First, They Came for the Schools
In
1983, the Carnegie Commission issued a report entitled, A Nation at Risk. That
report accelerated an all- out war on public education. It turned schools into outlets of the
textbook and testing industry and helped kick-start a war on teachers. The report used data from tests that have
since been challenged as unreliable and invalid. It compiled test scores without reference to
age, income, race or gender and concluded that schools were failing, although
there was little objective evidence to support that conclusion. Three and a half decades later, America’s
schools have been reduced to detention centers, drug providers and failed
technical training centers. In the
bargain, we’ve lost faith in education and see it as merely a means to
employment.
After
more than 70 years of mass education through high school, economic inequality
is either as bad as it’s ever been or the worst it’s ever been. Democracy in America has been hijacked by
political parties addicted to dark money and less than half of the people
eligible to vote do so. Whatever lofty
goals the nation had for our schools coming out of WWII, it’s time to admit
that we haven’t been able to reach them.
In fact, it’s time to admit that things are worse. If there is going to be another chapter of
American Democracy, that narrative is going to have include in it an alternative
and radically reconfigured idea of school.
First,
we have to face the fact that schools cannot function equally or effectively
when the country fails to address the social and economic disparity in our
society. It is ludicrous and beyond
cynical to send children who are homeless, malnourished, without parents who
live in violent settings to school and expect an underpaid and under supported
teacher to perform a magic trick.
Schools are not the corrective to our cultural problems, they are a reflection
of them. If we want, and I don’t think
we really do, an equal and fair quality education for all of our children, then
we have to address the conditions those children live in away from school. What we have done instead is to create a text
book and testing industry that sucks resources out of our schools and funnels
them to companies that produce tests and curricula that replicate the economic
and social divides in our country. If
you want your child to do well on the standardized tests their being force fed,
you better make enough money to move to a nice neighborhood and nice school.
Second,
we have to stop blaming teachers for everything that’s wrong with schools. Education might be the only example where
‘capitalists’ have decided that paying less and reducing benefits is the best
way to improve performance. Teaching
should be an attractive profession that is able to keep motivated teachers from
leaving. The opposite is true. In too many cases, we have taken away the
ability to teach and replaced it with test monitoring. Tests mean nothing if the things being tested
lack value in the real world. Teachers
are only part of the education puzzle.
They have to be supported and allowed to use their intelligence and
creativity. If you don’t think they
possess those characteristics, they shouldn’t be teaching.
Most
importantly, we need to rethink what we think an education is. Is it just the mastery of some random,
socially contextualized facts? Is it
only about memory and recall? A dogmatic
education only works in a culture where change is minimal. Ours is not that kind of culture. Children are going to need the ability to
imagine and connect with other people.
They are going to have to create or at least recreate a world that is
livable and sustainable. Sure, they need
skills and knowledge, but they also need to participate in making that
knowledge. They need teachers able to
lead and support them and communities that protect and nourish them.
The
easiest way to dismantle a democracy is to attack the way its children are
educated. In the last 35 years we’ve
done just that. There are smart and
well-intentioned people in education, but it’s impossible to ignore what a mess
they’ve created. The influence of
politicians and dark money has only added to the problem. Thinking of schools as these nice little
factory buildings where we house kids during the day is not a model for going
forward. We need to radically rethink
what it means to learn around an ethic of participation and not one of passive
transmission. We have no idea what our
kids are going to need to know to rebuild what we’ve destroyed. The least we could do is to stop acting like
we have the answers and get the hell out of the way.