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BOOK REVIEWS: Battling the Progressives
By Diane Ravitch
The Knowledge Deficit: Closing
the Shocking Education Gap for
American Children
By E. D. Hirsch, Jr.
The Knowledge Deficit: Closing the Shocking Education Gap for American Children
By E. D. Hirsch, Jr.
Houghton Mifflin, 2006, $22.00; 169 pages.
As reviewed by Diane Ravitch
This is the first time that I feel compelled
to acknowledge from the get-go that I am a frank partisan of the
ideas in a book I am reviewing. I am a member of the board of the
Core Knowledge Foundation, the nonprofit organization created by E.
D. (Don) Hirsch, Jr., to promote the goals of a knowledge-based
curriculum. I receive no compensation other than the pleasure of
seeing more children gain access to this excellent curriculum. I
agreed to join the board when invited because I believe that Don
Hirsch’s knowledge-based program encapsulates the best hope
for the future of American education.
The Quest for Cultural Literacy
The Knowledge Deficit is Hirsch’s third
attempt to explain why schools should teach a coherent, carefully
considered, knowledge-based curriculum. In his first book on this
subject, Cultural Literacy: What Every
American Needs to Know, published in
1987, he explained why all children and adults need to learn the
words, phrases, idioms, ideas, and other information that are an
essential part of contemporary society and culture. He explained
that simply teaching skills was not enough; that people actually
need a large body of knowledge and information in order to read and
understand the world they live in. At the end of the book was a
long list of words and expressions in an appendix titled
“What Literate Americans Know.” A surprise bestseller, the book generated enormous
controversy, and Hirsch was denounced by many academics as, along with
other insults, an elitist and an apologist for the canon of dead white
males.
Hirsch had always seen himself as a political
liberal and was taken aback by the critics’ harsh words, but
he was undeterred. In his second book in this series, The Schools We Need: And Why We Don’t Have
Them (1996), he described in
fulsome terms the insular “thoughtworld” of progressive
education, based in the nation’s schools of education, which
had miseducated teachers and administrators for decades. Our
schools did not have a knowledge-based curriculum, he contended,
because they were under the sway of certain bad ideas, which he
called naturalism and formalism. Naturalism is the romantic notion
that all children are motivated to learn and, if left to their own
devices, will make wise choices about what and how to learn.
Formalism is the belief that the schools should teach certain
procedural skills—like reading and critical
thinking—that can be transferred to any situation, and that
the schools must avoid teaching “mere facts” or
“mere knowledge.”
Taking on the Progressives
In this, his third book on the subject, Hirsch
has once again entered the fray, this time to demonstrate with
supporting research that students will not learn to read with
comprehension unless they have acquired a large fund of background
knowledge. Furthermore, he shows that the achievement gap between
students from different racial groups will continue to be large
unless students of all groups are educated with a knowledge-based curriculum. Even the use of the latest,
research-based reading programs, he shows, will only teach children to
decode, but it will not give them the broad and deep knowledge of the
world that they need to read increasingly complex texts in any subject.
In his assault on the precepts of progressive
education, Hirsch enters a battle that has been waged for over a
century. In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, almost every
high-school student studied Latin. Teachers and parents believed
that the study of Latin taught certain skills that could be
transferred to any other pursuit or activity, such as precision,
judgment, logical thinking, clarity, and so on. It was, in the
words of its defenders, a valuable form of mental gymnastics,
intended to improve one’s faculties. The same argument was
made for algebra and other areas of advanced mathematics. The first
generation of education psychologists (such as Edward L. Thorndike
of Teachers College) took aim at this belief and sought to
demonstrate through their studies that “transfer of
training” was a myth, and that there was no reason at all to
study Latin or any subject that was not immediately useful.
Progressive educators were heartened by
Thorndike’s work and concluded that “you study what you
study, and you learn what you learn.” In other words, what
was the point of learning Latin or algebra or even history since
they had no demonstrable utility? In 1958, Walter Kolesnik showed
that the research that allegedly “exploded” mental
discipline (as advanced by Thorndike and others) was deeply flawed,
but his work was ignored by progressive educators.
In this century-old debate, the great error of
traditionalist educators was their failure to defend cultural values in
education, that is, the importance of knowledge. By making the case for
Latin or history dependent on “transfer of training,” they
lost the debate. The culturally important studies such as literature,
history, and foreign language never should have been defended for their
value in “training the mind,” but for their importance in
shaping an educated, civilized human being.
Hirsch now makes that case, and it is a very
important contribution to American education. He shows that
research is now firmly on the side of those who advocate knowledge
as the goal of learning. In a curious reversal of history,
progressive educators now find themselves defending “transfer
of training,” the belief that the practice of critical
thinking will ensure that the student is able to think well about
other things in the future. In this formulation, what a student
learns is irrelevant so long as the student is doing something that
really interests her. As Hirsch shows, this belief in formalism
leads to dull practice in summarizing, predicting, clarifying, and
other mindless and unnecessary activities in the teaching of
reading, but it does not lead to a knowledgeable person who reads
widely and with deep comprehension.
As I said at the outset, I need no convincing. I believe that E. D. Hirsch, Jr., has become an indispensable figure in American
education, and that the curriculum he has developed over the past
20 years—the Core Knowledge curriculum—restores the
essential ingredients of a solid education, including history,
literature, science, mathematics, art, and music. He now
demonstrates that the same kind of education is necessary to cure
the well-documented reading deficiencies of large numbers of
students, and that is icing on the cake.
Diane Ravitch is Research Professor of
Education at New York University and a member of the Koret Task
Force at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University.
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