When you study education, one of the
most depressing revelations is the extent to which the Education
Establishment has abandoned its main responsibility.
Our elite educators come up with one
pretext after another for not doing much in the way of education.
Finally, you have this vast landscape full of almost nothing, at least
nothing academic, intellectual, or scholarly.
This is wildly counterintuitive. You
don’t expect to look across the educational landscape and see an empty
wasteland, although a famous professor did write a book in 1953 with
that exact title, “Educational
Wastelands--the Retreat from Learning in our Public Schools.”
How do they justify this
retreat? Basically, they throw out one basic lie: “Our children can’t handle
that.” Sometimes they say, “Our children don’t need that.” The
constant theme is that children are limited, unable to learn anything
difficult, and lacking in intellectual curiosity.
Our Education Establishment justifies
having dumb schools by insisting that the children themselves are dumb.
Our top educators seem to think that
kids are born ignorant, and we shouldn’t disturb the natural order of
things. Obviously, this is a self-serving cop-out by people more
interested in social engineering (read: leveling) than in
educating anyone.
The problem now is that these silly
sophistries have permeated every corner of the country. Adults look at
children and think, they’re just kids, we can’t expect much.
We need to turn this thing
around 180°. Start with the premise that children can learn far more
than now, probably ten times more.
Let’s do a blue-sky exploration of what is possible. Pick
any three serious subjects at random. Here are the three that first came
to my mind: steam engines, the Olympics, nuclear physics.
Children could and should learn about
these things. But it’s safe to predict that if you dared to suggest this
to our top educators, they would faint from the impossibility of
teaching such substantial information to a child. They haven’t tried in
many decades, therefore it can’t be done.
I submit that it’s feasible (maybe
easy given the power of Google) for any serious
teacher to assemble 1000 facts, quotations, photographs, videos,
Hollywood film clips, maps and other engaging material on each subject.
During a typical class, the teacher would discuss the most interesting
30-40 of these items to the children. Explain and connect. In a month
the teacher would cover the thousand pieces of information. At that
point the children would be brainiacs on the subject.
Does someone object you couldn’t find
1000 interesting bits about steam engines? Nonsense. You could find
1000 bits about a single steam engine now operating. What a fascinating
subject. How do they work? When did they first show up? How are they
used in trains, ships, cars, and even toys? You can teach history
through the development and spread of the steam engine and the steam
locomotive. (I think Google Images has something like 500 pictures just
under the search term "train wrecks.")
The Olympics? There are no doubt 1000
hours of film available from the last 20 Olympics. Probably a million
photographs. Probably a billion words. If you can’t make the Olympics
interesting, quit. (Did you know, for example, that every four years the
best design companies in the world compete to create entirely
new graphics and signage for the next Olympics?)
Nuclear energy? You can show pictures
of nuclear facilities around the planet, interiors and exteriors. Why
are they so huge? What are the scientists doing there? We can show
nuclear explosions, gas chamber experiments, famous people who worked on
this. You skip the math and show everything else. Even for younger
kids, you could talk about the atom, nuclear reactions, radiation, and
what happened to that reactor in Japan.
My thesis is you can teach
anything to anybody. You teach it at whatever level the class can
handle, perhaps a little higher but never lower. Let’s think of the
spectators at a football game, that is, average adults. It would be
possible to engage and inform them on almost any subject. Whatever you
can teach to them, you can teach to children. Who wouldn’t enjoy
learning interesting things about nuclear energy, the Olympics, and
steam engines?
Everything I’ve said is obvious. The
only reason it sounds ambitious is that the Education Establishment shut
down all rational thought on the subject years ago. They start from the
quackery that zero is normal: zero facts, zero teaching, zero learning.
Zero is normal for them.
It’s not normal for human beings at
any point in their growth. What’s normal is that the brain focuses on
interesting things and wants to learn more about them.
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