'Why Don’t Students Like School?' Well, Duhhhh…
by Peter Gray
Someone recently
referred me to a book that they thought I'd like. It's a 2009 book,
aimed toward teachers of grades K through 12, titled Why Don't Students
Like School? It's by a cognitive
scientist named Daniel T. Willingham, and it has received rave reviews
by countless people involved in the school system. Google the title
and author and you'll find pages and pages of doting reviews and
nobody pointing out that the book totally and utterly fails to answer
the question posed by its title.
Willingham's
thesis is that students don't like school because their teachers
don't have a full understanding of certain cognitive principles
and therefore don't teach as well as they could. They don't present
material in ways that appeal best to students' minds. Presumably,
if teachers followed Willingham's advice and used the latest information
cognitive science has to offer about how the mind works, students
would love school.
Talk about
avoiding the elephant in the room!
Ask any schoolchild
why they don't like school and they'll tell you. "School is
prison." They may not use those words, because they're too
polite, or maybe they've already been brainwashed to believe that
school is for their own good and therefore it can't be prison. But
decipher their words and the translation generally is, "School
is prison."
Let me say
that a few more times: School is prison. School is prison. School
is prison. School is prison. School is prison.
Willingham
surely knows that school is prison. He can't help but know it; everyone
knows it. But here he writes a whole book entitled Why
Don't Students Like School, and not once does he suggest
that just possibly they don't like school because they like freedom,
and in school they are not free.
I shouldn't
be too harsh on Willingham. He's not the only one avoiding this
particular elephant in the room. Everyone who has ever been to school
knows that school is prison, but almost nobody says it. It's not
polite to say it. We all tiptoe around this truth, that school is
prison, because telling the truth makes us all seem so mean. How
could all these nice people be sending their children to prison
for a good share of the first 18 years of their lives? How could
our democratic government, which is founded on principles of freedom
and self-determination, make laws requiring children and adolescents
to spend a good portion of their days in prison? It's unthinkable,
and so we try hard to avoid thinking it. Or, if we think it, we
at least don't say it. When we talk about what's wrong with schools
we pretend not to see the elephant, and we talk instead about some
of the dander that's gathered around the elephant's periphery.
But I think
it is time that we say it out loud. School is prison.
If you think
school is not prison, please explain the difference.
The only difference
I can think of is that to get into prison you have to commit a crime,
but they put you in school just because of your age. In other respects
school and prison are the same. In both places you are stripped
of your freedom and dignity. You are told exactly what you must
do, and you are punished for failing to comply. Actually, in school
you must spend more time doing exactly what you are told to do than
is true in adult prisons, so in that sense school is worse than
prison.
Read
the rest of the article
November
12, 2009
Copyright
© 2009 Psychology Today
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