The Crisis of Education in America:
"How to Become a Serf"
A society in which people exist for the sake of companies is a society enslaved
By John Kozy
URL of this article: www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=28852
Global Research, January 24, 2012
How to Become a Serf
Man is a pathetic creature; a brute trying to be god but traveling in the wrong direction.
Educational
systems now train workers to fulfill the needs of companies. A society
in which people exist for the sake of companies is a society enslaved.
But there's a deep problem with the notion that education should equal
vocational training. To paraphrase a very famous and renowned person,
man does not live by work alone. Indeed, the knowledge and skills needed
to earn a living in a capitalist industrial economy are of little use
in human relationships, and human relationships are the core of
everyone's life. Schools devoted to vocational training provide no venue
for teaching cultural differences, for trying to understand the person
who lives next door or in another country. Value systems are never
evaluated; alternatives are never considered. As a result, although we
all live on the same planet, we do not live together. At best, we only
live side by side. At worst, we live to kill each other. Education as
vocational training reduces everything to ideology, our devotion to
which causes us to reject the stark reality that stares us in the face,
because our ideologies color the realities we see and people never get
wiser than those of previous generations. People have become nothing but
the monkeys of hurdy gurdy grinders, tethered to grinders' organs with
tin cups in hands to be filled for the benefit of the grinders. And this
is the species we refer to as sapient. What a delusion!
For many years, I have been troubled by what I saw as the results of what passes for education in America and perhaps elsewhere too. Why is it, do you suppose, that one generation does not seem to get any smarter than the previous one? Oh, it may know more of this or that, but what it "knows" does not translate into smarts. In other words, why don't people ever seem to get wiser? Why do they repeat the same mistakes over and over?
For
centuries, an education was thought to be comprised of considerably
more than one providing the skills and requirements needed to carry on a
trade or profession. For instance, consider this passage:
"Education
is not the same as training. Plato made the distinction between techne
(skill) and episteme (knowledge). Becoming an educated person goes
beyond the acquisition of a technical skill. It requires an
understanding of one’s place in the world—cultural as well as natural—in
pursuit of a productive and meaningful life. And it requires historical
perspective so that one does not just live, as Edmund Burke said, like
'the flies of a summer,' born one day and gone the next, but as part of
that 'social contract' that binds our generation to those who have come
before and to those who are yet to be born.
An
education that achieves those goals must include the study of what
Matthew Arnold called 'the best that has been known and said.' It must
comprehend the whole—the human world and its history, our own culture
and those very different from ours. . . ."
This idea of an educated person was often summarized in the phrases, a Renaissance man, and un homme du monde.
But these expressions are hardly heard any more. Educated people no
longer exist. We are nothing but the monkeys of hurdy gurdy grinders,
tethered to grinders' organs with tin cups in hands to be filled for the
benefit of the grinders.
"Governor Rick Snyder
wants to tie retraining programs to companies' needs . . . and
encourage more Michigan residents to earn math and science degrees under
an initiative aimed at making workers more competitive in the global
marketplace."
The
hurdy gurdy grinder's monkey exists for the sake of the organ grinder;
Governor Snyder wants Michigan's residents to educate themselves for the
sake of companies. Workers are to fulfill companies' needs rather than vice versa. President Obama has said similar things.
But
there's something wrong, something terribly wrong, with this picture. A
society in which people exist for the sake of some non-human entity is a
society enslaved. And this picture gets even more horrid with the
realization that workers are expected to pay to acquire the required
skills. Students are being asked to pay for the privilege of becoming
serfs.
Living
things in the natural world exist as ends in themselves. Everything
they do is done for their own benefit or the benefit of their offspring.
Horses in the wild do not acquire skills in order to perform tasks that
benefit other horses. When a human being acquires a horse and trains it
to perform a skill for the person's benefit, the person provides for
all the natural needs of his horse. Horses don't come begging to be
trained to be ridden. What kind of perversion is the requirement that
people should beg to be trained to be serfs?
But
neither a hurdy gurdy grinder's monkey or a riding horse are educated;
they are trained. There is no such thing as a Renaissance monkey!
Education
in America, and perhaps other places too, is as fractured as shattered
glass. The federal agency called the Department of Education's only
power is the ability to cajole schools mainly by offering them money.
There are public and private schools, and the public ones are governed
by local school boards, the members of which are not even required to be
able to read or write. State school boards exist to have some influence
over local boards, but again, the power of the states is limited.
Education in America is a local affair. The people on these school
boards are the ones that control what is and how it is taught. For
instance, creationism is often given equal standing with evolution.
Students are often required to engage in practices that are clearly
unconstitutional. All of this is done to suit the views of school board
members, not society or even students.
Teachers
are certified by subject matter. Perfectly good mathematics teachers
may not be able to write literate essays. English teachers are not
required to understand even elementary algebra. The schools do not
employ hommes de monde. And what is true in the primary and secondary schools is also true in colleges and universities. Les spécialistes rule the classroom. Trained monkeys all!
Now
vocational training works, of course, if people know what industries
need workers and if workers want those jobs. But often, especially in
times of crisis, this knowledge doesn't exist. Yet there's a deeper
problem with the notion that education should equal vocational training.
To paraphrase a very famous and renowned person, man does not live by
work alone. Indeed, the knowledge and skills needed to earn a living in a
capitalist industrial economy are of little use in human relationships,
and human relationships are the core of everyone's life.
Although
the United States is often referred to as a multicultural melting pot,
most highly developed nations today have multicultural populations.
Different cultures embody different values. Those values often clash and
erupt in violent behavior. If people understood these cultural
differences, these clashes could be ameliorated. But schools devoted to
vocational training provide no venue for teaching cultural differences,
for trying to understand the person who lives next door or in another
country. Various value systems are never evaluated, and alternatives are
never considered. As a result, although we all live on the same planet,
we do not live together. At best, we only live side by side. At worst,
we live to kill each other.
Education
as vocational training reduces everything to ideology. Religion is an
ideology and no one ever questions a person's right to her/his own.
Economics, although often touted as a science, is an ideology. Part of
free marked economic theory is the belief that when an established
industry falters and declines, some new industry will come forth and
employ the newly unemployed. But nothing in economics can compel that to
happen. This belief is akin to the belief in a Second Coming. It is
purely ideological. Even science has become an ideology. People believe,
for instance, that science will discover solutions to all of our
problems. But again, there is nothing in science that compels that. It
is perfectly possible that, as human beings destroy their environment,
science will be unable to correct the damage and that life on this
planet will perish. Worse, ideologies contribute to human stupidity; our
devotion to them causes us to reject the stark realities that stare us
in the face. (See here and here.)
So
what is required if we are to make one generation smarter than the
previous one? We need to educate Renaissance men who comprehend the
whole human world, its history, our own culture, and those very
different from ours. Vocational training will never produce such people.
John
F. Kennedy was glorified when he said, "Ask not what your country can
do for you, but ask what you can do for your country." Shouldn't he have
been vilified? Do countries exist to benefit their peoples or do their
peoples exist to benefit their countries? What good is a country that
requires the sacrifice of its people?
Since
the Enlightenment, it is generally agreed that legitimate governments
are those that govern with the consent of their peoples. Does anyone
really believe that people would consent to living in a nation that made
it clear that the lives of most citizens would be fated to live for the
benefit of the few who control the nation's institutions? Isn't that
exactly what slavery is?
Analytical
thinking, even when valid, can lead people down invalid roads, because
analysis alone tends to overly simplify questions. When used to answer
the question, What must be done to put unemployed people to work?, it
leads to attempts to make education equivalent to vocational training.
But when put into practice, it results in people who lack the ability to
understand their value systems and evaluate them properly. They end up
being hurdy gurdy monkeys or, as Arnold put it, the flies of a summer,
born one day and gone the next. If a nation's institutions do not exist
to benefit its citizens, the institutions, not the people, are faulty.
In
Classical Greece it was known that the unexamined human life is not
worth living. Vocational training never presents people with
opportunities to examine one's life; so people end up relying entirely
on ideologies which have no intellectual basis and are often absurdly
false, but "falsehoods are not only evil in themselves, they infect the
soul with evil."
If
human beings wish to endure, their ideologies must be subjected to
serious criticism; otherwise, no generation will ever be smarter than
its predecessors and continuing to refer to ourselves as sapient is a
sheer delusion.
John Kozy
is a retired professor of philosophy and logic who writes on social,
political, and economic issues. After serving in the U.S. Army during
the Korean War, he spent 20 years as a university professor and another
20 years working as a writer. He has published a textbook in formal
logic commercially, in academic journals and a small number of
commercial magazines, and has written a number of guest editorials for
newspapers. His on-line pieces can be found on http://www.jkozy.com/ and he can be emailed from that site's homepage.