WhatFinger

Our Education Establishment goes to busy cities and towns, purges all the knowledge, cripples learning, until finally they have created a society of cognitive zombies wandering in the void.

What’s education for? Let’s have a national debate on this issue


By Bruce Deitrick Price ——--December 4, 2014

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An interesting theoretical issue in education from the beginning has been, who needs this stuff and how much of it do they need?
Let's imagine a farmer sitting behind a mule plowing his field. Does he need an education? Is it wasted on him? Would life be better or worse if he knew some history, could sing some opera, or do puzzles in his head. What if he knows some Shakespeare and, as he’s going around the fields, regales the mule with speeches from Hamlet? Would this make life a little more interesting? Or would having such knowledge be a horrible burden? These are not rhetorical questions. They are essential questions and might be asked about every child, and each bit of knowledge. Let’s go to another question. Whatever the value of education, shouldn’t each person be able to make the decision? Let’s say a school teaches you some uninteresting stuff you don’t need. You slough it off and forget it. Are you worse off for having had the exposure to the knowledge? Would you be better if you were protected from knowledge you later found useless? Do we need Knowledge Police to make sure that doesn’t happen? Too late. We have those people. That’s our Education Establishment. People born to limit and diminish. My thought is that in a democracy, people should be able to decide for themselves.

The great tragedy in the US is that our Education Establishment wants to answer for the kids. And the answer is always no. Our Education Establishment—that would be professors up at Harvard -– are basically saying, hey, kid, you don’t need to know that, you don’t need to know this, you don’t need to know anything. So stop trying. The Education Establishment decided that you don’t need to know the names of famous people. You don’t need to know dates. You don't need to know places. You don’t need to know the presidents or the states in the United States.  The oceans?! Why in the world would a child need to know that? The continents? Surely it’s a waste of time to know the continents? What about 30 days hath September and so on? What about 16 ounces in a pound? We have to get these professors under oath and find out if there is ANYTHING in the whole universe a student needs to know.  Professors of education have made the decision that children don’t need to memorize poetry, even though doing so makes it easier for children to learn to read and to appreciate stories. It’s a no-lose situation. But our Education Establishment doesn’t like memorization. They don’t want children to memorize the multiplication tables. If you don't know what six-times-seven is, you’ll be slow doing basic arithmetic, whether multiplying or division. Our top educators don’t seem to care. North, East, South and West? Who needs to know that? The sun rises in the east? Surely superfluous. Noon is when the sun is at its highest point. Seriously, why would anybody need to know that? The pattern seems to be simple and all-encompassing. These people don't like knowledge. If you ask why, they’ll say because it creates inequality in the classroom. if your kid knows what Kansas is, and another kid doesn’t, that kid will feel bad and we can’t have that, according to the doctrine of self-esteem. So their solution is to eliminate, as if with a neutron bomb, all factual information. The spirit of education today is the spirit of nothingness, of emptiness, of T.S. Eliot’s Wasteland. Our Education Establishment has created a desert and called it Sunny Acres and told you that it is a wonderful place to live There were times when knowledge was taught in big doses. Perhaps sometimes it was oppressive. But isn’t that better than learning nothing?  How much fun is an empty head?? Let’s imagine a non-oppressive situation where a teacher over months and years introduces the children to an array of information and talks about it constantly. As time goes by, the children retain most of this. When somebody says Illinois, they know it’s a state near the center of the country, with Chicago in the lower corner, by Lake Superior. That’s the way it should be. Our Education Establishment, however, has decided you don’t need to know anything about America. It’s just another country like all the others. And if you decide you need to know where Alaska is, well, you can use Google to find out. Why should you bother learning anything ahead of time?  This is the big new dumb dogma of the month. All information in the universe is on the Internet. Why should children know anything they can easily find. But 100 years ago all information in the universe was in books, encyclopedias or at the library. Did anybody make the completely idiotic deduction that you no longer need to learn anything because all the information was in the encyclopedias? No, nobody did that. Our Education Establishment makes these illogical deductions because they hate knowledge. Their idea is to have lots of kids equally ignorant. Everybody knows nothing. The education commissars think that’s fair and square. They are the grinches that stole education.  Education is about human fulfillment. Being all that you can be, as the Army used to say. Developing yourself as far as you can. The more stuff you know, the better chance you have of doing anything well. Being a citizen, voter, parent, business owner, or a hiker in the woods—probably the person who knows the most will survive the best. The public schools are not giving students the option of learning as much as  they can. So what is going on all day? There seems to be a great squandering of time, and a perpetual waste of human capital.  Michael Gove, an education official in England, said this: “I believe that education is a good in itself – one of the central hallmarks of a civilized society – indeed the means by which societies ensure that everything which is best in our society is passed on to succeeding generations.”” So what are we passing on? Anything at all? Every measurement, every test and stat, shows that children know less and less, and adults know less and less. The Education Establishment is selfish and shortsighted. By depriving people of the knowledge that everyone could have, they cripple each person’s ability to work, and they cripple the society’s ability to compete internationally. Our Education Establishment basically functions as ignorance engineers.  Remember the Seabees in World War II? They went to remote islands and built entire air ports out of nothing. Our Education Establishment does the opposite. It goes to busy cities and towns, purges all the knowledge, cripples learning, until finally they have created a society of cognitive zombies wandering in the void.

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Bruce Deitrick Price——

Bruce Deitrick Price has been writing about education for 30 years. He is the founder of Improve-Education.org. His eighth book is “Saving K-12—What happened to our public schools? How do we fix them?” More aggressively than most, Price argues that America’s elite educators have deliberately aimed for mediocrity—low standards in public schools prove this. Support this writer on Patreon.


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