"Against School" by John Taylor Gatto
As an educator, this is the little essay that turned my head around and helped me understand why "education" seems to have the opposite effect most think it is designed to have.
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Excerpt:
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Excerpt:
We don't need Karl Marx's conception of a
grand warfare between the classes to see that it is in the interest of
complex management, economic or political, to dumb people down, to
demoralize them, to divide them from one another, and to discard them
if they don't conform. Class may frame the proposition, as when
Woodrow Wilson, then president of Princeton University, said the
following to the New York City School Teachers Association in 1909:
"We want one class of persons to have a liberal education, and we want
another class of persons, a very much larger class, of necessity, in
every society, to forgo the privileges of a liberal education and fit
themselves to perform specific difficult manual tasks." But the
motives behind the disgusting decisions that bring about these ends
need not be class-based at all. They can stem purely from fear, or
from the by now familiar belief that "efficiency" is the paramount
virtue, rather than love, liberty, laughter, or hope. Above all, they
can stem from simple greed.
There were vast fortunes
to be made, after all, in an economy based on mass production and
organized to favor the large corporation rather than the small
business or the family farm. But mass production required mass
consumption, and at the turn of the twentieth century most Americans
considered it both unnatural and unwise to buy things they didn't
actually need. Mandatory schooling was a godsend on that count. School
didn't have to train kids in any direct sense to think they should
consume nonstop, because it did something even better: it encouraged
them not to think at all. And that left them sitting ducks for another
great invention of the modem era - marketing.
Now, you needn't have
studied marketing to know that there are two groups of people who can
always be convinced to consume more than they need to: addicts and
children. School has done a pretty good job of turning our children
into addicts, but it has done a spectacular job of turning our
children into children. Again, this is no accident. Theorists from
Plato to Rousseau to our own Dr. Inglis knew that if children could be
cloistered with other children, stripped of responsibility and
independence, encouraged to develop only the trivializing emotions of
greed, envy, jealousy, and fear, they would grow older but never truly
grow up. In the 1934 edition of his once well-known book Public
Education in the United States, Ellwood P. Cubberley detailed and
praised the way the strategy of successive school enlargements had
extended childhood by two to six years, and forced schooling was at
that point still quite new. This same Cubberley - who was dean of
Stanford's School of Education, a textbook editor at Houghton Mifflin,
and Conant's friend and correspondent at Harvard - had written the
following in the 1922 edition of his book Public School
Administration: "Our schools are . . . factories in which the raw
products (children) are to be shaped and fashioned.. . . And it is the
business of the school to build its pupils according to the
specifications laid down."
It's perfectly obvious
from our society today what those specifications were. Maturity has by
now been banished from nearly every aspect of our lives. Easy divorce
laws have removed the need to work at relationships; easy credit has
removed the need for fiscal self-control; easy entertainment has
removed the need to learn to entertain oneself; easy answers have
removed the need to ask questions. We have become a nation of
children, happy to surrender our judgments and our wills to political
exhortations and commercial blandishments that would insult actual
adults. We buy televisions, and then we buy the things we see on the
television. We buy computers, and then we buy the things we see on the
computer. We buy $150 sneakers whether we need them or not, and when
they fall apart too soon we buy another pair. We drive SUVs and
believe the lie that they constitute a kind of life insurance, even
when we're upside-down in them. And, worst of all, we don't bat an eye
when Ari Fleischer tells us to "be careful what you say," even if we
remember having been told somewhere back in school that America is the
land of the free. We simply buy that one too. Our schooling, as
intended, has seen to it.
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Read the entire essay at Against School - John Taylor Gatto
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