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The Defeat of the Schools (1939)

theatlantic.com

23 points by anthonyrubin 17 years ago · 11 comments

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anthonyrubinOP 17 years ago

I find this article to be incredibly insightful, even at 70 years old. It also contains many choice quotes.

"If we wanted to give our convenient inquiring friend, the Man from Mars, an idea of the best in human culture, we would hardly hand him a set of school texts and syllabi. Why should we do it with Johnnie and Susie?"

jibiki 17 years ago

"Do they experiment and analyze and try out alternative procedures in some sort of planned sequence? The author of one important study finds that few of them seem to reason at all, and that reflective thought is not evoked. 'Instead, many of them appear to perform almost random calculations upon the numbers given. Where they do solve a problem correctly the response seems to be determined largely by habit.'"

Having known many mathematicians, I can confirm that they too solve problems this way ;)

bitdiddle 17 years ago

I often wonder if the issue is that many educators feel there is an aspect of teaching that can be learned and mastered separate from the subject matter. In other words many think one can be a good math teacher without a passion for and a love of mathematics. The author's tone in discussing arithmetic conveys an attitude I often see with respect to one of the most powerful tools a child learns.

We see this in programming shops with the pointy-haired boss phenomenon. Management is taught as a science unto itself.

I'm reminded of a recent essay I read by the category theorist Eugena Cheng (http://cheng.staff.shef.ac.uk/illogic/illogic.html).

Imagine your children learning the "trivial" facts and algorithms of arithmetic from a teacher with this world view of what math is.

anthonyrubinOP 17 years ago

A follow up article:

http://www.theatlantic.com/issues/95dec/chilearn/muref.htm

jballanc 17 years ago

It is worth noting that, up until the start of the second world war (i.e. right around the time this was written), Germany was the seat of intellectual power. As educated individuals fled for the last safe haven, which just happened to be America, they brought about a shift in that power. However, it wasn't until Sputnik and the scare of the commies being able to "drop nukes on our heads" that natural born American citizens started to really participate in the development of America's intellectual prowess.

It's also apt to note that many of the individuals educated in the knee-jerk response to sputnik are now reaching retirement, and, dare I say, it shows!

  • tokenadult 17 years ago

    However, it wasn't until Sputnik and the scare of the commies being able to "drop nukes on our heads" that natural born American citizens started to really participate in the development of America's intellectual prowess.

    Not back when Benjamin Franklin was inventing and doing research?

    • sachinag 17 years ago

      Benjamin Franklin fits into the long line of American tinkerers, not a world-class intellect. Think of Ron Popeil.

      • jdminhbg 17 years ago

        Wha? The man discovered that lightning was electricity, hardly the 'Chop-o-Matic' of the 18th century.

      • skmurphy 17 years ago

        Here are two that go well beyond Mr. Popeil's contribution.

        lightning rod = extremely practical and still in widespread use today

        bifocals = one pair of glasses instead of two, still in use today

      • tokenadult 17 years ago

        How about Thomas Jefferson then?

      • 10ren 17 years ago

        tinkerer==hacker?

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