2.11.2006


This is from the Edge's world question center "question of the year," which I've talked about before, here. The question this year is "What is your dangerous idea?" This is one of the many responses that I really enjoyed and I've been debating the topic a bit recently. And I'm posting it here, because, like most Fridays, I'm toast, and in no state to write. This is laziness, and it hast to stop. Soon, but not tonight.

No More Teacher's Dirty Looks

After a natural disaster, the newscasters eventually excitedly announce that school is finally open so no matter what else is terrible where they live, the kids are going to school. I always feel sorry for the poor kids.

My dangerous idea is one that most people immediately reject without giving it serious thought: school is bad for kids - it makes them unhappy and as tests show -— they don't learn much.

When you listen to children talk about school you easily discover what they are thinking about in school: who likes them, who is being mean to them, how to improve their social ranking, how to get the teacher to treat them well and give them good grades.

Schools are structured today in much the same way as they have been for hundreds of years. And for hundreds of years philosophers and others have pointed out that school is really a bad idea:

We are shut up in schools and college recitation rooms for ten or fifteen years, and come out at last with a belly full of words and do not know a thing. -— Ralph Waldo Emerson

Education is an admirable thing, but it is well to remember from time to time that nothing that is worth knowing can be taught. - Oscar Wilde

Schools should simply cease to exist as we know them. The Government needs to get out of the education business and stop thinking it knows what children should know and then testing them constantly to see if they regurgitate whatever they have just been spoon fed.

The Government is and always has been the problem in education:

If the government would make up its mind to require for every child a good education, it might save itself the trouble of providing one. It might leave to parents to obtain the education where and how they pleased, and content itself with helping to pay the school fees of the poorer classes of children, and defraying the entire school expenses of those who have no one else to pay for them. -— JS Mill

First, God created idiots. That was just for practice. Then He created school boards. -— Mark Twain

Schools need to be replaced by safe places where children can go to learn how to do things that they are interested in learning how to do. Their interests should guide their learning. The government's role should be to create places that are attractive to children and would cause them to want to go there.

Whence it comes to pass, that for not having chosen the right course, we often take very great pains, and consume a good part of our time in training up children to things, for which, by their natural constitution, they are totally unfit. - Montaigne

We had a President many years ago who understood what education is really for. Nowadays we have ones that make speeches about the Pythagorean Theorem when we are quite sure they don't know anything about any theorem.

There are two types of education. . . One should teach us how to make a living, And the other how to live. -— John Adams

Over a million students have opted out of the existing school system and are now being home schooled. The problem is that the states regulate home schooling and home schooling still looks an awful lot like school.

We need to stop producing a nation of stressed out students who learn how to please the teacher instead of pleasing themselves. We need to produce adults who love learning, not adults who avoid all learning because it reminds them of the horrors of school. We need to stop thinking that all children need to learn the same stuff. We need to create adults who can think for themselves and are not convinced about how to understand complex situations in simplistic terms that can be rendered in a sound bite.

Just call school off. Turn them all into apartment houses.

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ROGER C. SCHANK
Psychologist & Computer Scientist; Chief Learning Officer, Trump University; Author, Making Minds Less Well Educated than Our Own

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Interesting, David.

A few immediate thoughts that I'll voice and others that I'll keep to myself for now.

I agree that the government is often a ridiculous voice when it comes to education, especially with the extreme weight on standardized testing.

I disagree with the blanket statement about what kids think about in school. Yes, the social aspect is huge, but school provides the first place for those kids to develop social skills that they'll need. And believe it or not, some kids actually *like* school and DO learn. *gasp*

The reguritation statement? Agreed. It's sad that even in college level classes in which future educators are taught about making learning meaningful for kids, there still exists the memorization just to puke the information back up for an exam. Not all, but enough.

The quote about leaving it up to the parents? As wonderfully dedicated as some parents are, you'd be amazed at how many parents really do not have a clue about their children's education...and sometimes even how to raise them.

I definately don't think that schools should be eliminated, but changed? Most definately.

Fortunately, there is a new education program that is quickly picking up all over the world. It's an international program that focuses on broader concepts and is based on children's inquiries. What they are interested in and researching want they want to learn more about.

Sorry for the book, but I definately couldn't let that posted go untouched. It's one that I actually read all the way through.

Some good insight, David, but maybe you need to hang out with teachers more often. Even with the government and school board regulations, we're not all that bad.