Educational Options:
Picking Through the Debris
by Steven LaTulippe
by Steven LaTulippe
My
recent article analyzing our nation’s educational maladies (American
Education, R.I.P.) received occasionally disparaging emails for
being long on denigration of the system and short on suggestions
for improvement. Many correspondents noted that everyone agrees
that the problem is severe…but they were critical about the lack
of constructive ideas presented.
So…in
that spirit:
First
and foremost, for reasons well known to everyone and described in-depth
in that earlier piece, parents need to keep their kids out of the
public school system. The system is an utter failure at teaching
the basic material that children need to survive and compete in
our modern economy, and it is systematically brainwashing them with
toxic doses of political correctness.
Barring
some truly unusual circumstances, the government system should be
out of the question.
When
suggesting alternatives, I often detect a note of "fear of
the unknown" in parents. The government system has managed
to create the idea in our nation’s collective brain that the public
school system is "how things have always been done." Other
methods of education are looked upon as being "unusual"
and "suspect."
In
reality, it is the public school system which is the new and precarious
method. The "school," as we have come to know it, has
only been around for a little over a century. Its modern manifestation
is largely the result of the centralizing mania that accompanied
the industrial revolution, and it represents the application of
the "factory method" to education. In the 19th
century, the rise of the great factory economy created a mindset
that spilled over into education. We were told that only centralized
factories (school buildings) with masses of workers (students) overseen
by shop floor managers (teachers) could produce the kind of mass
results necessary for that era.
The
rise of the Total State accompanied this centralization in economic
production and education. Government leaders were quick to grasp
the benefit of mass education controlled through government financing
and regulation. The opinions of the masses could thus easily be
formed and manipulated for the convenience of the ruling elites.
But
the systemic failures of socialism doomed the public school system
from the beginning. And if the system ever could be made to work,
the era in which it arose has now passed by. The factory epoch is
over. The Dickensian industrial revolution has given way to the
information age.
Our
public school system is like a giant 19th century coke-fired
steel mill in the age of nanotechnology.
In
hindsight, it was also a fairly goofy idea to bring huge numbers
of youths together in one building with minimal adult supervision.
This situation helped give rise to modern youth culture, which subsequently
degenerated into its present-day Lord
of the Flies manifestation. The purpose of "socialization"
in education is to inculcate children with values and ideas which
help them mature into adults (which can only be accomplished through
close interaction with adults)…not to establish a primitive, primate-style
system of hierarchical persecution and sexual competition (which
is what happens when hundreds or thousands of teens are bussed into
the same place to interact with one another without close oversight).
So…what
are the other options?
Many
private schools suffer from some of the same problems that infect
the public ones. Most are still based on the factory method. Plus,
the teacher training system is so thoroughly propagandized with
political correctness that its political ideologies frequently spill
over into the private schools as well. But even so, most of them
generally are an improvement over the public system. Since private
schools must function in the market-place, they are by and large
more responsive to the needs of the parents and offer a better overall
educational experience. They are also free from the legal constraints
of the public system in teaching moral values, and are thus more
able to maintain discipline.
So…in
general…it is my opinion that private schools are usually an improvement
over public ones, but are still not the optimal choice.
Home
schooling has made a big splash in education over the past decade
or so. If done correctly, this is an even better method than private
schools. Home schooling offers an enormous amount of flexibility,
especially with the numerous resources available on the Internet
and through various support organizations. No one is generally more
interested in the well being of children than their parents, and
committed parents can certainly do the job better than the soulless
cogs in the public system. Home-schooling is also free of the Lord
of the Flies baggage that accompanies factory-style schools
(public or private).
But,
at the risk of offending the home schooling partisans, I do have
some reservations.
First,
is the issue of entangling professional pursuits with family relationships.
For example, there is a longstanding principle in the practice of
medicine that a physician should not treat his family and friends.
This idea arose from the realization that the emotional bonds of
family often interfere with the objective analysis and treatment
of medical conditions. There is a certain detachment from these
personal ties that is necessary for the optimal delivery of health
care. This principle also applies to the practice of law. Being
represented in court by a family member or close friend alters the
relationship in intangible ways that can compromise the greater
mission at hand.
Similarly,
I believe that the role of educator often requires that the practitioner
be removed from the personal ties of family and friendship. Issues
of parental ego and familial relationship baggage can cause problems
that might also compromise the overall educational goals.
Secondly,
I consider education at the high school level and above to be a
professional endeavor, rather than an amateur one. It is one of
the great crimes of our government school system that teachers,
who were once professionals on the level of physicians and lawyers,
have been demoted into the ranks of clock-punching bureaucrats.
I have concerns that many parents may not have the breadth of knowledge
that is required for the optimal educational experience.(And
by "professional," I do not mean a graduate of
one of our "teacher colleges." Rather, I use the term
to refer to anyone who is well-educated, has a wealth of
life experience, and who desires to pursue the education
of youths as an occupational endeavor.) While many parents
may have these qualifications, many do not.
My
solution to this dilemma harkens back to the traditional method
of education in the Western world. In Classical Greece, Republican
Rome, Colonial America, and Victorian England, education was generally
the realm of "professional educators" who were hired by
small groups of parents. Typically, men with similarly-aged children
would seek out a well-known scholar as the instructor. They would
hire a grizzled professor, a retired minister, or an aged military
officer. The parents would pool their resources, and the group of
six or seven students would meet in one of their homes for their
lessons (and utilizing retired professionals has numerous practical
benefits…they often have other sources of income and do not require
benefit packages, making the expense surprisingly economical).
This
educator was more than just a transmitter of facts, but would take
an active role in the cultural and moral development of the youths.
The instructor would meet with the fathers on a regular basis, and
would schedule one-on-one sessions with his students as needed.
In
using this system today, the curriculum, while taking advantage
of modern technology such as computers and the Internet, should
be classical in style. The mastery of basic reading, writing, and
mathematics should of course be a given. The students should also
become conversant in Latin or Greek. There should be a rigorous
study of the history of Western governance, including the Greek
polis, the Roman Republic, the Magna Carta, the English Parliamentary
System, and the American Constitutional Republic.
A
significant emphasis should also be placed on the development of
character and ethics. A consistent philosophical and theological
system should be interwoven into the overall curriculum…starting
with Judaism, Mosaic Law, the development of early Christianity,
Catholic theology, and the Protestant Reformation.
It
would have seemed absurd to any previous generation of Westerners
to have the education of their children separated by a "legal
wall" from the inculcation of a coherent set of morals and
ethics. The development of character is arguably the most important
aspect of education…even more so than the particulars of math or
science. The vacuum created by the removal of these values from
our public schools is perhaps the greatest single cause of the cultural
collapse that is evident everywhere in our society today.
This
education should also emphasize culture. The students should master
at least one musical instrument, and the educator should accompany
the students regularly to the symphony, opera, and Shakespearean
plays. The curriculum should include immersion in the "Great
Books" of the Western tradition, from Homer and Plato to Dante
and Hugo.
Perhaps
even more importantly than any actual educational function, the
educator should fill the role of a mentor…in the global sense of
the term. It is this constant interaction with the teacher (and
the resultant immersion in his wisdom, life experience and character)
that is the most valuable commodity delivered to the students through
this process (and it is because this role is subtly different from
that of a parent that I believe this method is superior to parental
home schooling).
And
one further modification would also vastly improve this educational
option. It concerns what is perhaps the most pernicious influence
on the development of young people in America today.
Throw
a brick through your TV set.
Pull
its plug and haul it to the curb.
Spray
it with a garden hose to permanently disable its electrical circuits.
Leave
the carcass out there for a few days as a warning to other TV sets
in the area about what will happen to them if they show up on your
property.
(By
way of confession, I should admit that I have not successfully pulled
this off in my own house. My better half is strong-willed and quick-witted…and
she has succeeded in thwarting numerous attempts on the life of
her last remaining TV set. So this final recommendation is going
to have to remain in the "do as I say, not as I do" category…at
least until I can think of a more cunning plot.)
So,
these are my general recommendations:
- Keep your
kids out of the public school system.
- Destroy
your television.
- Get together
with 6 or 7 other parents and hire a professional instructor
to educate your children along the classical tradition.
- If you
can’t hire one, then home school them yourself.
- If you
can’t do that either, carefully search for a good private school
and send them there.
May
3, 2004
Steven
LaTulippe [send him mail]
is a physician currently practicing in Ohio. He was an officer in
the United States Air Force for 13 years.
Copyright
© 2004 LewRockwell.com
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