Posted by
Bruce Deitrick Price on Friday, April 03, 2009 4:29:14 PM
Public schools could do a lot
better; everyone agrees. What nobody agrees about is the reason for
their low performance. I call this mysterious mediocrity THE EDUCATION
ENIGMA. The question is: what happened to American education?
Remember, this country spends vast amounts of money on education, but
somehow manages to create 50 million functional illiterates.
You
might almost suspect that our Educational Establishment is not
genuinely committed to education as most parents define that term.
This, precisely, is my own conclusion.
I've been writing
about education for 25 years; the more I researched, the more cynical I
became. At this point I would argue that our public schools are
crippled by an array of bad ideas because our Educational Establishment
was often more committed to leveling than to academic excellence. And
the proper strategy now is to confront this regrettable history; expose
and eliminate all these bad ideas; and create a better future.
I've collected 50 of my favorite essays and excerpts in a book titled
THE EDUCATION ENIGMA -- What Happened To American Education. It's a
fast, lively read covering a great variety of entertaining topics. But
the central message is very sober and serious: our public schools have
been deliberately dumbed down; and we can deliberately smarten them up.
If you are concerned about education in the US, please skip over to
Amazon
and order THE EDUCATION ENIGMA. This little book, I believe, can do
more to save the public schools than anything else out there. In less
than 140 pages, the reader gets a sweeping view of the history of
American education, the thinking of the top educators, the inner
workings of many of the major sophistries, a guidebook to
all the problems in our schools, and a map to a better future.
Not
convinced? If you really want to confront the madness of American
education, you need only stare at this number: 50,000,000. That's how
many functional illiterates our educators created. They did this by
promoting a reading pedagogy that cannot possibly work. This gimmick
has many names but perhaps the best-known is Whole Word or Sight Words. I'm
particularly fascinated by this fraud because it's blatantly unworkable
and it turns out to be a paradigm for almost a dozen other bad ideas.
Without the presence of Whole Word in American education, we couldn't
be so sure -- so serenely confident -- that our educators were often
dealing from the bottom of the deck. For more about the flaws in Whole
Word, please see "37: Whole Word versus Phonics."