The Boy Who Could Change the World (38 page)

BOOK: The Boy Who Could Change the World
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I can hear the objections now. “That's a conspiracy theory!” they cry.

As a simple factual matter, that's badly mistaken. A conspiracy
theory is the notion that a small group of people have, in secret, managed to subvert the way things normally work. What I'm talking about is exactly the opposite: it's a large group of people, working in public, making sure things keep going the way they normally keep going.

So why does it seem so much like a conspiracy? I think it's because, in both instances, you're saying things don't work the way people have always believed they worked. From a young age, we're told that the society we live in may have its share of problems, but it's fundamentally sensible. Schools exist to give people an education, companies exist to make things people want, elections exist to give people a voice in how the system is run, newspapers exist to tell us what's going on. That's just how the world works.

Now, it's reasonable to believe that all of these things have flaws—that schools, for example, could do a better job of teaching students. After all, things can always be improved, sometimes quite a lot. But when you go further and say that schools are not only bad at teaching people, but that they're not about teaching people at all—well, that's when things get scary.

Because if schools aren't about teaching people, that means everything we've been told about them is a lie. And if everybody is lying to us, then, well, that does start to sound like a conspiracy theory.

But look back over our history—there's no conspiracy. A group of bold entrepreneurs find they can make cloth more efficiently by building large mills. The girls who staff them keep causing strikes and other trouble, so they require their employees go to school from a young age and learn to behave themselves.

But obviously most people won't be thrilled to go to school so that they can learn to accept lower wages without complaint. So the bosses develop a cover story: schools are about teaching people the things they need to know to survive in the world of business. It's not true, of course—there's no connection between the facts memorized in school and the skills needed on the job—but the story is convincing enough.

And so the spread of schools and factories destroys the American model of freedom. Instead of being independent farmers or self-employed manufacturers, Americans are herded into factories en
masse, forced to work for someone else because they cannot earn a living any other way. But thanks to schools, this seems normal, even natural. After all, isn't that just the way the world works?

Today, it seems like everyone agrees that what we need are more rigorous schools. George W. Bush joined with Ted Kennedy to pass No Child Left Behind, which punished school districts (i.e., took away their funding) if they didn't get high enough test scores. (How failing schools were supposed to improve by having
less
money was never really explained.) Barack Obama, of course, would never support such a cruel plan. Instead, his Race to the Top program will, like Skinner, catch schools doing something right—and reward them with extra funding.

But what is being tested is never a student's “prosocial attitudes” or “consistent attendance”—instead it's how well they memorized facts and figures. Why the disconnect? Perhaps because flunking students for not being good enough quitters wouldn't play well with parents. As Peter Cappelli, director of the U.S. government's National Center on the Educational Quality of the Workforce, put it, most people are “disturb[ed]” by the suggestion “that the values, norms, and behaviors being inculcated into students through the schools appear to be in conflict with the values associated with personal growth and development.”

The solution has been to fight the battle through other names. No Child Left Behind was supposed to have the effect of forcing schools to do a better job educating their students. Who could argue with that? But examining its effects on the ground finds it did something rather different. Students, of course, were not tested on how well they actually understood basic concepts but simply on how well they could answer the standard multiple-choice tests. And with so much at stake, schools converted even further from teaching kids ideas to teaching them how to perform well on tests.

Linda Perlstein spent a year at one school struggling to survive No Child Left Behind. Everything that wasn't tested had to get cut—not just art and gym, but recess, science, and social studies (yep, no science on the tests). What remains is converted entirely over to test prep—the only writing students ever do is short-answer sections
(“What text feature could have been added to help a reader better understand the information?”) and the stories in class are analyzed only in terms of what questions might be asked about them.

Large sections of the class have nothing to do with learning at all. Students are instead drilled on test-taking procedure: take deep breaths, work until time is called, eliminate obviously wrong answers. Every day students are taught special vocab words that will earn them extra points and reminded about how to properly phrase their answers to get the maximum score. Instead of covering the walls with students' art, they're covered with test-taking advice (“BATS: Borrow from the question, Answer the question, use Text supports, Stretch the formula”).

The single-minded goal of maximizing test scores has been a blessing for the textbook market, which forces schools to buy expensive “evidence-based curricula” which have been “proven” to maximize test scores. The packages include not only textbooks and workbooks but also scripts for the teachers to read verbatim—deviating from them hasn't been proven to raise test scores, and is thus prohibited. The package also comes with trained supervisors who drop in on teachers to make sure they're actually sticking to the script.

The effect on the students is almost heartbreaking. Taught that reading is simply about searching contrived stories for particular “text features,” they learn to hate reading. Taught that answering questions is simply about cycling through the multiple-choice answers to find the most plausible ones, they begin to stop thinking altogether and just spout random combinations of test buzzwords whenever they're asked a question. “The joy of finding things out” is banished from the classroom. Testing is in session.

Such drills don't teach children anything about the world, but it does teach them “skills”—skills like how to follow senseless orders and sit at your desk for hours at a time. Critics of high-stakes testing say that it isn't working as planned: teachers are teaching to the test instead of making sure kids actually learn. But maybe that is actually the plan. After all, employers seem to like it just fine.

Note: Some citations were added by the editor.

*
John S. Watson, “Smiling, Cooing, and ‘The Game.'”

†
Neal W. Finkelstein and Craig T. Ramey, “Learning to Control the Environment in Infancy,”
Child Development
, 1977, **48**, 806–819.

*
The Scientist in the Crib
.

*
http://www.jstor.org/pss/1129110
.

†
(James Raffini 1993.)

‡
http://family.go.com/parentpedia/preschool/milestones-development/preschool-asking-why/
.

*
Weiss,
www.Jstor.org/stable/2138394
.

*
http://digitalcommons.ilr.cornell.edu/cahrswp/400/
.

†
Capelli, 5.

*
Edwards 1977.

*
Fibre & Fabric: A Record of American Textile Industries in the Cotton and Woolen Trade
, 1898, Volume 28, 170.

†
Harriet Robinson,
Loom and Spindle
, Applewood Books, 68–70.

*
Ibid., 69.

*
A.P. Peabody, “The Lowell Offering,”
Atlantic Monthly
, April 1891.

†
Robinson,
Loom and Spindle
, 84.

*
The Voice of Industry
, April 14, 1848.

*
The Voice of Industry
, March 10, 1848.

†
Reference unknown.

*
Reference unknown.

†
David Isaac Bruck, “The Schools of Lowell, 1824–1861: A Case Study In the Origins of Modern Public Education in America,” honors thesis, Harvard University, 1971.
http://id.lib.harvard.edu/aleph/003824609/catalog
.

*
Luft.

†
Letter from H. Bartlett, Esq. to Horace Mann, Lowell, Dec. 1, 1841, in Horace Mann, ed.,
Common School Journal
, 1842, 366.

*
Massachusetts Board of Education,
Annual Report of the Board of Education
, Vol. 23, 1860, p. 56.

†
Lowell Mass. School Committee,
Annual Report
, 1847, Vol. 21, p. 56.

‡
Samuel Bowles,
Schooling in Capitalist America: Educational Reform and the Contradictions of Economic Life
, Haymarket, 1976, p. 160.

§
Ibid.

||
David K. Cohen and Barbara Neufeld, “The Failure of High Schools and the Progress of Education,”
Daedalus
I 10 (Summer 1981): 87, n. 2.

*
Merle Curti,
The Social Ideas of American Educators
, Totowa, NJ: Littlefield, Adams, 1959. An excerpt (pp. 218–220, 228, 230, 203).

*
Vince Packard quoted in Richard Rothstein,
The Way We Were? The Myths and Realities of America's Student Achievement
, The Century Foundation, 1998.

Welcome to Unschooling

http://web.archive.org/web/20020101214543/http://www.swartzfam.com: 82/aaron/school/2001/04/05/

April 5, 2001

Age 14

What Is It?

When I first
discovered Sudbury schools
, I found them interesting. As I began to research them more, I found them fascinating. It was only shortly ago that I found the missing piece of the puzzle: unschooling.

Unschooling is a phenomenon that is still relatively small, but steadily growing. I had heard mentions of unschooling, and local unschooling organizations, but couldn't find much more information about it on the web and so I dismissed it as some sort of fringe group that tried to de-brainwash schooled kids. Instead, as I recently discovered, it is a powerful philosophy bounded by a simple principle: kids want to learn. It's based upon
the writings of John Holt
, which are absolutely magnificent.

Unschooling someone is surprisingly simple. You first deal with whatever regulations your state requires to home-school (my state, Illinois, seems surprisingly liberal in this area), then the child simply stays home and explores the world as he pleases. Parents and other adults can provide him with advice and assistance on things he's interested in, but must do their best not to force the kid into things. That's really all there is to it. Pretty simple, huh?

How Do I Do It?

I found out about unschooling through an incredible book:
Teenage Liberation Handbook
(TLH
) by Grace Llewellyn. The book is a thick one, but is practically a step-by-step handbook to unschooling. It is divided into three major sections: why you should not go to school; how to get out of school; and what to do once you've gotten out. It's filled with quotes from
Growing Without Schooling
, a magazine for unschoolers to keep in touch and share ideas. (I'm subscribing and will report more on it soon.)

The real-life examples and experiences made it clear that this is no wacko fringe group, or simply a program for “gifted” kids. Instead, unschooling crosses nearly all boundaries—in fact, the book even recommends that adults try some of the ideas too. The book has plenty of experiences where unschooling has improved family relationships, “cured” cases of depression or “learning disabilities,” and, most importantly, made kids much happier.

Various studies that the book cites show that unschooled children are perfectly successful in the “real world” and almost always do better on standardized tests than their schooled peers—even when they've never cracked a textbook or taken a conventional course. Furthermore, because they have plenty of time to take on real-life work like apprenticeship or volunteering, they are much more likely to develop skills needed to survive in the “real world.”

How Will They Possibly Learn Without School?

TLH
kindly provides help on how to keep up with all the basic subjects (English, history, math, science, art, etc.)—few of them recommend opening up a textbook or taking a class. Instead, unschooling focuses on the learning opportunities that surround us.

I learned English not from school, but by writing emails and this column, as well as reading heavily. When I tell this to other students, they say: “Oh, I wish I could do that, but I don't have enough time.” Well, if they don't go to school, I'm sure that they'll have much more. It's quick and painless: just read interesting books and write about things that you're interested in. Keep doing it and your writing is sure to improve—no pain or struggle involved.

I've never liked history. It's always seemed like an abstract discussion of events and activities that had no relevance to my life and were just plain uninteresting. Worse, the only thing I was graded on was how well I memorized this boring stuff. Other students in my class are fascinated by history, and I've struggled to understand why. I recently figured it out: School teaches history backward. History classes always start towards the beginning of the story and move towards now. This may be a good way to tell a story, but it is awful for telling history. You start in a place I don't know, in a time I don't understand, with people I've never heard of. I'm not interested and I'll tune out. The answer is simple: start with the present and work backwards by asking the question: How did we get here? For one thing, you'll start in a world that I can easily connect to and associate with. For another, you'll ask the same question that I'm asking myself: how did we get here? Best of all, I'll develop a “sense of history” by truly seeing how everything fits in to where we are now. And I probably won't fall asleep.

Many believe that math must be learned in school, or at least through textbooks. This is simply not true, but merely shows the poor job of mathematical education done by schools today. For the most part, schools do not teach math: they teach computation, symbol manipulation, etc. These are only a small part of math and end up being the least interesting, since it can all be done by a calculator or a smart computer. Instead, math is really about the study of patterns and the development of theories. Math is a whole world of abstract beauty, full of puzzles to test your mind.

Science is not the memorization of uninteresting facts, as 12 years of science classes may lead you to believe. Science is merely a process of asking questions and searching answers, along with the combined knowledge accumulated from this search. The process is called the scientific method, and the best science teacher I ever had simply explained it to us and let us explore the world. Her room was filled with toys and puzzles to solve, and things to experiment with. She would often warn us of teachers she once had who had few hands-on activities and simply asked us to read through a textbook. Little did I know that these would be the science teachers I would have for the rest of my time at school. But now I realize that my scientific
explorations need not be limited to her classroom, or any other. Instead, the world around us is an enormous classroom and we merely need the time to explore it, and the drive to ask questions and try to answer them.

Art is obviously something that can be learned outside of school. All one needs is the materials and the time to let their creativity flow. Schools often have many materials that allow you to explore different forms of art, and it may be useful to work out an arrangement with your school so that you can continue to use their supplies. If not, there are many art supply stores, and plenty of other ways to find the necessary materials. The most important ingredient of all, however, is creativity, which is something you must cultivate from inside yourself.

However, don't think that unschooling is limited to just a new way of learning the same subjects in school! Instead, it's just as important to do other things: become an apprentice or volunteer and learn how to take care of a “real job”; start your own business; lobby politicians and try to make changes in our government or society; go on an explorative trip around the world to learn about other cultures and ways of living; etc.

As
TLH
points out, adolescence is one of the most exciting and important times of transformation in a child. Other cultures mark it through strong and powerful experiences: the town coming together to perform a hallowed tribal ritual; sending the child out on a quest or journey, making him into a man when he returns; etc. Why do we go on like nothing is happening, throwing our children into a mind-numbing, spine-straightening, painfully useless ordeal?

Today (2001-04-04) I visited
a museum
which included a theme-park-like adventure. Like Indiana Jones, it had you climb through its mazes and passageways to find the stone statues of the spirits of Reason, Inspiration, Questions, and Perseverance. When you discovered each statue, it sang a little song where it stressed its importance. In the end, when you had found all of them, all the statues came together to do a little song-and-dance number about how the secret of knowledge was to balance all four of them. It was quite insightful and certainly true. If you have Reason, Inspiration, Questions, and Perseverance, it's hard to go wrong.

But Won't My Child Become an Unsocial Hermit?!

Interestingly, I've heard people dislike unschooling not because they are afraid that their children will not learn anything, but because they are afraid they will not develop “healthy social relationships with their peers.” Nothing could be farther from the truth.

First, school is not a place to develop social relationships. In fact, it seems designed to stifle them. There is hardly time for socialization provided, and it is discouraged for the majority of the school day. Any student who does develop a true relationship with someone does it outside of school: at a local meeting place (like a park or mall); when going over to a friend's house; or after school. An unschooler can still do all of these things.

Second, who decided that meaningful relationships could only be had with other people who happen to be in roughly the same physical area at roughly the same age? If anything, this is a severely restrained peer group. I have developed my most meaningful relationships online. None of them live within driving distance. None of them are about my own age. Even among those who I would not count as “friends,” I have met many people online who have simply commented on my work or are interested by what I do. Through the Internet, I've developed a strong social network—something I could never do if I had to keep my choice of peers within school grounds.

But I Don't Want the Kids at Home!

Now, I have sort of implied that unschooling only takes place at home. This is not true. As I said at the beginning, the unschooling movement considers Sudbury schools part of them, and playfully calls them the Unschooling Schools. Unfortunately, through all of my research in Sudbury schools, I had not heard them mention the unschooling movement—this would be especially appreciated for fans of the Sudbury model who do not have such a school close by.

Where Do We Go from Here?

I have strong hopes for the growth of the unschooling movement in the future. First, I think that it needs to get the word out: I never knew
unschooling was a choice, or that others did it, until just recently—and I've done my best to research these things. So many people complain about the quality of our school systems today, and are ready for a change in the system. Unschooling is not only a change—it's a tidal wave knocking out all that we know and believe about the school system and providing a vastly different—and better—alternative.

Also, I hope to start a community for unschoolers on the web. If you know of any unschoolers, please point them to me. Have them send me an email. I'd love to see more sharing of experiences and collect this great knowledge that exists out there.

Finally, I end with a plea. If you have kids, or know kids, who are stuck in the monotony of school, give them an escape route: buy them a copy of
Teenage Liberation Handbook
. I'm sure they'll thank you for it. It's time for the kids to rise up and take control of our lives again. Our slavery has lasted long enough.

Large portions of this piece are based on
an online discussion I've been having
. I want to thank all who have participated and encourage you to join in the discussion if you haven't already.

BOOK: The Boy Who Could Change the World
13.21Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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