Radical Change

Though getting at an extremely important subject–education justice–Gatto in Against School ultimately misses the mark with the overarching issue and its subsequent solution. Starting off with a relatable issue in many classrooms, the feeling of boredom, Gatto uses the backdrop of his thirty years in the public school system to segue into a conversation about the true purpose of education or rather the lack thereof. Gatto paints a picture strikingly similar to Lois Lowry’s The Giver where students are heavily patrolled, analyzed and eventually funneled into a system that teaches them conformity rather than dissidence. Alexander Inglis, author of Principles of Secondary Education, details six functions of the education system: the adjustice or adapative function, the integrating function, the diagnostic and directive function, the differentiating function and the selective function. I can see some truths to each of these potential functions (some more than others) but the following parts of Gatto’s article is where I feel he lacked to really seek revolutionary, radical change. The solution to America’s education problem is not to abandon education entirely nor is it only to “teacher your own to be leaders and adventurers”, it is a drastic and systematic change to the current state of public education. For one, we have to talk critically about The Common Core, a national education system that sets out specific guidelines/benchmarks for school systems to attain in mathematics, the sciences, and literacy. This strategic form of education manipulatively sets itself off as an equalizing factor for all states, but actually it just forces the education system to focus more on standardized testing and test preparation than an actual intellectual experience–hence what Gatto is pointing at. In this process, those who are unable to afford test preparation get left behind. In addition, public schools are highly underfunded and under resourced which becomes a breeding ground for students who will be systematically ignored and stigmatized. But the answer to the lack of opportunities in the public schools is not privatization. Students should be able to acquire an all-encompassing education that sets them up for intellectual success without parents having to dish out $50,000 every year. These elitist institutions will bring in students of color and students from low-income backgrounds in hopes of creating more “equal opportunities” and “diversifying” the school but failing to provide spaces in which these students can succeed both academically and emotionally. All in all, Gatto understands the importance of rewiring our education system but this can not just happen on an individual level as he seems to insist, this radical transformation must occur on a wide-scale level in which the future of our students as self-governing, highly-motivated individuals will be placed at the forefront of the movement.

The Agency of Students

What I found nuance about Gatto’s analyzation of the school system is the way the system affects everyone involved. The modern education system does not allow students to physically control what information is being taught to them. Students are now passive bodies that are molded by their environment and have no agency to change their situation. Economic factors and poor test scores barricade individuals from reaching a successful point in society. This is a new form of segregation that aids in perpetuating capitalistic views. I completely agree that today’s population is being fed material that in turn, feeds our materialistic and social desires.

But Gatto fails to emphasize that the United States’ population cannot abandon the public school system because of its value in society and he diminishes the positive aspects of being educated. He failed to mention the very successful people that are bred through the school system and continue to find joy in education. And he is also functioning on the assumption that parents do not teach their children at home. In his conclusion, Gatto encourages parents to ameliorate the harms of schooling by simply parenting their children. This is such a naïve response to an extremely complex issue. Parental intervention will not solve the systematic issues that are deeply rooted in American ideals.

Importance of the Education System’s Impact on Greater Society

While I agree with Gatto’s argument about the role that the modern education system serves in the reproduction and repression of the citizenry, his solution to the problem, self-educating children, fails to addresses the wider influence on society that our education system has. Education teaches people what to value and what not to value. Gatto himself points this out when breaking down the six functions. He writes, “Schools are meant to tag the unfit – with poor grades, remedial placement, and other punishments – clearly enough that their peers will accept them as inferior and effectively bar them from the reproductive sweepstakes.” Schools label the “unfit”, but more importantly they socialize people to also unconsciously label the “unfit.” The same process, informed by the obedience and conformity that are taught in school, occurs in other institutions. Gatto’s example from his experience in the New York Public School System demonstrates this. His efforts to work outside of the norms of the classroom led to his eventual firing. Deviance is always met with sanctions. The unconventional thought that Gatto strives for would not be valued in society. It would be dismissed and sometimes would be actively repressed. The solution to the problem of the modern education system therefore cannot be circumvented just by individual action. Reforming the education system to value the unconventional would be the only way to promote the kind of education that Gatto strives for. However, perhaps it is not possible to reform, because education systems were not built to manage citizens, not educate them.

A missing link: income inequality

As the daughter of a public school teacher and as a graduate of a relatively test-score-focused public school system, I found Gatto’s arguments very compelling.  I felt bored in my public school classes which followed set curricula and did not allow for individual curiosity.  Upon reflection, however, I feel that Gatto is leaving out a key factor in his arguments, namely income inequality and local funding of public schools.  Mass production is an inherently cost-effective method of schooling, as Gatto implies with his reference to schools with 2000-4000 students.  School budgets are often the first to be affected by financial constraints, because very few people are willing to recognize that as the price of everything else goes up, good education will also cost more.  Many public schools have to increase class sizes to make up for rising costs in other areas, like special education mandates and health care costs.  In large classes, the teacher’s most important role may become management of 35+ students rather than inspiring children to love learning.  In wealthy enclaves, some of these problems are ameliorated by parents who not only know the value of good education but also can afford to support innovative and high quality schools.  These towns tend to pass higher school budgets that allow for smaller class sizes, new technology, enrichment programs and specialized courses.

Overall I believe that Gatto’s essay has had an important impact on how we see American public education and many teachers want to improve their students’ independence and engagement with subject matter.  Until we give them the resources to do so, only wealthy districts will have the flexibility to meet the needs of individual students and create well-educated adults.

 

Meritocracy

In this piece, Gatto claims that the educational system was created as a tool for social control of the masses. Accordingly, meritocracy is an extension of this means of control, separating the masses by their utility to the social machine. The point of grades and ranking in such a system are to facilitate this process of differentiation, elevating the few the system deems deserving to positions of power while consigning the rest to roles of subservient cogs in the machine.

Considered in this light, institutions such as Williams are no more than an extension of this very system, perpetuating the existing power structure and magnifying the distinctions between the winners in this system and everyone else. Indeed a liberal arts education is a reflection of this elitist view of society. As quoted in the Gatto piece, Woodrow Wilson himself said a liberal arts education was to be confined to a selected few while the rest “forgo the privileges of a liberal education and fit themselves to perform specific difficult manual tasks” (37).

Williams goes so far as to active flaunt its role in this system, specifically culling  “students of high academic ability and great personal promise” in order to provide a “privilege that creates the opportunity and responsibility to serve society at large” (Williams Mission Statement). That this purposeful segmentation of society to perpetual elite rule seems virtuous both on the part of the institutions as well as those subject to its practices reflects the extent to which this notion of meritocracy has permeated our modern condition.

 

Public Education: Flawed, but our best option

While Gatto certainly points out some of the troubling aspects of our current schooling system, I do not believe that schools are as intellectually limiting as Gatto suggests. Gatto claims that our educational system is “deliberately designed to produce mediocre intellects, to hamstring the inner life, to deny students appreciable leadership skills, and to ensure docile and incomplete citizens.” However, Gatto is mistaken in this claim because the public education system allows students from lower socioeconomic backgrounds to become educated and get to institutions like Williams.

Although our current education system fosters inequality, Gatto’s proposed alternative would undoubtedly be far worse. Encouraging parents to take their children’s’ education into their own hands rather then send them to school, will only create further inequality and limit certain children’s ability to succeed later in life. Naturally, parents who are relatively secure financially and have jobs that enable them to spend a lot of time with their children will be able to encourage and educate their children, while parents who must work long hours or multiple jobs in order to support their families will, for good reason, be unable to prioritize the intellectual stimulation of their children. This proposal would only move us further away from a true meritocracy, where hard work is the only predictor of success.

I believe that Williams does not reinforce the claims being made in the piece because Williams strives to admit students from extremely diverse backgrounds who have strived to get the most out of the educational system, rather than be suppressed and limited by it.

Unsung Heroes

In Against Schools, Gatto asserts that the United States public-school system has systematically, “encouraged students not to think at all” (Gatto, 37). As the product of twelve years of public schooling, I can partially attest to this. The meritocracy of public schools is structured such that the “smart,” “successful,” “most-likely-to-succeed” students are the ones with the highest GPAs. Unfortunately for society, a high GPA is more a measure of conformity than intellect. Those individuals who strive for high GPAs often must take specific classes, learn material to prepare for test rather than to understand, and learn to memorize instead of thoughtfully analyze. It is no wonder that these “successful” individuals lose the capacity to think for themselves.

However, there are those individuals who preserve the, “curiosity, adventure, resilience, and capacity for surprising insights” (Gatto, 34). They are the individuals who love learning for learning’s sake, who explore what they love outside of the classroom, and who would never sacrifice their intellectual enrichment for the sake of a grade. So, while I agree with Gatto that our schools are not set up in a way to encourage students to think for themselves, such students do exist in the current system.

Gatto also falters when discussing the complicity of our teachers in this meritocracy. Every school will have some teachers who have little interest in their subjects, but what Gatto fails to mention are those teachers – the heroes of our system – who possess a passion for both their subject and their students. Those teachers who inspire a love of learning and help them combat the classroom’s endemic boredom are the reason that, despite some glaring flaws, I have great hope in our educational system’s ability to produce the next generation of thoughtful, curious, and resilient leaders.

 

 

What is the Function of Modern Education?

Gatto makes it clear that there are problems with the current K-12 school system in the United States. He claims that they foster conformity and obedience, and he suggests that modern schools do not benefit today’s society. I agree that schools tend to breed a certain type of student, but I think it is rash to claim that society’s problems lie in schooling. Instead, I think the problem lies with Americans’ concept of success. We associate wealth with success, and our educational system ges on future jobs, not future growth and happiness. Consequently, the children that cannot succeed in our meritocratic school system are labeled as lazy and deserving of their failure. The nature of a meritocracy in modern American schooling hurts both its students and society as a whole.

Students should be rewarded for working hard. However, our school system is based on the false premise that all students are given the same opportunities. Some schools have lower funding than others, leading to drastically different experiences. But when done well, schooling can change lives for the better. Schools can introduce students to different viewpoints, new subjects, and job opportunities. These are vital to success in the modern, dynamic world. I think that Williams is a great model a of a school that encourages independent thinking and personal development, but it would be difficult for a public K-12 school to copy a college with a $2.5 billion endowment.

Flawed Assumptions

Gatto’s claim in “Against School” that the modern system of public education is unnecessary is overly idealistic because it assumes that we live in a meritocracy. He states that “plenty of people throughout the world today find a way to educate themselves without resorting to a system of compulsory secondary schools that all too often resemble prisons” (34). It is valid that secondary schools’ curriculum may be uncreative and not applicable to certain real-life situations. However, Gatto’s claim completely overlooks the current framework of our society, for example how almost all high-paying jobs require a college degree. I would argue that to assume our society is a meritocracy ignores entrenched power structures based on class, race, and gender – one could even claim we are closer to an aristocracy. Because of this, the somewhat arbitrary distinction of school diplomas is (with exceptions) necessary in order to maintain one’s position in society. This is one reason that many parents insist on their child getting a college education – not for the education itself, but because it is a class distinction.

Gatto also conflates materialism / commercialism with childishness, which is not logical. Marketing is not appealing because of uncreative schooling – it is appealing because of psychological and even physiological factors involved in addiction, desire, and satisfaction (that those behind marketing campaigns are acutely aware of). Marketing capitalizes on these known aspects of human nature, which has nothing to do with childishness. We may like to believe that “actual adults” would not be susceptible to these “political exhortations and commercial blandishments,” but that is simply not how our brains and bodies work.

For Public School

In his essay, John Taylor Gatto points out several valid criticisms of the public school system in the United States. Among his many points, he hints at the emphasis placed on standardized testing results. This focus limits the lesson plans teachers are allowed to pursue. As a result, students are generally exposed to material that does not invite opportunities for critical thinking. Because I attended a public school which struggled with funding, I am familiar with many of the issues Gatto mentions. However, I do not believe public schools deserve the blunt of his blame.

Public school curriculum does not develop in a vacuum. It reflects the values of the society that we live in today. Therefore, I do not think that public schools intentionally act to curb critical thinking. For better or worse, many of the jobs in our workforce do not require critical thinking. Instead, they demand discipline and training. To meet these demands, students generally have to obtain a college education. Ironically, most colleges demand a similar discipline in the form of grades and extra curricular activities. When viewed in this context, it seems that public schools are merely trying to prepare students for the world that awaits them after graduation.

While I completely disagree with my public school’s curriculum, I don’t blame the school system itself for its development. Critical thinking isn’t useful in a meritocracy. Our public school system is just a symptom of a larger societal indifference towards thought.