yet it could not read, write, count,
speak, or think as well as the earlier, less-schooled contingent.
-
- A third American war began in the
mid-1960s, By its end in 1973, the number of men found
non-inductible by reason of inability to read safety instructions,
interpret road signs, decipher orders, and so on - the number
found illiterate, in other words - had reached 27 percent of the
total pool. Vietnam-era young men had been schooled in the 1950s
and the 1960s-much better schooled than either of the two earlier
groups-but the 4 percent illiteracy of 1941, which had transmuted
into the 19 percent illiteracy of 1952, now had grown into the 27
percent illiteracy of 1970. Not only had the fraction of competent
readers dropped to 73 percent, but a substantial chunk of even
those were only barely adequate; they could not keep abreast of
developments by reading a newspaper; they could not read for
pleasure; they could not sustain a thought or an argument; they
could not write well enough to manage their own affairs without
assistance.
-
- Consider how much more compelling
this steady progression of intellectual blindness is when we track
it through Army admissions tests rather than college admissions
scores and standardized reading tests, which inflate apparent
proficiency by frequently changing the way the tests are scored.
-
- Looking back, abundant data exist
from states like Connecticut and Massachusetts to show that by
1840 the incidence of complex literacy in the United States was
between 93 and 100 percent wherever such a thing mattered.
According to the Connecticut census of 1840, only one citizen out
of every 579 was illiterate, and you probably don't want to know,
not really, what people in those days considered literate; it's
too embarrassing. Popular novels of the period give a clue:
Cooper's Last of the Mohicans, published in 1826, sold so
well that a contemporary equivalent would have to move 10 million
copies to match it. If you pick up an uncut version, you find your
self in a dense thicket of philosophy, history, culture, manners,
politics, geography, astute analysis of human motives and actions,
all conveyed in data-rich periodic sentences so formidable that
only a determined and well-educated reader can handle it nowadays.
Yet in 1818, the US was a small-farm nation without colleges or
universities to speak of. Could those sinple folk have had more
complex minds than our own?
-
- By 1940, the literacy figure for
all states stood at 96 percent for whites, 80 percent for blacks.
Notice for all the disadvantages blacks labored under, four of
five were still literate. Six decades later, at the end of the
twentieth century, the National Adult Literacy Survey and
the National Assessment of Educational Progress say 40
percent blacks and 17 percent of whites can't read at all. Put
another way, black illiteracy doubled, and white illiteracy
quadrupled. Before you think of anything else in regard to these
numbers, think of this: we spend three to four times as much real
money on schooling as we did 60 years ago, but 60 years ago
virtually everyone, black or white, could read.
-
- In their famous bestseller, The
Bell Curve, prominent social analysts Charles Murray and
Richard Herrnstein say that what we're seeing are the results of
selective breeding in society. Smart people naturally get together
with smart people, dumb people with dumb people. As they have
children generation after generation, the differences between the
groups get larger and larger. That sounds plausible, and the
authors produce impressive mathematics to prove their case, but
their documentation shows that they are entirely ignorant of the
military data available to challenge their contention. The
terrifying drop in literacy between World War 11 and Korea
happened in a decade, and even the brashest
survival-of-the-fittest theorist wouldn't argue evolution unfolds
that way. The Bell Curve writers say black illiteracy (and
violence) is genetically programmed, but like many academics they
ignore contradictory evidence.
-
- For example, on the matter of
violence inscribed in black genes, the inconvenient parallel is to
South Africa, where 31 million blacks live, the same count living
in the United States. Compare numbers of blacks who died by
violence in South Africa in civil war conditions during 1989,
1990, and 1991 with America's peacetime mortality statistics, and
you find that far from exceeding the violent death toll in the US,
or even matching it, South Africa had proportionately less than
one-quarter the violent death rate of American blacks. If more
contemporary comparisons are sought, we need only compare the
current black literacy rate in the US (56 percent) with the rate
in Jamaica (98.5 percent) - a figure considerably higher than the
American white literacy rate (83 percent).
-
- If not heredity, what then? Well,
one change is indisputable, welldocumented, and easy to track.
During WWII, American public schools massively converted to
non-phonetic ways of teaching reading. They stopped teaching
students to look at words as combinations of letters, sounding
them out, and instead started using the disastrous whole-word
method, which has students memorize the meanings of entire words
through sheer repetition (the method used by Dick and Jane and Dr.
Seuss).
-
- On the matter of violence alone,
this would seem to have an impact: According to the Justice
Department, 80 percent of the incarcerated violent criminal
population is illiterate or nearly so (the rate for all imprisoned
criminals is 67 percent). There seems to be a direct connection
between the humiliation poor readers experience and the life of
angry criminals 4.
As reading ability plummeted in America after WWII, crime soared;
so did out-of-wedlock births, which doubled in the 1950s and
doubled again in the 1960s when bizarre violence for the first
time became commonplace in daily life.
-
- When literacy was first abandoned
as a primary goal by schools, white people were in a better
position than black people because they inherited a 300-year-old
American tradition of learning to read at home by matching spoken
sound with letters; thus, home assistance was able to correct the
deficiencies of dumbed-down schools for whites. But black people
had been forbidden to learn to read during slavery and as late as
1930 averaged only three to four years of schooling, so they were
helpless when teachers suddenly stopped teaching children to read;
they had no fallback position. Not helpless because of genetic
inferiority but because they had to trust school authorities to a
much greater extent than white people.
-
- Back in 1952 the Army quietly began
hiring hundreds of psychologists to find out how
- 600,000 high school graduates had
successfully faked illiteracy. Regna Wood sums up the episode this
way:
-
- After the psychologists told the
officers that the graduates weren't faking, Defense Department
administrators knew that something terrible had happened in grade
school reading instruction. And they knew it had started in the
thirties. Why they remained silent, no one knows. The switch back
to reading instruction that worked for everyone should have been
made then. But it wasn't.
-
- In 1882, fifth-graders read these
authors in their Appleton School Reader. William Shakespeare,
Henry Thoreau, George Washington, Sir Walter Scott, Mark Twain,
Benjamin Franklin, Oliver Wendell Holmes, John Bunyan, Daniel
Webster, Samuel Johnson, Lewis Carroll, Thomas Jefferson, Ralph
Waldo Emerson, and others like them. In 1995, a student-teacher of
fifth-graders in Minneapolis wrote to the local newspaper: "I was
told children are not to be expected to spell the following words
correctly: back, big, call, came, can, day, did, dog, down, get,
good, have, he, home, if, in, is, it, like, little, man, morning,
mother, my, night, off, out, over, people, play, ran, said, saw,
she, some, soon, their, them, there, time, two, too, up, us, very,
water, we, went, where, when, will, would, etc. Is this nuts?"
-
- WILLIAM TORREY HARRIS
-
- If you have a hard time believing
this revolution in the contract ordinary Americans had with their
political State was intentionally provoked, it's time to meet
William Torrey Harris, US Commissioner of Education from 1889 to
1906. Nobody else who rose out of the ranks of professional
pedagogues, other than Cubberley, ever had the influence Harris
did. Harris standardized our schools and Germanized them. Listen
as he speaks in 1906:
-
- Ninety-nine [students] out
of a hundred are automata, careful to walk in prescribed paths,
careful to follow the prescribed custom. This is not an accident
but the result of substantial education, which, scientifically
defined, is the subsumption of the individual.
-The Philosophy of
Education (1906)..
-
- Listen again to Harris, giant of
American schooling, leading scholar of German philosophy in the
Western hemisphere, editor/publisher of The Joumal of Speculative
Philosophy which trained a generation of American intellectuals in
the ideas of the Prussian thinkers Kant and Hegel, the man who
gave America scientifically age-graded classrooms to replace
successful mixed-age school practice:
-
- The great purpose of school can be
realized better in dark, airless, ugly places.... It is to master
the physical self, to transcend the beauty of nature. School
should develop the power to withdraw from the external world.
-The Philosophy of
Education (1906)..
-
- Nearly a hundred years ago, this
schoolman thought that self-alienation was the secret to
successful industrial society. Surely he was right. When you stand
at a machine or sit at a computer, you require an ability to
withdraw from life, to alienate yourself without a supervisor. How
else could that be tolerated unless prepared in advance by
simulated Birkenhead drills? School, thought Harris, was sensible
preparation for a life of alienation. Can you say he was wrong?
-
- In exactly the years Cubberley of
Stanford identified as the launching time for the school
institution, Harris reigned supreme as the bull goose educator of
America. His was the most influential voice teaching what school
was to be in a modern, scientific State. School histories commonly
treat Harris as an old-fashioned defender of high academic
standards, but this is a grossly inadequate analysis; as a
philosophical Hegelian, Harris believed children were property and
the State had a compelling interest in disposing of them as it
pleased. Some would receive intellectual training, most not. Any
distinction that can be made between Harris and later
weak-curriculum advocates (those interested in stupefaction for
everybody) is far less important than substantial agreement in
both camps that parents or local tradition could no longer
determine the individual child's future.
-
- Unlike any official schoolman until
Conant, Harris had social access to important salons of power in
the United States. Over his long career he furnished inspiration
to the ongoing obsessions of Andrew Carnegie, the steel man who
first nourished the conceit of yoking our entire economy to
cradle-to-grave schooling. If you can find copies ofThe Empire
of Business (1902) orTriumphant Democracy (1886), you
will find remarkable congruence between the world Carnegie urged
and the one our society has achieved.
-
- Carnegie's "Gospel of Wealth" idea
took his peers by storm at the very moment the great school
transformation began - the idea that the wealthy owed society a
duty to take over everything in the public interest was an uncanny
echo of Carnegie's experience as a boy watching the elite
establishment of Britain and the teachings of its State religion.
It would require perverse blindness not to acknowledge a
connection between the Carnegie blueprint, hammered into shape in
the Greenwich Village salon of Mrs. Botta after the Civil War, and
the explosive developments which restored the Anglican worldview
to our schools.
- Of course, every upper class in
history has specified what can be known. The defining
characteristic of class control is that it establishes a grammar
and vocabulary for ordinary people, and for subordinate elites,
too. If the rest of us uncritically accept certain official
concepts such as "globalization," then we have unwittingly
committed ourselves to a whole intricate narrative of society's
future, too, a narrative which inevitably drags an irresistible
curriculum in its wake.
-
- Since Aristotle, thinkers have
understood that work is the vital theater of self-knowledge.
Schooling in concert with a controlled workplace is the most
effective way ever devised to foreclose the development of
imagination. But where did these radical doctrines of true belief
come from? Who spread them? We get at least part of the answer
from the tantalizing clue Walt Whitman left when he said that
"only Hegel is fit for America." Hegel was the protean Prussian
philosopher capable of shaping Karl Marx on one hand and J.P.
Morgan on the other; the man who taught a generation of prominent
Americans that history itself could be controlled by the
deliberate provoking of crises. Hegel was sold to America in large
measure by William Torrey Harris, who made Hegelianism his
lifelong project and forced schooling its principal instrument in
its role as a pee rless agent provocateur.
-
- Harris was inspired by the notion
that correctly managed mass schooling would result in a population
so dependent on leaders that schism and revolution would be things
of the past. If a world could be cobbled together by Hegelian
tactical manipulation, and such a school plan imposed upon it,
history itself would stop. No more wars, no civil disputes, just
people waiting around pleasantly like the Eloi in Wells'The
Time Machine. Waiting for Teacher to tell them what to do. The
psychological tool was alienation. The was to alienate children
from themselves so they couldn't turn inside for strength, to
alienate them from their families, religions, cultures, etc. so no
countervailing force could intervene.
-
- Carnegie used his own considerable
influence to keep this expatriate New England Hegelian as the US
Commissioner of Education for sixteen years, long enough to set
the stage for an era of "scientific management" (or "Fordism," as
the Soviets called it) in American schooling. Long enough to bring
about the rise of the multilayered school bureaucracy. But it
would be a huge mistake to regard Harris and other true believers
as merely tools of business interest; what they were about was the
creation of a modern, living faith to replace the Christian one
which had died for them. It was their good fortune to live at
precisely the moment when the dreamers of the empire of business
(to use emperor Carnegie's label) for an Anglo-American
world-State were beginning to consider worldwide schooling as the
most direct route to that destination.
-
- Both movements, to centralize the
economy and to centralize schooling, were aided immeasurably by
the rapid disintegration of old-line Protestant churches and the
rise from their pious ashes of the "Social Gospel" ideology,
aggressively underwritten by important industrialists, who
intertwined churchgoing tightly with standards of business,
entertainment, and government. The experience of religion came to
mean, in the words of Reverend Earl Hoon, "the best social
programs money can buy." A clear statement of the belief that
social justice and salvation were to be had through skillful
consumption.
-
- Shailer Mathews - dean of Chicago's
School of Divinity, editor of Biblical World, president of
the Federal Council of Churches - wrote his influential
Scientific Management in the Churches (1912) to convince
American Protestants they should sacrifice independence and
autonomy and adopt the structure and strategy of corporations:
-
- If this seems to make the Church
something of a business establishment, it is precisely what should
be the case.
-
- If Americans listened to the
corporate message, Mathews told them they would feel anew the
spell of Jesus.
-
- In the decade before WWI, a
consortium of private foundations drawing on industrial wealth
began slowly working toward a long range goal of lifelong
schooling and a thoroughly rationalized global economy and
society.
-
- MR. YOUNG'S HEAD WAS POUNDED TO
JELLY
-
- The most surprising thing about the
start-up of mass public education in mid-nineteenth-century
Massachusetts is how overwhelming ly parents of all classes soon
complained about it. Reports of school committees around 1850 show
the greatest single theme of discussion was conflict between the
state and the general public on this matter. Resistance was led by
the old yeoman class - those families accustomed to taking care of
themselves and providing meaning for their own lives. The little
town of Barnstable on Cape Cod is exemplary. Its school committee
lamented, according to Katz's Irony of Early School Reform,
that "the great defect of our day is the absence of governing or
controlling power on the part of parents and the consequent
insubordination of children. Our schools are rendered inefficient
by the apathy of parents."
-
- Years ago I was in possession of an
old newspaper account which related the use of militia to march
recalcitrant children to school there, but I've been unable to
locate it again. Nevertheless, even a cursory look for evidence of
State violence in bending public will to accept compulsion
schooling will be rewarded: Bruce Curtis' book Building the
Education State 1836-1871 documents the intense aversion to
schooling which occurred across North America, in Anglican Canada
where leadership was uniform, as well as in the US where
leadership was more divided. Many schools were burned to the
ground and teachers run out of town by angry mobs. When students
were kept after school, parents often broke into school to free
them.
-
- At Saltfleet Township in 1859, a
teacher was locked in the schoolhouse by students who "threw mud
and mire into his face and over his clothes," according to school
records - while parents egged them on. At Brantford in 1863, the
teacher William Young was assaulted to the point (according to his
replacement) that "Mr. Young's head, face and body was, if I
understand rightly, pounded literally to jelly." Curtis argues
that parents' resistance was motivated by a radical transformation
in the intentions of schools-a change from teaching basic literacy
to molding social identity.
-
- The first effective American
compulsory schooling in the modern era was a reform school
movement which Know-Nothing legislatures of the 1850s put into the
hopper along with their radical new adoption law. Objects of
reformation were announced as follows: respect for authority,
self-control, self-discipline. The properly reformed boy "acquires
a fixed character," one that can be planned for in advance by
authority in keeping with the efficiency needs of business and
industry.
-
- Reform meant the total
transformation of character, behavior modification, a complete
makeover. By 1857, a few years after stranger adoption was kicked
off as a new policy of the State, Boutwell could consider foster
parenting (the old designation for adoption) "one of the major
strategies for the reform of youth." 5
The first step in the strategy of reform was for the State to
become the de facto parent of the child. That, according to
another Massachusetts educator, Emory Washburn, "presents the
State in her true relation of a parent seeking out her erring
children."
-
- The 1850s in Massachusetts marked
the beginning of a new epoch in schooling. Washburn triumphantly
crowed that these years produced the first occasion in history
"whereby a State in the character of a common parent has
undertaken the high and sacred duty of rescuing and restoring her
lost children ... by the influence of the school." John Philbrick,
Boston school superintendent [ed. note: perhaps an ancestor
of Herbert Philbrick, the Massachusetts McCarthy-era informer who
"Led Three Lives"?], said of his growing empire in 1863,
"Here is real home!" All schooling, including the reform variety,
was to be in imitation of the best "family system of
organization"; this squared with the prevalent belief that
delinquency was not caused by external conditions - thus letting
industrialists and slumlords off the hook - but by deficient
homes.
-
- Between 1840 and 1860, male
schoolteachers were cleansed from the Massachusetts system and
replaced by women. A variety of stratagems was used, including the
novel one of paying women slightly more than men in order to bring
shame into play in chasing men out of the business. Again the move
was part of a well-conceived strategy: "Experience teaches that
these boys, many of whom never had a mother's affection ... need
the softening and refining influence which woman alone can give,
and we have, wherever practicable, substituted female officers and
teachers for those of the other sex."
-
- A state report noted the frequency
with which parents coming to retrieve their own children from
reform school were met by news that their children had been given
away to others, through the State's parens patriae power.
"We have felt it to be our duty generally to decline giving them
up to their parents and have placed as many of them as we could
with farmers and mechanics," reads a portion of Public Document 20
for the state of Massachusetts, written in 1864. To recreate the
feelings of parents on hearing this news is beyond my power.
-
- THE TECHNOLOGY OF
SUBJECTION
-
- Administrative utopias are a
peculiar kind of dreaming by those in power, driven by an urge to
arrange the lives of others, organizing them for production,
combat, or detention. The operating principles of administrative
utopia are hierarchy, discipline, regimentation, strict order,
rational planning, a geometrical environment, a production line, a
cellblock, and a form of welfarism. Government schools and some
private schools pass such parameters with flying colors.
-
- In one sense, administrative
utopias are laboratories for exploring the technology of
subjection and as such belong to a precise subdivision of
pornographic art: total surveillance and total control of the
helpless. The aim and mode of administrative utopia is to bestow
order and assistance on an unwilling population. To provide its
clothing and food. To schedule it. In a masterpiece of cosmic
misjudgment, the phrenologist George Combe wrote to Horace Mann on
November 14, 1843:
-
- The Prussian and Saxon governments
by means of their schools and their just laws and rational public
administration are doing a good deal to bring their people into a
rational and moral condition. It is pretty obvious to thinking men
that a few years more of this cultivation will lead to the
development of free institutions in Germany.
-
- Earlier that year (May 21, 1843),
Mann had written to Combe: "I want to find out what are the
results, as well as the workings of the famous Prussian system."
Just three years earlier, with the election of Marcus Morton as
governor of Massachusetts, a serious challenge had been presented
to Mann and to his Board of Education, including the air of
Prussianism surrounding it and its manufacturer/politician
friends. A House committee was directed to look into the new Board
of Education and its plan to undertake a teachers college with
$10,000 put up by industrialist Edmund Dwight. Four days after its
assignment, the majority reported out a bill to kill the board!
Discontinue the Normal School experiment, it said, and give Dwight
his money back:
-
- If then the Board has any actual
power, it is a dangerous power, touching directly upon the rights
and duties of the Legislature; if it has no power, why continue
its existence at an annual expense to the commonwealth?
-
- But the House committee did more;
it warned explicitly that this board, dominated by a Unitarian
majority of 7-5 (although Unitarians comprised less than 1 percent
of the state), really wanted to install a Prussian system of
education in Massachusetts, to put "a monopoly of power in a few
hands, contrary in every respect to the true spirit of our
democratical institutions." The vote of the House on this was the
single greatest victory of Mann's political career, one for which
he and his wealthy friends called in every favor they were owed.
The result was 245 votes to continue, 182 votes to discontinue,
and so the House voted to overturn the recommendations of its own
committee. A 32-vote swing might have given us a much different
twentieth century than the one we saw.
-
- Although Mann's own letters and
diaries are replete with attacks on orthodox religionists as
enemies of government schooling, an examination of the positive
vote reveals that from the outset the orthodox churches were among
Mann's staunchest allies. Mann had general support from
Congregational, Presbyterian, and Baptist clergymen. At this early
stage they were completely unaware of the doom secular schooling
would spell for their denominations. They had been seduced into
believing school was a necessary insurance policy to deal with
incoming waves of Catholic immigration from Ireland and Germany,
the cheap labor army which as early as 1830 had been talked about
in business circles and eagerly anticipated as an answer to
America's production problems.
-
- The reason Germany, and not
England, provided the original model for America's essay into
compulsion schooling may be that Mann had a shocking experience in
English class snobbery while in Britain, which left him reeling.
Boston Common, he wrote, with its rows of mottled sycamore trees,
gravel walks, and frog ponds, was downright embarrassing compared
with any number of stately English private grounds furnished with
stag and deer, fine arboretums of botanical specimens from faraway
lands, marble floors better than the tabletops at home, portraits,
tapestries, giant gold-frame mirrors. The ballroom in the
Bullfinch house in Boston would be a butler's pantry in England,
he wrote. When Mann visited Stafford House of the Duke of
Cumberland, he went into culture shock:
-
- Convicts on treadmills provide the
energy to pump water for fountains. I have seen equipages,
palaces, and the regalia of royalty side by side with beggary,
squalidness, and degradation in which the very features of
humanity were almost lost in those of the brute.
-
- For this great distinction between
the layered orders of society, Mann held the Anglican Church to
blame. "Give me America with all its rawness and want. We have
aristocracy enough at home and here I trace its foundations."
Shocked from his English experience, Mann virtually willed that
Prussian schools would provide him with answers, says his
biographer Jonathan Messerli.
-
- Mann arrived in Prussia when its
schools were closed for vacation; he toured empty classrooms,
spoke with authorities, interviewed vacationing schoolmasters, and
read piles of dusty official reports. Yet from this non-experience
he claimed to come away with a strong sense of the professional
competence of Prussian teachers! All "admirably qualified and full
of animation!" His wife, Mary, of the famous Peabodys, wrote home:
"We have not seen a teacher with a book in his hand in all
Prussia; no, not one!" This wasn't surprising, for they hardly saw
teachers at all.
-
- Equally impressive, he wrote, was
the wonderful obedience of children; these German kinder
had "innate respect for superior years." The German teacher corps?
"The finest collection of men I have ever seen - full of
intelligence, dignity, benevolence, kindness and bearing Never,
says Mann, did he witness "an instance of harshness and severity.
All is kind, encouraging, animating, sympathizing." On the basis
of imagining this miraculous vision of exactly the Prussia he
wanted to see, Mann made a special plea for changes in the
teaching of reading. He criticized the standard American practice
of beginning with the alphabet and moving to syllables, urging his
readers to consider the superior merit of teaching entire words
from the beginning. "I am satisfied," he said, "our greatest error
in teach-
- ing lies in beginning with the
alphabet."
-
- The heart of Mann's most famous
Report to the Boston School Committee, the legendary
Seventh, rings a familiar theme in American affairs: It seems even
then we were falling behind! This time behind the Prussians in
education. In order to catch up, it was mandatory to create a
professional corps of teachers, just as the Prussians had. And a
systematic curriculum just as the Prussians had. Mann fervently
implored the board to accept his prescription ... while there was
still time!
-
- That fall, the Association of
Masters of the Boston Public Schools published its 150-page
rebuttal of Mann's Report. It attacked the Normal schools proposal
as a propaganda vehicle for Mann's "hot bed theories, in which the
projectors have disregarded experience and observation." It
belittled his advocacy of phrenology and charged Mann with
attempting to excite the prejudices of the ignorant. Its second
attack was against the teacher-centered, non-book presentations of
Prussian classrooms, insisting the psychological result of these
was to break student potential "for forming the habit of
independent and individual effort." The third attack was against
the "word method" in teaching reading, and in defense of the
traditional alphabet method. Lastly, it attacked Mann's belief
that interest was a better motivator to learning than discipline:
"Duty should come first and pleasure should grow out of the
discharge of it."
- ....................................
-
- Sixty years later - amid a
well-coordinated attempt on the part of industrialists and
financiers to transfer power over money and interest rates from
elected representatives of the American people to a "Federal
Reserve" of centralized private banking interests -George
Reynolds, president of the American Bankers Association, rose
before an audience on September 13, 1909, to declare himself
flatly in favor of a central bank modeled after the German
Reichsbank. As he spoke, the schools of the United States were
being forcibly rebuilt on Prussian lines.
-
- On September 14, 1909, in Boston,
the President of the United States, William Howard Taft,
instructed the country that it should "take up seriously" the
problem of establishing a centralized bank on the German model. As
the Wall Street Journal put it, an important step in the
education of Americans would soon be taken to translate the "realm
of theory" into "practical politics," in pedagogy as well as
finance.
-
- Dramatic symbolic evidence of what
was working deep in the bowels of the school institution surfaced
in 1935. At the University of Chicago's experimental high school,
the head of the Social Science department, Howard C. Hill,
published an inspirational textbook, The Life and Work of the
Citizen. It is decorated throughout with the fasces,
symbol of the Fascist movement, an emblem binding government and
corporation together as one entity. Mussolini had landed in
America.
-
- The fasces are strange,
hybridized images - one might almost say Americanized. The bundle
of sticks wrapped around a two-headed axe, the classic Italian
Fascist image, has been decisively altered. Now the sticks are
wrapped around a sword. They appear on the spine of this high
school text, on the decorative page introducing part one, again on
a similar page for part two, repeating on part three and part
four, as well. There are also fierce, military eagles hovering
above those pages.
-
- The strangest decoration of all
faces the title page, a weird interlock of hands and wrists which,
with only a few slight alterations of its structural members,
would be a living swastika 6.
The legend announces it as representing the "united strength" of
Law, Order, Science, and the Trades. Where the strength of America
had been traditionally located in our First Amendment guarantee of
argument, now the Prussian connection was shifting the locus of
attention in school to cooperation, with both working and
professional classes sandwiched between the watchful eye of Law
and Order. Prussia had entrenched itself deep inside the bowels of
American institutional schooling.
-
- A CRITICAL APPRAISAL
-
- In the latter half of the
nineteenth century, as the new school institution slowly took root
after the Civil War in big cities and the defeated South, some of
the best minds in the land, people fit by their social rank to
comment publicly, spoke out as they watched its first phalanx of
graduates take their place in the traditional American world. All
of these speakers had been trained themselves in the older,
a-systematic, non-institutional schools. At the beginning of
another new century, it is eerie to hear what these
great-grandfathers of ours had to say about the mass schooling
phenomenon as they approached their own fateful new century.
-
- In 1867, world-famous American
physician and academic Vincent Youmans lectured the London College
of Preceptors about the school institution just coming into being:
-
- School produces mental perversion
and absolute stupidity. It produces bodily disease. It produces
these things by measures which operate to the prejudice of the
growing brain. It is not to be doubted that dullness, indocility,
and viciousness are frequently aggravated by the lessons of
school.
-
- Thirteen years later, Francis
Parkman (of Oregon Trail fame) delivered a similar judgment. The
year was 1880, at the very moment Wundt was founding his
laboratory of scientific psychology in Germany:
-
- Many had hoped that by giving a
partial reaching to great numbers of persons, a thirst for
knowledge might be awakened. Thus far, the results have not
equaled expectations. Schools have not borne any fruit on which we
have cause to congratulate ourselves,
-
- In 1885, the president of Columbia
University said:
-
- The results actually attained under
our present system of instruction are neither very flattering nor
very encouraging.
-
- In 1895, the president of Harvard
said:
-
- Ordinary schooling produces
dullness. A young man whose intellectual powers are worth
cultivating cannot be willing to cultivate them by pursuing
phantoms as the schools now insist upon.
-
When he said this, compulsion
schooling in its first manifestation was approaching its forty
third year of operations in Massachusetts and was running at high
efficiency in Cambridge, where Harvard is located.
-
- Then the great metamorphosis to an
even more efficient scientific form of pedagogy took place in the
early years of the twentieth century. Four years before WWI broke
out, a well-known European thinker and schoolman, Paul Geheeb,
whom Einstein, Herman Hesse, and Albert Schweitzer all were to
claim as a friend, made this commentary on English and German
types of forced schooling:
-
- The dissatisfaction with public
schools is widely felt. Countless attempts to reform them have
failed. People complain about the "overburdening" of schools;
educators argue about which parts of curriculum should be cut; but
school cannot be reformed with a pair of scissors. The solution is
not to be found in educational institutions.
-
- In 1930, the yearly Inglis Lecture
at Harvard made the same case:
-
- We have absolutely nothing to show
for our colossal investment in common schooling after 80 years of
trying.
-
- Thirty years passed before John
Gardner's Annual Report to the Carnegie Corporation in 1960 added
this:
-
- Too many young people gain nothing
[from school] except the conviction they are misfits.
-
- The record after 1960 is no
different. It is hardly unfair to say that the stupidity of 1867,
the fruitlessness of 1880, the dullness of 1895, the cannot be
reformed of 1910, the absolutely nothing of 1930, and the nothing
of 1960 have been continued into the schools of 2000 and beyond.
We pay four times more in real dollars than we did in 1930, and
thus we buy even more of what mass schooling dollars always
bought.
-
- THE CULT OF FORCED
SCHOOLING
-
- The most candid account we have of
the changeover from old-style American free-market schooling to
the laboratory variety under the close eye of society's managers
is a book long out of print. But the author was famous enough in
his day that a yearly lecture at Harvard is named after him, so
with a bit of effort on your part, and perhaps a kind word to your
local librarian, in due time you should be able to find a
hair-raising account of the school transformation written by one
of the insiders. The book in question bears the soporific title
Principles of Secondary Education. Published in 1918 near
the end of the great school revolution, Principles offers a
unique account of the project written through the eyes of an
important revolutionary. Any lingering doubts you may have about
the purposes of government schooling should be put to rest by
Alexander Inglis, The principal purpose of the vast enterprise was
to place control of the new social and economic machinery out of
reach of the mob 7.
-
- The great social engineers were
confronted by the formidable challenge of working their magic in a
democracy, the least efficient and most unpredictable of political
forms. School was designed to neutralize as much as possible any
risk of being blindsided by the democratic will. Nelson W. Aldrich
Jr., writing of his grandfather, Senator Aldrich - one of the
principal architects of the Federal Reserve System which had come
into being while Inglis' cohort built the schools, and whose
intent was much the same, to remove economic machinery from public
interference - caught the attitude of the builders perfectly in
his book Old Money. Grandfather, he writes, believed that
history, evolution, and a saving grace found their best advocates
in him and in men like him, in his family and in families like
his, down to the close of time. But the price of his privilege,
the senator knew, "was vigilance - vigilance, above all, against
the resentment of those who never could emerge." Once in Paris,
Senator Aldrich saw two men "of the middle or lower class," as he
described them, drinking absinthe in a cafe. That evening back at
his hotel he wrote these words: "As I looked upon their dull wild
stupor I wondered what dreams were evolved from the depths of the
bitter glass. Multiply that scene and you have the possibility of
the wildest revolution or the most terrible outrages."
-
- Alexander Inglis, author of
Principles of Secondary Education, was of Aldrich's class. He
wrote that the new schools were being expressly created to serve a
command economy and command society, one in which the controlling
coalition would be drawn from important institutional stakeholders
in the future. According to Inglis, the first function of
schooling is adjustive, establishing fixed habits of reaction to
authority. This prepares the young to accept whatever management
dictates when they are grown.
-
- Second is the diagnostic function.
School determines each student's "proper" social role, logging it
mathematically on cumulative records to justify the next function,
sorting. Individuals are to be trained only so far as their likely
destination in the social machine, not one step beyond. Conformity
is the fourth function. Kids are to be made alike, not from any
passion for egalitarianism, but so future behavior will be
predictable, in service to market and political research.
-
- Next is the hygienic function. This
has nothing to do with individual health, only the health of the
"race." This is polite code for saying that school should
accelerate Darwinian natural selection by tagging the unfit so
clearly that they drop from the reproduction sweepstakes.
-
- And last is the propadeutic
function, a fancy word meaning that a small fraction of kids will
slowly be trained to take over management of the system, guardians
of a population deliberately dumbed down and rendered childlike in
order that government and economic life can be managed with a
minimum of hassle.
-
- And there you have the formula:
adjustment, diagnosis, sorting, conformity, racial hygiene, and
continuity. This is the man after whom an honor lecture in
education at Harvard is named. According to James Bryant Conant -
another progressive aristocrat from whom I first learned of Inglis
in a perfectly frightening book called The Child, the Parent,
and the State (1949) - the school transformation had been
ordered by "certain industrialists and the innovative who were
altering the nature of the industrial process."
-
- President of Harvard from 1933 to
1953, Conant himself is a school name that resonates through the
central third of the twentieth century. His book, The American
High School Today (1959), was one of the important springs
that pushed secondary schools to gigantic size in the 1960s and
forced consolidation of many small school districts into larger
ones. His career began as a poison gas specialist in WWI, a task
assigned only to young men whose family lineage could be trusted,
with other notable way stations on his path being service in the
secret atomic bomb project during WWII and a stint as US High
Commissioner for Germany during the military occupation after
1945.
-
- In his book Conant brusquely
acknowledges that conversion of oldstyle American education into
Prussian-style schooling was done as a coup de main, but
his greater motive in 1959 was to speak directly to men and women
of his own class who were beginning to believe the new school
procedure might be unsuited to human needs, that experience
dictated a return to older institutional pluralistic ways. No,
Conant fairly shouts, the clock cannot be turned back! "Clearly,
the total process is irreversible." Severe consequences would
certainly follow the break-up of this carefully contrived
behavioral-training machine: "A successful counter-revolution ...
would require reorientation of a complex social pattern. Only a
person bereft of reason would undertake [it]."
-
- Reading Conant is like overhearing
a private conversation not meant for you yet fraught with the
greatest personal significance. To Conant, school was a triumph of
Anglo/Germanic pragmatism, a pinnacle of the social technocrat's
problem-solving art. One task it performed with brilliance was to
sharply curtail the American entrepreneurial spirit, a mission
undertaken on perfectly sensible grounds, at least from a
management perspective. As long as capital investments were at the
mercy of millions of self-reliant, resourceful young entrepreneurs
running about with a gleam in their eye, who would commit the huge
flows of capital needed to continually tool and retool the
commercial/industrial/financial machine? As long as the entire
population could become producers, young people were loose cannons
crashing around a storm-tossed deck, threatening to destroy the
corporate ship; confined, however, to employee status, they became
suitable ballast upon which a dependable domestic market could be
erected.
-
- How to mute competition in the
generation of tomorrow? That was the cutting-edge question. In his
take-no-prisoners style, acquired mixing poison gas and building
atomic bombs, Conant candidly tells us that the answer "was in the
process of formulation" as early as the 1890s. By 1905 the nation
obeyed this clarion call from coast to coast: "Keep all youth in
school full time through grade twelve." All youth, including those
most unwilling to be there and those certain to take vengeance on
their jailers.
-
- President Conant was quick to
acknowledge that "practical-minded" kids paid a heavy price from
enforced confinement. But there it was - nothing could be done. It
was a worthy trade-off. I suspect he was being disingenuous. Any
mind sophisticated enough to calculate a way to short-circuit
entrepreneurial energy, and ideology-driven enough to be willing
to do that in service to a corporate takeover of the economy, is
shrewd enough also to have foreseen the destructive side effects
of having an angry and tough-minded band of prisoners forced
against its will to remain in school with the docile The net
result on the intellectual possibilities of class instruction was
near total wipe-out.
-
- Did Conant understand the
catastrophe he helped cause? I think he did. He, of course, would
dispute my judgment that it was a catastrophe. One of his close
friends was another highly placed school man, Ellwood P.
Cubberley, the Stanford education dean. Cubberley had himself
written about the blow to serious classwork caused early
experiments in forcing universal school attendance. So it wasn't
as if the destruction of academic integrity came as any surprise
to insiders. Cubberley's house history of American education
refers directly to this episode, although in somewhat elliptical
prose. First published in 1919, it was republished in 1934, the
year after Conant took office at Harvard. The two men talked and
wrote to one another. Both knew the score. Yet for all his candor,
it isn't hard to understand Conant's reticence about discussing
this procedure. It's one thing to announce that children have to
do involuntary duty for the State, quite another to describe the
why and how of the matter in explicit detail.
-
- Another prominent Harvard
professor, Robert Ulich, wrote in his own book, Philosophy of
Education (1961): "[We are producing] more and more
people who will be dissatisfied because the artificially prolonged
time of formal schooling will arouse in them hopes which society
cannot fulfill.... These men and women will form the avant garde
of the disgruntled. It is no exaggeration to say [people like
these] were responsible for World War II."
-
- Although Ulich is parroting Toynbee
here, whose Study of History was a standard reference of
speculative history for decades, the idea that serious
intellectual schooling of a universal nature would be a sword
pointed at established order has been common in the West since at
least the Tudors, and one openly discussed from 1890 onwards.
-
- Thus I was less surprised than I
might have been to open Walter Kotschnig's Unemployment in the
Leamed Professions (1937) - which I purchased from a college
graduate down on his luck for 50 cents off a blanket on the street
in front of Columbia University - to find myself listening to an
argument attributing the rise of Nazism directly to the expansion
of German university enrollment after WWI. For Germany, this had
been a short-term solution to postwar unemployment, like the G.I.
Bill, but according to Kotschnig, the policy created a mob of
well-educated people with a chip on their shoulder because there
was no work - a situation which led swiftly downhill for the
Weimar Republic.
-
- A whole new way to look at
schooling from this management perspective emerges, a perspective
which is the furthest thing from cynical. Of course there are
implications for our contemporary situation. Much of our own 50 to
60 percent post-secondary college enrollment should be seen as a
temporary solution to the otherwise awesome reality that
two-thirds of all work in the US is now part-time or short-term
employment. In a highly centralized corporate workplace becoming
ever more so with no end in sight, all jobs are sucked like debris
in a tornado into four hierarchical funnels of vast proportions:
corporate, governmental, institutional, and professional. Once
work is preempted in this monopoly fashion, fear of too many smart
people is legitimate, hard to exaggerate. If you let people learn
too much, they might kill you. Or so history and Senator Aldrich
would have us believe.
-
- Once privy to ideas like those
entertained by Inglis, Conant, Ulich, and Kotschnig, most
contemporary public school debate becomes nonsense. Without
addressing philosophies and policies which sentence the largest
part of our people to lives devoid of meaning, we might be better
off not discussing school at all.
-
- Endnotes
-
- 1.
If you ever want to hunt this thing down, it bears the US Office
of Education Contract Number OEC-0-9-320424-4042 (1310).
-
- 2.
A fuller discussion of Bloom and the other documents mentioned
here, plus much more, is available in the writings of Beverly
Eakman, a Department of Justice employee, particularly her book
The Cloning of the American Mind (Huntington House, 1998).
-
- 3.
The discussion here is based on Regna Lee Wood's work as printed
in Chester Finn and Diane Ravitch's Network News and Views (and
reprinted many other places). Together with other statistical
indictmentsfrom the National Adult Literacy Survey, the Journal of
the American Medical Association, and a host of other credible
sources-it provides chilling evidence of the disastrous turn in
reading methodology. But in a larger sense the author urges every
reader to trust personal judgment over "numerical" evidence,
whatever the source. During the writer's 30-year classroom
experience, the decline in student ability to comprehend difficult
text was marked, while the ability to extract and parrot
"information" in the form of "facts" was much less affected. This
is a product of deliberate pedagogy, to what is the burden of my
essay.
-
- 4.
A particularly clear example of the dynamics hypothesized to cause
the correlation can be found in Michael S. Brunner's monograph
"Reduced Recidivism and Increased Employment Opportunity Through
Research-Based Reading Instruction," United States Department of
Justice (June 1992). Brunner's recent book, Retarding
America (Halcyon House, 1993), written as a Visiting Fellow
for the US Department of Justice, is recommended. A growing body
of documentation causally ties illiteracy to violent crime. A
study by Dennis Hogenson, "Reading Failure and Juvenile
Delinquency" (Reading Reform Foundation), attempted to correlate
teenage aggression with age, family size, numbers of parents
present in home, rural versus urban environment, socioeconomic
status, minority group member ship, and religious preference. None
of these factors produced a significant correlation. But one did.
As the author reports: "Only reading failure was found to
correlate with aggression in both populations of delinquent boys."
An organization of ex-prisoners testified before the Subcommittee
on Education of the US Congress that in its opinion illiteracy was
an important causative factor in crime, "for the illiterate have
very few honest ways of making a living." In 1994 the US
Department of Education acknowledged that two-thirds of all
incarcerated criminals have poor literacy.
-
- 5.
The reader will recall such a strategy was considered for Hester
Prynne's child, Pearl, in Hawthorne's Scariet Letter. That
Hawthorne, writing at mid-century, chose this as a hinge for his
characterization of the fallen woman Hester is surely no
coincidence.
-
- 6.
Interestingly enough, several versions of this book exist -
although no indication that this is so appears on the copyright
page. In one of these versions, the familiar totalitarian symbols
are much more pronounced than in the other.
-
- 7.
A Harvard professor with a Teachers College Ph.D., Inglis
descended from a long line of famous Anglicans. One of his
ancestors, assistant Rector of Trinity Church when the Revolution
began, in 1777 fled the onrushing Republic; another wrote a
refutation of Tom Paine's Common Sense and was made the
first Bishop of Nova Scotia in 1787; and a third, Sir John Inglis,
commanded the British forces at Lucknow during the famous siege by
the Sepoy mutineers in 1857. Is the Inglis bloodline germane to
his work as a school pioneer? You'll have to decide that for
yourself.
-
- Back
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