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applejax
17th January 2012, 00:53
I checked to see if this was already posted but nothing came up (sorry if has been repeated, but I did try to search for it with the tools provided)...My friend on fb posted this and it was an interesting read...and the comments were also mindful (especially from one college teacher)...

here's the link to it: https://www.commondreams.org/view/2011/04/11 (if you prefer this) or scroll below:

Published on Monday, April 11, 2011 by TruthDig.com
Why the United States Is Destroying Its Education System
by Chris Hedges
A nation that destroys its systems of education, degrades its public information, guts its public libraries and turns its airwaves into vehicles for cheap, mindless amusement becomes deaf, dumb and blind. It prizes test scores above critical thinking and literacy. It celebrates rote vocational training and the singular, amoral skill of making money. It churns out stunted human products, lacking the capacity and vocabulary to challenge the assumptions and structures of the corporate state. It funnels them into a caste system of drones and systems managers. It transforms a democratic state into a feudal system of corporate masters and serfs.

Teachers, their unions under attack, are becoming as replaceable as minimum-wage employees at Burger King. We spurn real teachers—those with the capacity to inspire children to think, those who help the young discover their gifts and potential—and replace them with instructors who teach to narrow, standardized tests. These instructors obey. They teach children to obey. And that is the point. The No Child Left Behind program, modeled on the “Texas Miracle,” is a fraud. It worked no better than our deregulated financial system. But when you shut out debate these dead ideas are self-perpetuating.

Passing bubble tests celebrates and rewards a peculiar form of analytical intelligence. This kind of intelligence is prized by money managers and corporations. They don’t want employees to ask uncomfortable questions or examine existing structures and assumptions. They want them to serve the system. These tests produce men and women who are just literate and numerate enough to perform basic functions and service jobs. The tests elevate those with the financial means to prepare for them. They reward those who obey the rules, memorize the formulas and pay deference to authority. Rebels, artists, independent thinkers, eccentrics and iconoclasts—those who march to the beat of their own drum—are weeded out.

“Imagine,” said a public school teacher in New York City, who asked that I not use his name, “going to work each day knowing a great deal of what you are doing is fraudulent, knowing in no way are you preparing your students for life in an ever more brutal world, knowing that if you don’t continue along your scripted test prep course and indeed get better at it you will be out of a job. Up until very recently, the principal of a school was something like the conductor of an orchestra: a person who had deep experience and knowledge of the part and place of every member and every instrument. In the past 10 years we’ve had the emergence of both [Mayor] Mike Bloomberg’s Leadership Academy and Eli Broad’s Superintendents Academy, both created exclusively to produce instant principals and superintendents who model themselves after CEOs. How is this kind of thing even legal? How are such ‘academies’ accredited? What quality of leader needs a ‘leadership academy’? What kind of society would allow such people to run their children’s schools? The high-stakes tests may be worthless as pedagogy but they are a brilliant mechanism for undermining the school systems, instilling fear and creating a rationale for corporate takeover. There is something grotesque about the fact the education reform is being led not by educators but by financers and speculators and billionaires.”

Teachers, under assault from every direction, are fleeing the profession. Even before the “reform” blitzkrieg we were losing half of all teachers within five years after they started work—and these were people who spent years in school and many thousands of dollars to become teachers. How does the country expect to retain dignified, trained professionals under the hostility of current conditions? I suspect that the hedge fund managers behind our charter schools system—whose primary concern is certainly not with education—are delighted to replace real teachers with nonunionized, poorly trained instructors. To truly teach is to instill the values and knowledge which promote the common good and protect a society from the folly of historical amnesia. The utilitarian, corporate ideology embraced by the system of standardized tests and leadership academies has no time for the nuances and moral ambiguities inherent in a liberal arts education. Corporatism is about the cult of the self. It is about personal enrichment and profit as the sole aim of human existence. And those who do not conform are pushed aside.

“It is extremely dispiriting to realize that you are in effect lying to these kids by insinuating that this diet of corporate reading programs and standardized tests are preparing them for anything,” said this teacher, who feared he would suffer reprisals from school administrators if they knew he was speaking out. “It is even more dispiriting to know that your livelihood depends increasingly on maintaining this lie. You have to ask yourself why are hedge fund managers suddenly so interested in the education of the urban poor? The main purpose of the testing craze is not to grade the students but to grade the teacher.”

“I cannot say for certain—not with the certainty of a Bill Gates or a Mike Bloomberg who pontificate with utter certainty over a field in which they know absolutely nothing—but more and more I suspect that a major goal of the reform campaign is to make the work of a teacher so degrading and insulting that the dignified and the truly educated teachers will simply leave while they still retain a modicum of self-respect,” he added. “In less than a decade we been stripped of autonomy and are increasingly micromanaged. Students have been given the power to fire us by failing their tests. Teachers have been likened to pigs at a trough and blamed for the economic collapse of the United States. In New York, principals have been given every incentive, both financial and in terms of control, to replace experienced teachers with 22-year-old untenured rookies. They cost less. They know nothing. They are malleable and they are vulnerable to termination.”

The demonizing of teachers is another public relations feint, a way for corporations to deflect attention from the theft of some $17 billion in wages, savings and earnings among American workers and a landscape where one in six workers is without employment. The speculators on Wall Street looted the U.S. Treasury. They stymied any kind of regulation. They have avoided criminal charges. They are stripping basic social services. And now they are demanding to run our schools and universities.

“Not only have the reformers removed poverty as a factor, they’ve removed students’ aptitude and motivation as factors,” said this teacher, who is in a teachers union. “They seem to believe that students are something like plants where you just add water and place them in the sun of your teaching and everything blooms. This is a fantasy that insults both student and teacher. The reformers have come up with a variety of insidious schemes pushed as steps to professionalize the profession of teaching. As they are all businessmen who know nothing of the field, it goes without saying that you do not do this by giving teachers autonomy and respect. They use merit pay in which teachers whose students do well on bubble tests will receive more money and teachers whose students do not do so well on bubble tests will receive less money. Of course, the only way this could conceivably be fair is to have an identical group of students in each class—an impossibility. The real purposes of merit pay are to divide teachers against themselves as they scramble for the brighter and more motivated students and to further institutionalize the idiot notion of standardized tests. There is a certain diabolical intelligence at work in both of these.”

“If the Bloomberg administration can be said to have succeeded in anything,” he said, “they have succeeded in turning schools into stress factories where teachers are running around wondering if it’s possible to please their principals and if their school will be open a year from now, if their union will still be there to offer some kind of protection, if they will still have jobs next year. This is not how you run a school system. It’s how you destroy one. The reformers and their friends in the media have created a Manichean world of bad teachers and effective teachers. In this alternative universe there are no other factors. Or, all other factors—poverty, depraved parents, mental illness and malnutrition—are all excuses of the Bad Teacher that can be overcome by hard work and the Effective Teacher.”

The truly educated become conscious. They become self-aware. They do not lie to themselves. They do not pretend that fraud is moral or that corporate greed is good. They do not claim that the demands of the marketplace can morally justify the hunger of children or denial of medical care to the sick. They do not throw 6 million families from their homes as the cost of doing business. Thought is a dialogue with one’s inner self. Those who think ask questions, questions those in authority do not want asked. They remember who we are, where we come from and where we should go. They remain eternally skeptical and distrustful of power. And they know that this moral independence is the only protection from the radical evil that results from collective unconsciousness. The capacity to think is the only bulwark against any centralized authority that seeks to impose mindless obedience. There is a huge difference, as Socrates understood, between teaching people what to think and teaching them how to think. Those who are endowed with a moral conscience refuse to commit crimes, even those sanctioned by the corporate state, because they do not in the end want to live with criminals—themselves.

“It is better to be at odds with the whole world than, being one, to be at odds with myself,” Socrates said.

Those who can ask the right questions are armed with the capacity to make a moral choice, to defend the good in the face of outside pressure. And this is why the philosopher Immanuel Kant puts the duties we have to ourselves before the duties we have to others. The standard for Kant is not the biblical idea of self-love—love thy neighbor as thyself, do unto others as you would have them do unto you—but self-respect. What brings us meaning and worth as human beings is our ability to stand up and pit ourselves against injustice and the vast, moral indifference of the universe. Once justice perishes, as Kant knew, life loses all meaning. Those who meekly obey laws and rules imposed from the outside—including religious laws—are not moral human beings. The fulfillment of an imposed law is morally neutral. The truly educated make their own wills serve the higher call of justice, empathy and reason. Socrates made the same argument when he said it is better to suffer wrong than to do wrong.

“The greatest evil perpetrated,” Hannah Arendt wrote, “is the evil committed by nobodies, that is, by human beings who refuse to be persons.”

As Arendt pointed out, we must trust only those who have this self-awareness. This self-awareness comes only through consciousness. It comes with the ability to look at a crime being committed and say “I can’t.” We must fear, Arendt warned, those whose moral system is built around the flimsy structure of blind obedience. We must fear those who cannot think. Unconscious civilizations become totalitarian wastelands.

“The greatest evildoers are those who don’t remember because they have never given thought to the matter, and, without remembrance, nothing can hold them back,” Arendt writes. “For human beings, thinking of past matters means moving in the dimension of depth, striking roots and thus stabilizing themselves, so as not to be swept away by whatever may occur—the Zeitgeist or History or simple temptation. The greatest evil is not radical, it has no roots, and because it has no roots it has no limitations, it can go to unthinkable extremes and sweep over the whole world.”

Copyright © 2011 Truthdig, L.L.C.

Carmody
17th January 2012, 01:20
democracy..is about staying on guard and using force on that which attempts to be a parasite.

It is about never sleeping..for the parasites have their ways/behavior/doings... as a permanent mindset and state of existence, and they will NEVER stop attempting to be a parasite.

It really is that simple. People fell asleep.


KooC6mZPF2M

Unified Serenity
17th January 2012, 01:21
Excellent article Applejax! It's not by chance that this has taken place. It took years to remove the kinds of teachers who taught students to think and not what to think. To have your essay test graded down because the teacher disagreed with your point of view rather than how well you defended it or how well written it actually was. They did not like your views so you got a C while the student who turned in a sub-standard piece of work which the teacher agreed with in principle received an A and that affected your overall GPA, so to get through the system you either learn to regurgitate what they want you to think and get a high GPA or stay an individual and get a low 2.5 GPA so when it's time to find a job or go on to get your masters you are competing with those who played the game and oddly end up actually believing what the system wanted you to believe. Just like in 1984, "How many fingers am I holding up?" The torture ends when you tell them what they want to hear. Break the spirit and gain control is what it's about.

Hughe
17th January 2012, 01:36
“If the Bloomberg administration can be said to have succeeded in anything,” he said, “they have succeeded in turning schools into stress factories where teachers are running around wondering if it’s possible to please their principals and if their school will be open a year from now, if their union will still be there to offer some kind of protection, if they will still have jobs next year. This is not how you run a school system. It’s how you destroy one. The reformers and their friends in the media have created a Manichean world of bad teachers and effective teachers. In this alternative universe there are no other factors. Or, all other factors—poverty, depraved parents, mental illness and malnutrition—are all excuses of the Bad Teacher that can be overcome by hard work and the Effective Teacher.”

Dumb down or weed out. Asian countries are good at weeding out children thorough public education. Only smart kids who eventually becomes intelligent slaves being nurtured by teachers, family members. I was a smart kid but high school destroyed me. LOL. I wasn't super smart to understand the advanced mathematics: Calculus, vectors, linear algebra, probability, etc, which are serious field of mathematics in college/university. I barely got beat up by teachers after exams. I do remember students who below average are treated like dogs. "Why they do this?" Maybe that's one of reason I have void memory of childhood.

A have a nephew who is going to be grade 7 (middle school is grade 7 to 9). Few months ago I visited her house. She was studying grade 6 math. What surprised at me the bastards made math a lot harder than before. Little(?) girl was trying to solve math questions that are being taught in trade colleges in Canada. I spent 10 minutes to find a solution and explained to her. But point is this is indirect torture of children

In these days kids in South Korea study 8 to 10 hour per day. The world goes backward, gets worse. Then, you might think South Korea has smart adults. I can tell the ability of university graduate is below average in world standard. Wasting their entire childhood, being submitted by the education systematically. Unemployment rate is high. The college/university graduates are forced to join military forces or go to graduate schools.
I learned that South Korea copied this slavery education from Japan. I don't know about Chinese education system.

To make too easy or too hard same thing - manufacturing slaves. Millions will follow orders without questions. Creativity? Talented mind challenges against professors in class, those academic career is bye-bye. University professors are the gods.

@applejax
Don't be upset. It sounds strange but I can tell most of governments dumb down children. One thing I thanked for Korean government they forced me learning English. LOL

Flash
17th January 2012, 01:46
When you do not have the tools to think from childhood (some child would do fine by themselves with good parents, but they have to be changed through toughtless schools and education), you cannot analyse clearly. When you are not developping the artistic or holistic brain either, because of schools, then you are left with not even enough to understand that you have in fact nothing.

Easy to control then. No history, no geography, no maths, no socialisation either, lots of drugs, lots of video games, well easy to manage. However, despite the will to have slave workers, these do not make that good workers.

For good slave workers, the Korean method might be better.

applejax
17th January 2012, 02:02
@applejax
Don't be upset. It sounds strange but I can tell most of governments dumb down children. One thing I thanked for Korean government they forced me learning English. LOL

not upset at the whole article actually, i found it quite interesting...considering that my soon to be 10 year old is in 4th grade. after kindergarten i noticed the changes in the how the education system worked...definitely was NOT what i went through when i was her age...of course, i moved around a lot considering my dad was in the military. nonetheless during elementary for me (i'm 32 btw), the schools i went to tried to get me into the GATE program, but because my mom did not consent it (i wish she did, i'd like to know what that was like), i didn't go to that program at all. i remember how i was taught, both home and school, and it's NOTHING like what my daughter went through. on TOP of that, looking at my daughter's homework is astounding -- they're already doing algebra equations, yet the word problem side of it is literally a PROBLEM. (my hubby's a whiz in math) and he was even stumped at the word problems. too vague at the question and it can seem like it actually have multiple answers (but that's not the case).

the only thing i'm "mad" about is that even though english is the only language in our household (unfortunately, since i cannot teach her my parents and my hubby's native tongue), they have put my child through ESL thinking she spoke another language. WHAT? i asked them, what justified you guys for putting her there, they simply said that she tested lower than most. my daughter's comprehension of words is slower, and i honestly think she has dyslexia, but i have never heard that anyone needed to be put in an ESL class because of this (come on). looking at my daughter's school, they've gone through a lot of teachers as well, except for some tenured teachers (there's still a 3rd grade teacher there that my younger bro had). her teacher from last year was just "amazing" (sarcastic) and i simply do not think she learned anything last year. it is very difficult nowadays to find quality teachers...i've also tried putting my daughter into a charter school for the past 4 years (very hard) since they've only got a lottery set. and the school district also denied the new petition to bring another charter school here. i dunno, i don't want to lose hope, but i think maybe homeschooling would be a better choice than my daughter going thru public school.

Mulder
17th January 2012, 02:33
Here is one of my favourite Educational Commentators - Charlotte Iserbyt. Her father was high up in the elite.

ezTIYd5UFRY

WhiteFeather
17th January 2012, 02:44
The dumber we are, the more control they have. The reptillian agenda.

TWINCANS
17th January 2012, 02:55
Not to sound disrespectful to Avalonians, but with this true understanding of the real damage being done to children by attending today's government school systems, why do you put your children in them?

applejax
17th January 2012, 03:02
Not to sound disrespectful to Avalonians, but with this true understanding of the real damage being done to children by attending today's government school systems, why do you put your children in them?

you're not disrespectful...i'm trying to find ways that i can change things for me and my family. i'm just learning as i go...and i also want to share important information to others.

TWINCANS
17th January 2012, 03:04
The way we handle it is to homeschool.

Carmen
17th January 2012, 03:11
Great post applejax. A truly great post! I'm afraid this may be happening to a certain degree all round the world, and deliberately so. This article should be posted everywhere so people may see for themselves and start to question what is going on. Our teachers here in New Zealand seem to spend so much time filling in forms that they barely have time for any teaching! They are more administrators than teachers.

Unified Serenity
17th January 2012, 03:17
I've always shared real history with my children. They are a handful for their teachers because I have always encouraged my children to respectfully ask questions and to share their views whether in agreement or not. My oldest son did not fit in well with the standard educational system. I home schooled him for first grade. He read on a college level by the fifth grade, and amazed his teachers at school. He did not enjoy traditional school, loved documentaries, and I eventually withdrew him from high school in the middle of the 9th grade to home school him again.

He did not like the Florida home school system though it is very good actually. So, he tested out, and they (the admins at the local college and tech school) tried to get him to go to college based on his blowing the test scores off the charts, but he has opted to go to tech school and play his guitar. He's brilliant, an independent thinker, but is not very highly motivated. I think he wishes he were living in another time period of heroes, dragons, fair maidens, honor and righteousness serving his Viking Gods.

Well, he has his fantasy world, and soon he will have a 3d work world. He is definitely his own individual. I'm proud of each of my children and their unique qualities. I highly recommend home schooling. FLVS does a fine job at educating (florida virtual school) and they can still go to regular school for sports, art, music etc.. There is no "homework" and for the kids who don't seem to get the system well or can't go along with it, it's a great way to go! My oldest daughter is taking Spanish via FLVS.

kcbc2010
17th January 2012, 20:56
I'm interested in re-assessing my situation at a later date; however, at this point, my son needs professionals who have experience working with kids who aren't able to communicate well. I have him in private therapy as well as the special needs program in our local district. When we started, we had no idea how to help my son. Now, we have a tool-box we can use. Also, just from an academic perspective, he will have options that my husband and I didn't have because we went to smaller school districts - (and we didn't have options that are out there today in terms of schooling.)

Lazlo
18th January 2012, 01:13
Excellent article Applejax! It's not by chance that this has taken place. It took years to remove the kinds of teachers who taught students to think and not what to think. To have your essay test graded down because the teacher disagreed with your point of view rather than how well you defended it or how well written it actually was. They did not like your views so you got a C while the student who turned in a sub-standard piece of work which the teacher agreed with in principle received an A and that affected your overall GPA, so to get through the system you either learn to regurgitate what they want you to think and get a high GPA or stay an individual and get a low 2.5 GPA so when it's time to find a job or go on to get your masters you are competing with those who played the game and oddly end up actually believing what the system wanted you to believe. Just like in 1984, "How many fingers am I holding up?" The torture ends when you tell them what they want to hear. Break the spirit and gain control is what it's about.

Interesting, this was not my experience in public schools at all. Critical thinking was rewarded. And, I have never had a job interview where my GPA mattered.

Education is a subject which is very close to home for me. Perhaps my own school experience differed so greatly because of my perspective. This still leads to some pretty heated debates within the family.

I was one of those annoying kids who never met a standardized test that they couldn't ace. I missed being valedictorian because I refused to do an assigment for a class that I disagreed with the teacher on. Grades didn't matter, but principle did. I never brought a book home from school to study...ever, even in college. My teachers pretty much left me alone and spent their time on other kids (except when I was bored and concocting some scheme or other to amuse myself) I ran like hell after earning my BA (Indigo Girls: I spent four years prostrate to the higher mind, got my paper, I was free)

I thought that I wanted to change direction and become a teacher about 10 years ago. I applied for the Denver Teacher Project (a program to get more people into the profession because they didn't have ENOUGH teachers) I got to the final interview, and was given a strange speech before the final job offer was made. In short, I was told to banish any thoughts of making the world a better place or changing any children's lives...I was to get remedial students to pass tests...that's it...There is a percentage of kids who are simply not that smart, and aren't going to succeed no matter what you do...These kids were to be allowed to fail so that they wouldn't hold back those with a chance. Tests...statistics...assessments

Needless to say I decided that this wasn't for me.

My brother is a teacher: He had to move from Ohio to Arizona for a job. Strictly demographics at work here. Ohio was losing population and there were simply no jobs to be had except in urban combat zones. Arizona, on the other hand, is gaining population, and as a result, he had multiple job offers. He chooses to coach as a means to inspire and tutor kids along. He also chose to transition to special ed. He loves what he does and is truly passionat about it.

My wife worked as a teacher for five years. She gave it up because she simply wasn't passionate about teaching in a classroom, nothing nefarious there. She did go back to school to earn her Master's in education policy, thinking that she would like to be in administration...decided that wasn't right either. She now works as an instructor for an outdoor experiential education program. She abhors the idea of standardized testing...more on this later

My sister in law is a PHD who teaches creative writing at a community college. My brother in law is finishing his PHD. Mother in law teaches art history at a university. Father in law is 'retired" as dean of a university, teaches western history now for "fun". Grandfather 1 was dean at a major university, grandfather 2 was president of a major university and was advisor to two presidents. Aunt develops standardized tests and textbooks for a big publisher.

Now, the conversation at family dinners:

Not surprisingly, education comes up as a topic for discussion...and everybody has a strong opinion. Where we have agreed, or at least called a truce: While certainly not the only factor, economics is a primary driver of educational success for students. Parents who are more highly educated and more successful financially place a higher value on education, are more likely to read recreationally and have books around the house, are more involved in their kids education, more likely to read to their kids at an early age, and pass these values along.

Where we disagree: Standardized testing and the emphasis placed on it by school systems: Those on the creative-artsy side of the equation, passionately defend the position that not all kids are good at taking tests or integrating complex information, and should be assessed on other factors.

Those on the other side, myself included, believe that standardized testing tells you exactly what you want to find out- Who is good at analytical thinking and complex problem solving. These are the kids that you want to be engineers and scientists. There are plenty of jobs for artists and musicians, I just don't want them pushing buttons on a power plant or designing a bridge.

The one thing that everyone agrees on, is that there is no grand conspiracy to dumb down the masses through the educational system. Everyone sees lots of bright kids who are going to grow up to be tomorrow's leaders, and lots of kids who are probably not going to be capable of much beyond balancing a checkbook and reading a job application.

Peace4all
18th January 2012, 01:43
Teachers hate when you ask reasonable questions..
I graduated from high school in 2010, and could not be happier to be out.
The whole system is screwed up, perhaps that just the way i perceived it though.
You can tell everyone is struggling with their true identities.
My life improved tenfold after i graduated, which is strange because high school is supposed to be "the best time of your life"
Most of my teachers were some of the most close-minded people i have ever met...
It always irritated me how they would stand up on their pedestals like some sort of higher beings.. My opinion rarely ever mattered.
My life is so much better now, I am happier, I know who i am inside and out.
I wish i had a teacher who told me to look inside for the answers instead of a textbook.