Difference between revisions of "Anarchy 43/High School U.S.A."
imported>Ivanhoe |
imported>Ivanhoe |
||
Line 23: | Line 23: | ||
{{tab}}We dull them in an in­cuba­tion period so they won{{t}} know what the world is really about. They get reward for false­ness in test­ing in­stead of truth. The truth of the matter is they really don{{t}} under­stand, can{{t}} pos­sibly under­stand most of what they are writing or read­ing, or get­ting tested on. But they have to find tricks for study­ing to get a good grade. To get a good grade things have to be done super­fi­cially so every­thing that is re­quired can be fin­ished on time. A trick for doing things you don{{t}} like to do as well as what you do like thereby dulling your true feel­ings. There is no energy left for what you really want to do there­fore set­ting a pat­tern for all your life. It leads to a subtle feel­ing of guilt if you<!-- 'your' in original --> really are having a good time at some­thing. | {{tab}}We dull them in an in­cuba­tion period so they won{{t}} know what the world is really about. They get reward for false­ness in test­ing in­stead of truth. The truth of the matter is they really don{{t}} under­stand, can{{t}} pos­sibly under­stand most of what they are writing or read­ing, or get­ting tested on. But they have to find tricks for study­ing to get a good grade. To get a good grade things have to be done super­fi­cially so every­thing that is re­quired can be fin­ished on time. A trick for doing things you don{{t}} like to do as well as what you do like thereby dulling your true feel­ings. There is no energy left for what you really want to do there­fore set­ting a pat­tern for all your life. It leads to a subtle feel­ing of guilt if you<!-- 'your' in original --> really are having a good time at some­thing. | ||
− | {{p|269}}{{tab}}We don{{t}} let stu­dents start at their own level. We set up stand­ards for them. They should be al­lowed to start at a begin­ning level, even if garish, | + | {{p|269}}{{tab}}We don{{t}} let stu­dents start at their own level. We set up stand­ards for them. They should be al­lowed to start at a begin­ning level, even if garish, whether in clothes, music, art, history, ideas, any­thing. We don{{t}} let them begin at the bottom and work up to the level they are able to reach. Only through a long slow pro­cess of free­dom of choice, and plenty of trial and error, plenty of errors, can a person de­velop any au­thor­ity on his own. We would then be able to break through the me­diocrity of our culture, and wouldn{{t}} rely on fashion or critics to judge for us. We must have the judge­ment to act on our own in­sight and de­ci­sion, and not from the mere wish to copy con­ven­tion. |
− | {{tab}}Another de­struct­ive aspect of the grad­ing system is the em­phasis put on each stu­dent for self-<wbr>at­tain­ment and the con­tinual com­pet­i­tion fostered between each child. A whole group of chil­dren can{{t}} be doing well, each at his own speed under the present system. But we are so proud of the curve system where some are Cham­pions, some | + | {{tab}}Another de­struct­ive aspect of the grad­ing system is the em­phasis put on each stu­dent for self-<wbr>at­tain­ment and the con­tinual com­pet­i­tion fostered between each child. A whole group of chil­dren can{{t}} be doing well, each at his own speed under the present system. But we are so proud of the {{w|curve system|Grading_on_a_curve}} where some are Cham­pions, some fail­ures, and they can rise only at someone else{{s}} ex­pense. Work isn{{t}} done for a feel­ing of self-<wbr>fulfil­ment, or for the com­mun­ity, but for the grade. Even in some lower grades where the grad­ing system has been abol­ished the slow learn­ers still feel pitted against the fast learn­ers. And under the new {{w|SRA|Science_Research_Associates}} read­ing method the child knows by the colour pencil he has to use. The methods are subtle but even more deadly than report cards. A line graph, black and white which seems in­vulner­able, you{{re}}<!-- 'your' in original --> below average, in the middle or above average. A mother feels as if God has spoken when they show her where her child rates against his room mates, the area, and the nation. After 12 or more years of this con­di­tion­ing what wonder the adult thinks more of his profit than the value of his product or ser­vice. He has never had the ex­peri­ence of com­mun­ity action. It was wrong if you helped another pupil write a theme, or pass a test. |
− | {{tab}}For at least 80,000 years man was a hunter, until pos­sibly 8,000 years ago when he began to settle into agri­cul­tural com­mun­ities. Man{{s}} emo­tions, drives and phys­ical in­herit­ance all are geared for sur­vival as a hunter. Our | + | {{tab}}For at least 80,000 years man was a hunter, until pos­sibly 8,000 years ago when he began to settle into agri­cul­tural com­mun­ities. Man{{s}} emo­tions, drives and phys­ical in­herit­ance all are geared for sur­vival as a hunter. Our pat­terns of living should take into ac­count what is a natural part of our make-<wbr>up. In the near past boys of high school age satis­fied their drives by going to sea, into armies, the fron­tier, or becom­ing ap­pren­tices in the eco­nomic world. It wasn{{t}} neces­sarily per­fect solu­tions to their needs, but now the chil­dren seem to be in school as much because there just isn{{t}} any other place for them. They aren{{t}} wanted in the home or the eco­nomic world. So we pile them into bigger and bigger schools of hun­dreds or thou­sands of chil­dren, the archi­tec­ture of which is like a modern jail, and fear­fully watch them so an­ti­cip­ated vi­ol­ence won{{t}} break out. Well for the most part the stu­dents have been so well con­di­tioned through grammar school that very little vi­ol­ence breaks out there. But is it any wonder that our world fan­tas­ises on the great­est of all pos­sible vi­ol­ence. I agree with {{w|Jung|Carl_Jung}} that maybe we shouldn{{t}} main­tain that {{w|atomic phys­i­cists|Nuclear_weapon_design}} are a pack of crim­in­als, but un­con­sciously they must be aiming at some kind of vi­ol­ence when they plan a {{w|weapon|Thermonuclear_weapon}}, and they could just as easily be in­vent­ing some­thing useful and be­ne­fi­cial to human­ity. And we could {{p|270}}be giving a healthy direc­tion to the in­stinctual drives in­stead of cre­at­ing a pent up danger through dis­tor­tion and sub­merging of the hered­it­ary urges. |
{{tab}}Since the edu­ca­tional in­stitu­tions tend to per­petu­ate them­selves and seem to be in­dis­tin­guish­able from free­dom and demo­cracy one must over­come a feel­ing of ex­treme dis­loy­alty to cri­ti­cise its<!-- 'critise it's' in original --> found­a­tions. Just as a parent re­tains a feel­ing of sub­mis­sion when enter­ing a school build­ing or talk­ing to a teach­er. ''But there are al­tern­at­ives,'' and there should be as many dif­fer­ent types of schools as there are com­mun­it­ies. Per­haps we needed a ho­mo­gen­eous system to draw to­gether our large country into a work­able whole, but now it is out­moded and detri­mental to a cre­at­ive thriv­ing people. | {{tab}}Since the edu­ca­tional in­stitu­tions tend to per­petu­ate them­selves and seem to be in­dis­tin­guish­able from free­dom and demo­cracy one must over­come a feel­ing of ex­treme dis­loy­alty to cri­ti­cise its<!-- 'critise it's' in original --> found­a­tions. Just as a parent re­tains a feel­ing of sub­mis­sion when enter­ing a school build­ing or talk­ing to a teach­er. ''But there are al­tern­at­ives,'' and there should be as many dif­fer­ent types of schools as there are com­mun­it­ies. Per­haps we needed a ho­mo­gen­eous system to draw to­gether our large country into a work­able whole, but now it is out­moded and detri­mental to a cre­at­ive thriv­ing people. |
Revision as of 18:26, 21 February 2018
High School
U.S.A.
Schools create life and death pressure to succeed, but to succeed into what. High schools pressure kids at a College level for the school’s glory, and parents sit on the side lines and root them on. We take advantage of the fact the children want to please the parents and teachers. They do a lot against their own grain for the parent’s approval (love). The parents exploit this. The students should please themselves. High School should be a time for self discovery, and for sampling at the student’s own speed. Instead they are taught techniques, not how to think. The students are interested in knowing where they will fit, what they would be good at, but instead are driven for excellence in subjects that have no meaning to them at this time.
We dull them in an incubation period so they won’t know what the world is really about. They get reward for falseness in testing instead of truth. The truth of the matter is they really don’t understand, can’t possibly understand most of what they are writing or reading, or getting tested on. But they have to find tricks for studying to get a good grade. To get a good grade things have to be done superficially so everything that is required can be finished on time. A trick for doing things you don’t like to do as well as what you do like thereby dulling your true feelings. There is no energy left for what you really want to do therefore setting a pattern for all your life. It leads to a subtle feeling of guilt if you really are having a good time at something.
Another destructive aspect of the grading system is the emphasis put on each student for self-
Since the educational institutions tend to perpetuate themselves and seem to be indistinguishable from freedom and democracy one must overcome a feeling of extreme disloyalty to criticise its foundations. Just as a parent retains a feeling of submission when entering a school building or talking to a teacher. But there are alternatives, and there should be as many different types of schools as there are communities. Perhaps we needed a homogeneous system to draw together our large country into a workable whole, but now it is outmoded and detrimental to a creative thriving people.
The great architect Le Corbusier, who was apprenticed to architects, but never went to school past the age of 13½ wrote, “The schools are the product of 19th century theories. In a time of complete upheaval they have, with their diplomats , officially applied the brake. They have killed architecture.” And I would add they kill and dull and maim innumerable minds in every field.
While schools might be varied there are some basic musts for any school that aims at giving the students self-
1. Schools must be small. I would say between 50 and 300 students, obviously you cannot get an organic community in the large prison-
The ideal environment is one that the students can modify. One of the barriers against change is the excuse it will cost money. This however is easily breached. There are tenements going begging to anyone who will take them off the landlords’ hands, and mansions left to estates that would be charitably given. Considering the tremendous cost of the huge buildings we now put up, a change-
2. There must be no ggrades. The grading system is destructive and has no positive value.
The children from the most economically deprived areas are humiliated by being pitted against the averages of others who have been trained from nursery school in the techniques for success in school. Haven’t these children feelings, sensitivity like any others? For 12 years we tell them they aren’t good enough. But good enough in what? In writing a paper, organising words found in reference books? Passing tests with symbols not understood, putting down these words they don’t understand. I could quote from Tolstoy, Goethe, Plato, Pavlov, Thoreau, Ruskin, Kierkegaard all to the point that words are the most superficial level of learning. Herbert Read writes, “It is not merely that we have disguised our feelings as symbols, but what in effect we have done is to accept a limited number of symbols as an adequate account of the total reality, and what escapes our consciousness is what ultimately destroys us, individually in the form of insanity, socially in the form of war”.
The student working with his complete self, without pressure of time, who develops his own project will know how he is doing, he will judge himself. If he makes poor choices he knows eventually where it doesn’t work, and will progress. If his work is carefully kept valued and respected—
What a cross we have given each child to bear. Those who feel inadequate because they cannot hope to compete, and the student who has managed to please the teachers feels guilty because he has cheated himself.
3. A fluid Curriculum. The curriculum may be stimulated by the teacher, but should be planned by the students within a very loose time structure.
There should be regional differences in courses. Why shouldn’t the special problems relating to an area or culture group be discussed, proved evaluated in depth? Why minimise them in an overall story which we pretend is history? One of the important aims of education should be to give students some idea of who he is and where he came from. The Puritans have no immediate relevance to the problems confronting a negro student whose family is supported by ADC, but heIt is the last time most of them will be in school and there is no more important knowledge we can give them than some insight into their emotions, into the problems they are confused and worried about. Why can’t we be truthful with them and let them discuss and probe into the areas that bother all of us? Using the same method as used in group therapy they could find out they are not carrying fears that are unique with them, but are common. Fears of homosexuality, disturbing dreams and emissions, family relationships full of tension. Why lie and call the Oedipus drama theatre when it is a myth dramatising the relationships within every family?
Our advertising tends to glorify in a glow of perfection lovers, wives, mothers. It makes the average person fell inadequate and a failure in their real life situation. How much better the old fairy tales of queens who wwere jealous of the princess, brother against brother, and children being put out of their house by their parents (rejected) like Hansel and Gretal. It is the last time they will be in school where they can learn the real dance we all go through, and perhaps some bad family patterns can be broken and some insight given into the compulsions that determine who we marry.
Every subject studied is actually to find out Who we are, Why we are here. Psychology and religion are at the basis of every subject studied whether it be chemistry, literature, history or biology. At the basis of all our studies is our search to find out what our life really is, and if we treated subjects from this viewpoint what ubject could be boring? But in the present curriculum each subject pompously parades as an end in itself.
But learning should not be emphasised as a verbal process. Art materials, drama, music, dance should be the most important part of the school. In the creative process the student reaches into himself for perceptions. He learns to see and feel for himself. Forms take shapes particular to him, and feelings will not be sublimated to become the breeding ground of hates. A person who can work through his feelings and relationships in the art mediums does not have resentments that fester in him. He develops confidence because every line he has put down or every movement he has made is a part of himself and he sees the progress and achievement that comes from his own attempts. He should feel satisfaction and be relaxed after each day at school. Now students speed out of school after five hours of being pent-
The teachers should lose their fear of having relationships with pupils. Attachments to teachers is one way of breaking away from the family when he is not ready for the responsibilities involved in sexual relationships. It has the element of sex but can be constructive and is a normal and healthy way of development.
We don’t call it fascistic, but our school, teacher set-
A teacher who is herself working on a project part of the day will automatically show the pupil more by example than can be learned through any other teaching method. When there is a good relationship the students tend to work out solutions to problems that the teacher is struggling with, and she incorporates it into her own work. She refines the students’ ideas and in this way they both go forward. In a natural atmosphere a group will develop between certain students and the teacher. If a teacher is right for them there is no reason she should be forced to stop at the end of a semester or year, and the students forced to readjust to a new situation. There is usually a breaking point where the teacher and the group will be finished with each other. At that point the group too might rearrange itself. We all know the feeling of being finished with a friend who was really a teacher to us and suddenly you know enough or had worked through the relationship and it was over. If we continually break into activities and relationships before the are consummated we contribute to the gragmentation that is a problem in our culture.
Every timea variation on our education is broached you get the response there aren’t enough teachers available. Poppycock, there just aren’t enough diplomas. Everywhere there are people who come into small schools and give a little of themselves. Who would be glad to give of their time, for the pleasure they would have being needed for themselves. Doctors, lawyers, merchants, chiefs. The school hours could be flexible to enable the students and teachers to take advantage of the hours that can be given to them. When personal relationships develop between students and “resource person” apprenticeships couldJane Addams knew what Tolstoy meant when he said we spread a “Snare of preparation” before the young people’s feet, “hopelessly entangling them in a curious inactivity at the very period of life when they are longing to construct the world anew and to conform it to their own ideals”. We deaden their intuitive abilities.
There is another source for teachers that we neglect, and that is the student himself. An excited student wants to share what he has learned, and there should be a constant interchange between the students all day long. The idea that sterile silence is the best environment for education is false. How does a student know that he has really learnt something unless he tries to pass on that knowledge in his own way while he is still involved in it? In a new book on education by a leading authority it was suggested that the students each have their own cubicle for studying. We are alienated, fragmented, isolated in the words of psychologists today. Why not let the students grow up in an atmosphere of friendship, relationships, and awareness of each other?