Jesus Loves Darwin

After my talk a couple of weeks ago at the EVoS seminar at Binghamton University, one audience member raised a great question.  If some creationists attack the teaching of evolution because they think it leads to atheism, why do some prominent evolutionists promote the idea that there is any necessary connection between evolution and atheism?  In other words, just because prominent evolutionists such as Richard Dawkins insist that evolution and atheism go together, why do we all have to agree?  Is it because leading creationists agree on this point?  Is there any room in there, this audience member asked, for Bible-believing evolutionists?

Since then, I’ve been in touch with Gregory Smith, a scientist at the College of William and Mary.  On his blog, Jesus Loves Darwin, Greg wrestles with just these questions.  How can a Bible believer who is also an evolutionist bring these beliefs into sync?

As Greg knows, there is a rich tradition of these explorations of theistic evolution.  For those ILYBYGTH readers curious to see some of his ideas, I encourage you to check out his blog!

WHAT ARE SCHOOLS FOR?

Teachers that I talk to often complain that everyone thinks they can do a better job, even though such folks never spent five minutes in a real school.  Politicians, neighbors, pushy relatives, all tell teachers loudly and repeatedly that it would be easy to fix schools.  Teachers often point out, sometimes publicly, sometimes only in teachers’ lounges, that those folks would never talk that way about other professions, like medicine or law.  But since everyone went to school, everyone thinks and talks as if they’re experts in school reform.

I think the teachers’ complaint makes a lot of sense.  I work with a lot of smart people who are planning to become teachers.  A lot of them are very well educated, very smart, very hard working, and very eager to help people by becoming teachers.  There is a huge difference in the way these folks view schooling and education reform before they start teaching, and once they’ve got a taste of life in real classrooms.  Many of them come into the teachers’ education program confident that they will be a new kind of teacher, one who doesn’t water down hard ideas for students, one who doesn’t take any guff, one who doesn’t softpedal the hard facts of intellectual life for students.  After they’ve tried it, even for just a few weeks, they often relate stories of shock and sometimes depression at the sheer impossibility of accomplishing their lofty goals.

Maybe it would help the conversation if everyone had to teach for a few years before they could suggest ways to fix schools.  But that’s not likely to happen.  Especially in the case of ambitious politicians, there will always be those who think they have a simple panacea to fix America’s schools.

In addition to the fact that some of these schemes demonstrate a profound ignorance of the realities of schooling, there is another enormous problem with all these reform ideas.  Depending on who’s talking, the fix for schools might be more discipline for those lazy kids.  Or it might be less discipline for those creative yet hounded students.  It might be less public money to encourage competition and entrepreneurialism.  Or it might be more public money for better teacher pay and student conditions.  Like a blanket pulled in every direction at once, with all these varied prescriptions, reform can go nowhere.

This is not incidental to the nature of American schooling.  America’s notions of the proper role of schooling have always pulled not only in different directions, but in precisely opposite directions.  Like a tug-of-war in many directions, this has resulted in short bursts of movement, followed by correction, and often accompanied by messy pileups.

As David Tyack and Larry Cuban argued in their 1995 essay “Tinkering Toward Utopia,” Americans have long held contradictory ideas about the purposes of institutional schooling.  In Tyack’s and Cuban’s words, Americans have always wanted schools to do lots of different things for their children:

“to socialize them to be obedient, yet to teach them to be critical thinkers;

“to pass on the best academic knowledge that the past has to offer, yet also to teach marketable and practical skills;

“to cultivate cooperation, yet to teach students to compete with one another in school and later in life;

“to stress basic skills but also to encourage creativity and higher-order thinking;

“to focus on the academic ‘basics’ yet to permit a wide range of choice of courses.”

To muddy the waters even further, I think it will be more accurate and more helpful if we change Tyack’s and Cuban’s ‘yets’ and ‘buts’ to ANDs.  That is, Americans have wanted both ends of these apparent dichotomies in their schools.  When one side appears to have worked itself into absurdity, public pressure grows to emphasize the other end.

In terms of the endless bickering over whether our schools need to be more “progressive” or more “traditional,” this multiplicity of ideas about the nature of schooling means that everyone can find something to be angry about at any time.  For example, a progressive, democratic parent or teacher can find lots to complain about if he or she wants schools to do a good job of teaching students to be cooperative.  Especially in these days of high-stakes standardized testing, students can spend most of a school day learning that the function of school is to move quickly through academic material.  Like the end of a zombie movie, students learn that the most vital notion of schooling is to keep moving.

On the other hand, parents, teachers, administrators, and students who hope for more “traditional” schools can gripe that schools do nothing but “fluff.”  They don’t prepare students with the real-world skills they’ll need to get and keep good jobs in a competitive economy.

Both sides can keep on talking, since they can both be right at the same time.  Both can claim the justice of having the vast majority of people on their sides (“Every intelligent teacher I know agrees with me”) while also claiming to be a victimized minority (“Why don’t the powers that be every recognize these obvious truths about school?!?”)

Perhaps this pull toward the middle is a good thing.  It might be far more terrifying if one group of zealous educators could simply seize control of America’s schools and declare a dramatically new direction.  As it is, the notion of “school” is tied up with so many conflicting and contradictory notions that it is more likely to maintain its basic structure than it is to change rapidly or dramatically.

 

Further reading: David Tyack and Larry Cuban, Tinkering toward Utopia: A Century of Public School Reform (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1995).

Evolution and Creation: One Historian’s View

The Evolutionary Studies program at Binghamton University has published some audio from my talk last week about creationist thought and its history.  I’d like to thank the EVoS folks for the opportunity to address the seminar.  The interview beforehand and the questions and discussion afterward were very lively and provocative.  The students, faculty, and other audience members raised terrific points and mind-expanding challenges.

An audio recording of the talk, ‘Surely You’re Joking, Mr. Huckabee:” Creationism in Historical Perspective’ is available here via EVoS’ website.  You can also listen to a podcast of the interview with David Sloan Wilson’s students.  A sharp bunch!

Are Culture War Activists MORE Likely to Read from the Other Side?

It has become a tired cliche that our society has grown more culturally segregated due to the fact that we only read/see/hear those ideologically driven news outlets with which we already agree.  An interesting piece in this morning’s New York Times describes a study of media consumership that challenges that common wisdom.  According to a study by Matthew Gentzkow and Jesse Shapiro of the Booth School of Business at the University of Chicago, people who read/view/listen to news and information from one side of the political spectrum are MORE likely to also read/view/listen to sources from the other side.

“Internet news consumers with homogeneous news diets are rare,” the authors wrote.

As James Warren of the Chicago News Cooperative suggests, the problem might not be that hardened culture warriors are clustering farther and farther apart in the newsiverse, reinforcing their own stereotypes and preconceived notions.  The problem might be, Warren suggests, that too many Americans are not reading/viewing/listening to ANY news at all.  Though some news consumers frequented sources from both left and right, larger numbers of Americans consumed very little news from any source.

What does this mean for our understanding of the culture wars?  Morris Fiorina has suggested that the hype of culture war has been overblown.  Fiorina argued that most Americans were centrist, but journalists and politicians eager for attention stressed extreme positions.  Perhaps this study bolsters Fiorino’s argument.  The study’s authors found that most online news consumption clustered around centrist sites such as Yahoo and CNN.  I find that heartening.

Some might say that another, gloomier interpretation is more obvious.  According to the study, listeners to Rush Limbaugh were more likely than the average American to also spend some time on perceived left-leaning sites such as the New York Times.com.   And visitors to the leftist MoveOn.org were more likely than the average American to also visit right-leaning sites such as FoxNews.com.  One interpretation is that those readers and viewers were interested in hearing both sides of an issue.  The most obvious interpretation, though, is that each side is only conducting reconnaissance.  Both sides, in other words, scan through the news outlets from the other side in order to expose their foibles and weaknesses.

So, perhaps these ardent culture warriors are only reading their enemies in order to disprove them.  Even so, I consider that a good thing.  Even if culture warriors are only trying to disprove one another, the fact that they are familiarizing themselves with the “enemy” will mean that they have some sense of what other people are thinking.  This study, in any case, seems to give support to a hunch that Americans are not as far apart culturally as some have suggested.

PROGRESSIVE EDUCATION Ib: WHY COME TO SCHOOL? (cont…)

It is easy to notice that students don’t come to school to learn.  In fact, it is difficult to spend any amount of time in a secondary school without butting up against that central truth.  But it is much harder to figure out how to engage students more authentically in the learning that could go on inside a school.

There are at least two big problems.  First, students often don’t have the background knowledge to make the transmitted information interesting.  For example, students can be told about the Boston Massacre of 1770.  They can hear or read about the colonists’ anger at the Stamp Act.  They can be told that five men died from the
shooting by the British soldiers.

But without an adequate background, students can too easily miss the importance of the event.  They can see it as simply a very small battle, one in which just a few people were killed.  Without a fuller historical understanding, they can view the Boston Massacre as simply one of the steps that led to the Revolution a few years later.  They can miss the terrifying uncertainty and excitement of that March day in 1770, the anger among the colonists, the sweaty nervousness among the armed teenagers in the British army.  Without a proper background, the events lose their individuality, the participants become stick figures acting out their parts, running along a pre-ordained track toward the Revolution and the start of the united States.  Boring.

The second major problem is that many students don’t have a decent reason to work to remember this transmitted information.  This can be different for a lot of students.  For a surprising number of young people, the internal rewards are enough.  They want to earn good grades, so they work hard at the abstract task of memorizing the series of facts that are told to them.  Sometimes they are successful, sometimes not.

The bigger problem comes from the much larger numbers of students who see very little reason to chase after those internal rewards.  They don’t care what kind of grade they get.  They don’t see any reason to work hard to memorize this series of facts.  They don’t care about Crispus Attucks, or Paul Revere, or the anxiety of late colonial life.

Consider this analogy: without these two things, 1.) background knowledge with which to contextualize information and 2.) a reason to care about that information, information transmitted in schools is like listening to driving directions in an area you’ve never been, to a place you have no desire to go.

With a solid background, you can follow along with those directions in your head, making sense of each part.  When you are told to “take a left on Broadway, where there’s that big Halal store on the corner,” you can picture that store and picture yourself driving along the new street.  It all fits.  You can follow along and mentally get to the place you want to go.  You’ll remember it.  You’ll get there.

But if you are hearing directions for a city you don’t know, you will have to do the much more difficult task of simply memorizing a list of directions.  You’ll have to remember that after taking a left at the Halal store, you need to go through three lights, then take a right on 83rd, etc.  Without a preexisting knowledge of the destination in general terms, it is a much more difficult task to remember a list of directions.  You are not able to picture the route in your
head as it is described.  Second, if you don’t really want to go where the directions are leading, you will be less likely to make the effort to memorize the list of directions.  You will be more likely to simply stop listening after you hear the mind-numbing list of directions.  But if you really need to get there, you will be more likely to listen carefully, take notes, and ask questions to be sure you’ve got the directions correct.

In any case, reading a list of directions then expecting people to be able to get where they are supposed to go is a tall order.  Yet that is what the transmission model of schooling assumes.  It presumes that young people will be able to memorize long lists of facts, usually separated from any reasons to make the facts seem important.  Also, the transmission model assumes that students will be able to develop the background information to contextualize those facts at the same time that they are receiving the lists of facts.

In order to make schooling more effective, we need to shatter both of these mistaken preconceptions.  We need to break away from thinking of proper schooling as a transmission of facts from adult to youth.  We need to break away from conceiving of the proper measure of that education as the regurgitation of lists of transmitted facts.

So how do we do it instead?
Let’s return to our directions analogy.  If a young person was not familiar with a part of town, we would not
simply read them a list of directions.  If we could, we’d take them on a tour of that part of town first.  We’d let them know that in a little while we’ll be expecting them to be able to get to the destination on their own.  That we need them to get there without help from us in order to function as an adult in our society.  Then we might show them some maps of the area as we point out the route.  They could try to redraw the route themselves on a map before they try it their first time.  As they go, they could progress from driving with an experienced instructor at first to driving on their own.

And in order to decide if the education had been successful, we would not simply ask students to recite back the list of directions they had been told to a place they did not want to go in a part of town they had never been.  Rather, we would evaluate their education by watching them get themselves to that destination.  If they took a different route, fine.  The important part would not be a question of repeating back abstract transmitted information but achieving a real task set out for them, one in which they had been given the support and guidance to complete successfully.

TRADITIONALIST EDUCATION Ia: DISCOVERY…OF WHAT? (continued…)

Traditionalist educators have sometimes tried to combat the philosophical underpinnings of progressivist education.  In America, conservatives have often argued from a Christian viewpoint.  The materialist understanding of humans, they sometimes say, misunderstands the nature of humanity.  People are not merely clever apes, but something essentially different.  Therefore, young humans need to be taught that there are transcendent truths; there are absolute values of right and wrong that need to be transmitted from one generation to the next.

This has concrete implications in classroom practice.  If there are eternal values and truths, it is not merely mistaken to adopt a “discovery” approach to classroom teaching.  If there are such things, it becomes both cruel and dangerous to do so.  It would
be like allowing students to wander at will around a field, when the teacher knows full well that there are intellectual landmines buried throughout the field.  It would be to keep silent as students wandered away from the truth.  Instead, the proper role for a teacher is to lead the children carefully along an intellectual path. The teacher’s job is not to encourage the children to wander, but to correct the children—sternly if necessary—to keep them from straying from the correct path.

What does this mean for day-to-day teaching?  If we have this kind of traditionalist mindset about the nature of morality—that there are eternal values of right and wrong—then the goal of education must be to impart those truths.  Fundamentally, it requires us to acknowledge that the teacher must remain the authority in the classroom.  Consider two different ways of teaching about the history of antebellum slavery.  A progressivist pedagogy might encourage students to collect information about the nature of
that slavery, make a website in which that history is explained, then present this website to the class and school/learning community.  The role of the teacher in this scheme is to help the student find research material, guide the process by which the student learns how to put the information into a website, facilitate the presentation, and evaluate the presentation by suggesting improvements.  The student might then improve the presentation based on the teacher’s feedback.  The goal would be for the student to be motivated by her interest in the subject, to conduct authentic research in which she learns about the history of
American slavery, and then gets practice in speaking to a group.  All of those skills are improved while the student learns about the historical content.  It sounds good.  But what happens when the student concludes that antebellum plantation life didn’t
look too bad for slaves?  It may sound outlandish, but such was my experience with student research time and time again.  Students did not yet have the ability to fully understand the horrors of being owned.  They did not yet have the intellectual
maturity to put themselves fully into the shoes of a slave and understand what such a thing would mean.  Students would
look at the maps online of the typical plantation house and conclude that slaves had a “nice little row of houses all to themselves.”  Even worse, what happens when the student finds online sites from white supremacists claiming that slaves enjoyed slavery?  How does she know what information to include or exclude?  And if she presents her history of the happy slave to the rest of the class, how are they to know that such history is fundamentally flawed?  The role of the teacher is precisely to prevent those things
from happening.  Before a student can be encouraged to “discover” the historical lessons of antebellum slavery, she must
be given a lot of information about the topic.  She needs to understand the horrors of dehumanization that accompanied
chattel slavery.  She needs to understand that slaves were people, just like her, with the same rights and expectations.  There are values, in other words, that a student must be directly taught.  It is not responsible to allow students to explore among the ideas that are out there about slavery without giving them a roadmap.  Students should be led intellectually to understand that owning other humans is a fundamental injustice.  They should not be expected to consider that truth as one idea among others.

Backstory: Creation, Evolution, Science, & Religion

Everyone interested in the longer history of the creation/evolution controversy should check out a new podcast by the American History Guys at Backstory.  Too many folks–and I plead guilty to this as well–tend to start their study of the creation/evolution controversy at 1925.  This broadcast explores the longer history, including Thomas Jefferson’s attitudes toward the subject.

Be sure to check out the longer interview with Ron Numbers.  Anyone interested in the topic should get into Ron’s published books.  This interview is a good place to start.

IS There an Education Culture War?

People disagree about the nature and proper direction for American schools.  But do those disagreements rise to the level of culture war?  Unlike the evolution/creation divide, there is a lot of room in the middle.

For instance, are charter schools ‘progressive’ or ‘traditional?’  Some scholars suggest that charter schools are an attempt to privatize education and undermine the power of teachers’ unions.  They suggest
that charter schools tend to function regressively.

Other charter-school advocates say that charter schools give students and families a fairer chance at a quality
education.  This “Waiting for Superman” crowd promotes charter schools as the ‘progressive’ solution for poor people.

The same could be said for other educational ideas.  For instance, where does the notion of testing fit in?  For most of the twentieth century, the idea that tests could determine the individual strengths and weaknesses of students led the pack of progressive ideology.  With the proper array of tests, progressives believed, schooling could be tailored to each particular student.  The procrustean bed of institutional schooling could be shattered with a more individualized sense of personal experiences and beliefs.

Today, some educational thinkers promote the progressive possibilities of high-stakes standardized testing.  They argue that kids from lower-incomefamilies have been allowed to slip through the educational cracks.  For too long, they argue, such kids have been subjected to the “soft bigotry of low expectations.”   High-stakes testing promised to turn that around.  Embedded in the language of the 2002 No Child Left Behind Act was the notion that schools must improve test scores for all kids, including those from groups that historically underperformed on academic
measures.

Other education thinkers disagree.  They dismiss such talk as mere window-dressing for conservative attempts to seize school power.  Famously, New York University professor Diane Ravitch recently switched sides in the debate over the meanings and implication of high-stakes testing.  Ravitch helped design the original testing
megalith.  Now she argues that the focus on tests undermines the proper goals of schooling for all students, especially those from the most vulnerable categories.

This broad expanse of room in the middle for disagreement and debate about foundational ideas in the field of education suggests that there is no real culture war at work.  If people can agree on basic terms and notions, even if they disagree about policy and practice, then they must share fundamental ideas about the proper form and
purpose of schooling.  The fact that issues such as testing and charter schools attract different arguments from
conservatives and progressives implies that each side shares most of the notions of its opposition.  The
disagreements are more prosaic than in the starkly defined ideologies and theologies of creation or evolution.

More telling, I have had only a handful of firsthand encounters with culture-war clashes in my career in education.  We all have heard stories of teachers getting fired for offending people’s religious or political beliefs, but in my
experience parents are far more concerned with grades and achievement than in creeping secularism or dictatorial preachiness in schools.

On the other hand, one could argue that education is the ultimate culture-war battleground, since it forces Americans to define their values and rank the importance of foundational notions such as social inequality, race, religion, and the relationship between family and state.

For example, it is difficult to think of a culture-war issue that has not become a clash over schooling.  For instance, the forum for most disagreements over beliefs in creation and evolution has always been schooling.  Should schools teach evolution?  Creation?

Similarly, clashes over the role of race in American culture have been framed as questions about schooling.
Brown v. Board focused on the legitimacy of educational segregation.  George Wallace stood in the doorway of a school, the Foster Auditorium of the University of Alabama in 1963 to proclaim “Segregation now, segregation
tomorrow and segregation forever.”

Schools also are the field in which activists contend over fundamental notions of social and economic justice.  Schools in poor neighborhoods look, feel, and are funded in very different ways than schools in affluent ones.  Nicholas Kristof’s recent plea for more equalized funding for early-education programs only rehashes generations of
arguments about the power of schooling to combat the great inequalities of American life.

So IS there a culture war in education?  Do Americans fundamentally disagree with one another about the basic premises of schooling?  As with evolution and creation, do the two sides have such different worldviews that they claim not to be able even to understand the other side’s view?  Or is education an embodiment of Louis Hartz’ famous claim in 1955 that America really only has one fundamental political tradition, that of a general liberalism?

If you are a teacher, parent, or school administrator, have you had experiences with culture wars in your schools?  Or is this more evidence to back up Morris Fiorina’s claim that culture-war rhetoric is merely the creation of a myopic chattering class?

Agnotology and Education

Late-night comics must miss the days of Cheney and Rumsfeld.  Dick Cheney shot people and literally had no heartbeat due to a special kind of pacemaker. Donald Rumsfeld offered rhetorical gems during press
conferences, none better than the following from 2002:

[T]here are known knowns; there are things we know we know.
We also know there are known unknowns; that is to say we know there are some
things we do not know.
But there are also unknown unknowns – the ones we don’t know we don’t know.

Along these lines, although with pithier prose, historian of science Robert Proctor  has suggested a promising line of study, about the things we don’t know and the ways we don’t know them.  He calls the field agnotology, or the study
of ignorance.  Others have suggested different terms, such as agnoiology.  (See Tim Lacy’s discussion of the history on the US Intellectual History blog for more.)

In a recent collection of essays co-edited with Londa Schiebinger, Proctor laid out a three-part structure of agnotology.  In Proctor’s view, it will be helpful to differentiate between types of ignorance:

ignorance as native state (or resource), ignorance as lost realm (or selective choice), and

ignorance as a deliberately engineered and strategic ploy (or active construct).

Proctor and some of the other essay contributors are especially interested in the ways that ignorance can be a strategic ploy.  Proctor, for instance, describes the ways tobacco companies constructed plausible ignorance about the negative health impacts of smoking.  Naomi Oreskes and Erik M. Conway, in their contribution “Challenging Knowledge: How Climate Science Became a Victim of the Cold War,” explore the conspiratorial history of the George Marshall Institute and its quest to create ignorance about the causes of global climate change.

It seems to me the study of ignorance has another productive application in our thinking about the cultural and intellectual role of institutional education.  Notions of education usually include the implicit claim to be combating ignorance.  But in fact, some kinds of ignorance have long been part and parcel of educational goals.  In general, this has taken the form of certain types of information from which young people must be shielded.  This has a long and storied legacy.  Anthony Comstock, for example, made his career on protecting youth, women, and other “vulnerable” classes of people from exposure to lewd information.

In American schools, a Calvinist hangover has implicitly shaped ideologies of mandatory ignorance, especially for the young.  Pre-1857 editions of McGuffey’s Third Reader included a short anonymous selection that typified this tradition.  In the short dialogue, “Knowledge is Power,” the first speaker asserts confidently, “Knowledge is an excellent thing.”

An old man replies, “It may be a blessing or a curse.  Knowledge is only an increase of power, and power may be a bad as well as a good thing.”  The old man goes on to give examples that overwhelm the initial reluctance of his optimistic interlocutor: A horse without a bridle can wreck a barn. A pond without dams can flood a field.  A ship well steered goes faster, but if steered wrong, “the more sail she carries, the further will she go out of her course.”

The younger man is convinced.  Without tight control, such things can cause damage.  “‘Well, then,’ continued the old man, ‘if you see these things so clearly, I hope you can see, too, that knowledge to be a good thing, must be rightly applied.  God’s grace in the heart will render the knowledge of the head a blessing; but without this, it may prove to us no better than a curse.”

This short bit captures the powerful drive toward ignorance that long ruled the Reformed tradition in the United States.  Knowledge, in this view, was not a simple good.  It must be carefully examined and weighed before being pursued.  By itself, knowledge could be the sinful knowledge first banned for Adam and Eve.  It could be the knowledge of pernicious doubt and skepticism.  To become wise, in this tradition, meant remaining ignorant of such fields.

This tradition of mandatory ignorance has been enormously influential on American thinking about education and youth.  Throughout the twentieth and into the twenty-first century, the notion that ignorance must be actively promoted and defended among young people has proven culturally and politically powerful far beyond the circles of religious conservatives.  Knowledge about sex, violence, and—among certain circles—scientific topics such as evolution has been seen as an intellectual poison.  Building and defending walls of ignorance around such notions has been asserted as the primary aim of education.

For instance, in the 1920s, when the culture wars over the teaching of evolution first heated up, anti-evolutionists insisted that any chink in the armor of ignorance protecting young people would be worse than death.  In 1923, anti-evolution evangelist T.T. Martin demanded relentless defense of the ignorance of young people.  “Ramming poison down the throats of our children is nothing,” Martin accused, “compared with damning their souls with the teaching of Evolution.”

Other anti-evolutionists in the 1920s argued that this ignorance should only extend through children’s formative years.  By the time they reached college age, many thought, they could be safely allowed to know.  For instance, Alfred Fairhurst, a fundamentalist educator active in the 1920s controversies, had always argued that “in the colleges and universities [evolution] ought to be taught honestly and fully to the select few who have the ability to comprehend it in all its bearings.”

Similar arguments were made throughout the twentieth century about the importance of ignorance about sex for young people.  One of the most prolific fundamentalist writers about education and ignorance has been Tim LaHaye.  In his 1983 Battle for the Public School, LaHaye decried the fact that explicit knowledge about sex had been “jammed down the throats of our children.”  LaHaye described one passage of a sex-ed book:

thescene of intercourse portrays a naked father astride his equally naked wife,
intent on three areas of contact: lips, breasts/chest, penis/vagina.  The genital area offers an ‘inner’ diagram,
so that the child can perceive the mother’s vagina and uterus; the father has
inserted his penis into the vagina and is emitting sperm cells.

Such knowledge, LaHaye insisted, exemplified “this reckless policy of inflaming young minds with adult information.”  For LaHaye as for Protestant fundamentalists of the 1920s, this was not an undifferentiated insistence on ignorance, but rather a belief that certain types of ignorance must be maintained for young
people specifically.  As many conservative Protestants did not—and do not—object to the teaching of evolution
to older students, so LaHaye famously celebrated sex knowledge for some audiences.  In his 1976 book, The Act of Marriage, LaHaye promoted frank, explicit knowledge of sex for adult married couples.

This distinction between young unmarried people and married couples runs throughout current conservative Protestant thinking about sex education.  Ministries such as Joe Beam’s Family Dynamics promote knowledge about sex, but only within a traditional marriage.

For such Christian conservatives, knowledge as such is not dangerous, but the boundaries around knowledge must be vigorously defended.

The notion that young people must be protected from certain types of knowledge has powerful influence beyond the ranks of Protestant fundamentalists.  Recently, the US Supreme Court ruled in Brown v.
Entertainment Merchants Association
(2010) that the state of California could not ban violent video games for those under eighteen years of age.  The Court agreed that such a ban violated the game-makers’ First Amendment right to free speech.

Justice Clarence Thomas made a curious rejoinder.  In his dissenting opinion, he argued that California could ban violent video games because the founding generation believed in and rigidly enforced parents’ ability to severely curtail the outer bounds of knowledge accessible to their children.

Thomas argued that the founding generation demanded strong control over what young people could know.
He stated, “Adults [in the founding era] carefully controlled what they published for children.  Stories written for children were dedicated to moral instruction and were relatively austere, lacking details that might titillate children’s minds.”

Like LaHaye and the 1920s anti-evolutionists, Thomas insisted on the educational tradition of promoting, defending, and enforcing ignorance.  Certain topics, especially concerning sex, violence, and religiously charged notions such as evolution, must not be broached with young people.  There is an inherent danger, according to this line of thinking, in the merest exposure of young people to such forms of knowledge.  In this view, schools join parents as gatekeepers of such forbidden forms of knowledge.  The role of the school, parent, and society, is to become active purveyors of constructed ignorance for young people.

 

 

PROGRESSIVE EDUCATION Ia: WHY COME TO SCHOOL? (cont…)

In the last “progressive education” post, we discussed the notion that most students don’t come to school primarily to learn.  They are often willing to learn, but their main reason for going to school is because they have to.

Schools for less affluent kids wear the compulsion more nakedly.  Some schools resemble nothing so much as  prisons.  Students are processed like prisoners, by armed guards.  They have very little freedom in the school, and the fact that they are in school because they have to be is starkly evident.  Evident largely from the fact that many
students evade the requirement.  Do they want to learn?  By and large, yes.  But they do not connect their desire to learn with school.  They do not see school as the place to do their learning.  They see school as a requirement that they can evade.

Sometimes the evasion is internal.  That is, kids will be physically present in their schools, but they will not agree to master the mind-numbing tasks set before them.  They will not work to memorize the information that teachers attempt to transmit to them.  Thus, when the time comes for students to regurgitate that information on a high-stakes test, they cannot do it very well.  When large numbers of students in a given school don’t repeat back transmitted information successfully, it shows up in these NCLB days as a school that is not making “Adequate Yearly Progress.”  It shows up with a dunce cap on the school in the form of a label of “School in Need of Improvement.”

What does that mean for education?  Too often, it is assumed that new educational methods must be tried only in those schools that show the compulsion of attendance more nakedly.  In those schools where large numbers of students do not agree to the social contract.  Where students do not agree to work to memorize and repeat back chunks of information.

Educators say that they need to try new methods for “these kids” who aren’t succeeding in the traditional school environment.  The assumption is that students who come to school regularly and willingly, students who sit docilely through transmission-style classes and submit to tests of their reception of that information, the assumption is that such students are doing well in the traditional system.  But that’s not good enough.  All students, whether they are
willing to submit to school or not, must first really come to school tolearn.  If we start by assuming that those students who can repeat back transmitted information can do so because they’ve come to school to learn, we’ve put the cart before the horse.

A traditionalist might object at this point that we can’t sap the students’ responsibility for their own education.  If we don’t assume that students come to school to learn, a traditionalist might say, in the end we’re weakening them
even further.  We can’t do everything for a student.  They are not hothouse flowers.  It is a good point.  But it represents a misunderstanding.  Schools and teachers must not coddle students.  That is counterproductive in
both the short term and the long term.  But dismissing the simple assumption that students come to school to learn does not mean that we will turn school into what students desire; we will not turn school into a purely social event, where they can meet and mingle and enjoy themselves and one another.  A traditionalist might object that if we assume that students don’t come to school to learn, we have to radically decrease our expectations of student motivation.  But there is another solution.  Instead of making the tasks easier in order to encourage student buy-in, we must increase the responsibility we assign to students.  We need to begin our thinking about education by assuming that we must engage students in learning.  We must get students—even students that weren’t protesting too loudly against schooling as it was—to connect schooling with learning.  In short, we must convince students to come to school to learn.  What will that mean?