Thursday, January 10, 2013

Bill Ayers — Mr. President, Education Is a Human Right, Not a Product

The landscape of “educational reform” is currently littered with rubble and ruin and wreckage on all sides. Sadly, your administration has contributed significantly to the mounting catastrophe. You’re not alone: The toxic materials have been assembled as a bipartisan endeavor over many years, and the efforts of the last several administrations are now organized into a coherent push mobilized and led by a merry band of billionaires including Bill Gates, Michael Bloomberg, Sam Walton, and Eli Broad.
Whether inept or clueless or malevolent—who’s to say?—these titans have worked relentlessly to take up all the available space, preaching, persuading, promoting, and, when all else fails, spreading around massive amounts of cash to promote their particular brand of school change as common sense. You and Secretary Arne Duncan—endorsed in your efforts by Newt Gingrich, Paul Ryan, and a host of reactionary politicians and pundits—now bear a major responsibility for that agenda.
The three most trumpeted and simultaneously most destructive aspects of the united “school reform” agenda are these: turning over public assets and spaces to private management; dismantling and opposing any independent, collective voice of teachers; and reducing education to a single narrow metric that claims to recognize an educated person through a test score. While there’s absolutely no substantive proof that this approach improves schooling for children, it chugs along unfazed—fact-free, faith-based reform at its core, resting firmly on rank ideology rather than any evidence whatsoever.
The three pillars of this agenda are nested in a seductive but wholly inaccurate metaphor: Education is a commodity like any other—a car or a refrigerator, a box of bolts or a screwdriver—that is bought and sold in the marketplace. Within this controlling metaphor the schoolhouse is assumed to be a business run by a CEO, with teachers as workers and students as the raw material bumping along the assembly line while information is incrementally stuffed into their little up-turned heads.
It goes on from there. Right on, bro! We either change this sucker, or we are going down. It ain't workin.

We have an 18th century educational system designed to "repurpose and refit" agricultural workers to factory hands. Hello, the Industrial Revolution has been over from some time, and we are in the midst of the Digital Revolution in the Information Age. We don't need to be converting agricultural workers into factory workers anymore.

I was recently reading a study suggesting that interest in the educational process declines linearly and in direct proportion with advancing in grade, until in secondary school there is minimal interest in the vast majority.

Truthout
Mr. President, Education Is a Human Right, Not a Product
Bill Ayers

Scathing indictment. Read it.


3 comments:

Matt Franko said...

"nested in a seductive but wholly inaccurate metaphor"

It ALWAYS shows up Tom... ALWAYS...

rsp,

Matt Franko said...

And this is a familiar question:

"Whether inept or clueless or malevolent—who’s to say?..."

David said...

Looks like Barack Obama won't have Bill Ayers to "pal around with" anymore.