SLAVE TRAINING
America's public-school
culture is creating prime targets for demagogic manipulation
By Gene Edward
Veith
Most of those worrying
about America's educational problems focus on the effect of bad schooling on
individuals (the children who are left behind) or the economy (businesses
struggling with semi-literate workers). But there is a much more important
issue: What kind of society will bad schools give us? What kind of government
will we have if current educational trends have their way?
The Founding Fathers did
not think that a free, democratic republic would be possible without
well-educated citizens. John Adams made education a priority when he wrote in
the Massachusetts constitution of "Wisdom and knowledge, as well as virtue,
diffused generally among the body of the people being necessary for the
preservation of their rights and liberties." Thomas Jefferson said of
education, "No other sure foundation can be devised for the preservation of
freedom and happiness."
Certainly, if people are
going to take the burden of government onto themselves voting for their own
rulers and setting policies through their elected representatives they need
to be well-informed, able to think for themselves, and willing to exercise good
judgment. The citizen of a republic must be able to read newspapers and keep up
with the issues of the day. He must be a good thinker, able to approach policy
decisions with logic and insight. He must recognize demagoguery and propaganda,
so that he is not easily manipulated. Otherwise, he will be swept away by his
passions and controlled by someone else. As Adams recognized, a democracy can be
just as tyrannical as a monarchy.
A major purpose of
America's schools used to be training in citizenship. The schoolhouse was a
means of assimilating immigrants and teaching them the ideals of their new
country. As late as a few decades ago, schools unabashedly taught
"Americanism," held patriotic essay contests, and began the day with
the Pledge of Allegiance to the flag.
Though the flag salute
continues in many schools, the overt nationalism of the old schools strikes many
people today as quaint or embarrassing. To be sure, these practices often
amounted to little more than "civil religion" and appropriate
anti-communist indoctrination during the Cold War, rather than the intentional
equipping of students for the skills and duties of citizenship.
But today we are at the
other extreme. Many educators teach "multiculturalism" as if America
had no culture of its own. Schools often teach students nothing of their
American heritage the heroes, ideals, and principles that really have made
our nation great and instead rub their noses into the unsavory parts of
American history.
Part of this is due to the
still left-wing intellectual establishment, whose anti-Americanism trickles down
from the universities to the grade schools. Another part is due to the
curriculum. Instead of teaching history as a saga of great men, great ideas, and
great actions, history has often been reduced to "social studies," how
ordinary men and women of the time had to live. Instead of learning about the
Battle of Yorktown, children are taught about clothing styles and social customs
of the lower classes, including how women and minorities were oppressed.
The deeper lesson, taught
in so many words on college campuses, is that cultures and governments and laws
are nothing more than a cynical faηade for certain people to exercise power
over others. This is a worldview for dictatorship. If it is correct, then the
only legitimate political activity is to seize power and then forcibly oppress
the people who disagree with you.
The attention to process
over content enshrined in educational theory through the socialist John
Dewey and his disciples also leaves students unprepared for effective
citizenship. Many students have minds that are quick and well-functioning but
empty. Since they were never taught the substance of their cultural heritage,
they cannot build on that heritage. Instead, they are left with the entertain-me
aesthetic of pop culture, which becomes the only culture they have. As the Roman
emperors came to realize, keeping the masses entertained preferably with
violent spectacles and decadent sex is the best way to keep them under
control.
The basic skills crisis
also has political ramifications. It isn't just that graduates who cannot read
and write make bad employees. They also make bad citizens. Those who have the
privilege of voting have an obligation to study issues, analyze them, and make
judgments that are good for the nation. Those who cannot or, more commonly,
will not inform themselves are prime targets for demagogic manipulation.
And, indeed, a look at
political advertising from both parties shows that this is exactly the way to
win a contemporary campaign: Project a good image of your candidate and a
negative of your opponent. This can be done not by policy analysis (which is
"BORING," to use the mantra of the ignorant pop culture addict).
Rather image enhancement comes from clothing styles, body language, and emoting
the correct platitudes. Opponents' images are degraded to the level of B-grade
movie villains ("He wants to poison your water").
Any educated person,
anyone trained in objective thinking even if he never went beyond grade school,
should be able to see through this kind of manipulation. But even college grads
maybe especially college grads, who have absorbed more of contemporary
thought than the less educationally advantaged behave just like the focus
groups predict.
Ancient Greece and Rome
provided two kinds of education: Slaves received a practical, minimal education
that equipped them to contribute to the economy through their good work, but not
to think for themselves. Free citizens, though, gained a "liberal"
education from the Latin word libera, meaning "free" that
would equip them to take an active role in the Athenian democracy or the Roman
republic.
The education for freedom
was not just patriotic indoctrination; rather, it comprised certain intellectual
skills, as embodied in the so-called "liberal arts" of grammar, logic,
rhetoric; music, arithmetic, astronomy, and geometry. Christianity put these
arts to use in mastering certain content areas: natural science, moral science,
and theological science (the queen of them all). This was the kind of education
put into effect by the Reformation and the Founding Fathers. It can be found
today among Classical Christian schools and many homeschoolers. In the meantime,
most of our schools are goose-stepping in the opposite direction.
The
problem, however, is not just the curriculum but the culture of our schools.
Part of this culture comes from the institution, with its insistence on herding
young people into segregated age groups, and part comes from the students
themselves who have been so segregated away from adult influence.
Cliques,
fads, and the imperative to be cool turn typical high schools into mutually
hostile camps. And pity the poor adolescent who does not fit into any group at
all. The cruel put-downs, the abusive ridicule, the Machiavellian politics of
the school social scene now appear even on the grade-school level. School
culture is typically every bit as hierarchical as a medieval aristocracy a
strange way to raise members of a democratic republic.
Thus,
from the grade schools to the universities, our young people are learning
conformity, group behavior, and the necessity of following fashions.
Students
learn to be obedient consumers. They learn to feel, not to think. They are
bombarded with emotion-laden images, indoctrination-camp-style "sensitivity
training," and rhetorical manipulation. This is not the kind of formation
needed for free citizens. Instead, it is a formula for producing both slaves and
tyrants.
FROM: America's
public-school culture is creating prime targets for demagogic manipulation By
Gene Edward Veith