The hidden curriculum of compulsory schooling

paralleloscope

The Living Force
J.T.Gatto said:
"everything we know about why people drive themselves to know things and do their best is contraindicted inside these places"

I’ve been intrigued by the videos that have been posted around here with John Taylor Gatto jamming about the school-system and how it’s designed for making us a dull brained cookie cut human resource. I just never really got how the system actually did that, so I got hold of his ’ Dumbing us down - the hidden curriculum of compulsory schooling’. It’s a collection of straight shooting essays/ speeches. Even though he speaks of american education I take it that his points can be applied globally. Here are some quotes I found interesting:

From ’The seven lesson schoolteacher’ –given when named ’New York Teacher of the Year’ for 1991:
Teaching means different things in different places, but seven lesson are universally taught from Harlem to Hollywood Hills. They constitute a national curriculum you pay for in more ways than you can imagine, so you might as well know what it is.

1. CONFUSION
The first lesson I teach is confusion. Everything I teach is out of context. I teach the un-relating of everything. I teach disconnections. I teach too much:[...]
I teach the un-relating of everything, an infinite fragmentation the opposite of cohesion; what I do is more related to television programming than to making a scheme of order.

2. CLASS POSITION
If I do my job well, the kids can't even imagine themselves somewhere else because I've shown them how to envy and fear the better classes and how to have contempt for the dumb classes. Under this efficient discipline the class mostly polices itself into good marching order. That's the real lesson of any rigged competition
The lesson of numbered classes is that everyone has a proper place in the pyramid and that there is no way out of your class except by number magic. Failing that, you must stay where you are put.

3. INDIFFERENCE
I teach children not to care too much about anything, even though they want to make it appear that they do. How I do this is very subtle.
[...]
When I'm at my best I plan lessons very carefully in order to produce this show of enthusiasm. But when the bell rings I insist they drop whatever it is we have been doing and proceed quickly to the next work station. They must turn on and off like a light switch. Nothing important is ever finished in my class nor in any class I know of.
[...]
Bells are the secret logic of school time; their logic is inexorable. Bells destroy the past and future, rendering every interval the same as any other [...]
Bells inoculate each undertaking with indifference.

4. EMOTIONAL DEPENDENCY
By stars and red checks, smiles and frowns, prizes, honors, and disgraces, I teach kids to surrender their will to the predestinated chain of command. Rights may be granted or withheld by any authority without appeal, because rights do not exist inside a school not even the right of free speech, as the Supreme Court has ruled unless school authorities say they do.
5. INTELLECTUAL DEPENDENCY
The fifth lesson I teach is intellectual dependency. Good students wait for a teacher to tell them what to do. This is the most important lesson of them all: we must wait for other people, better trained than ourselves, to make the meanings of our lives. The expert makes all the important choices; only I, the teacher, can determine what my kids must study, or rather, only the people who pay me can make those decisions, which I then enforce. If I'm told that evolution is a fact instead of a theory, I transmit that as ordered, punishing deviants who resist what I have been told to tell them to think. This power to control what children will think lets me separate successful students from failures very easily.

6. PROVISIONAL SELF-ESTEEM
A monthly report, impressive in its provision, is sent into a student's home to elicit approval or mark exactly, down to a single percentage point, how dissatisfied with the child a parent should be. The ecology of "good" schooling depends on perpetuating dissatisfaction, just as the commercial economy depends on the same fertilizer. Although some people might be surprised how little time or reflection goes into making up these mathematical records, the cumulative weight of these objective-seeming documents establishes a profile that compels children to arrive at certain decisions about themselves and their futures based on the casual judgment of strangers. Self-evaluation, the staple of every major philosophical system that ever appeared on the planet, is never considered a factor. The lesson of report cards, grades, and tests is that children should not trust themselves or their parents but should instead rely on the evaluation of certified officials. People need to be told what they are worth.
7. ONE CAN'T HIDE
The meaning of constant surveillance and denial of privacy is that no one can be trusted, that privacy is not legitimate.


From the essay ’The Psychopathic School’, given as acceptance speech for ’New York City Teacher of the year 1990’:
It is absurd and anti-life to be part of a system that compels you to sit in confinement with people of exactly the same age and social class. That system effectively cuts you off from the immense diversity of life and the synergy of variety; indeed, it cuts you off from your own past and future, sealing you in a continuous present much the same way television does.
It is absurd and anti-life to move from cell to cell at the sound of a gong for every day of your natural youth in an institution that allows you no privacy and even follows you into the sanctuary of your home, demanding that you do its "homework."

He also has an interesting chapter on communities vs. networks and how the latter are masquerading and taking the place of the former as pseudo-communities, where friendship and loyalties are transient, attention is bought and one is only allowed to show the part that is relevant to the network’s profit. And they steal away from communal life in the sense that one has to hunt in multiple networks for all modern life’s diversified needs. unlike real communities networks/institutions expand endlessly for the profit of it's dwellers. He is of course not talking of this network as this includes all areas and has the most human purpose, but boy do I miss a community where one and all can grow together in all facets of life.

I’m on to reading his ’ The Underground History of American Education’ which is much more detailed and elaborate on historical and political parts that have made our schooling systems, tracing the people and influences back to the so called Prussian model and Indian caste schooling. This is probably not new to most here but personally ’Dumbing us down’ has been good for recapitulating what got lost where, and could probably also benefit parents who have children in school and would like get on top of what to countermeasure.

J.T.Gatto said:
Children learn what they live. Put kids in a class and they will live out their lives in an invisible cage, isolated from their chance at community; interrupt kids with bells and horns all the time and they will learn that nothing is important; force them to plead for the natural right to the toilet and they will become liars and toadies; ridicule them and will retreat from human association; shame them and they will find a hundred ways to get even.
 
Thank you for sharing, this is great stuff. It's relieving to see the many problems of our crazy school system laid out in such a straight-forward way. I know that many people in my environment that I consider decent and "deep" had a terrible time in school. Me too... thanks again.
 
I haven't been in a high school or lower classroom in a long while, but that strikes me a a very cynical viewpoint expressed by someone who has surrendered to agendas. But no doubt the students produced by our system are not reaching potentials.

I taught on the college level for eleven years, mostly computer graphics and digital multimedia production.

I was very popular with my students, not so much with my colleagues.

My principles of teaching were based upon Native American values: for one thing I encouraged cooperation over competition, and stressed actually understanding what you learned in contexts.

If the goal is to teach and not punish for not learning, I think my methods were.are superior. For one thing, whenever I gave a test (except for the final), I gave the graded tests back to the students and gave them a week to resubmit it with corrected answers. Corrected answers were worth half of either the full credit, or half of the remaining credit if they got partial credit. Needless to say, I didn't give multiple guess tests. I despise those since anyone with a grasp of English can almost always quickly eliminate all but two answers, reducing it to a 50-50 blind chance. So with a minimum of knowledge, one can easily pass a multiple guess test with a passing grade without knowing much at all about the subject. Short answer and essay questions preclude this. Allowing them to resubmit both improves retention and eases anxiety.

At the beginning of the semester I required two one-page or better essays on two standard subjects. The first required students to select something they were absolutely sure they knew exactly what it looked like, and look at it until they found something they never noticed before, then write about the mental state the epiphany created in their mind. The thing itself was intended to be merely a trigger to self-examination. The second short paper's requirement was to seek out something they never knew existed, and describe the mental process that occurred when they found it, and how their mind tried to categorize it. Both exercises were designed to awaken critical mental functions and increase awareness.

At the end of the semester I required a longer paper entitled "What I learned", which would summarize what they had, indeed, learned. Most students didn't merely catalogue software and techniques, but rather described learning HOW to learn on their own, or offered profound insights to their relationships.

One of my standard handouts was a paper I authored about levels of meaning, showing how symbols, thoughts and words could be woven to provide different levels of meaning depending on the target audiences. I also refused to take "I don't know" as answer, either verbally or on a test. As an example I would always ask the students on the first day a question like "How many blades of grass are in the quad outside the door?" When they replied "I don't now", my response was to tell them to ask me, to which I would reply giving them a concrete number based on extrapolation from a section count, then challenge them to prove me wrong, in order to illustrate two things: 1. an answer is reachable with the right tools and 2. an answer given with authority is seldom challenged. On tests I told them if they truly didn't know, make something up that logically answered the question. If it made me laugh and I hadn't seen it before, they got partial credit.

Teaching doesn't have to be sterile or accede to the agendas implicit in the administrators' directions. If you remember that your goal is to teach people to think rather than to reiterate, it is possible to nullify stupidity-promoting agendas.

One of my treasured comments from a student was that I "taught in 3D".
 
apacheman said:
I haven't been in a high school or lower classroom in a long while, but that strikes me a a very cynical viewpoint expressed by someone who has surrendered to agendas.
........................


Teaching doesn't have to be sterile or accede to the agendas implicit in the administrators' directions. If you remember that your goal is to teach people to think rather than to reiterate, it is possible to nullify stupidity-promoting agendas.

Hi Apacheman,
It does look like you incorporated creative techniques in your teaching to help students. Such creative efforts from inside the system serve a useful adaptive purpose. Gatto's views about education emphasize the pathological aspects of the education system and serve the purpose of creating a shock in the minds of readers who can still be reached in this way. It can raise awareness which has a possibility (however slim) of enabling future large-scale change in the system. Therein lies the value of his work - osit.
 
obyvatel said:
It does look like you incorporated creative techniques in your teaching to help students. Such creative efforts from inside the system serve a useful adaptive purpose. Gatto's views about education emphasize the pathological aspects of the education system and serve the purpose of creating a shock in the minds of readers who can still be reached in this way. It can raise awareness which has a possibility (however slim) of enabling future large-scale change in the system. Therein lies the value of his work - osit.

I wanted to express similar thoughts, but struggeled with the words. Thank you, this is exactly how I see it, too.
 
obyvatel said:
apacheman said:
I haven't been in a high school or lower classroom in a long while, but that strikes me a a very cynical viewpoint expressed by someone who has surrendered to agendas.
........................


Teaching doesn't have to be sterile or accede to the agendas implicit in the administrators' directions. If you remember that your goal is to teach people to think rather than to reiterate, it is possible to nullify stupidity-promoting agendas.

Hi Apacheman,
It does look like you incorporated creative techniques in your teaching to help students. Such creative efforts from inside the system serve a useful adaptive purpose. Gatto's views about education emphasize the pathological aspects of the education system and serve the purpose of creating a shock in the minds of readers who can still be reached in this way. It can raise awareness which has a possibility (however slim) of enabling future large-scale change in the system. Therein lies the value of his work - osit.

I think mainly J. Gatto is talking about the inherent structure of the compulsory and basic schooling system although he also taught at university level and still quit the classroom teaching profession, although he seems one of the most compassionate ones about that vocation. He's talking about what one cannot help but convey to the kids even though one has the best intentions. His work reveals how it's no coincidence this came to be. He himself also incorporated many alternative and creative teaching approaches to get the kids to rediscover interest and discover skills not otherwise taught on how to buck the system- very interesting reading/ listening.

On a related note to this hidden curriculum; in reading B. Alan Wallace's "Taboo of subjectivity" he makes a point that; the ruling mindset of scientific materialism in science and education and it's disdain for introspection will be transmitted to the kids.

Wallace said:
Conversely, if one is indoctrinated into a belief system that denies the possibility or value of introspection, this may cause one's introspective ability to atrophy. If so, scientific materialism's assessment of introspection may well have been conceived by individuals with impaired introspective abilities; and it's adoption by others may result in the atrophying of their ability to observe their own mental processes. Thus , while children normally develop the ability of introspection by the age of eight, their later indoctrination into the principles of scientific materialism may actually cause them to revert to a preadolescent state of psychological immaturity. The denial of first-person awareness of conscious states thereby becomes a self fulfilling prophecy
 
Very interesting Paralell, I´ll have a look at the videos of J.Taylor Gatto tomorrow. We started school at such a young age and for such a long time that everything there can easily appear to be "normal" and will furthermore reflects itself as a self limiting learned behaviour for the rest of our life, without us even knowing it.

1. CONFUSION
The first lesson I teach is confusion. Everything I teach is out of context. I teach the un-relating of everything. I teach disconnections. I teach too much:[...]
I teach the un-relating of everything, an infinite fragmentation the opposite of cohesion; what I do is more related to television programming than to making a scheme of order.

I can relate to the "un-related and disconnected teaching" when recalling how History were taught in my class; mainly a matter of memorizing huge amounts of dates, wars, pacts, etc., which left me under the disturbing -externally induced- feeling all this past folk had nothing in common with our actual life. One of the trap of this teaching method is it can lead one to think of our historical past as kind of an abrupt history interruption with modern world, thanks to great scientific ongoing progresses. In my case, it sadly also eliminated any interest in studying the past of my own country. Pushing this subjective idea a little bit more in its psychological implications, if the past of my country is felt as insignificant, so are my ancestors, my family, and myself at the end, of course.

3. INDIFFERENCE
I teach children not to care too much about anything, even though they want to make it appear that they do. How I do this is very subtle.
[...]
When I'm at my best I plan lessons very carefully in order to produce this show of enthusiasm. But when the bell rings I insist they drop whatever it is we have been doing and proceed quickly to the next work station. They must turn on and off like a light switch. Nothing important is ever finished in my class nor in any class I know of.
[...]
Bells are the secret logic of school time; their logic is inexorable. Bells destroy the past and future, rendering every interval the same as any other [...]
Bells inoculate each undertaking with indifference.

Never thought about bells ringing acting as an indifference inducer, although once said it´s obvious, really clever and subtle. Reminds me of my concern when I can´t leave my office as scheduled! Sounds much like the same order that keeps saying "end of office work class!, you must now run into the next cooking class! (my kitchen)", that at the end provides a sense of cunning urgency invading all life area, thereby depleting the value of whatever we are involved with.

4. EMOTIONAL DEPENDENCY
By stars and red checks, smiles and frowns, prizes, honors, and disgraces, I teach kids to surrender their will to the predestinated chain of command. Rights may be granted or withheld by any authority without appeal, because rights do not exist inside a school not even the right of free speech, as the Supreme Court has ruled unless school authorities say they do.

I would add the rating system may also exert a quite impressive pressure on our emotions. I remember myself reciting poesies, standing in front of all the students, all the while a could sense from the corner of my eyes the hand movement my teacher made each time I was hesitating (minus 1/2 point) or making an error (minus 1 point), and how it would make no difference if I finally reminded correctly the whole verse. That means I had to endure facing everybody from the podium, not paying too much attention to my fast heartbeats nor to the feared countdown rite executed by my teacher because my memory was no more able to function in middle of such emotional distractions. I somehow managed to get good rating, but at which price. How? By repeating the poesies -I already had perfectly memorized them well the previous day - on my way to school and once there during breaks. This only led me to confound memorization process with selfworth. Finally it could be said that a high rate was more related to reflecting my ability to shutdown any emotional arousal than what it is supposed to be rating, namely the mere memorization work in itself.
 
hesperides said:
We started school at such a young age and for such a long time that everything there can easily appear to be "normal" and will furthermore reflects itself as a self limiting learned behaviour for the rest of our life, without us even knowing it.

Yes it's astounding how efficient the system is at destilling brains that can't imagine anything else or even question what it saw and learnt. Compulsory schooling truly is a brainwashing prison sentence of a most cruel kind, the more I read about it the more terrified I get that saying so isn't sensationalist in the least sense.

hesperides said:
Never thought about bells ringing acting as an indifference inducer, although once said it´s obvious, really clever and subtle. Reminds me of my concern when I can´t leave my office as scheduled! Sounds much like the same order that keeps saying "end of office work class!, you must now run into the next cooking class! (my kitchen)", that at the end provides a sense of cunning urgency invading all life area, thereby depleting the value of whatever we are involved with.

Yea it seem to have built a horrid conveyor belt mentality. We're conditioned for novelty and in the process real attention, focus and care is sacrificed. The official history is that bell ringing and dedicated classrooms was born out of an efficiency plan, which sounds reasonable considering how robotic institutional planners in general are, but I don't think it's a coincidence that this invention came soon after Pavlov's findings.

Personally I remember counting the minuttes till the bell would ring when I wasn't trying to bi-locate out through the back of the classroom. Recess wasn't so much fun either when you didn't feel 'at home' in the environment, but at least you got away from the 'unrelating of everything'. Going home wasn't that much of relief either since it too was under the spell of modern slavery, but at least there was privacy.

hesperides said:
I would add the rating system may also exert a quite impressive pressure on our emotions. I remember myself reciting poesies, standing in front of all the students, all the while a could sense from the corner of my eyes the hand movement my teacher made each time I was hesitating (minus 1/2 point) or making an error (minus 1 point), and how it would make no difference if I finally reminded correctly the whole verse. That means I had to endure facing everybody from the podium, not paying too much attention to my fast heartbeats nor to the feared countdown rite executed by my teacher because my memory was no more able to function in middle of such emotional distractions. I somehow managed to get good rating, but at which price. How? By repeating the poesies -I already had perfectly memorized them well the previous day - on my way to school and once there during breaks. This only led me to confound memorization process with selfworth. Finally it could be said that a high rate was more related to reflecting my ability to shutdown any emotional arousal than what it is supposed to be rating, namely the mere memorization work in itself.

That's just horrible (the live point reduction), but a clear example of dependency making. J.Gatto says that one of the main differences between ordinary schools (private ones included) for the working class and the elite schools is that they teach public speaking, and I'm guessing this is not the way they do it- it's completely counter productive.

On the topic of poetry from Gatto's 'Underground history...':
Samuel Johnson entered a note into his diary several hundred years ago about the powerful effect
reading Hamlet was having upon him. He was nine at the time. Abraham Cowley wrote of his
"infinite delight" with Spenser’s Faerie Queen—an epic poem that treats moral values allegorically
in nine-line stanzas that never existed before Spenser (and hardly since). He spoke of his pleasure
with its "Stories of Knights and Giants and Monsters and Brave Houses." Cowley was twelve at
the time. It couldn’t have been an easy read in 1630 for anyone, and it’s beyond the reach of many
elite college graduates today. What happened? The answer is that Dick and Jane happened.
"Frank had a dog. His name was Spot." That happened.

Another neat list of Gatto's
Recipe for empty children:
1. Remove children from the business of the world until time has passed for them to learn
how to self-teach.

2. Age-grade them so that past and future both are muted and become irrelevant.

3. Take all religion out of their lives except the hidden civil religion of appetite, and
positive/negative reinforcement schedules.

4. Remove all significant functions from home and family life except its role as dormitory
and casual companionship. Make parents unpaid agents of the State; recruit them into
partnerships to monitor the conformity of children to an official agenda.

5. Keep children under surveillance every minute from dawn to dusk. Give no private space
or time. Fill time with collective activities. Record behavior quantitatively.

6. Addict the young to machinery and electronic displays. Teach that these are desirable to
recreation and learning both.

7. Use designed games and commercial entertainment to teach preplanned habits, attitudes,
and language usage.

8. Pair the selling of merchandise with attractive females in their prime childbearing years
so that the valences of lovemaking and mothering can be transferred intact to the goods
vended.

9. Remove as much private ritual as possible from young lives, such as the rituals of food
preparation and family dining.

10. Keep both parents employed with the business of strangers. Discourage independent
livelihoods with low start-up costs. Make labor for others and outside obligations first
priority, self-development second.

11. Grade, evaluate, and assess children constantly and publicly. Begin early. Make sure
everyone knows his or her rank.

12. Honor the highly graded. Keep grading and real world accomplishment as strictly
separate as possible so that a false meritocracy, dependent on the support of authority to
continue, is created. Push the most independent kids to the margin; do not tolerate real
argument.

13. Forbid the efficient transmission of useful knowledge, such as how to build a house,
repair a car, make a dress.

14. Reward dependency in many forms. Call it "teamwork."

15. Establish visually degraded group environments called "schools" and arrange mass
movements through these environments at regular intervals. Encourage a level of
fluctuating noise (aperiodic negative reinforcement) so that concentration, habits of civil
discourse, and intellectual investigation are gradually extinguished from the behavioral
repertoire.
 
Thanks for posting about this book. Looks like good reading. I have been thinking about this alot lately in part becuase of the "Games" in London.
Starting at very young ages we are taught and rewarded for competitive and negative thoughts. Parents driving around kids for "practice" . The team you become a part of is something that the child/person has to be faithful to and better than others.
I see it kind of like being a patriot for your country. Standing up with pride for an illusion of self worth and idenity. We are told that it is healthy to compete with one another. When I have seen movies that show animals attacking people for sport in an arena or when in Rome seeing those gigantic structures that are still honered today for the horrors that were preformed for the wealthys entertainment it makes me feel ill.
I have always been a competative person and since doing this self work it has alowed me to see how unhealthy that subtle programing is and where it comes from.
The amount of money spent on "Games" while people suffer is not only a part of our history it is something that we are taught to have pride in at a very young age. I know alot of my football loving freinds would see this differently but this is how it feels to me.
 
parallel said:
Another neat list of Gatto's
Recipe for empty children:
1. Remove children from the business of the world until time has passed for them to learn
how to self-teach.

2. Age-grade them so that past and future both are muted and become irrelevant.

3. Take all religion out of their lives except the hidden civil religion of appetite, and
positive/negative reinforcement schedules.

4. Remove all significant functions from home and family life except its role as dormitory
and casual companionship. Make parents unpaid agents of the State; recruit them into
partnerships to monitor the conformity of children to an official agenda.

5. Keep children under surveillance every minute from dawn to dusk. Give no private space
or time. Fill time with collective activities. Record behavior quantitatively.

6. Addict the young to machinery and electronic displays. Teach that these are desirable to
recreation and learning both.

7. Use designed games and commercial entertainment to teach preplanned habits, attitudes,
and language usage.

8. Pair the selling of merchandise with attractive females in their prime childbearing years
so that the valences of lovemaking and mothering can be transferred intact to the goods
vended.

9. Remove as much private ritual as possible from young lives, such as the rituals of food
preparation and family dining.

10. Keep both parents employed with the business of strangers. Discourage independent
livelihoods with low start-up costs. Make labor for others and outside obligations first
priority, self-development second.

11. Grade, evaluate, and assess children constantly and publicly. Begin early. Make sure
everyone knows his or her rank.

12. Honor the highly graded. Keep grading and real world accomplishment as strictly
separate as possible so that a false meritocracy, dependent on the support of authority to
continue, is created. Push the most independent kids to the margin; do not tolerate real
argument.

13. Forbid the efficient transmission of useful knowledge, such as how to build a house,
repair a car, make a dress.

14. Reward dependency in many forms. Call it "teamwork."

15. Establish visually degraded group environments called "schools" and arrange mass
movements through these environments at regular intervals. Encourage a level of
fluctuating noise (aperiodic negative reinforcement) so that concentration, habits of civil
discourse, and intellectual investigation are gradually extinguished from the behavioral
repertoire.

This is a very strong list, thank you!

Ever since primary school, I've been working on keeping my own developmental freedom, and as a student, this was tough.
I was under the influence of a primary school teacher who had virtually all of the skills it takes to enforce the complete list.
It hurt. Interestingly, the religious instructions teacher (catholic) helped through it - she kept our minds open, encouraged questions, depicted God as "IamwhoIam, I'llbewhoI'llbe, I'malwaysthereforyou" and Jesus as a fellow-human.

In secondary school, the influence widened to a bigger spectrum of individual teachers, and I was lucky to be taught by a few whose intention was different - they wanted us students to become who we are - curiously observing and enabling our development. This was encouraged by my parents in parts, but by them, I was also convinced to be a good girl and make good grades, no matter how silly or useless the content of the class.

But those few teachers and my parents made it easier to withstand the efforts of the majority of our teachers, who tried to be servants to the informal aims our school system in Austria fosters - creating submissive workforce and such. What probably disturbed me most was that some of those, who were half-conscious about the problem kept telling us that "It's been like that when I was in school, and this is why I'll do to you what they've done to me." - acknowledging that it is not good, and (semi-)consciously being evil.
We also had a few teachers you'd most likely diagnose as psychopaths, and I made the choice not to suffer from what they tried to do, which made them mad for a while - but they let go.

Now, parent and teacher myself, I work on transforming schooling into something less conceptual (there seems no better word, look at my final question: do you need boxes to think outside of them). In the system, it is still quite a difficult task, and it takes a lot of energy to bring my children up under the influence of the same old patterns (there is limited choice here...).

Inasmuch as I like Gatto's list, and the other quotes I read here from his publications, I must say that while reading his analysis of the situation can help understand the pattern of many bad parts of the system (particularly if the reader connects it to his/her personal experiences and thus digests it fully on the personal level), it is necessary to work on what good upbringing/schooling might be.
Otherwise, too much energy goes into the old patterns and no development is made.

IMO one person publishing brilliantly about it is Sir Ken Robinson.
I found references to him on this forum, eg here: http://cassiopaea.org/forum/index.php/topic,8635.0.html, but would like to add a link to his TED talk on how schools kill creativity in 2006, http://www.ted.com/talks/ken_robinson_says_schools_kill_creativity.html, followed by the one in 2010 http://www.ted.com/talks/sir_ken_robinson_bring_on_the_revolution.html providing ideas for solutions.

Since this is the Books section of the forum, his books can also be highly recommended: IMO "How Finding Your Passion Changes Everything" can help the reader and the children/students of the reader...

Greetings!
momo
 
momo said:
parallel said:
Another neat list of Gatto's
Recipe for empty children:
1. Remove children from the business of the world until time has passed for them to learn
how to self-teach.

2. Age-grade them so that past and future both are muted and become irrelevant.

3. Take all religion out of their lives except the hidden civil religion of appetite, and
positive/negative reinforcement schedules.

4. Remove all significant functions from home and family life except its role as dormitory
and casual companionship. Make parents unpaid agents of the State; recruit them into
partnerships to monitor the conformity of children to an official agenda.

5. Keep children under surveillance every minute from dawn to dusk. Give no private space
or time. Fill time with collective activities. Record behavior quantitatively.

6. Addict the young to machinery and electronic displays. Teach that these are desirable to
recreation and learning both.

7. Use designed games and commercial entertainment to teach preplanned habits, attitudes,
and language usage.

8. Pair the selling of merchandise with attractive females in their prime childbearing years
so that the valences of lovemaking and mothering can be transferred intact to the goods
vended.

9. Remove as much private ritual as possible from young lives, such as the rituals of food
preparation and family dining.

10. Keep both parents employed with the business of strangers. Discourage independent
livelihoods with low start-up costs. Make labor for others and outside obligations first
priority, self-development second.

11. Grade, evaluate, and assess children constantly and publicly. Begin early. Make sure
everyone knows his or her rank.

12. Honor the highly graded. Keep grading and real world accomplishment as strictly
separate as possible so that a false meritocracy, dependent on the support of authority to
continue, is created. Push the most independent kids to the margin; do not tolerate real
argument.

13. Forbid the efficient transmission of useful knowledge, such as how to build a house,
repair a car, make a dress.

14. Reward dependency in many forms. Call it "teamwork."

15. Establish visually degraded group environments called "schools" and arrange mass
movements through these environments at regular intervals. Encourage a level of
fluctuating noise (aperiodic negative reinforcement) so that concentration, habits of civil
discourse, and intellectual investigation are gradually extinguished from the behavioral
repertoire.

This is a very strong list, thank you!

Inasmuch as I like Gatto's list, and the other quotes I read here from his publications, I must say that while reading his analysis of the situation can help understand the pattern of many bad parts of the system (particularly if the reader connects it to his/her personal experiences and thus digests it fully on the personal level), it is necessary to work on what good upbringing/schooling might be.
Otherwise, too much energy goes into the old patterns and no development is made.

Yes, that is why home education is growing and growing. If I remember correctly JTG said there is no solution to modern schooling. The whole system has to be dismantled first. At first he had his doubts about home ed, but changed after having met all kinds of families whose kids learn at/from home.

I have a subscription to 'Life Learning' magazine and I insert here a quote from the editor, as JTG suffered two serious strokes last year.

Many of our readers will be familiar with the work of
John Taylor Gatto, a Life Learning Magazine contributor,
author, speaker, and well-loved critic of schools. John
taught in public schools for thirty-some years and cli-
maxed his teaching career as New York State Teacher of
the Year after being named New York City Teacher of the
Year three times. In 1991, he quit teaching on the op ed page of the Wall
Street Journal, claiming that he was no longer willing to hurt children. Since
then, he has given presentations around the world and written five books –
Dumbing Us Down: The Hidden Curriculum of Compulsory Schooling (1992),
The Exhausted School (1993), A Different Kind of Teacher (2000), The Under-
ground History Of American Education (2001), and Weapons of Mass Instruc-
tion: A Schoolteacher’s Journey through the Dark World of Compulsory
Schooling (2008).
Rolf and I met John at a conference in 1994, where John and I were both
speaking, and we became mutual admirers. Since then, he has provided us
with numerous articles for both Natural Life and Life Learning magazines (see
links below), talked about our work at many of his speaking engagements, and
endorsed a number of the books we’ve published. John became good friends
with one of our authors, veteran homeschooling advocate Léandre Bergeron
(For the Sake of Our Children, 2009), after he graciously wrote the foreword to
Léandre’s book. The last time I spoke with John by phone, he said, “Wendy, be
careful crossing the street...we need your work to continue!”
Sadly, John had two serious strokes last summer and has been hospitalized
off and on since then. He is now at home trying to recover. When I heard from
him earlier this year, he was working on another book. Unfortunately, his eco-
nomic resources have been hurt by his long recovery, and his depleted insur-
ance no longer covers his rehab and other medical needs, so his recovery is
faltering. I miss receiving his hand-written postcards, his article manuscripts
(typewritten by his wife Janet), and his rambling phone calls. And the
home-based education world misses his voice.
If you appreciate John Taylor Gatto’s work and miss it too, here’s a way you
can give back to him. To facilitate support for John, the alternative education
advocacy organization AERO, under its director Jerry Mintz, has organized a
fundraiser. All proceeds will go to his support, and they are tax deductible in
the USA, since it is an AERO project. The online donation form is at
www.educationrevolution.org/store/product/donation/. (There’s a message
field just before you finalize the transaction where you should note that the
money is to go to the John Taylor Gatto medical fund). Or you can phone the
AERO office at (516) 621-2195. (If you’re not familiar with AERO, it’s a well-re-
spected, long-time project of the School of Living http://schoolofliving.org.)

There is also the book written by Charlotte Iserbyt.

http://deliberatedumbingdown.com/

You can also watch her on YouTube. She was a former Senior Policy Advisor in the U.S. Department of Education under Reagan. She also has some very interesting things to say!

Here are some more articles by JTG:

http://www.lifelearningmagazine.com/0804/dont_worry_about_college_by_John_Taylor_Gatto.htm

http://www.lifelearningmagazine.com/1004/the_hall_of_mirrors_by_john_taylor_gatto.htm

http://www.lifelearningmagazine.com/0510/breaking_from_the_herd_whats_wrong_with_college_by_John_Taylor_Gatto.htm

http://www.lifelearningmagazine.com/1006/curriculum_of_play_by_John_Taylor_Gatto.htm
 
thanks parallel,

interesting to read the seven lessons. having gone through primary and secondary modern state run schools in the seventies, i can now clearly see their effect. not all the "lessons" worked, but certainly the first three, at the time anyway.

reading the recipie.....it's horrid to see how effectively they cook it up in france.

even my three year old gets a report book.

needless to say, by this time next year, our children won't be preparing for rentrée.

granted, initially it has helped them immeasurably with their french, but i still think that at this age, lightly supervised play with friends, outside is the best learning policy. they would still learn french.

collective homeschooling anyone?

jeff
 
Mariama, thanks for the links about Charlotte Iserbyt!

I just came across a like-minded article:

How The American University was Killed, in Five Easy Steps

Posted on August 12, 2012by junctrebellion

http://junctrebellion.wordpress.com/2012/08/12/how-the-american-university-was-killed-in-five-easy-steps/

A few years back, Paul E. Lingenfelter began his report on the defunding of public education by saying, “In 1920 H.G. Wells wrote, ‘History is becoming more and more a race between education and catastrophe.’ I think he got it right. Nothing is more important to the future of the United States and the world than the breadth and effectiveness of education, especially of higher education. I say especially higher education, but not because pre- school, elementary, and secondary education are less important. Success at every level of education obviously depends on what has gone before. But for better or worse, the quality of postsecondary education and research affects the quality and effectiveness of education at every level.”

In the last few years, conversations have been growing like gathering storm clouds about the ways in which our universities are failing. There is talk about the poor educational outcomes apparent in our graduates, the out-of-control tuitions and crippling student loan debt. Attention is finally being paid to the enormous salaries for presidents and sports coaches, and the migrant worker status of the low-wage majority faculty. There are now movements to control tuition, to forgive student debt, to create more powerful “assessment” tools, to offer “free” university materials online, to combat adjunct faculty exploitation. But each of these movements focuses on a narrow aspect of a much wider problem, and no amount of “fix” for these aspects individually will address the real reason that universities in America are dying.

To explain my perspective here, I need to go back in time. Let’s go back to post World War II, 1950s when the GI bill, and the affordability – and sometimes free access – to universities created an upsurge of college students across the country. This surge continued through the ’60s, when universities were the very heart of intense public discourse, passionate learning, and vocal citizen involvement in the issues of the times. It was during this time, too, when colleges had a thriving professoriate, and when students were given access to a variety of subject areas, and the possibility of broad learning. The Liberal Arts stood at the center of a college education, and students were exposed to philosophy, anthropology, literature, history, sociology, world religions, foreign languages and cultures. Of course, something else happened, beginning in the late fifties into the sixties — the uprisings and growing numbers of citizens taking part in popular dissent — against the Vietnam War, against racism, against destruction of the environment in a growing corporatized culture, against misogyny, against homophobia. Where did much of that revolt incubate? Where did large numbers of well-educated, intellectual, and vocal people congregate? On college campuses. Who didn’t like the outcome of the 60s? The corporations, the war-mongers, those in our society who would keep us divided based on our race, our gender, our sexual orientation.

I suspect that, given the opportunity, those groups would have liked nothing more than to shut down the universities. Destroy them outright. But a country claiming to have democratic values can’t just shut down its universities. That would reveal something about that country which would not support the image they are determined to portray – that of a country of freedom, justice, opportunity for all. So, how do you kill the universities of the country without showing your hand? As a child growing up during the Cold War, I was taught that the communist countries in the first half of the 20th Century put their scholars, intellectuals and artists into prison camps, called “re-education camps”. What I’ve come to realize as an adult is that American corporatism despises those same individuals as much as we were told communism did. But instead of doing anything so obvious as throwing them into prison, here those same people are thrown into dire poverty. The outcome is the same. Desperate poverty controls and ultimately breaks people as effectively as prison…..and some research says that it works even MORE powerfully.

So: here is the recipe for killing universities, and you tell ME if what I’m describing isn’t exactly what is at the root of all the problems of our country’s system of higher education. (Because what I’m saying has more recently been applied to K-12 public education as well.)

First, you defund public higher education.

Anna Victoria, writing in Pluck Magazine, discusses this issue in a review of Christopher Newfield’s book, Unmaking the Public University: “In 1971, Lewis Powell (before assuming his post as a Supreme Court Justice) authored a memo, now known as the Powell Memorandum, and sent it to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. The title of the memo was “Attack on the American Free Enterprise System,” and in it he called on corporate America to take an increased role in shaping politics, law, and education in the United States.” How would they do that? One, by increased lobbying and pressure on legislators to change their priorities. “Funding for public universities comes from, as the term suggests, the state and federal government. Yet starting in the early 1980s, shifting state priorities forced public universities to increasingly rely on other sources of revenue. For example, in the University of Washington school system, state funding for schools decreased as a percentage of total public education budgets from 82% in 1989 to 51% in 2011.” That’s a loss of more than 1/3 of its public funding. But why this shift in priorities? U.C. Berkeley English professor, Christopher Newfield, in his new book Unmaking the Public University posits that conservative elites have worked to de-fund higher education explicitly because of its function in creating a more empowered, democratic, and multiracial middle class. His theory is one that blames explicit cultural concern, not financial woes, for the current decreases in funding. He cites the fact that California public universities were forced to reject 300,000 applicants because of lack of funding. Newfield explains that much of the motive behind conservative advocacy for de-funding of public education is racial, pro-corporate, and anti-protest in nature.

Again, from Victoria: “(The) ultimate objective, as outlined in the (Lewis Powell) memo, was to purge respectable institutions such as the media, arts, sciences, as well as college campus themselves of left-wing thoughts. At the time, college campuses were seen as “springboards for dissent,” as Newfield terms it, and were therefore viewed as publicly funded sources of opposition to the interests of the establishment. While it is impossible to know the extent to which this memo influenced the conservative political strategy over the coming decades, it is extraordinary to see how far the principles outlined in his memo have been adopted.”

Under the guise of many “conflicts”, such as budget struggles, or quotas, de-funding was consistently the result. This funding argument also was used to re-shape the kind of course offerings and curriculum focus found on campuses. Victoria writes, “Attacks on humanities curriculums, political correctness, and affirmative action shifted the conversation on public universities to the right, creating a climate of skepticism around state funded schools. State budget debates became platforms for conservatives to argue why certain disciplines such as sociology, history, anthropology, minority studies, language, and gender studies should be de-funded…” on one hand, through the argument that they were not offering students the “practical” skills needed for the job market — which was a powerful way to increase emphasis on what now is seen as vocational focus rather than actual higher education, and to de-value those very courses that trained and expanded the mind, developed a more complete human being, a more actively intelligent person and involved citizen. Another argument used to attack the humanities was “…their so-called promotion of anti-establishment sentiment.

Gradually, these arguments translated into real- and often deep- cuts into the budgets of state university systems,” especially in those most undesirable areas that the establishment found to run counter to their ability to control the population’s thoughts and behavior. The idea of “manufactured consent” should be talked about here – because if you remove the classes and the disciplines that are the strongest in their ability to develop higher level intellectual rigor, the result is a more easily manipulated citizenry, less capable of deep interrogation and investigation of the establishment “message”.

Second, you deprofessionalize and impoverish the professors (and continue to create a surplus of underemployed and unemployed Ph.D.s)

V.P. Joe Biden, a few months back, said that the reason tuitions are out of control is because of the high price of college faculty. He has NO IDEA what he is talking about. At latest count, we have 1.5 million university professors in this country, 1 million of whom are adjuncts. One million professors in America are hired on short-term contracts, most often for one semester at a time, with no job security whatsoever – which means that they have no idea how much work they will have in any given semester, and that they are often completely unemployed over summer months when work is nearly impossible to find (and many of the unemployed adjuncts do not qualify for unemployment payments). So, one million American university professors are earning, on average, $20K a year gross, with no benefits or healthcare, no unemployment insurance when they are out of work. Keep in mind, too, that many of the more recent Ph.Ds have entered this field often with the burden of six figure student loan debt on their backs.

There was recently an article talking about the long-term mental and physical destruction caused when people are faced with poverty and “job insecurity” — precarious employment, or “under-employment”. The article says that, in just the few short years since our 2008 economic collapse, the medical problems of this group have increased exponentially. This has been the horrible state of insecurity that America’s college professors have experienced now for thirty years. It can destroy you — breaking down your physical and emotional health. As an example: the average yearly starting salary of a university professor at Temple University in 1975 was just under $10,000 a year, with full benefits – health, retirement, and educational benefits (their family’s could attend college for free.) And guess what? Average pay for Temple’s faculty is STILL about the same — because adjuncts now make up the majority of faculty, and earn between $8,000 to $14,000 a year (depending on how many courses they are assigned each semester – there is NO guarantee of continued employment) — but unlike the full-time professors of 1975, these adjunct jobs come with NO benefits, no health care, no retirement, no educational benefits, no offices. How many other professions report salaries that have remained at 1975 levels?

This is how you break the evil, wicked, leftist academic class in America — you turn them into low-wage members of the precariat – that growing number of American workers whose employment is consistently precarious. All around the country, our undergraduates are being taught by faculty living at or near the poverty line, who have little to no say in the way classes are being taught, the number of students in a class, or how curriculum is being designed. They often have no offices in which to meet their students, no professional staff support, no professional development support. One million of our college professors are struggling to continue offering the best they can in the face of this wasteland of deteriorated professional support, while living the very worst kind of economic insecurity. Unlike those communist countries, which sometimes executed their intellectuals, here we are being killed off by lack of healthcare, by stress-related illness like heart-attacks or strokes. While we’re at it, let’s add suicide to that list of killers — and readers of this blog will remember that I have written at length about adjunct faculty suicide in the past.

Step #3: You move in a managerial/administrative class who take over governance of the university.

This new class takes control of much of the university’s functioning, including funding allocation, curriculum design, course offerings. If you are old enough to remember when medicine was forever changed by the appearance of the ‘HMO’ model of managed medicine, you will have an idea of what has happened to academia. If you are not old enough – let me tell you that Once Upon a Time, doctors ran hospitals, doctors made decisions on what treatment their patients needed. In the 1970s, during the infamous Nixon Administration, HMOs were an idea sold to the American public, said to help reign in medical costs. But once Nixon secured passage of the HMO Act in 1973, the organizations went quickly from operating on a non-profit organization model, focused on high quality health care for controlled costs, to being for-profit organizations, with lots of corporate money funding them – and suddenly the idea of high-quality health care was sacrificed in favor of profits – which meant taking in higher and higher premiums and offering less and less service, more denied claims, more limitations placed on doctors, who became a “managed profession”. You see the state of healthcare in this country, and how disastrous it is. Well, during this same time, there was a similar kind of development — something akin to the HMO — let’s call it an “EMO”, Educational Management Organization, began to take hold in American academia. From the 1970s until today, as the number of full-time faculty jobs continued to shrink, the number of full-time administrative jobs began to explode. As faculty was deprofessionalized and casualized, reduced to teaching as migrant contract workers, administrative jobs now offered good, solid salaries, benefits, offices, prestige and power. In 2012, administrators now outnumber faculty on every campus across the country. And just as disastrous as the HMO was to the practice of medicine in America, so is the EMO model disastrous to the practice of academia in America, and to the quality of our students’ education. Benjamin Ginsburg writes about this in great detail in his book The Fall of the Faculty.

I’d like to mention here, too, that universities often defend their use of adjuncts – which are now 75% of all professors in the country — claiming that they have no choice but to hire adjuncts, as a “cost saving measure” in an increasingly defunded university. What they don’t say, and without demand of transparency will NEVER say, is that they have not saved money by hiring adjuncts — they have reduced faculty salaries, security and power. The money wasn’t saved, because it was simply re-allocated to administrative salaries, coach salaries and outrageous university president salaries. There has been a redistribution of funds away from those who actually teach, the scholars – and therefore away from the students’ education itself — and into these administrative and executive salaries, sports costs — and the expanded use of “consultants”, PR and marketing firms, law firms. We have to add here, too, that president salaries went from being, in the 1970s, around $25K to 30K, to being in the hundreds of thousands to MILLIONS of dollars – salary, delayed compensation, discretionary funds, free homes, or generous housing allowances, cars and drivers, memberships to expensive country clubs.

Step Four: You move in corporate culture and corporate money

To further control and dominate how the university is ‘used” -a flood of corporate money results in changing the value and mission of the university from a place where an educated citizenry is seen as a social good, where intellect and reasoning is developed and heightened for the value of the individual and for society, to a place of vocational training, focused on profit. Corporate culture hijacked the narrative – university was no longer attended for the development of your mind. It was where you went so you could get a “good job”. Anything not immediately and directly related to job preparation or hiring was denigrated and seen as worthless — philosophy, literature, art, history.

Anna Victoria writes, on Corporate Culture: “Many universities have relied on private sector methods of revenue generation such as the formation of private corporations, patents, increased marketing strategies, corporate partnerships, campus rentals, and for-profit e-learning enterprises. To cut costs, public universities have employed non-state employee service contractors and have streamlined their financial operations.”
So what is the problem with corporate money, you might ask? A lot. When corporate money floods the universities, corporate values replace academic values. As we said before, humanities get defunded and the business school gets tons of money. Serious issues of ethics begin to develop when corporate money begins to make donations and form partnerships with science departments – where that money buys influence regarding not only the kinds of research being done but the outcomes of that research. Corporations donate to departments, and get the use of university researchers in the bargain — AND the ability to deduct the money as donation while using the labor, controlling and owning the research. Suddenly, the university laboratory is not a place of objective research anymore. As one example, corporations who don’t like “climate change” warnings will donate money and control research at universities, which then publish refutations of global warning proofs. OR, universities labs will be corporate-controlled in cases of FDA-approval research. This is especially dangerous when pharmaceutical companies take control of university labs to test efficacy or safety and then push approval through the governmental agencies. Another example is in economics departments — and movies like “The Inside Job” have done a great job of showing how Wall Street has bought off high-profile economists from Harvard, or Yale, or Stanford, or MIT, to talk about the state of the stock market and the country’s financial stability. Papers were being presented and published that were blatantly false, by well-respected economists who were on the payroll of Goldman Sachs or Merrill Lynch.

Academia should not be the whore of corporatism, but that’s what it has become. Academia once celebrated itself as an independent institution. Academia is a culture, one that offers a long-standing worldview which values on-going, rigorous intellectual, emotional, psychological, creative development of the individual citizen. It respects and values the contributions of the scholar, the intellectual, to society. It treasures the promise of each student, and strives to offer the fullest possible support to the development of that promise. It does this not only for the good of the scholar and the student, but for the social good. Like medicine, academia existed for the social good. Neither should be a purely for-profit endeavor. And yet, in both the case of the HMO and the EMO, we have been taken over by an alien for-profit culture, our sovereignty over our own profession, our own institutions, stripped from us.

A corporate model, where profit depends on 1) maintaining a low-wage work force and 2) charging continually higher pricers for their “services” is what now controls our colleges . Faculty is being squeezed from one end and our students are being squeezed from the other.

Step Five – Destroy the Students

While claiming to offer them hope of a better life, our corporatized universities are ruining the lives of our students. This is accomplished through a two-prong tactic: you dumb down and destroy the quality of the education so that no one on campus is really learning to think, to question, to reason. Instead, they are learning to obey, to withstand “tests” and “exams”, to follow rules, to endure absurdity and abuse. Our students have been denied full-time available faculty, the ability to develop mentors and advisors, faculty-designed syllabi which changes each semester, a wide variety of courses and options. Instead, more and more universities have core curriculum which dictates a large portion of the course of study, in which the majority of classes are administrative-designed “common syllabi” courses, taught by an army of underpaid, part-time faculty in a model that more closely resembles a factory or the industrial kitchen of a fast food restaurant than an institution of higher learning.

The Second Prong: You make college so insanely unaffordable that only the wealthiest students from the wealthiest of families can afford to go to the school debt free. Younger people may not know that for much of the 20th Century many universities in the U.S. were free – including the CA state system – you could establish residency in six months and go to Berkeley for free, or at very low cost. When I was an undergraduate student in the mid to late 1970s, tuition at Temple University was around $700 a year. Today, tuition is nearly $15,000 a year. Tuitions have increased, using CA as an example again, over 2000% since the 1970s. 2000%! This is the most directly dangerous situation for our students: pulling them into crippling debt that will follow them to the grave.

Another dangerous aspect of what is happening can be found in the shady partnership that has formed between the lending institutions and the Financial Aid Departments of universities. This is an unholy alliance. I have had students in my classes who work for Financial Aid. They tell me that they are trained to say NOT “This is what you need to borrow,” but to say “This is what you can get,” and to always entice the student with the highest possible number. There have been plenty of kick-back scandals between colleges and lenders — and I’m sure there is plenty undiscovered shady business going on. So, tuition costs are out of control because of administrative, executive and coach salaries, and the loan numbers keep growing, risking a life of indebtedness for most of our students. Further, there is absolutely no incentive on the part of this corporatized university to care.

The propaganda machine here has been powerful. Students, through the belief of their parents, their K-12 teachers, their high school counselors, are convinced by constant repetition that they HAVE to go to college to have a promising, middle class life, they are convinced that this tuition debt is “worth it” — and learn too late that it will indenture them. Let’s be clear: this is not the fault of the parents, or K-12 teachers or counselors. This is an intentional message that has been repeated year in and year out that aims to convince us all about the essential quality of a college education.

So, there you have it.

Within one generation, in five easy steps, not only have the scholars and intellectuals of the country been silenced and nearly wiped out, but the entire institution has been hijacked, and recreated as a machine through which future generations will ALL be impoverished, indebted and silenced. Now, low wage migrant professors teach repetitive courses they did not design to students who travel through on a kind of conveyor belt, only to be spit out, indebted and desperate into a jobless economy. The only people immediately benefitting inside this system are the administrative class – whores to the corporatized colonizers, earning money in this system in order to oversee this travesty. But the most important thing to keep in mind is this: The real winners, the only people truly benefitting from the big-picture meltdown of the American university are those people who, in the 1960s, saw those vibrant college campuses as a threat to their established power. They are the same people now working feverishly to dismantle other social structures, everything from Medicare and Social Security to the Post Office.

Looking at this wreckage of American academia, we have to acknowledge: They have won.

BUT these are victors who will never declare victory — because the carefully-maintained capitalist illusion of the “university education” still benefits them. Never, ever, admit that the university is dead. No, no. Quite the opposite. Instead, continue to insist that the university is the ONLY way to gain a successful, middle class life. Say that the university is mandatory for happiness in adulthood. All the while, maintain this low-wage precariate class of edu-migrants, continually mis-educate and indebt in the students to ensure their docility, pimp the institution out to corporate interests. It’s a win-win for those right wingers – they’ve crippled those in the country who would push back against them, and have so carefully and cleverly hijacked the educational institutions that they can now be turned into part of the neoliberal/neocon machinery, further benefitting the right-wing agenda.

So now what?

This ruination has taken about a generation. Will we be able to undo this damage? Can we force refunding of our public educational system? Can we professionalize faculty, drive out the administrative glut and corporate hijackers? Can we provide free or low-cost tuition and high-quality education to our students in a way that does NOT focus only on job training, but on high-level personal and intellectual development? I believe we can. But only if we understand this as a big picture issue, and refuse to allow those in government, or those corporate-owned media mouthpieces to divide and conquer us further. This ruinous rampage is part of the much larger attack on progressive values, on the institutions of social good. The battle isn’t only to reclaim the professoriate, to wipe out student debt, to raise educational outcomes — although each of those goals deserve to be fought for. But we will win a Pyrrhic victory at best unless we understand the nature of the larger war, and fight back in a much, much bigger way to reclaim the country’s values for the betterment of our citizens.

I am eager to hear from those of you who have been involved in this battle, or are about to enter it. We have a big job ahead of us, and are facing a very powerful foe in a kind of David and Goliath battle. I’m open to hearing ideas about how to build a much, much better slingshot.
 
parallel said:
obyvatel said:
apacheman said:
I haven't been in a high school or lower classroom in a long while, but that strikes me a a very cynical viewpoint expressed by someone who has surrendered to agendas.
........................


Teaching doesn't have to be sterile or accede to the agendas implicit in the administrators' directions. If you remember that your goal is to teach people to think rather than to reiterate, it is possible to nullify stupidity-promoting agendas.

Hi Apacheman,
It does look like you incorporated creative techniques in your teaching to help students. Such creative efforts from inside the system serve a useful adaptive purpose. Gatto's views about education emphasize the pathological aspects of the education system and serve the purpose of creating a shock in the minds of readers who can still be reached in this way. It can raise awareness which has a possibility (however slim) of enabling future large-scale change in the system. Therein lies the value of his work - osit.

I think mainly J. Gatto is talking about the inherent structure of the compulsory and basic schooling system although he also taught at university level and still quit the classroom teaching profession, although he seems one of the most compassionate ones about that vocation. He's talking about what one cannot help but convey to the kids even though one has the best intentions. His work reveals how it's no coincidence this came to be. He himself also incorporated many alternative and creative teaching approaches to get the kids to rediscover interest and discover skills not otherwise taught on how to buck the system- very interesting reading/ listening.

I taught languages in a secondary school for a while (aka middle school?). We struggled with the national curriculum that was being implemented in the UK at the time. I did not get the horror of the NC until I started home ed.
Everything or so it seemed was prescribed. I distinctly remember that we had to teach phrases like: "J'aime le lait" (I like milk). The difference being that in French you say I like the milk.
I remember talking to my head of languages, explaining to her how I went about a new topic and what I had learnt at my teacher training college. Basically, we had to make sure that the pupils' interest had been piqued before introducing a topic, for instance hobbies. I would then start talking about hobbies and asking my pupils what they liked doing. Horror of horrors! We were not supposed to teach like that! That had nothing to do with the NC!! :O
I received an inspector in my class once. The only thing he could do, was complain, nag and criticize.
A typical teacher I would say. The pathological type that goes into teaching because he loves having an audience that cannot fight back and loves the feeling of power he has over others. Basically, teachers can get away with murder (of the soul). :headbash:

From what I have heard teachers have been leaving the profession in droves in the UK because of the NC. So while it may be true that people can still teach using creative techniques at college/university level it has become increasingly hard for teachers of our younger people. Especially, if you consider all the testing that the kids have to deal with. I, therefore, think that JTG's work is not cynical, but quite realistic. If you read his book 'The Underground History of American Education' you just know it is NOT cynical.
In it there is this beautiful ode to a friend and colleague of JTG's that burns out and dies at a fairly young age, thoroughly disillusioned by the education system and life.
I would like to refer to the 'Donnie Darko' thread where it becomes obvious what happens to teachers that think outside the box. They get attacked at PTA meetings by their colleagues and fired for straying a little, for trying something different, for trying to reach apathetic kids.

Edit: grammar OSIT.
 
HifromGrace said:
Mariama, thanks for the links about Charlotte Iserbyt!

I just came across a like-minded article:

How The American University was Killed, in Five Easy Steps

Posted on August 12, 2012by junctrebellion

http://junctrebellion.wordpress.com/2012/08/12/how-the-american-university-was-killed-in-five-easy-steps/

A few years back, Paul E. Lingenfelter began his report on the defunding of public education by saying, “In 1920 H.G. Wells wrote, ‘History is becoming more and more a race between education and catastrophe.’ I think he got it right. Nothing is more important to the future of the United States and the world than the breadth and effectiveness of education, especially of higher education. I say especially higher education, but not because pre- school, elementary, and secondary education are less important. Success at every level of education obviously depends on what has gone before. But for better or worse, the quality of postsecondary education and research affects the quality and effectiveness of education at every level.”

In the last few years, conversations have been growing like gathering storm clouds about the ways in which our universities are failing. There is talk about the poor educational outcomes apparent in our graduates, the out-of-control tuitions and crippling student loan debt. Attention is finally being paid to the enormous salaries for presidents and sports coaches, and the migrant worker status of the low-wage majority faculty. There are now movements to control tuition, to forgive student debt, to create more powerful “assessment” tools, to offer “free” university materials online, to combat adjunct faculty exploitation. But each of these movements focuses on a narrow aspect of a much wider problem, and no amount of “fix” for these aspects individually will address the real reason that universities in America are dying.

To explain my perspective here, I need to go back in time. Let’s go back to post World War II, 1950s when the GI bill, and the affordability – and sometimes free access – to universities created an upsurge of college students across the country. This surge continued through the ’60s, when universities were the very heart of intense public discourse, passionate learning, and vocal citizen involvement in the issues of the times. It was during this time, too, when colleges had a thriving professoriate, and when students were given access to a variety of subject areas, and the possibility of broad learning. The Liberal Arts stood at the center of a college education, and students were exposed to philosophy, anthropology, literature, history, sociology, world religions, foreign languages and cultures. Of course, something else happened, beginning in the late fifties into the sixties — the uprisings and growing numbers of citizens taking part in popular dissent — against the Vietnam War, against racism, against destruction of the environment in a growing corporatized culture, against misogyny, against homophobia. Where did much of that revolt incubate? Where did large numbers of well-educated, intellectual, and vocal people congregate? On college campuses. Who didn’t like the outcome of the 60s? The corporations, the war-mongers, those in our society who would keep us divided based on our race, our gender, our sexual orientation.

I suspect that, given the opportunity, those groups would have liked nothing more than to shut down the universities. Destroy them outright. But a country claiming to have democratic values can’t just shut down its universities. That would reveal something about that country which would not support the image they are determined to portray – that of a country of freedom, justice, opportunity for all. So, how do you kill the universities of the country without showing your hand? As a child growing up during the Cold War, I was taught that the communist countries in the first half of the 20th Century put their scholars, intellectuals and artists into prison camps, called “re-education camps”. What I’ve come to realize as an adult is that American corporatism despises those same individuals as much as we were told communism did. But instead of doing anything so obvious as throwing them into prison, here those same people are thrown into dire poverty. The outcome is the same. Desperate poverty controls and ultimately breaks people as effectively as prison…..and some research says that it works even MORE powerfully.

So: here is the recipe for killing universities, and you tell ME if what I’m describing isn’t exactly what is at the root of all the problems of our country’s system of higher education. (Because what I’m saying has more recently been applied to K-12 public education as well.)

First, you defund public higher education.

Anna Victoria, writing in Pluck Magazine, discusses this issue in a review of Christopher Newfield’s book, Unmaking the Public University: “In 1971, Lewis Powell (before assuming his post as a Supreme Court Justice) authored a memo, now known as the Powell Memorandum, and sent it to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. The title of the memo was “Attack on the American Free Enterprise System,” and in it he called on corporate America to take an increased role in shaping politics, law, and education in the United States.” How would they do that? One, by increased lobbying and pressure on legislators to change their priorities. “Funding for public universities comes from, as the term suggests, the state and federal government. Yet starting in the early 1980s, shifting state priorities forced public universities to increasingly rely on other sources of revenue. For example, in the University of Washington school system, state funding for schools decreased as a percentage of total public education budgets from 82% in 1989 to 51% in 2011.” That’s a loss of more than 1/3 of its public funding. But why this shift in priorities? U.C. Berkeley English professor, Christopher Newfield, in his new book Unmaking the Public University posits that conservative elites have worked to de-fund higher education explicitly because of its function in creating a more empowered, democratic, and multiracial middle class. His theory is one that blames explicit cultural concern, not financial woes, for the current decreases in funding. He cites the fact that California public universities were forced to reject 300,000 applicants because of lack of funding. Newfield explains that much of the motive behind conservative advocacy for de-funding of public education is racial, pro-corporate, and anti-protest in nature.

Again, from Victoria: “(The) ultimate objective, as outlined in the (Lewis Powell) memo, was to purge respectable institutions such as the media, arts, sciences, as well as college campus themselves of left-wing thoughts. At the time, college campuses were seen as “springboards for dissent,” as Newfield terms it, and were therefore viewed as publicly funded sources of opposition to the interests of the establishment. While it is impossible to know the extent to which this memo influenced the conservative political strategy over the coming decades, it is extraordinary to see how far the principles outlined in his memo have been adopted.”

Under the guise of many “conflicts”, such as budget struggles, or quotas, de-funding was consistently the result. This funding argument also was used to re-shape the kind of course offerings and curriculum focus found on campuses. Victoria writes, “Attacks on humanities curriculums, political correctness, and affirmative action shifted the conversation on public universities to the right, creating a climate of skepticism around state funded schools. State budget debates became platforms for conservatives to argue why certain disciplines such as sociology, history, anthropology, minority studies, language, and gender studies should be de-funded…” on one hand, through the argument that they were not offering students the “practical” skills needed for the job market — which was a powerful way to increase emphasis on what now is seen as vocational focus rather than actual higher education, and to de-value those very courses that trained and expanded the mind, developed a more complete human being, a more actively intelligent person and involved citizen. Another argument used to attack the humanities was “…their so-called promotion of anti-establishment sentiment.

Gradually, these arguments translated into real- and often deep- cuts into the budgets of state university systems,” especially in those most undesirable areas that the establishment found to run counter to their ability to control the population’s thoughts and behavior. The idea of “manufactured consent” should be talked about here – because if you remove the classes and the disciplines that are the strongest in their ability to develop higher level intellectual rigor, the result is a more easily manipulated citizenry, less capable of deep interrogation and investigation of the establishment “message”.

Second, you deprofessionalize and impoverish the professors (and continue to create a surplus of underemployed and unemployed Ph.D.s)

V.P. Joe Biden, a few months back, said that the reason tuitions are out of control is because of the high price of college faculty. He has NO IDEA what he is talking about. At latest count, we have 1.5 million university professors in this country, 1 million of whom are adjuncts. One million professors in America are hired on short-term contracts, most often for one semester at a time, with no job security whatsoever – which means that they have no idea how much work they will have in any given semester, and that they are often completely unemployed over summer months when work is nearly impossible to find (and many of the unemployed adjuncts do not qualify for unemployment payments). So, one million American university professors are earning, on average, $20K a year gross, with no benefits or healthcare, no unemployment insurance when they are out of work. Keep in mind, too, that many of the more recent Ph.Ds have entered this field often with the burden of six figure student loan debt on their backs.

There was recently an article talking about the long-term mental and physical destruction caused when people are faced with poverty and “job insecurity” — precarious employment, or “under-employment”. The article says that, in just the few short years since our 2008 economic collapse, the medical problems of this group have increased exponentially. This has been the horrible state of insecurity that America’s college professors have experienced now for thirty years. It can destroy you — breaking down your physical and emotional health. As an example: the average yearly starting salary of a university professor at Temple University in 1975 was just under $10,000 a year, with full benefits – health, retirement, and educational benefits (their family’s could attend college for free.) And guess what? Average pay for Temple’s faculty is STILL about the same — because adjuncts now make up the majority of faculty, and earn between $8,000 to $14,000 a year (depending on how many courses they are assigned each semester – there is NO guarantee of continued employment) — but unlike the full-time professors of 1975, these adjunct jobs come with NO benefits, no health care, no retirement, no educational benefits, no offices. How many other professions report salaries that have remained at 1975 levels?

This is how you break the evil, wicked, leftist academic class in America — you turn them into low-wage members of the precariat – that growing number of American workers whose employment is consistently precarious. All around the country, our undergraduates are being taught by faculty living at or near the poverty line, who have little to no say in the way classes are being taught, the number of students in a class, or how curriculum is being designed. They often have no offices in which to meet their students, no professional staff support, no professional development support. One million of our college professors are struggling to continue offering the best they can in the face of this wasteland of deteriorated professional support, while living the very worst kind of economic insecurity. Unlike those communist countries, which sometimes executed their intellectuals, here we are being killed off by lack of healthcare, by stress-related illness like heart-attacks or strokes. While we’re at it, let’s add suicide to that list of killers — and readers of this blog will remember that I have written at length about adjunct faculty suicide in the past.

Step #3: You move in a managerial/administrative class who take over governance of the university.

This new class takes control of much of the university’s functioning, including funding allocation, curriculum design, course offerings. If you are old enough to remember when medicine was forever changed by the appearance of the ‘HMO’ model of managed medicine, you will have an idea of what has happened to academia. If you are not old enough – let me tell you that Once Upon a Time, doctors ran hospitals, doctors made decisions on what treatment their patients needed. In the 1970s, during the infamous Nixon Administration, HMOs were an idea sold to the American public, said to help reign in medical costs. But once Nixon secured passage of the HMO Act in 1973, the organizations went quickly from operating on a non-profit organization model, focused on high quality health care for controlled costs, to being for-profit organizations, with lots of corporate money funding them – and suddenly the idea of high-quality health care was sacrificed in favor of profits – which meant taking in higher and higher premiums and offering less and less service, more denied claims, more limitations placed on doctors, who became a “managed profession”. You see the state of healthcare in this country, and how disastrous it is. Well, during this same time, there was a similar kind of development — something akin to the HMO — let’s call it an “EMO”, Educational Management Organization, began to take hold in American academia. From the 1970s until today, as the number of full-time faculty jobs continued to shrink, the number of full-time administrative jobs began to explode. As faculty was deprofessionalized and casualized, reduced to teaching as migrant contract workers, administrative jobs now offered good, solid salaries, benefits, offices, prestige and power. In 2012, administrators now outnumber faculty on every campus across the country. And just as disastrous as the HMO was to the practice of medicine in America, so is the EMO model disastrous to the practice of academia in America, and to the quality of our students’ education. Benjamin Ginsburg writes about this in great detail in his book The Fall of the Faculty.

I’d like to mention here, too, that universities often defend their use of adjuncts – which are now 75% of all professors in the country — claiming that they have no choice but to hire adjuncts, as a “cost saving measure” in an increasingly defunded university. What they don’t say, and without demand of transparency will NEVER say, is that they have not saved money by hiring adjuncts — they have reduced faculty salaries, security and power. The money wasn’t saved, because it was simply re-allocated to administrative salaries, coach salaries and outrageous university president salaries. There has been a redistribution of funds away from those who actually teach, the scholars – and therefore away from the students’ education itself — and into these administrative and executive salaries, sports costs — and the expanded use of “consultants”, PR and marketing firms, law firms. We have to add here, too, that president salaries went from being, in the 1970s, around $25K to 30K, to being in the hundreds of thousands to MILLIONS of dollars – salary, delayed compensation, discretionary funds, free homes, or generous housing allowances, cars and drivers, memberships to expensive country clubs.

Step Four: You move in corporate culture and corporate money

To further control and dominate how the university is ‘used” -a flood of corporate money results in changing the value and mission of the university from a place where an educated citizenry is seen as a social good, where intellect and reasoning is developed and heightened for the value of the individual and for society, to a place of vocational training, focused on profit. Corporate culture hijacked the narrative – university was no longer attended for the development of your mind. It was where you went so you could get a “good job”. Anything not immediately and directly related to job preparation or hiring was denigrated and seen as worthless — philosophy, literature, art, history.

Anna Victoria writes, on Corporate Culture: “Many universities have relied on private sector methods of revenue generation such as the formation of private corporations, patents, increased marketing strategies, corporate partnerships, campus rentals, and for-profit e-learning enterprises. To cut costs, public universities have employed non-state employee service contractors and have streamlined their financial operations.”
So what is the problem with corporate money, you might ask? A lot. When corporate money floods the universities, corporate values replace academic values. As we said before, humanities get defunded and the business school gets tons of money. Serious issues of ethics begin to develop when corporate money begins to make donations and form partnerships with science departments – where that money buys influence regarding not only the kinds of research being done but the outcomes of that research. Corporations donate to departments, and get the use of university researchers in the bargain — AND the ability to deduct the money as donation while using the labor, controlling and owning the research. Suddenly, the university laboratory is not a place of objective research anymore. As one example, corporations who don’t like “climate change” warnings will donate money and control research at universities, which then publish refutations of global warning proofs. OR, universities labs will be corporate-controlled in cases of FDA-approval research. This is especially dangerous when pharmaceutical companies take control of university labs to test efficacy or safety and then push approval through the governmental agencies. Another example is in economics departments — and movies like “The Inside Job” have done a great job of showing how Wall Street has bought off high-profile economists from Harvard, or Yale, or Stanford, or MIT, to talk about the state of the stock market and the country’s financial stability. Papers were being presented and published that were blatantly false, by well-respected economists who were on the payroll of Goldman Sachs or Merrill Lynch.

Academia should not be the -jezebel- of corporatism, but that’s what it has become. Academia once celebrated itself as an independent institution. Academia is a culture, one that offers a long-standing worldview which values on-going, rigorous intellectual, emotional, psychological, creative development of the individual citizen. It respects and values the contributions of the scholar, the intellectual, to society. It treasures the promise of each student, and strives to offer the fullest possible support to the development of that promise. It does this not only for the good of the scholar and the student, but for the social good. Like medicine, academia existed for the social good. Neither should be a purely for-profit endeavor. And yet, in both the case of the HMO and the EMO, we have been taken over by an alien for-profit culture, our sovereignty over our own profession, our own institutions, stripped from us.

A corporate model, where profit depends on 1) maintaining a low-wage work force and 2) charging continually higher pricers for their “services” is what now controls our colleges . Faculty is being squeezed from one end and our students are being squeezed from the other.

Step Five – Destroy the Students

While claiming to offer them hope of a better life, our corporatized universities are ruining the lives of our students. This is accomplished through a two-prong tactic: you dumb down and destroy the quality of the education so that no one on campus is really learning to think, to question, to reason. Instead, they are learning to obey, to withstand “tests” and “exams”, to follow rules, to endure absurdity and abuse. Our students have been denied full-time available faculty, the ability to develop mentors and advisors, faculty-designed syllabi which changes each semester, a wide variety of courses and options. Instead, more and more universities have core curriculum which dictates a large portion of the course of study, in which the majority of classes are administrative-designed “common syllabi” courses, taught by an army of underpaid, part-time faculty in a model that more closely resembles a factory or the industrial kitchen of a fast food restaurant than an institution of higher learning.

The Second Prong: You make college so insanely unaffordable that only the wealthiest students from the wealthiest of families can afford to go to the school debt free. Younger people may not know that for much of the 20th Century many universities in the U.S. were free – including the CA state system – you could establish residency in six months and go to Berkeley for free, or at very low cost. When I was an undergraduate student in the mid to late 1970s, tuition at Temple University was around $700 a year. Today, tuition is nearly $15,000 a year. Tuitions have increased, using CA as an example again, over 2000% since the 1970s. 2000%! This is the most directly dangerous situation for our students: pulling them into crippling debt that will follow them to the grave.

Another dangerous aspect of what is happening can be found in the shady partnership that has formed between the lending institutions and the Financial Aid Departments of universities. This is an unholy alliance. I have had students in my classes who work for Financial Aid. They tell me that they are trained to say NOT “This is what you need to borrow,” but to say “This is what you can get,” and to always entice the student with the highest possible number. There have been plenty of kick-back scandals between colleges and lenders — and I’m sure there is plenty undiscovered shady business going on. So, tuition costs are out of control because of administrative, executive and coach salaries, and the loan numbers keep growing, risking a life of indebtedness for most of our students. Further, there is absolutely no incentive on the part of this corporatized university to care.

The propaganda machine here has been powerful. Students, through the belief of their parents, their K-12 teachers, their high school counselors, are convinced by constant repetition that they HAVE to go to college to have a promising, middle class life, they are convinced that this tuition debt is “worth it” — and learn too late that it will indenture them. Let’s be clear: this is not the fault of the parents, or K-12 teachers or counselors. This is an intentional message that has been repeated year in and year out that aims to convince us all about the essential quality of a college education.

So, there you have it.

Within one generation, in five easy steps, not only have the scholars and intellectuals of the country been silenced and nearly wiped out, but the entire institution has been hijacked, and recreated as a machine through which future generations will ALL be impoverished, indebted and silenced. Now, low wage migrant professors teach repetitive courses they did not design to students who travel through on a kind of conveyor belt, only to be spit out, indebted and desperate into a jobless economy. The only people immediately benefitting inside this system are the administrative class – whores to the corporatized colonizers, earning money in this system in order to oversee this travesty. But the most important thing to keep in mind is this: The real winners, the only people truly benefitting from the big-picture meltdown of the American university are those people who, in the 1960s, saw those vibrant college campuses as a threat to their established power. They are the same people now working feverishly to dismantle other social structures, everything from Medicare and Social Security to the Post Office.

Looking at this wreckage of American academia, we have to acknowledge: They have won.

BUT these are victors who will never declare victory — because the carefully-maintained capitalist illusion of the “university education” still benefits them. Never, ever, admit that the university is dead. No, no. Quite the opposite. Instead, continue to insist that the university is the ONLY way to gain a successful, middle class life. Say that the university is mandatory for happiness in adulthood. All the while, maintain this low-wage precariate class of edu-migrants, continually mis-educate and indebt in the students to ensure their docility, pimp the institution out to corporate interests. It’s a win-win for those right wingers – they’ve crippled those in the country who would push back against them, and have so carefully and cleverly hijacked the educational institutions that they can now be turned into part of the neoliberal/neocon machinery, further benefitting the right-wing agenda.

So now what?

This ruination has taken about a generation. Will we be able to undo this damage? Can we force refunding of our public educational system? Can we professionalize faculty, drive out the administrative glut and corporate hijackers? Can we provide free or low-cost tuition and high-quality education to our students in a way that does NOT focus only on job training, but on high-level personal and intellectual development? I believe we can. But only if we understand this as a big picture issue, and refuse to allow those in government, or those corporate-owned media mouthpieces to divide and conquer us further. This ruinous rampage is part of the much larger attack on progressive values, on the institutions of social good. The battle isn’t only to reclaim the professoriate, to wipe out student debt, to raise educational outcomes — although each of those goals deserve to be fought for. But we will win a Pyrrhic victory at best unless we understand the nature of the larger war, and fight back in a much, much bigger way to reclaim the country’s values for the betterment of our citizens.

I am eager to hear from those of you who have been involved in this battle, or are about to enter it. We have a big job ahead of us, and are facing a very powerful foe in a kind of David and Goliath battle. I’m open to hearing ideas about how to build a much, much better slingshot.

Shocking, but not surprising. :(
How many college campuses were infiltrated during the sixties?, I wonder. Something like this was mentioned in the JFK movie.

That is why I loved JTG's letter to his grand-daughter 'Don't worry about college'.

I found this in Life Learning Magazine:

Better Than College
We featured the start-up of Blake Boles’ Zero Tuition College – www.ztcollege.com – in
our January/February 2011 issue. It’s now an online community of close to three hundred self-directed learners who educate themselves without college. Boles is an author and entrepreneur who owns and operates Unschool Adventures, a travel company for self-directed teens. In 2003 he was studying astrophysics at UC Berkeley when he stumbled upon a treasure trove of books by unschooling authors, and was inspired to custom-design his final two years of college to study the topic full-time. After graduating, he joined the Not Back to School Camp community and began writing about the topic of self-directed learning.
His first book was College Without High School (New Society Press, 2009). His new book, Better Than College: How to Build a Successful Life Without a Four-Year Degree, is a natural progression from the first. And, true to its message of DIY learning and entrepreneurialism, it was self-published.
Like most other people in our culture, many life learners (and their parents) assume that they will eventually go to college. But there is no reason not to continue (or begin, if that’s the case) to control your own learning at the post-secondary level. College is hugely expensive and many people are realizing that it is no longer all that effective. Better Than College will provide you with compelling inspiration and practical information for becoming, as Boles puts it “financially independent, self-employed (or very happily employed), well-rounded, and well-connected without the grace of a college institution,” but through self-knowledge and entrepreneurship. The world is a different place than it was just a few years ago, and those two things are important for anyone’s future. Given Boles’ passion, and his experience working with young people via Zero Tuition College, I was looking forward to this book. And it’s all I expected it to be: grounded in real life experiences, practical, inspiring, and convincing about the possibilities outside academia. Go to www.better-than-college.com to learn more or buy it.

Edit: adjusted quote
 

Trending content

Back
Top Bottom