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Pulling down the edifice of knowledge

"Left Back: A Century of Failed School Reforms"

Wed., April 25, 2001

"It is time to renew the academic tradition for the children of the twenty-first century." Diane Ravitch

by Diane Ravitch
Simon & Schuster, 2000;
555 pages;

Reviewed by Samuel Walker and Josh Pater

For decades, bits and pieces of the history of how America's educational crisis came about have trickled out to the public, sometimes from dubious sources, with little in the way of authoritative credibility to pull the whole picture together. In her new book, "Left Back: A Century of Failed School Reforms," education historian and policy analyst Diane Ravitch has compiled a genuine history, accessible to the average reader, of just what happened to cause America's educational meltdown.

Ravitch's thesis is simple, but hard to grasp in its full implications. It is that beginning early in the 20th century, possessed by what they thought were visionary notions, education reformers began systematically to abandon the old, classical academic curriculum—"the systematic study of language and literature, science and mathematics, history, the arts and foreign languages"—in favor of a pragmatic, utilitarian model aimed at "social efficiency."

Ravitch correctly points out that the current dispute over standards and testing is simply another flare-up of the same century-old debate over the relevancy to modern life of the classic, liberal arts curriculum. Ultimately, the line in the battle over education in America is drawn between "knowledge for general intelligence" and "education for utility." Choose one or the other and you set in motion radically different educational programs, one which proved successful for centuries, the other which has proved a dismal, universal failure.

"Left Back:
A Century of Failed School Reforms"
by Diane Ravitch
Simon & Schuster, 2000
555 pages

Reviewed by Samuel Walker and Josh Pater

Is knowledge we can "use" the only knowledge worthy of pursuit? Or does that knowledge emerge from a wider reservoir that takes in the philosophical, the transcendent—or the poetical and artistic—in addition to the temporal and the scientific? Is education for vocation—getting a job—or is vocation merely one of many purposes served by learning once order is imposed on the wide range of knowledge? These are the questions that lurk in the background of the debate over American education in the 20th century, and whisper from behind every page of Ravitch's book.

"Education for utility" is the term Ravitch uses to describe a revolutionary overthrow of centuries of experience in learning; a revolution that placed unprecedented authority in the hands of academic "experts" less concerned with the content of what was taught, and more concerned about "new" and "progressive" methods they could devise for consumption by the masses.

Thus began the deterioration of expertise in subject matter too characteristic of today's teaching profession, and the phenomenon of faddishness with regard to teaching methods, promoted by a "pedagogical profession" that dominates today's education establishment. As this new profession was consolidating itself, it attracted those seeking to "liberate" children from traditional liberal arts learning, and teacher's colleges became "seedbeds of progressive education."

This teaching vanguard sought to "refute the assumptions of traditional education . . . and encourage schools to replace traditional subjects with practical studies." Unfortunately, the result was to put the traditional curriculum—which had produced the very educators who were now tearing it down—"up for grabs, available for capture by any idea, fad, or movement that was advanced by pedagogical experts, popular sentiment, or employers."

Over the years, progressivism took many forms, some blatantly elitist. One of the more pernicious trends was to view the millions of immigrant children populating U.S. cities in the early 1900s as ill-equipped for rigorous study. The "powers" possessed by these students were regarded as "fundamentally manual," a notion progressives used as one of several excuses to abandon the traditional academic curriculum.

Today, as educators scramble for explanations, politicians for solutions, and parents for answers, it is instructive to remember what W.E.B. DuBois told a group of teachers in 1935: "The school has again but one way, and that is, first and last, to teach them to read, write, and count. And if the school fails to do that, and tries beyond that to do something for which a school is not adapted, it not only fails in its own function, but it fails in all other attempted functions. Because no school as such can organise industry, or settle the matter of wage and income, can found homes or furnish parents, can establish justice or make a civilised world."

"Left Back" recounts the failure of numerous 20th-century pedagogical theories, such as the child-centered, the self-esteem, the I.Q. testing, and the multicultural movements. All of these share a common root: the rejection of education's "historic rationale"; the idea that truth, wisdom, and knowledge are worthy of pursuit for their own sake, and not for what they can "do" for the individual or for society.

Twentieth-century reformers thought they were merely being practical in rejecting such "quaint" ideas. But what they actually accomplished was akin to removing the cornerstone of the edifice of knowledge. The "education crisis" we have experienced ever since has merely been the sound of that edifice crashing. Having nothing of comparable substance with which to replace it, the reformers opened the entire enterprise to the merry-go-round of vocationalism, politicization, and endless pop-psychological tinkering.

Those seeking quick policy solutions will not find them in this book. For an edifice—easily torn down—is difficult to rebuild and must be put back together slowly, piece by piece. What Ravitch has provided is a first step toward any solution, which is to understand where we are and how we got here. In this sense, she has performed a service few historians have equaled.

Samuel Walker is a communications specialist with the Mackinac Center for Public Policy in Midland, Mich.  Joshua R. Pater is an education policy researcher with the Mackinac Center for Public Policy.

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User Comments
Since 2009, the EFM was allocated $500.5 million in stimulus funds. They tore down a High School and built a multi-million dollar Cass Tech, the structure alone costing $94 million. $45 million was spent for a safety program. $41 million was used to purchase a reading series not needed, $50 million was used to buy all new computers for staff and students. $1.6 million was used for administrative travel and all leadership positions recieved significant raises. The EFM in the first year gave himself a $86,000 raise, including resources from philanthropist contributions, his salalry was somewhere beyond $450,000. This is a leadership who spent more to rent and eventually buy five floors of the Fisher Bldg for office space, paying more than the owner paid for the entire building one year earlier, adorned with rare and expensive artifacts.

Teachers have had pay freezes since 2001, they have had pay cuts, benefit cuts and an additional $500.00 has been deducted from their monothly pay for two years and counting.

Oh the money is in the schools alright, it just doesn't make it to the classroom. >>
except/accept??????? per pupil funding. If you're a teacher, I hope this was a typo. >>
Yes, I am agree with you. Educational equity argument can help, But also cause blowback credits are more popular than vouchers.

Thanks
_______
Daniel

<a href=“http://www.legalx.net” rel=“dofollow”>Find Attorney</a> >>
Yes, I am agree with you. Educational equity argument can help, But also cause blowback credits are more popular than vouchers.

Thanks
_______
Daniel

<a href=“http://www.legalx.net”>Find Attorney</a> >>
Your comment "No one is that poor that they cant provide a boloney sandwich..." was the definition of "out-of-touch". First, I agree whole-heartedly that parents matter. I would love to see parents drive or car pool kids to school. Even provide them with food, too. However, sadly it is unrealistic. The economy is so weak that everything is shrinking. If we eliminate transportation and food for students we may find many families electing not to send the child to school at all...then what?

Please respond! >>
This agreement has saved the districts money yet we are chastised for it despite the fact the wording at issue was known to be invalid and unenforceable by either side. I applaud our effort and believe this suit is frivolous. http://www.godfrey-lee.org/education/components/board/default.php?sectiondetailid=3458&threadid=554 >>
education is an all around development for a child
he should be mentally and physically strong


<a href="http://rescueyoursavings.com" rel="dofollow">Savings</a> >>
education is an all around development for a child
he should be mentally and physically strong >>
Informative post. In order to deal with today's troubled youth, it is helpful to take a professional guidance for better teen recovery programs. Choosing a specialized organization for troubled youth is one of the most important steps for better teen recovery. Boysville is one of the non profit organization dedicated to help troubled youth with years of successful results by helping <a href=http://www.troubledteensguide.com/>troubled youth</a> to responsible individuals. Hope this organization continue their priceless support to most of the needy troubled youth with various helpful services. >>
Public servants like Presidents, Vice-Presidents, Senators, Congressmen, Judges, Secretaries of Various Departments and the like should be first to be compensated for performance.
The idea that the playing field for students is level everywhere is as Quixotic as thinking all politicians are honest and competent.
There are neighborhoods where only Portugese or gang sign language is spoken, where the parents both work two jobs to pay rent, where getting to school and back is more dangerous than Iraq and Afghanastan.
This Secretary of Education has to remove the silver spoon, roll up his sleeves and take his superior intellect attitude into the trenches and show the poor slobs that are taking their teachers jobs for granted how he would do it. Just because his mommy used to help out in Chicago doesn't give him the Congression Medal of Honor. Actually he's a stuffed shirt pretending to know it all.
How much do you want to bet that he wouldn't attempt entering these neighborhoods let alone these schools without security. >>