• BC
    13.6k
    In these later years, I have spent a lot of time evaluating the course of my life and have often wondered, "What intervention, taken at the right time, what kind of program, might have significantly changed my life so that it would have turned out 'better'?" Not that my life was or is terrible. It wasn't; it isn't. But one wonders...

    What I lacked at age 18 was maturity. Four years in college, two years in the domestic Peace Corps; a couple of years of graduate school helped enormously by giving me time to grow up some. My entry into the real world was delayed by 8 years. Finally, at age 26, i landed a responsible professional job, had an apartment and was living a more or less normal life.

    The next 40 years were a bumpy ride -- there were some peak periods and several long ditches.

    Could school (at any time from K to 17) have taught me what I apparently had not learned very well on my own? Such as...

    how to conduct a satisfactory sex life?
    how to work constructively in very volatile political settings?
    how to understand the nature of (my own) mental health and mental illness?
    how to effectively pursue life plans...

    I've been around long enough to know these are common problems. Many people have chaotic sex and family lives because they don't know the basics of relationships (among other things). Community groups often come together to address important issues, and find their efforts disrupted by intense conflict over ends and means. People experience intense anger, loneliness, fear, alienation, confusion, etc. -- even actual depression -- without having enough self-knowledge to see that their functioning is failing. Millions (billions?) of people can not maintain long term plans (like... 5 to 10 years) to achieve desirable and practical goals.

    Having these good features adds up to being effective persons. Let's say that 60% to 70% of the population consists of at least effective people, including many who are highly effective. Still, that's 30% to 40% of the population that flounders about ineffectively. COULD SOMETHING HAVE BEEN DONE TO IMPROVE THEIR PERFORMANCE?

    Maybe not. Skills are at least somewhat normally distributed. The largest group of people are going to be reasonably effective; smaller groups are going to be very effective, and some are going to be ineffective to very ineffective. The distribution is probably skewed in favor of "ineffective".

    Can we suppose that everybody can be a big success? No, we can not. There are too many variables in intelligence, background (race, class, sex, physical health / physical handicap, wealth / poverty, etc.) birth order, # of siblings, family health or disorganization, quality of communities and schools, genetics, disinvestments, and so forth. If children reach K or 1st grade with significant deficits, it is almost a certainty that the child will either overcome them himself, or will suffer negative outcomes. Children can not be started over under better circumstances.

    IF in the United States, 30% to 40% of the 56.6 million children in school (K-12) have significant life-skill deficits, those 16.8 million to 22.4 million children are too numerous to provide provide remediation--assuming we knew what effective remediation looked like.

    I think a certain level of individual failure in life is inevitable--more inevitable now than in the past when the technical demands of work, play, learning, etc. contained more -- and simpler -- options.
  • pbxman
    39
    Knowing the times of mass-deception we are going through I think the ideal thing would be to teach kids to develop their own critical thinking skills so they can have a mind of their own. In few words to teach the kids to look for the truth efficiently.
    History and Philosophy/Psychology would help a lot because as long as they are taught in a critical way and kids are not asked just to memorize stuff. Those who don't know history are doomed to repeat it and the human mind is not efficient at looking for the truth.
  • Brett
    3k
    Education as a whole should also further develop resilience, emotional intelligence and physical and mental health awareness, as well as spiritual awareness and interconnection within an ever widening sense of community. But without sufficient grounding in this area (from parents and community in the first five years), students begin school life at a serious disadvantage, and teachers are not equipped with time or resources to bridge this gap within the year and the hours they have with each child (on top of all the other requirements of teaching).Possibility


    I’ve been wondering about the period of education. Are those years in high school enough for students to be educated in all of those aspects, plus the subject matter itself? This seems more than a teacher can impart whose job it is to teach English, maths, etc. This also includes a lot of specialists. So should education be compulsory on into university. Should students be leaving school at the age they do? Should they be leaving at all if they are not educated?
  • Possibility
    2.8k
    I’ve been wondering about the period of education. Are those years in high school enough for students to be educated in all of those aspects, plus the subject matter itself? This seems more than a teacher can impart whose job it is to teach English, maths, etc. This also includes a lot of specialists. So should education be compulsory on into university. Should students be leaving school at the age they do? Should they be leaving at all if they are not educated?Brett

    I’m not sure that simply keeping students in school longer is going to make them more educated. There are already many who are there only because they have to be - they have no plans to get a job - just to sit at home and play computer games. Unfortunately, you can’t make learning compulsory, only attendance at best. No education system is going to be beneficial for every child.

    Having said that, every interaction is an opportunity to learn, and everything we say and do with a child present is an opportunity to teach. This needs to be a whole community approach to education: to take responsibility for what impressionable minds are learning from their interactions with us, and to be open to lifelong learning ourselves. If we wait until first grade to start ‘teaching’ resilience or emotional intelligence, we’ve already missed a crucial period of brain development. And if it’s left up to high school teachers (even a ‘specialist’) who would have each student for an hour per day at best, then we’re already way behind.

    These aspects of a child’s education are more effectively acquired through all their experiences and relationships, starting from birth. The stronger the relationship, the more they will learn - even if what they’re learning is damaging. Ensuring that a child has opportunities to develop strong relationships with quality teachers will go a long way towards enhancing their overall education in these areas.
  • sime
    1.1k
    As an ex-phd student I saw scant evidence to suggest that neo-liberal universities, whose main object was to retain fee paying students, were truth motivated. As rational consumers, students don't want truth per se, they want to secure jobs and status by the easiest route possible.

    All i experienced was an authoritarian power structure consisting of a hierarchy of line managers going all the way up to the vice-chancellor, few if any who were continuing to publish as first authors due to skills obsoletion and the fact they weren't rewarded for being academics, and none of whom seemed remotely interested in real academia that had long since surpassed their academic knowledge.

    Outside of a few well-funded and prestigious universities, many universities provide education services only in the spirit of it being a 'necessary evil' delivered reluctantly in the most efficient manner possible (via copy-pasta) in order to receive student fees. Truth is whatever information retains the fee paying students who don't know any better.

    If a hard Brexit precipitated a national collapse of the UK university system, I'd take a Thatcherite view that the industry shouldn't be bailed out and needed to go any way, and let the market sort it out.
  • Brett
    3k
    These are all pretty high expectations I’ve seen here. And there’s nothing wrong with setting a bar. But what is realistic? There are only so many years, so many moments between teacher and student, however good that teacher may be, and enough things working against education to make those expectations unrealistic. So how long should teachers persevere with students who refuse help, who disrupt classes and put pressure on the students keen to learn? If class numbers are too big then should disruptive students be in those numbers? What sort of return should taxpayers expect on their investment? Is it an investment?
  • Bright7
    4
    The purpose of education is to give people equal opportunity. Without free education only the affluent would be able to obtain it or family's who put more emphasis on schooling alongside funneling money to incompetent teachers who aren't very creative ( education majors on average score less iq) not that it matters much. But if education wad really meant to better society as a whole why not teach personal finance, how to be a good citizen, and develop into a full functioning rational member of society.
  • Possibility
    2.8k
    I see passionate teachers everyday who feel like they’re fighting the system to teach effectively and do the best by their students, as well as teachers who are simply going through the motions and working the system to benefit themselves.

    If we continue to see education only in terms of ROI or turning out whatever it means to be a ‘good citizen’ or a ‘full functioning, rational member of society’, then I think the education system will continue to fall short of whatever benchmarks we set.

    Education doesn’t just happen when you put a knowledgeable person in the room with an ignorant one. But in my experience, it does occur naturally when you put a passionate teacher together with a willing student. Ideally, this is where the focus of education needs to be: to create environments for passionate teachers to interact with willing students. Everything else should simply support and facilitate this interaction, and if the system environment is preventing this interaction from occurring, then frankly it isn’t fair to blame the teachers or the students.

    We struggle to attract and retain passionate teachers when the environment prioritises administrative hoop-jumping and data entry over facilitating quality interaction with students. We struggle to attract and retain willing students when the environment prioritises bums on seats or fees paid over facilitating quality interaction with teachers.

    Yet we publicly applaud students on their numerical ranking and natural ability - disregarding effort, enthusiasm and willingness to learn, let alone acknowledging the relationship with their teachers. And we publicly applaud teachers on...nothing, really. The public assessment of education’s value doesn’t even understand what education is.

    Quality education is not purely about numbers or results - it’s about balancing the numbers in order to maximise the quality of relationships between teacher and student. Because that’s where teaching and learning happens, and where education is most effective and most valuable.

    That means there’s no one-size-fits-all answer, and the best balance will be different from one year to the next, from one school to the next, one classroom or teacher to the next and even from one student to the next. Diversity of offerings and flexibility, balanced with quality controls and accountability that prioritise the web of student-teacher relationships, are the mark of a quality education system. Everything else reflects the pressure society puts on itself.
  • petrichor
    322
    One severely underappreciated function of our education system is that it acts, for good or ill, as a big sorting machine. Think of how after digging potatoes from a field, farmers use either people or machines on a conveyor belt to sort them by size, rottenness, and so on. They are diverted to different destinations. The rot goes to the starch plant. The big potatoes go for french fries. And so on. The potatoes literally get letter grades. The education system does for the economy the same thing with the mass of human material that parents continually provide it.

    As children, we too ride the conveyor belt. The education system is part assembly line, part produce sorter.

    We get tested and then directed toward various slots in the big machine. It is like the ASVAB in the military. Is this recruit suitable for nuclear engineering or is he best used as machine gun fodder? Is this kid capable of working in medicine or is he best sent to the warehouses to heft sacks of vegetables onto pallets? Other kinds of testing determine such things as willingness to follow orders.

    I noticed while going to school that the main thing I was constantly being tested on was my ability and willingness to follow instructions. I was consistently found lacking. And attempts were often made to increase my compliance.

    It was seemingly less about what I knew or understood or about my growth as a person than it was about how readily I could be programmed by superiors to perform tasks.

    School is at least partly about normalizing and standardizing us and making us behave in a way that serves economic growth. Behavior not consistent with such ends is systematically shamed and punished. Lots of smileys and stars go to those who do as they are told.

    Should this system be serving other ends?
  • Brett
    3k


    I read a lot about these sort of experiences, the idea of normalising and standardisation and making us behave in particular ways that serve one objective, economic growth. But it seems to me that everyone who writes about this suggests, by their comments, that they have escaped the planned control and are able to express themselves quite well. Unless they regard themselves as psychological cripples, unable to act reasonably and reach out for what they want, then the education system they went through was either okay, or failed to impose its normalisation on them.
  • Banno
    25.3k
    Education is for showing off. That’s all. Everything else is mere pretence.
  • Brett
    3k


    Well that’s a change from being a victim of the Capitalist system.
  • Possibility
    2.8k
    Some of us have taken over 20 years out of the school system to reach this point, having finally unlearned the system that probably did psychologically cripple us for a time, where we can begin to express ourselves.

    The education system can certainly set us on a path, but it’s not the only influence on our lives. We can turn out okay despite the system, which may be why we contribute to these discussion about changing the system...
  • Brett
    3k


    And what was it that enabled you to do that?
  • ssu
    8.7k
    At least for higher education, I believe that the Humboldtian ideals: holistic combination of research and studies, freedom of scientific inquiry, freedom from religious orthodoxy (or today, any political orthodoxy) and also the integration arts and sciences in the university.
  • Possibility
    2.8k
    Good point - it is education that enables us to do that, eventually.

    I think @petrichor’s criticism of the education system is a narrow view of the effect of the system, but it only goes to show how that effect can indeed psychologically cripple, preventing people from seeing their own unlimited potential.

    I don’t agree that the aim of schools is to normalise or standardise to serve economic growth. I think there is pressure on schools to turn out whatever society sees as a ‘full functioning, rational member of society’ at the time - which leads to curriculum and management systems designed to normalise and standardise results.

    I agree with you that actual education is highly effective in enabling us to express ourselves and to act reasonably - but this process is frequently crippled by the curriculum and management systems that should be supporting and facilitiating that education.

    I had an excellent education, but it was the passion for learning that my parents instilled in me from an early age that enabled me to unlearn and eventually move beyond harmful, limiting doctrine and submissive, ignorant habits that the school system taught alongside the curriculum. I now work within the system (in my own small way) to change the way we support and facilitate education.
  • BrianW
    999
    What should the purpose of education be?

    To inspire and guide to knowledge. Then to assist us in converting the knowledge into wisdom.
    (By knowledge I mean pertinent information for appropriate use and wisdom refers to the qualities that we imprint in ourselves as values for, and connections to, all of life (or existence/reality) and which we channel through understanding.)

    If learning never ends, then education is the tool that never wears away.
  • petrichor
    322
    ...they have escaped the planned control...Brett

    I never claimed any of it is planned. Maybe it is, maybe it isn't. Perhaps this is just a pattern of organization that tends to evolve simply because of selection pressures. It works and contributes to the strength, size, and competitive advantage of a society. Whatever the case, to at least some extent, that is how most education systems function for the larger society.

    Unless they regard themselves as psychological cripples, unable to act reasonably and reach out for what they want, then the education system they went through was either okay, or failed to impose its normalisation on them.Brett

    You seem to suggest here that the only way of becoming something other than a psychological cripple is to be educated in such a system. Not so.

    I probably got more out of my public school education than I realize (and even if I did, this doesn't conflict with my essential point), but for the most part, I don't feel that I learned by way of it much of what it purported to teach. I was always an autonomous learner. Curiosity was and is probably my primary trait. I spent countless hours in libraries, in nature, and later on the Internet learning about the things that interested me. I still do that. It might well be the thing I do most! And of course, I learned much just by experiencing life and by observation. I learned a great deal in school, but most of what I learned there wasn't part of the intended curriculum. Being subjected to such an institution and exposed to that sort of social environment taught me much about the world.

    I can clearly remember my first day at school. We were each given a xeroxed sheet of paper with an outline of a completely uninteresting tree, something very much like this:

    pToAgopgc.jpg

    We were also given boxes of crayons, with which we were instructed to color the tree. I colored the tree as I saw fit and got bored and set my paper aside to go play with some blocks I saw, which seemed more interesting. I'll never forget my shock when the teacher yelled at me for both stopping coloring before exactly filling the outline with an even, flat patch of unbroken, green color, and for coloring some outside the lines. At home, coloring was something I sometimes did for fun. And my coloring books had much more interesting outlines to fill, such things as this:

    superman-coloring-pages-printable-printable-superman-coloring-pages-printable-of-superman-coloring-coloring-book-printable-lego-superman-coloring-pages.jpg

    This place was different. It was menacing. "Get in line!" seemed to be its directive. Already, on day one, my self-direction, creativity, and curiosity were being punished. This event was emblematic of the rest of my public school experience.

    I remember a time in high school when I wrote a paper for a class on government and was docked something like 30 percentage points for not adhering to explicit instructions about how the cover page was to be written. Among other things, my spacing wasn't exactly right. Most egregious though, apparently, was that I put the first name of my teacher before his last name rather than "Mr.". The content of the paper, which I like to think was of rather high quality, was hardly considered.

    To put it in Dostoevsky's terms, I am not a piano key. I always bristled at being treated like one. And my tendency to resist authority and follow my own lights has cost me greatly in my adult life. I have never been "well-adjusted" and probably never will be. People like me can succeed (whatever that means) in this world, but it is much safer to get in line and do as one is told or as one does. But to me, such has always seemed a kind of sleep-walking.

    And some of the greatest educational experiences for me have been the occasions where I broke through the lies I was told. Santa Claus comes to mind as an early experience of this sort. I think it was a good experience to be taught that he exists and then to realize for myself that it was a lie. Life is full of such lies, from beginning to end. Some, especially the values inexplicitly given by the society, or even those given by our biological instincts, are very difficult to come to see through.

    Those who do as the education system tries to get them to do hardly question authority. Their understanding of the world is therefore rather impoverished. But they generally do okay. They get enough to eat. They stay warm. They get retirement benefits. They see their grandchildren grow up. But their lives are hardly their own.
  • Banno
    25.3k
    It's the elephant in the brain.

    Those who think education is for escaping "the system" will only succeed in replacing one system with another.

    But what is continuous thorough all education is the public display of prowess. From preschool through PhD.
  • Brett
    3k
    We get tested and then directed toward various slots in the big machine.petrichor

    I never claimed any of it is planned.petrichor

    Well actually that’s exactly what you claim. But you’re right it’s very planned, but not for the reasons you assume..

    Of course the years at school are very planned. 1) because of time, 2) because the curriculum changes from age to age, 3) because children have different learning skills that need to be addressed, 4) because exams are required so teachers can assess whether their pedagogy is effective.

    Public schooling is basically a mass education program. It may not be ideal, but it’s an attempt to give every child in the country an opportunity to learn. At the least a child will come away with a rudimentary education. Unless they resist and then it’s more than likely that child will come away with nothing. The system is not really built for all that personal time, which is why there is the standardisation. Of course it would be ideal if it was better, like the private education system, but it’s not and it was never meant to be.

    The corporations are somehow held responsible for the standard of education that is developed only for their purposes, but it’s the corporations who have commented on the poor levels of literacy they observe in the people they employ, or refuse to employ, and the problems they have with it.

    You probably take for granted what you learned at school, you may even be unaware of how much you did learn. You probably didn’t teach yourself to write, or spell, or recognise words, or add up numbers. You were probably unaware of how you learned to work with other individuals, how to give and take, how to share and compromise. You probably didn’t understand what you learned about people who knew so much more than you about the world and what can be learned from watching and listening.

    You probably wouldn’t be half the person you are without that education.
  • Brett
    3k
    Unless they regard themselves as psychological cripples, unable to act reasonably and reach out for what they want, then the education system they went through was either okay, or failed to impose its normalisation on them.
    — Brett
    petrichor
    You seem to suggest here that the only way of becoming something other than a psychological cripple is to be educated in such a system. Not so.petrichor

    What I was saying was (and you know this because you can read) that you obviously got a good enough education to take part in this forum and that this is because a) the education system worked for you, and b) it did not destroy your spirit through ‘normalisation’. And I emphasised this by saying you would have to be a failure if you could not do this, which you aren’t.
  • Brett
    3k
    Those who do as the education system tries to get them to do hardly question authority. Their understanding of the world is therefore rather impoverished. But they generally do okay. They get enough to eat. They stay warm. They get retirement benefits. They see their grandchildren grow up. But their lives are hardly their own.petrichor

    And this is patently untrue.
  • Brett
    3k
    I think a certain level of individual failure in life is inevitable--more inevitable now than in the past when the technical demands of work, play, learning, etc. contained more -- and simpler -- options.Bitter Crank

    How do you think these demands make failure in life more inevitable today over the past?
  • BC
    13.6k
    Perhaps I was too hasty in making that generalization. But it does seem to me that more elaborate automated processes, greater bureaucratic complexity, technological 'churn', and so forth make it more difficult for the average worker (white/blue collar) to find a niche in which to succeed. Of course, similar kinds of barriers existed in the past. The conversion from sailing ships to steamships, from ox carts to wagon trains to railroads, from small shops to big factories, etc. were all big changes. Not everybody succeeded who left the east to Go West into the frontier states. The simpler agriculture of the time could be a do-or-die proposition, and a lot of people didn't make it--they died trying.

    Economic success is another issue. The distribution of those who succeed economically (are prosperous) and those who fail (are not prosperous on to flat broke) seems to be skewing strongly toward failure. This may not be the fault of individuals -- we may be caught in a massive defrauding scheme.
  • petrichor
    322
    Well actually that’s exactly what you claim. But you’re right it’s very planned, but not for the reasons you assume..Brett

    It seems I must not have explained myself clearly. With regard to the question of planning, I wasn't alluding to the sort of planning you seem to have in mind. Obviously, the education system is full of planning of the sort you describe! When I denied claiming it was planned, I was talking about whether or not there was some kind of group of people in a room somewhere that decided to create the education system for the purpose of sorting us into slots in the economic machine or some such, some "evil plan" by the elites to enslave us or something. You made several comments such as these:

    But it seems to me that everyone who writes about this suggests, by their comments, that they have escaped the planned controlBrett

    Well that’s a change from being a victim of the Capitalist system.Brett

    You seemed to me to be perceiving posts like mine as indicating some kind of anti-capitalist conspiracy theory involving some powerful people setting all this up to control us. Maybe I misread what was behind those comments. Regardless, I was denying that I made any such suggestion. I never claimed that this was conscious on anyone's part. I was saying that regardless of whether or not this was planned, that's how it functions, at least in part. Obviously, that's not all that it is.

    The corporations are somehow held responsible for the standard of education that is developed only for their purposesBrett

    That's not what I am saying either. Education system as sorting machine occurs in pretty much every kind of modern society, be it capitalist, communist, socialist, or whatever. It serves the economic machine. Even communist societies have economies. I was never expressing any anti-capitalist sentiment as you seem to have suspected. I am not motivated here by some kind of politico-tribal identity thing.

    A mass education system like ours prepares and sorts the mass of newly available human resources in such a way as to serve the economy. All of this is simply how it ends up working, regardless of whether any human in any power position ever intended for it to work this way. And it isn't a left/right battle here. This happens both in left and right leaning systems. Not every comment amounts to shots fired in the culture war.

    This all may have nothing to do with any kind of aim. It isn't necessarily the aim of any government leaders or CEOs. And it certainly isn't the aim of the system itself. The system isn't conscious. It has no conscious aims. This sort of situation probably simply self-organizes because of various selection pressures, as I pointed out earlier.

    You probably take for granted what you learned at school, you may even be unaware of how much you did learn.Brett

    I'll grant you that. Yes. I probably learned more than I remember learning. It's irrelevant to my point. Perhaps it even supports my point, depending on how you look at it.

    Whatever the case, the education system functions as a sorting, standardizing, normalizing, and so on, machine for the economic machine, regardless of what else it might do, beneficial or not. It simply does sort people by aptitudes and other attributes. And it's probably a good thing that it does! Imagine if we had no such sorting machine and that people running nuclear reactors were selected completely at random, regardless of aptitude, never having been tested in any way! Imagine if our smartest and physically least fit were set to do the manual labor and our least intelligent and strongest were set to govern and control the missiles and so on! The economy works best if the people best suited to do the various jobs somehow are actually placed in those positions. A sorting machine of some sort is needed to make that happen. If we have no way of determining what each person new to the job world is likely to perform well at, the economy will seriously suffer.

    Further, the economic machine works best, since it involves people performing various tasks, if those people have been trained to effectively follow instructions with a minimum of resistance.

    Consider the military. To perform well, it needs chain-of-command to work quickly and nearly flawlessly. It is like a body. The brain needs all the nerve cells downstream to take orders without hesitation and to not think for themselves. The generals need to be able to direct the forces as they see fit in order to apply various strategies. Imagine if every soldier were to be encouraged to do at any time whatever they like! Imagine if every nerve cell in your body were to question whether or not it should follow your orders! What if I don't want to fire? It would be like having some horrible disease of the nervous system! Your body would fail to function and you'd probably die. The whole system would collapse. Selection pressures will generally remove such systems from existence, favoring those with more effective forms of organization, usually including power hierarchies.

    That's just how it is. There may be no need for anyone to consciously design it this way. Selection perhaps is enough to shape things this way. Societies with no such structures would never have gotten this large in the first place and would almost certainly have been conquered or absorbed by societies featuring them.
  • Brett
    3k
    But it does seem to me that more elaborate automated processes, greater bureaucratic complexity, technological 'churn', and so forth make it more difficult for the average worker (white/blue collar) to find a niche in which to succeed.Bitter Crank

    I think most people would agree, (an assumption on my part) that something has happened in the relationship between people and their jobs. Possibly the biggest issue is their desposability and consequently their permanent insecurity. That, it seems to me, is a bigger issue than the idea of success you which I assume we mean financial success. In the past many people had low paying jobs but they felt secure that the job was theirs. Not always, I know, hence the actions of unions. So in some ways, then, I begin to wonder if things really are any more difficult now than then.

    But this is all in relation to education, right?. My feeling is that people are quite possibly better educated than they’ve ever been. They certainly have more choices in what they can study going through the early years up to and including university; these are subjects not necessarily driven by job opportunities. This might differ from country to country. But on top of that they gave more opportunities to extend their education and they have the internet to serve them in their endeavours.

    Technology gives and takes away, some win, some lose. That seems to me the common thread throughout history. We thought we could change that, but all we did was create another version of it. Social Welfare was one way of mitigating the inevitability if this.

    Petrichor beleives that the education system is a natural extension of society in that it has no choice but to serve society. But if I look at the education system today I see a system that allows people to chose their own future. Obviously some take the easiest route to some sort of security, but people still have the choice over what they will be.

    I know others will point out the circumstances of the poor or those who gave few opportunities. Those are the ones who have always been there and always will. Apart from helping them out economically what else can be done?
  • BC
    13.6k
    Apart from helping them out economically what else can be done?Brett

    That's the question. First, we haven't done all that much to help them out economically. We could do better at that task.

    Still, there will always be people on the bottom, however the bottom is defined. (Just like there will always be a team that has the lowest possible ranking.) One of the questions with which we need to be concerned is, "how big is the group on th bottom?" and what do the other layers look like.

    It seems to me that "the poor" form too large a group to justify complacency, plus there are quite a few layers above the bottom which are not very secure, not very successful. A large share of Americans have zero resources saved for retirement; a large share have virtually no savings for emergencies (like, $500). There is a fair percentage of working class people who do have retirement resources in addition to Social Security, and many of them also have funds for emergencies. But these people aren't wealthy by any stretch. $100,000 invested in retirement funds, and $2500 in cash for emergencies is not a thick shield against adversity.

    The stats on income across the board looked better when less wealth was concentrated in so few hands.

    I am not sure that education provides a way up for very many people. A few years ago I took a course in literacy, and one of the things that the professor emphasized was that literacy doesn't help that much. Literacy is a minimal expectation of employers, and gaining literacy doesn't give one much leverage. Similarly, having a high school diploma (and having good high school level skills) is a minimal expectation. It's definitely better to have it than not. Having a BA degree in a liberal arts field (history, language, literature, a science) is likewise a minimum expectation for many jobs. It's worth having, but lots of other people have the same thing.

    Education is an inherently good thing; it lays the foundation for a better understanding of self and the world (but the payoff isn't instant). Education often gives one actual skills one can sell on the labor market, and that too is a good thing.

    But education should be broadly affordable and it was once affordable. When states were willing to subsidize education with tax money so that tuition was within the reach of most young people, there was a good economic payoff for the individual and the state both. There was also an intellectual and cultural payoff for the individual and the state.

    I still think a major like English Literature is a good thing (provided it isn't larded with POMO claptrap). Ditto for History, Sociology, German, Philosophy, etc. All study helps. A 4 year degree allows for 4 more years of maturation before one starts on one's career path. Time in a residential college setting is a broadening experience.

    BUT, there is no guarantee it will solve economic problems for individuals. Some uneducated people manage to do quite well economically. Some don't. Same for educated people.

    So, what concerns me most is that there are too many people in the lower third, or lower half of the economic distribution who have also been short-changed culturally and intellectually. The LEAST we could have done for those many millions of people is give them a first rate secondary education. We didn't do that.

    Doing poorly in school is an individual failing sometimes. You can lead a horse to water but you can't make it drink. But school failure is more often a collective failure (often a bottom up one). Do I have a fix for that? No. Unfortunately.
  • I like sushi
    4.9k
    In the simplist terms possible I believe education should be about helping people hone their natural inclinations to explore the world.

    The difficulty of this is how to achieve freedom of choice within an educational structure. The balance of resources between the individual and group needs.

    Perhaps it would make more sense to divide education into two parts. One being about universal tools/skills for careers (literacy, basic arithmetic, and the scientific method) and the other being more about exploring and sharing interests and passions.

    Many people say that logic should be taught at an early age. Generally speaking this hasn‘t worked in the attempts they’ve tried. Likely because abstract logic is seriously counter intuitive.
  • Brett
    3k
    BUT, there is no guarantee it will solve economic problems for individuals.Bitter Crank

    This conversation has reached an interesting point, that education may not be the answer for everyone. And if it’s not then what a waste of resources. But who would admit such a thing?

    I think it’s true that education may not solve economic problems for all individuals.
    So if it’s the economic problems for individual we’re addressing, and education doesn’t necessarily do it, then what does? And I do think that economic well-being comes before ideas about self awareness, growth and meaningfulness.
  • ssu
    8.7k
    So if it’s the economic problems for individual we’re addressing, and education doesn’t necessarily do it, then what does?Brett
    It works on the collective scale. Good education (along with good governance etc.) of a society or a nation makes it succeed in World that we have today. Lousy or nonexistent education causes severe social problems on the macro scale, while individuals can make it fine even with having participated in a lousy education system.

    Education gives us better abilities to be part of the society we live in.

    And you don't have science without good education.
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