The Public School Nightmare by Gatto
The Public School Nightmare by Gatto
The Public School Nightmare by Gatto
Who are the children I taught? If you spent a short time with them under carefully controlled
conditions, as perhaps a visiting businessman or politician might, you would see children who seemed
to meet traditional specifications of the genus: alert, intelligent, active, funny, emotional beings who
through judicious application of adult attention and some occasional resort to tricks and tricky
machines can be brought to listen, to question, to analyze, to record, and to respond in a heartening
fashion.
It would be an error, however, to fashion a long-range teaching strategy of these quick impressions -
yes, my kids look and act as kids have always done, but all of my children are marked deeply by their
experience in a secret underworld of the industrial society in decay - the government compulsion
school. Schools, too, look as they did prior to 1960, but they are not the same at all. For a whole host of
complicated reasons schools have been converted into behavioral training laboratories, where
intellectual development - the enlightened historical justification for schooling children at all - has been
abandoned in favor of other forms of training. So in an era of great technical progress my students have
been invisibly disfigured by historical placement in a time without moral logic; in a time without an
ethical source in God, in natural law, or in other forms of traditional authority, this destines many of
them, rich and poor, for meaningless lives of unrooted activity. Only the State, jealous of its final claim
to total loyalty, speaks regularly through its rules and laws about proper behavior, and because the
voice of the State is, by turns, too rigid, or too pragmatic (conditional/situational ethics), or too
dishonest (playing favorites/promising what it cannot deliver), children listen less and less. Nor should
they do any differently; their disobedience is an inborn defense: they are trying to save their sanity or
their souls, though few would have the language to put it that way.
The children I teach are victims of a very specific human delusion, one which once affected only kings
and priests, though now it infects big bureaucrats, public and private, and schoolteachers alike. I refer
to the fantastic notion that something called "mass man" actually exists, that human intellectual talent is
for the most part a function of economics and social class, and that these conditions can be
scientifically managed by a huge, intricately articulated bureaucracy which itself is cantilevered with
other huge bureaucracies. This is the ultimate statement of scientific materialism on human life since in
this view human nature is the result of random environmental factors; if the randomness is removed a
good result will be almost automatic. Thus, it is thought, the training of the young, the corporate world
of economics, the political world of power, breeding, death, war, amusement, health, and other basic
aspects of individual and social life should be centrally controlled and regulated because all men and
women are the same at the core, need the same things, and are as malleable as plastic.
This peculiar illusion that people are a mass, based on fear, greed, the need to have security, the need to
justify special privileges, and other dark sources in the human psyche, leads inevitably to a form of
social organization which bleeds significance from individual lives by removing decisions of
consequence from the individual. Without personal significance people go insane, many become
outlaws. This is the world of modern bureaucratic society which can only exist in a stable form through
the relentless, nearly comprehensive social and psychological training provided by mass schooling. It is
easy to pierce the veil of fiction that schooling has anything much to do with reading, writing, or
arithmetic. The frightening fact that particular myth is still perpetuated is ample testimony to how
unwilling we have been to face a horrifying truth. Schools work exactly as they were designed to work;
they produce incomplete and tractable human beings, exactly as they were designed to do. To a
scientific morality such a scheme has much to recommend it. It makes management of mass-man seem
necessary - and real.
Scientific management is an idea older than Plato. Its theory is found in cabalistic lore attributed to
Solomon and in records of pyramid builders before him; but in 20th century schooling the thing derives
from certain schemes of the American efficiency engineer, Frederick Taylor, who at the beginning of
the present century was the driving force behind the imposition of mechanical ideals on every
conceivable plane of human affairs including sexual love (think of sex manuals with their diagrams and
recommended sequences), ways in which human energy could be regulated and utilized according to
standards of machine productivity. Behind Taylor, of course, were the dreams of cosmic social
engineers, intimations that a long-awaited planetary society was at hand, and that because of the
troubling defects of "mass man" it could only be run as a beehive world, or a hospital planet, or a
prison state. Such had John Calvin's dark outlook on human nature which had once provided the spine
of New England life transformed itself in the public and private plans of those groups which thought of
themselves as "progressive". Hell was no longer the destination of most of us after death, Life and
Death themselves were only epiphenomena, organizing and regulating society and nature were the only
remaining things of meaning in a machine world. Reforming the past.
We won't have time here for a clinic in philosophy, but I'll ask you to examine the implications of some
of this, if human beings are cleverly disguised mechanisms then where can the notion of "liberty"
apply? Liberty and the theological notion of free will are joined irrevocably in a close relationship. You
can say, "I don't have time for this lofty stuff," but your own actions will make a liar out of you.
People are free. Or they are bound, determined by forces out of their own control. The society you
allow stems from the decision which. So I want you to think of this: if people are not mechanisms (let's
say that for the sake of argument) then what is the net effect of treating them so? Adam Smith doesn't
talk about this in Wealth of Nations but he does have something to say about it in The Theory of Moral
Sentiments. If you treat people like machines the moral effect on them and yourself is lousy.
Or think of this: how can you "educate" a machine at all? Even in a loose usage of that verb, a machine
is only improved from outside the mechanism or circuitry. But in a human sense people have a very
limited ability to be improved by the attention of others from the outside; most of the job, according to
every major thinker who ever turned attention to this, has to be privately accomplished in the private
interior of each individual consciousness. You can't teach courage or perseverance, wisdom or piety.
Such things can be learned, it's clear, but taught, no. Yet people only begin to be educated when they
tackle such goals - indeed, they are hardly completely human until that moment.
Individual development has to be fought for privately in a free market of plentiful choices, no one can
do it for you. Too much interference early on cripples our natural progress toward independence and
produces its opposite, dependence. We all recognize the bad effect a too indulgent parent has, we
should begin to see the same force at work in a too indulgent school. This formula has been clearly
understood by the powerful of this planet for thousands of years; even a cursory inspection of the
development of their own young shows plenty of early exposure to unmonitored experience, risk
taking, independence, high performance standards, and many other characteristics which receive only
lip service in government schooling, even suburban government schooling. Elite education, where the
kid does hard work and does it without interference, is one likely cause for the amazing continuity of
certain families throughout history. Yet lite education can be provided at less cost than factory school
training. Some irony there. Until roughly the same time of the Jackson presidency in the 19th century
rich and poor alike could get this same sort of education in a variety of different ways, but from Horace
Mann's time until today those possibilities have been deliberately - I feel tempted to say "scientifically"
- closed down for all but the economic elites and a few very determined parents from all the other
classes. Why has that happened do you suppose?
In spite of a longstanding knowledge how human education is done right, the model Frederick Taylor,
high priest of scientific management, sought to impose was a machine model, a model whose results
are highly predictable, one which eliminates risks by setting its sights very low. Although in a limited
sense this procedure successfully increases material output when the target is cheap, standardized,
mass-produced merchandise, it only manages this productivity by crippling the self-governing spirit. So
there's a big price to pay. Whether you decide to pay it or not depends a lot upon your regard for your
fellow human beings; perhaps it depends on your idea of God, who knows?
A few years back one of the schools at Harvard issued some advice to its students on planning a career
in the new international economy it believed was arriving. It warned sharply that academic classes and
professional credentials would be devalued when measured against real world training. Ten qualities
were offered as essential to successfully adapt to what Harvard believed was a rapidly changing world
of work.
See how many of these you think are regularly taught in the schools of your city, including its "gifted
and talented" classes:
You might be able to come up with a better list than Harvard did without surrendering any of these
fundamental ideas, and yet from where I sit - and I sat around schools for nearly 30 years - I know we
don't teach any of these things as a matter of school policy. And for good reason, schools as we know
them couldn't function at all if we did. Try to imagine a school where children challenged prevailing
assumptions or worked alone without guidance. How about a school where children defined their own
problems? If you want your kid to learn what Harvard says is necessary you'll have to arrange it outside
school time in between the dentist and MTV. If you are poor you'd better forget it altogether. None of
the schools I ever worked for were able to provide any important parts of this vital curriculum for
children. All the schools I worked for taught nonsense up front and under the table they taught young
people how to be dumb, how to be slavish, how to be frightened, and how to be dependent.
Things weren't always this way in the United States, indeed for the first 250 years of our history
schooling here was wildly entrepreneurial; before we had forced schooling on the government model
we had abundant schooling of many different types and the result by any historical measure were quite
spectacular. Tom Paine's Common Sense, the philosophical basis for the American Revolution, sold
600,000 copies to a population of two and a half million colonists (about 75 percent of them African
slaves or indentured servants!), James Fenimore Cooper's novels, rich with periodic sentences and
dense with allusions, sold five million copies in the first two decades of the 19th century in a
population of about eighteen million; Scott's novels matched that sale as did Noah Webster's
monumental Speller. All this happened long before compulsion schooling was more than a gleam in the
eye of certain interested parties in the early Federal period.
Pierre duPont de Nemours, who had a monopoly on gunpowder sales for the War of 1812 said in a
book he wrote in that year, National Education in the United States, that "less than four in every
thousand cannot read and do numbers" with great facility, and the habit of Bible reading at the
breakfast table had led to such skill in argumentation among the young that he predicted the new nation
would soon hold a corner on the world's supply of lawyers. Tocqueville's classic Democracy in
America, whose first volume appeared in 1835, confirmed duPont's conclusions, and a book written a
few years later by another French aristocrat, Michael Chevalier, said in astonishment that the American
farmer had such a mind that he entered the fields in the morning with the plow in one hand and
Descartes in the other!
Literacy in language and number was, from the beginning, highly valued in the New World, far beyond
practical need. It was as if the promise that each mind could soar to unprecedented achievement beyond
the limit of class bound European practice inspired the commonality to take what its natural gifts
offered. In this new scheme schooling was everywhere considered important, but nowhere was it
considered very important. The principle that the educated man, like Benjamin Franklin, is largely self-
taught was the real dynamic honored, and though the decision to proceed in this fashion was probably
an accident of time and place in the last New World on the planet rather than any determination of
scientific pedagogy, by some unlucky happenstance it is exactly the brilliant spring of development
twentieth century institutional schooling has broken.
Lesson XXVII, "The Self-Taught Mathematician", used at one-room schools in the northeast in the
year 1833 (20 years before the first compulsion school law) for children who would today be fourth to
sixth graders is a revealing window into the attitudes toward learning present fifty years after we
became a nation. It is the story of Edmund Stone, a self-educated Scottish mathematician born at the
beginning of the 18th century. His father was gardener to the Duke of Argyle. One day when the Duke
was walking in his garden he observed a Latin copy of Newton's Principia lying on the grass and
thinking it had been brought from his own library sought to carry it back to its place. Stone, a boy of
eighteen, rushed forward to claim the book for his own.
"Yours?" said the Duke. "Do you then understand Geometry, Latin, and Newton?"
The Duke, surprised, entered into a conversation with the young man who had not the slightest
acquaintance with schooling and was astonished at the force, the accuracy, and the candor of his
answers.
"But how," said the Duke, "came you by the knowledge of these things?"
Stone replied, "A servant taught me to read when I was eight. Does one need to know anything more
than the twenty six letters in order to learn everything else that one wishes?"
"I first learned to read. The masons were then at work upon your house. I approached them one day and
observed that the architect used a rule and compasses, and that he made calculations. I inquired what
might be the meaning and use of these things. I was informed there was a science called arithmetic. So
I purchased a book of arithmetic and I learned it. I was told there was another science called geometry;
I got the necessary books and I learned geometry. By reading I learned that there were good books in
these two sciences in Latin. I bought a dictionary and I learned Latin. I understood also that there were
good books in French. I bought a dictionary and I learned French."
"And this, my Lord, is what I have done; it seems to me that we may learn everything when we know
the twenty-six letters of the alphabet."
Stone went to London at the age of twenty-three and published his first work, A Treatise on
Mathematical Instruments. Two years later he was chosen a Fellow of the Royal Society. And such was
the lesson conveyed to five and ten-year-olds in Boston in 1833, if you knew how to read well you
could learn anything you chose by yourself. Let me stick my schoolteacher's nose in here for a moment
to say that this is obviously the same lesson I learned at my mother's knee in Monongahela a hundred
years after "The Self-Taught Mathematician" was taught in Boston and two hundred years after Stone
himself had learned it. I knew how to read well before I was five, thanks to my mother, and never had
much difficulty learning anything I chose to learn after that. It was only after the coming of an
enormous, multi-layered, densely articulated form of government schooling, a form imposed on the
total population at the beginning of the twentieth century, not with the intention of enhancing literacy
but of controlling and shaping behavior, that Stone's lesson was pushed into the background or in
places discarded entirely. Learn to read well and you can teach yourself everything.
I want to show you just how far modern schooling is a radical deviation from the past by taking you
back to George Washington's boyhood as the middle of the eighteenth century approached. If you
watch carefully as the images unfold you'll catch a glimpse of just what the average kid is capable of if
an opportunity is extended to develop fully, and you will even see a little of what simple, inexpensive
schooling can do when stripped of administrative ranks, expert hierarchies, specialized materials, and
psychological counselors. It will be a revelation so pay close attention!
George Washington was no genius, as all his friends would hasten to agree; John Adams, his
contemporary, called him "too illiterate, unlearned, unread for his station and reputation,"; Jefferson,
his fellow Virginian, declared he liked to spend his time "chiefly in action, reading little." As a teenager
Washington loved two things, dancing and horseback riding, and he studied both formally with a
passion not supplied by schoolteachers.
These studies paid off for Washington because the grace they communicated to all his actions allowed
him to physically dominate any gathering. Think of Michael Jordan the basketball player of whom it
has been said he plays so well it's exactly as if the other players aren't even playing the same game.
Well, that was Washington thanks to his twin obsessions. Listen to his friend George Mercer describe
him as a young man:
He is straight as an Indian, measuring six feet, two inches in his stockings and weighing 175 pounds....
His frame is padded with well-developed muscles, indicating great strength.
Wouldn't everyone wish this for their own son? Washington got there by spending a great deal of time
doing things that government schools ignore and would hardly teach.
Washington was no intellectual giant his friends agreed, but because of the unusual position he holds in
American mythology it might be useful to see what subjects his average mind studied as a boy, the
better to understand just what it is we have accomplished by 20th century state schooling. First we
should note that although Washington didn't attend school until he was 11 (the same age, incidentally,
that Woodrow Wilson learned to read) he had no trouble learning reading, writing, and arithmetic on
his own. None at all, nor did any of his contemporaries who cared to learn such things have much
difficulty whether they were rich or poor. Indeed in most places in the colonies or the early republic
you couldn't go to school at all until you had first become literate. Few wanted to waste their time
teaching what was so easy to learn. There is an enormous amount of evidence that colonial America
was comprehensively literate wherever literacy was valued; children became literate because they
wanted to be and because they were expected to be because it isn't hard to do.
But back to George at eleven on his way to school for the first time. What did he begin to study there?
How about geometry, trigonometry, and surveying? Is that what your own average-minded eleven-year-
old studies in sixth grade? Why not do you suppose? Or perhaps you think it was only a dumbed-down
version of those things that Washington got, some kid's game. Well, maybe, but how do you account for
this? Two thousand days after Washington first picked up a surveyor's transit in school at the age of
eleven he assumed the office of official surveyor of Culpepper County, Virginia, a wonderful way to
make a living in early America. Not only was the job highly paid but the frontier surveyor could pick
out and keep the best land for himself.
For the next three years Washington earned in modern purchasing power about $100,000 a year.
Perhaps his social connections helped this fatherless boy to get the position, but in a frontier society
anyone would be crazy to give a boy serious work unless he could actually do it. I mean, what would
the neighbors say? Almost at once Washington began speculating in land; by the time he was twenty-
one he had leveraged his knowledge and capital into 2,500 acres of prime land in Frederick County,
Virginia. Not a bad place then or now to own a few acres.
Washington had no father and as we know he was no genius, but learned geometry, trigonometry and
surveying in school starting when he was eleven, and he was rich by his own effort at twenty-one. In
school he studied frequently used legal forms including bills of exchange, tobacco receipts, bail bonds,
servant indentures, wills, land conveyances, leases and patents. From these forms he was able to
recreate the theory, philosophy and custom which had produced them. He had an average mind but by
all accounts this steeping in grown-up reality hardly bored him. I had the same sort of experience with
disruptive Harlem kids 250 years later. They stopped being hoodlums when I gave them real things to
do. When did we lose the understanding that young people yearn for this kind of knowledge? Or was
that yearning disregarded deliberately in order to create a different social reality?
On his own hook young Washington decided to scientifically study what might be called "gentlemanly
deportment", how to be well regarded by the best people. Out of his journals I've taken his rule 56 to
illustrate how he gathered his own character in hand, becoming his own father:
Rule 56
Associate yourself with men of good Quality if you Esteem your own reputation.
A sharp kid, that one; is it any wonder he became our first President?
Washington also studied geography and astronomy, gaining a knowledge thereby of the continents, the
globe, and the heavens. In light of the putdowns of his reading you'll be interested to know that he read
regularly the famous and elegant "Spectator" from London, which was sort of like the "New Yorker"
before Tina Brown got her hooks on it. By the time he was 18 he had read all the writings of Henry
Fielding, Tobias Smollett, and Daniel Defoe. But he read much more than the great English novelists,
he read, too, Seneca's Morals, Julius Caesar's Commentaries, and the major writings of other Roman
generals. What an amazing standard Adams and Jefferson must have had to consider Washington
illiterate.
At 16 he began writing memos to himself about the design of his own clothing; years later he became
his own architect for the magnificent estate of Mt. Vernon.
George Washington, as we now know, had an average mind in the eyes of the people who knew him
best, yet he had no apparent difficulty studying the spots off technical manuals about agriculture and
economics without a guide. The mysterious nature of money particularly interested him, he perceived
that to the learned money was a much less valuable thing than wealth. Using his own research about
such things, Washington was able to figure out that the talk of British bankers, politicians, and creditors
about the importance of internationalism and global markets was a cunning way to drain his own
resources into their pockets. He saw that the economics of tobacco farming (which had been forced on
Virginia) made the tobacco farmer dependent on international factors, put his well-being out of his own
control.
So Washington, in his early 20s, began experimenting with domestic industry - where he could keep a
close eye on things himself. First he tried to grow hemp. That's called marijuana today, but presumably
he was growing it for rope, not to smoke. He was 25. It didn't work. Next he tried to grow flax. He was
28. It didn't work. But because Washington had been educated to think for himself and not to wait for a
teacher to tell him what to do he kept trying. At 31 he hit on wheat. That first year he sold 257 bushels.
The third year 2,600 bushels. The seventh year 7,500 bushels. He built flour mills in various parts of
Virginia and marketed his own brand of flour, think of it, "George Washington's Finest Home Grown
Flour", accept no imported substitutes! While that business was maturing he turned his attention to
building fishing boats. By 1772 his boats were pulling in 900,000 herring a year. George Washington
was no genius, but partly because he got an education and wasn't compelled to waste all his youth in a
government school scheme he did okay for himself.
There is no public school in the United States set up to allow a George Washington to happen; an
Andrew Carnegie, from a poor family, who was well on his way to becoming rich at age 13 through a
combination of hard work and intelligence, would be referred for psychological counseling; a Thomas
Edison would find himself in Special Ed. No doubt about it.
Anyone who can read independently and runs a comparison with the present school product and what
the American past proved kids can do will discover the magnitude of our government school
institution's negative accomplishment.
In its movement toward programmatic society at the turn of the 20th century, scientific management
found ways to break apart the natural sanctuaries of family, religion, tradition and place where a student
might flee to escape his allotted mechanical destiny. It is one of the rich ironies of 20th century secular
schooling that certain traditional religious groups like the Amish, the Mennonites, the Quakers, the
Mormons, the orthodox Jews, The Jesuits and a few others found ways to aggressively preserve
religious sources of private meaning - and became prosperous and significant citizens as a direct result.
But many of the rest of us were flushed clean away from our roots. We were forcibly retrained to
regard our own families, churches and neighbors as expendable, disposable, exchangeable - to think of
them as conditional on good performance.
Now if historic families, those timeless families which continue to exist for centuries have one
distinguishing characteristic that cannot be duplicated by temporary, rootless families, it is the property
of conferring categorical significance on their members. Categorical significance means that you count
because you are, because you exist, not because of something you can do, or whether you are
successful, strong, or beautiful. Being categorical cannot survive grading or comparison. This point
cannot be overemphasized because networks which only simulate family, like school, the army, the
workplace, your bridge club, etc., just can't do it. Categorical significance is the opposite of conditional
significance, that form of status operating in networks where the respect you receive is directly
proportional to your performance. The Prodigal Son parable is the Western world's symbolic
illustration and it helps to think of it if you want to measure whether this priceless quality is present or
absent. Does your family love you in spite of anything? Do you love them in spite of anything?
Reciprocity in a good family is almost beside the point.
Back to the children I teach. I have noticed no one talks to my kids though everyone commands their
time. Because of seating arrangements in orderly rows, because of the solitary nature of television and
computer operation, my children have very little ability to talk, even to each other. They have been
socialized to speak only to children their own age, and then only at approved intervals. Partly as a result
of this and partly from a confluence of other reasons, I notice with increasing discomfort that children
do not know who they are, where they are, or even what time it is.
Certainly I mean that metaphorically, but also I mean it literally: certain basic tools of self-knowledge
like mirrors, maps, clocks, and so on are kept away from children - at least in any classroom you would
care to visit in New York City. Other basic tools aren't around either, like hammers, chisels, saws, glue,
telephones, calendars, typewriters, paper, pens, scissors, rulers. They just aren't there, at least not in
accessible places. Schools are stripped bare of effective tools, not because of lack of money but
because the autonomy that tools confer works against the collective socialization logic schools are
about.
Tools constitute a curriculum of power. This seems something too fundamental to belabor. It is hard to
make tool-competent people into a proletariat. Did you ever wonder why kids don't do the cooking and
serving in a school, or the glazing, wiring, plumbing, roofing, and furniture repair? I've wondered about
that often. At any rate a malaise follows the withdrawal of tools from common life. Of 62 functioning
classrooms in my intermediate school there is a clock in exactly one of them. And it's been years since I
saw a student wear a wristwatch. What could be going on? Something spooky I can tell you.
The clock, Lewis Mumford tells us, is the foremost machine of modern techniques, not merely a means
of keeping track of the hours but a way to synchronize the actions of diverse individuals. And the watch
is the personalization of time, a major stimulus to the individuality we cherish as a salient aspect of
Western civilization. The turning hands of a watch (not a digital obviously) are a measure of time used
and time remaining, time spent and time wasted, time past and time to come. As such it is a key to
personal achievement and productivity. The watch is a defense against panic in a time of turbulence
such as we all surely agree our kids are living through at present.
Just as my children have no clocks or wristwatches, they are seldom in a classroom that offers a mirror
in which to see themselves, to verify their inner states outwardly, to try on attitudes with. A reflecting
surface is one important way we come to know ourselves. If classrooms have none, then television - in
the mental room it creates - is worse. Television takes a very thin sample of human physical types and
broadcasts this unrepresentative fragment endlessly. Most of the black people on television have white
features, have you noticed? How do you suppose that happens? And most of the white kids who are
featured in that vaguely precise way we call "ethnic" are hardly ever shown in television commercials
or programming. In the mirror of American school- and video- culture, most of us are invisible non-
persons, white or black.
Maps and children are kept apart, too, so some of my 14-year-old children think it is 100,000 miles to
California, some think it is 9,000,000 miles. I seldom have more than one kid a year who can come
within a thousand miles of the reality. My kids don't know what a mile is, not really, although I think
they could pass a test on it; in similar fashion they don't know what democracy is, or what money is, or
what an economy is, or how to fix anything. They've heard of Mogadishu and Saddam Hussein but they
couldn't tell you the name of the tree outside their window if their life depended on it. That's what so-
called global thinking since 1910 has done to reality, it put a utopian spin on things. Some of them can
do quadratic equations, but they can't sew a button on a shirt or fry an egg; they can bubble in answers
with a number two pencil but they can't build a wall. Many of them have no idea that most of the men
and women on earth believe in God, or how that might affect the way they live.
The whole dull liar's world that government schooling has created is a form of abstract witchcraft,
mumbo jumbo leading nowhere like Mogadishu or Saddam Hussein. The truth is that my kids are
unable to plot a future because they don't know where they are or who they are. How can you know
who you are if you don't know your own family, and how can you know your own family if none of
you are home together very often? Who arranged things this way, because surely they didn't just
happen?
Nobody I ever taught had any idea how many people live in New York City or what significance such a
fact might have, few know what the city abuts upon, how long ago the Revolution was fought there, or
why or who the enemy was. They have been deprived of the proper experience to care about such
things. This is the characteristic profile of a proletariat, it cares about very little except avoiding
punishment and filling its belly. People aren't proles by nature but by training, a proletariat doesn't just
happen, it is made.
The fact we are a revolutionary nation and what that did to our subsequent history good and bad has
been carefully screened from the view of children, even from ones who can parrot words about Patrick
Henry and Sam Adams; the magnificent Second Amendment to our Constitution with its vast trust in
the common sense of the common people, and its vast mistrust of government has been perverted by
the rhetoric of our academic leadership into an eccentric privilege of misfits and scoundrels. We have
the right to bear arms mainly as protection against our own government going astray, only secondarily
to protect our homes. The proof of that lies in looking at what the British colonists in America did with
guns when the British government went astray - they pitched it out on its ears and became Americans.
They couldn't have done that without personal firearms. The possibility such a situation might arise
again is commemorated in the Second Amendment. But someone decided you weren't supposed to
learn that so you don't. Can you imagine why?
In the ongoing condition of derangement among my kids caused by ignorance of basic facts like
knowing where they are you'd think one specific remedy would be giant wall maps of the
neighborhood, the city, the state, the nation, and the world; you would think these things would be
permanent decorations in every classroom and every corridor of the school hive, but you would be
mistaken. What maps there are will be found in "social studies" rooms, but most often not even there.
Whose interest is served by kids not knowing basic stuff like this?
I could go on and on about other fundamental, inexpensive tools missing from my students' lives but
the point of this progression has been to draw a radical conclusion: SCHOOL IS A BARRIER TO
EDUCATION
It is quite impossible to think this happened by accident, although I am prepared to grant that the
original group of social engineers who set up the school machine is dead, and for the most part the
peculiar motives they had in a very successful free market in American schooling have been forgotten.
School perpetuates itself today in the ugly form it was given originally because it has become the most
profitable business in the United States. We need to look no further than that for a conspiracy.
Structural reform of schooling would disenfranchise an enormous number of comfortable people. Talk
about change is permitted, but never more than minor tinkering follows.
Schools are barriers to the education of children. This is particularly true for children of poverty, but I
believe the statement holds for all classes of the young. Schools are black holes. If they miss the
decisive significance of a mirror, a map, and a wristwatch, you can be certain anything else of
importance has been missed, too. Reform will only come about when there is an angry national debate
about the real purpose of these warehouse institutions, a debate in which sham defenses like "teaching
children to read" are finally thrown aside and reality faced square on. Schools do exactly what they
were assigned to do in the first decade of the 20th century - they contain the poor. Having taught poor
children for many years I don't think they need to be feared any more than rich kids, but I want to be
certain to put the bell on the cat. Fear of the poor in the United States first crested with the election of
Andrew Jackson in 1828, that's the event that started the real drive for government schools. Who knew
what the poor were capable of in a revolutionary democracy, better to get them locked up where they
could be watched. Fear of the poor crested a second time just before and just after the Civil War when
waves of Catholic immigrants from Ireland and Italy poured into this country strong, resourceful,
energetic, and child-loving - people with family ties who couldn't easily be pushed around.
Trying to push them led to a series of violent national strikes, railroad strikes in Chicago and steel
strikes in Pittsburgh. Remember when Andy Carnegie sent an army of Pinkertons to shoot the steel
strikers at Homestead? The Pinkertons got shot instead. It was those strikes which finally nailed the
children in the school coffin where they've rested for just about a century. What nobody figured on was
the ambitious reach of civil service bureaucrats. They would not rest content as guardians of the poor
alone, but would seek to wax fatter so the destiny of all children would be in their hands. Thus was the
road to Outcomes-Based Education paved.
Who will fix this thing now it has become a central core of the American economy, the single largest
hiring agent, the largest contractor? We can't count on much help from professional school reformers or
from state education departments because the business is their bread and butter.
And yet, even without our experts we're going to have to find some way to sidestep official owners of
the school monopoly and relieve the terrible stresses growing up absurd this way causes. The elasticity
of our children is nearly exhausted. I've deliberately borrowed a term from the world of structural
engineering because I think it applies. When building materials lose their elasticity they don't fail
immediately but pass through a stage of plastic behavior, where the deformations don't return to true
but take some dangerous and unpredictable course. Our children as a class have begun to display
plastic behavior.
What else would you call our world's record teenage suicide rate, teenage murder rate, and our national
all-encompassing addictions to violence, alcohol, drugs, commercial entertainments, the narcotic-like
addiction we have to magical machines, and a long list of other aberrations. Each generation we have
produced since the very recent invention of government compulsion-school seems to me less elastic,
more plastic than the one before it.
There are many fine and inexpensive ways to inspire children to provide a first-class education for
themselves, we all know a few of them. But whether it's going to be possible to get an education in the
new schools of the year 2000 will depend on political decisions made by those who hold power in trust
for all of us. Or perhaps I am wrong. Perhaps it will depend on defiant personal decisions of simple
people, like the quiet revolution of home schoolers taking place under our noses right now, which to me
seems the most exciting social movement since the pioneers, a revolution in which our type of factory
schooling is not contested at all, just treated as monumentally irrelevant, which it certainly is.
Give me a minute to be visionary. If we closed the government schools, divided half the tax money
currently spent on these places among parents with kids to educate, and spent the other half on free
libraries, on underwriting apprenticeships for every young person, and on subsidizing any group who
wanted to open a school a current of fresh air would sweep away the past in a short time. If further we
made provisions for a continuous public dialogue on the local level - so that people in the street began
to count once again - if we strictly limited political terms of office in order to weaken the protective
legislative net around businesses which profit from mass schooling, and if we launched a national
program of family revival with all the energy we reserve for wars we would soon find the American
school nightmare changing into a dream we could all be proud of.
Very well. The next best thing then is to deconstruct mass schooling, minimizing the "school" aspect of
the thing and maximizing the educational one. What that means in simple terms is trusting children,
trusting parents, trusting families, trusting communities to be the main architects in the training of the
young. It means reversing the familiar teacher/student equation so that toxic professionalism which
sees teaching, wrongheadedly, as the key to learning can be relegated to the Prussian nightmare from
whence it sprang. That's a formula for a priesthood, not for an education. Socrates in the Apology told
us that if we professionalized teaching two bad results would occur: first, what is easy to learn would
be made to appear difficult; and second, what can be learned quickly would be stretched out
indefinitely to provide some security for the pedagogue. Is there anyone who doesn't recognize this is
precisely what we have allowed to happen? Even this simpler goal of deconstructing institutional
schooling will require enough courage to challenge deeply rooted assumptions such as the assumption
that the poor are stupid, bestial, or criminal. And it will require a great amount of stamina because this
school monster is alive and growing, and very, very strong.
Now let me give you some practical suggestions drawn from a lifetime teaching and thinking about
schools. I've arranged them in no particular order. Even invoking a few of these safeguards would bring
beneficial changes to a school or district. I have ten suggestions in all, and you will likely have some of
your own to add as you hear mine.
l) Make Everybody Teach. The ghastly proliferation of non teaching jobs began when it was imposed
on schools by local and state politicians and the new Germanic teacher colleges about the turn of the
century. It is wasteful and demoralizing. There should be no such thing as a non teaching principal,
assistant principal, coordinator, specialist, or any other category of school employee who doesn't
actually spend regular time on intellectual undertakings with groups of children.
2) Simplify the curriculum and make it intelligent. The purpose which confinement schooling can
be most productively turned to is the development of the intellect. Such development is valuable for
everyone and my long experience with ghetto kids taught me they are as capable of this development as
any. Every other purpose schooling has been turned to is better accomplished outside of school, with
the time freed up by taking a sledgehammer to the current silliness and confusion; each child could
have apprenticeships, internships, and independent study throughout the community in areas of their
own deepest concern.
3) Let no school exceed a few hundred in size. Time to shut the factory schools forever. They are
hideously expensive to maintain, they degrade the children they encompass, they hurt the
neighborhoods in which they stand, they present ready markets for every kind of commercial hanky-
panky. If schools were miniaturized a lot of worthless businesses would go belly-up on the spot. Make
schools small and make them independent and autonomous. Everyone knows that is the right way, but
not everyone knows that it is the inexpensive way, too. And make these small schools local. Curtail
busing, neighborhoods need their own children and vice versa.
And let us save ourselves a fortune although the construction industry will scream bloody murder. Let
us recognize there is no proper shape for a school building, schools can be anywhere and look like
anything. In a very short time desktop computers will allow libraries of information to be everywhere,
too, and contact with the best minds in every pursuit. Then what will the excuse for schools become?
4) Sharply constrict the power and size of state Departments of Education and large-city centralized
school boards, they are a paradise for grifters and grafters and even if they were not their long-range
interventions are irrelevant at best and horribly damaging at worst - in addition to being expensive.
Decentralize school down to the neighborhood school level. In that one bold move families would be
given control over the professionals in their children's lives. Each school under this governance would
have its own citizen managing board elected from among neighbors. And full autonomy in purchasing
and curriculum decisions. That's not a new idea, that's the way we had it for hundreds of years during
which this country schooled - and educated - quite well.
5) Get rid of standardized tests completely. Measure accomplishment by performance, most often
performance against a personal standard, not ranking against a class or larger entity. Standardized tests
don't work. Is that news to anybody? What a scam! They correlate with nothing of human value, their
very existence perverts curriculum into an advance preparation for the extravagant ritual administration
of the tests. Is this a good thing? Why do you think that? If you don't then why do you put up with it?
Would you hire a newspaper reporter on the basis of his test scores in journalism? Would you hire a
hair stylist who had an "A" average in Beauty School? Wouldn't you ask for a demonstration? I hope
so. The fact is nobody is crazy enough to hire anyone on the basis of grades and test scores for
important work with one glaring exception - government jobs, and government licensing. The reason
for that is that tests are poor predictors of the future unless the competition is rigged in advance by only
allowing people who score well on tests to have jobs. That is the whole sorry story of the government
licensing racket in this century.
6) End the teacher certification monopoly which is only kept alive by illicit agreement between
teacher institutes and the state legislature. It makes colleges rich, it supports an army of unnecessary
occupational titles, and it deprives children and unlicensed but competent adults from having valuable
educational connections with each other.
Once again, it's hard to break the illusion that certification is there to protect the children so let me help.
Think of this: the legendary private schools of this nation, Exeter, Andover, St. Paul's, Groton, Culver
Military, wouldn't dream of restricting themselves to certified teachers. Why should we? Let anyone
who can demonstrate performance competency before a citizen board, a parent body, or a group of
students then be licensed to teach.
7) Restore the primary experience base we have stolen from kids' lives.
Kids need to do, not sit in chairs. The school diet of confinement, test worship, bell addiction, and
dependence on low grade secondary experience in the form of semi literate printed material cracks
children away from their own innate understanding of how to learn and why. Let children engage in
real tasks, not synthetic games and simulations. Field curriculum, critical thinking, apprenticeships,
team projects, independent study, actual jobs, and other themes of primary experience must be restored
to the life of the young.
8) Install permanent parent and community facilities in every school, in a prominent place near the
front office. We need to create a tidal movement of real life in and out of the dead waters of school.
Open these places on a daily basis to family and other community resource people and rig these rooms
with appropriate equipment to allow parent partnerships with their own kids. Frequently release kids
from classwork to work with their own parents, frequently substitute parents and other adults for
professional staff in classrooms, too.
10) Teach children to think critically so they can challenge the hidden assumptions of the world
around them including the assumptions of the school world.
This type of thinking power has always been at the center of the world's lite educational systems.
Policy makers are taught to think, the rest of the mass is not or is only taught partially. We could end
this age-old means of social control in several short generations. What a society would look like where
education instead of schooling happened for everyone I have no more idea than you do, but it would
restore the exhilarating flux in human affairs we had in the early Federal period of this nation's history
under President Jackson - before the dead hand of state schooling closed the door on it. Well, I said ten
suggestions, but here's one more, number eleven:
11) We have to get down to business and provide legitimate choices to people; schooling can indeed
be compulsory but education requires volition, anti-compulsion is essential to become educated - there
is no one right way to do it nor is there one right way to grow up successfully, either. That kind of
thinking has had a century and abundant treasure to prove itself and what it has done is to prove itself a
fraud.
The word "public" in our form of public education has not had real meaning for a long time; public
schooling will make a comeback when we strip control from the Egyptian pyramid of dubious experts
and force our government to return full free market choice to the people. This is the only curriculum of
necessity we need to see imposed by compulsion on everyone, the return of decision-making power to
individuals and families. I hope we won't have to use guns to bring this second American revolution
about.