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- .IF DSK1.C-3
-
- .CE 10
- ~~~~~ TI-101 ~~~~~
-
- OUR 4/A UNIVERSITY
-
- by Jack Sughrue
- Box 459
- E.Douglas MA 01516
- .CE
- #1 Corpus
- Historical Perspective
-
-
- First, Class, if you'd look at
- the screen. This overhead shows the
- brain. Yes, Ms.^Bronte, the human
- brain.
- This is the corpus calosum, that
- wonderful band of billions of nerve
- fibers connecting the hemispheres of
- the brain. Forty years ago that band
- was surgically severed to
- containgrand malseizures in
- epileptic patients.
- That was the beginning of a
- profound revolution in education that
- is quietly (though, at times, quite
- noisily) continuing through today.
- Through the massive research done
- since that fateful slice, we, as a
- society, have learned more in the
- past quarter century abouthowpeople
- learn than we knew about the subject
- in all the tens of centuries humans
- have considered the process.
- This educational revolution was
- not without its prophets. John Dewey
- was one. Today there are many great
- teachers out there operating under
- the umbrellas of "Process Learning,"
- "Open Methodologies," "Whole-brain
- Teaching," "Open Classrooms,"
- "Science/Logic Approach," and
- piles of other names, including
- "Whole Language." The last is
- probably having the most profound
- influence on the real education in
- the English-speaking World as any
- philosophical approach since Horace
- Mann "Manndated" public education in
- America so long ago. (So long ago
- that we take free, public education
- for all as a given, as an inalienable
- right.)
- But there is a problem, Class.
- (Isn't there always?)
- When the Germans first devised an
- efficient way of organizing a mass
- education in the 19th Century, they
- decided to make a step-by-step
- system of completing a given body of
- work at a given chronological year of
- a child's life. Thus, 6-year-olds go
- through a first grade (and an
- artificially-created, adult-generated
- curriculum). After completing this
- predetermined set of tasks, the child
- turns seven and, if lucky, moves into
- the second grade where another set of
- artificial goals awaits HIM (no
- girls, of course).
- Aren't you glad America has no
- sexist or racist bias these days?
- The fact that 7-year-olds are not
- developmentally on the exact step at
- any time (any more than all the
- 47-year-olds are) made no difference
- to the people operating this 19th
- Century system. In order to protect
- the system, an achievement hierarchy
- was developed, which has come down to
- us, unfortunately, even to today in
- too many schools. It is a system
- that never worked because it created
- an invisible - though profound -
- class system. The system created a
- society of elitists, of average Dicks
- and Janes, of losers. The basal
- reader system (unfortunately still in
- place in most American schools)
- requires that the classroom be
- divided into three groups: the good
- readers, the average readers, the
- poor readers (sometimes called
- Bluebirds, Robins, and Snowy Egrets
- or Red-crested Flambinglers or
- whatever). But you know and I know
- that those groups, begun in
- kindergarten and carried all through
- elementary school, created what are
- perceived as the smart snobs, the
- struggling middle class, and the dumb
- (and bad) kids. By the time official
- tracking takes place in junior high
- (middle school) the system is firmly
- in place. You'll never guess which
- group has the greatest number of
- dropouts or which group has the
- greatest number of kids who go on to
- advanced degrees (followed by the
- best jobs). These determinations for
- the most part are made in the primary
- grades in elementary school.
- The same 19th-Century system also
- created a hierarchy of adults. Prior
- to the institutionalization of
- education the teacher was the most
- important adult in the learning
- process. After the system overtook
- the world, administrators became the
- most important part of the system.
- This is usually followed by the
- operational staff. (Go into ANY
- school and see if that institution
- operates around the things that
- secretaries and custodians require
- before all else or whether the
- teachers get top priority. Surprise!)
- Anyway, Class, in this
- topsy-turvy setup, highly-paid
- administrators make the decisions.
- These decisions (from administrators
- operating in an entirely separate
- building from a school, believe it or
- not) are then handed down to other
- adminstrators who have offices and
- secretaries. The decisions are then
- handed down to administrators who are
- in schools (principals, which means,
- by the way "first or highest in rank
- and importance"). In secondary
- schools these decisions are usually
- then handed down to department heads.
- Then - possibly - the teachers are
- told. These are the same teachers
- who adminstrators love to hold
- "accountable," even though they have
- been excluded from the decision
- making. Doesn't this "accountability
- without authority" have a bit of the
- ring of "taxation without
- representation" about it?
- Generally speaking,
- administrators - who have the most
- opportunity and time to learn about
- all the masses of reseach on how
- children learn - know the least.
- They are divorced from the youngsters
- and from the realities of day-to-day
- education. They don't realize, for
- example, that the clientele has
- changed. That the students today are
- not made the same way, intellectually
- and emotionally and socially, that
- youngsters 25 years ago were. That
- the horrors of nuclear war, AIDS,
- street violence, fanatic consumerism,
- drugs, and so on were not part of our
- growing up, of our everyday
- consciousness and reality. That when
- I was growing up the attention span
- of youngsters in ELEMENTARY SCHOOL
- was estimated to be a little over an
- hour; that seven years ago for
- students in K-12 it was 22 minutes;
- that last year for that same group it
- was 10.8 minutes!
- And education is a big - a
- humongous! - business. Publishers
- determine the curriculum in America
- and sell their goods to
- administrators who foist these
- materials upon the trained classroom
- professionals. This is a
- multi-billion dollar business and one
- that stomps out any attempt at
- teacher input for better ways of
- doing things in the classroom. Such
- changes may cause these influential
- profiteers to lose money; influential
- bureaucrats to lose power.
- Millions of Americans sense (even
- if they don't have statistics at
- hand) that something is drastically
- wrong with schools that still use
- 19th-Century methods and materials to
- teach 21st-Century life skills and
- that still put profits and political
- power (inside and outside the
- schools) ahead of the education of
- our children. These parents and
- other friends of pulic education are
- afraid for America, for the Earth.
- For all our children.
- Some parents (former Bluebirds)
- have the lucky financial fortune to
- put their children into expensive
- private schools. Others have sought
- to find some solace and protection
- from the outside world by placing
- their youngsters in religious schools
- where they hope their own values will
- be inculcated. Others, who have the
- trained academic and intellectual
- background (like Barry Traver) teach
- their children at home. The vast
- majority of us parents are, however,
- just working class stiffs who want
- and expect public education to do its
- job by our kids.
-
- But, wait a minute, my young
- scholars!
- Aren't we the same society that
- put a man on the Moon just because
- Jack Kennedy set us that national
- goal? Didn't we (not England, not
- Chile, not Russia, not China, not
- Iraq) send those Voyager spacecraft
- out into the wilderness of our Solar
- System? Aren't we the country with
- the most Nobel winners?
- But those achievements all
- stemmed from a society that prized
- education. Weren't these and most of
- the other masterful achievements of
- our nation developed during a high
- level of caring for our youngsters
- (our future), and of developing a
- liberal climate of risk-taking and
- experimentation?
- What has happened since Nixon's
- Presidency to change all this? In
- spite of the lip service given to
- education by our recent Presidents,
- the State of the Union,
- educationally, has regressed
- catastrophically following the
- Kennedy/Johnson Era. And, because
- federal and state programs to assist
- and enhance the education of our
- nation's greatest resource - it's
- children - has virtually dried up and
- property taxes are the primary source
- of funding education, teacher bashing
- has become a national pastime.
- Blaming the teachers (the lower paid
- members of the staff who are not
- allowed to make important educational
- decisions nor even to give input in
- most cases) is like blaming the
- production line worker for the stupid
- concepts American car manufacturers
- have been promulgating. As a matter
- of fact, it is an interesting
- solution on the part of these rich
- conservatives to save American
- business (and, thus, America) by
- laying off the workers, as if they in
- some way were to blame for the
- decision-makers' gross and blatant
- stupidities.
- That, of course, is another
- story, Class.
- There is a revolution happening
- in American education, and it will
- prove to be the saving of our nation.
- This revolution has many names and
- takes many forms, but it has a
- commonality: holism. It's an idea
- whose time is long overdue, and your
- TI has its place in this scheme of
- things. We'll begin to look at those
- next time in TI-101.
- Meanwhile, Class, for your
- homework I'd like you to type in any
- program from any source on your TI.
- No, it doesn't have to be an
- educational program, but it must be a
- minimum of 20 lines and work when you
- bring it to class next time.
- Ciao!
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