Ok students, let’s start today with a quick multiple choice
question.
Which of the following represents the best reason for having a highly functioning system of public
schools?
a) economic
stability
b) social
stability
c) political
stability
d) joy
of the individual
Yes I know. I hated these “best reason” questions when I was
taking standardized tests, too. It always seemed to me that these questions
were asking you to guess what was in the test makers head. Nonetheless, your
answer to this question will go a long way to determining what kind of schools
you champion.
If your answer to the question is a) economic stability, you are part of a long tradition in American
education that sees education for its utilitarian value. One early proponent of
the economic stability argument was Booker T. Washington, who argued that the
best way for newly freed African Americans to find their place in an American
society that they had been brought to in chains was to learn a trade. Later on,
public school districts throughout the country built vocational schools where
high school students learned practical skills to ensure employment. In this day
and age, when a high school diploma seems inadequate for earning a living wage,
those who focus on economic stability are likely to champion educational
standards that promise to get students “college and career ready.” If your
concern is maintaining the economic status quo, you may choose economic
stability as the goal of public schooling.
If your answer is b)
social stability, you also have history on your side. As Michael Katz has
shown in his book The Irony of Early
Education Reform, a driving motive behind the reform movement in public
education in the 19th century was to convert the children of factory
workers and recent immigrants into “middle-class standards of behavior and
tastes.” Public education was seen as a way to “control the rabble”, if you
will. It was a way for the “haves” to control the “have-nots.” Many charter
schools have apparently bought into this philosophy. Schools, such as those run
by the KIPP chain and those patterned closely after KIPP, focus on compliance
and test scores. Students are subject to rigid, military-style discipline regimens
and blatant shaming in order to force compliance. So if you are a champion of
charter schools, your bias may be toward social stability as the best reason
for good public schools.
Beginning with my first day of school, I learned that in
America we lived in a democracy and that the preservation of that democracy was
dependent on an educated populace. In school I recited the Pledge of
Allegiance, sang the National Anthem, and took courses entitled American History,
Civics, and Problems of Democracy. So surely answer c) political stability is an appealing answer. One of my education
heroes, John Dewey, in his book Democracy
and Education, said that the aim of education in a democratic society was
the creation of free human beings associated with one another on terms of
equality. A beautiful sentiment, but a messy one. As a child of the 60s, I know
just how messy this can be. During that period I exercised my rights as a free
(and admittedly immature) individual to take to the streets in protest for
civil rights, freedom of speech on my college campus and against the Vietnam
War. It was (sort of) political democracy, but it wasn’t very stable.
What the corporate education reformer wants from political
stability, I believe, is something very different from what Dewey wanted or
what I was protesting about. As E. Wayne Ross has pointed out in his
introduction to Volume
II of Defending Public Schools, the real political status quo in the
country today is neoliberalism. As Ross puts it, neoliberalism represents
“policies and
processes that permit a relative handful of private interests to control as much as possible of
social life in order to maximize their personal profit. Neoliberalism is embraced by parties across the political
spectrum, from right to left,
and is characterized by social and economic policy that is shaped
in the interests of wealthy investors and large corporations. The free market, private enterprise, consumer
choice, entrepreneurial initiative, and government
deregulation are some important principles of neoliberalism."
Understood in this light, the education reformer looking to
preserve the political stability of neoliberalism, might argue for the positive
impact of competition on public schools. They might champion school choice in
the form of for profit charters, parent vouchers, and parent trigger
legislation. They might seek to weaken unions and subject teachers to a “business
model” based on a perversion of Darwinian survival of the fittest, with the
fittest being judged by student scores on standardized tests.
I borrowed the term “joy of the individual” from the
aforementioned Michael Katz, who says throughout its history, individual joy has
never been the focus of public schools. So what might we think of those who
choose d) joy of the individual as
the best reason for having public schools. Are these only the raging
looney-fringe idealists? What might schools look like if the individual student
were at the center of our thinking?
A school focused on the joy of the individual would start, I
think, with an emphasis on engagement, rather than compliance. Engaged students
need the guidance and direction and
background knowledge a skilled professional can provide, and they need some
routines established so they can get out of their own way and learn, but they do
not need the harsh discipline practices seen in so many of those reform charter
schools.
Engaging individual students will require a broad and rich curriculum
including plenty of time for the arts in all of its forms and for physical
education and recess. A school focused on the joy of the individual will also
be required to provide lots of choice. Choice in what books to read. Choice to pursue
topics of personal interest and choice in how learning is demonstrated.
But choice is not sufficient for this focus on the joy of
the individual. Since the individual must also live and work in a society, this
rich curriculum would also include the study of the vast array of cultures in
that society, readings of the great works of many different cultures and
opportunities to talk and meet with people from many different cultures.
This kind of education cannot be done on the cheap. It cannot
be done if we focus on “college and career ready”, instead of life ready. It
cannot be done in an atmosphere of rigid compliance. It cannot be done in an atmosphere
where educators live in fear of their jobs. It can only be done through a real
commitment to our children, every one of them.
This focus on individual growth in public education may seem
to be pie-in-the-sky, but think for a moment: If you were about to send your
child off to school for the first time, what would be your dream education for
that child? I think your dream would come pretty close to answer d above, joy
and personal fulfillment.
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