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CULTURED: Urban Hero
By David Steiner
Wrong role for school teachers
The movie scene has
become familiar—the American high school class close to
rioting, the racial tensions boiling, the curses flying across the
room—and then, the breakthrough moment. Through an inspired
gesture, the teacher connects: he uses an apple, she uses karate,
he the doping of a mouse, she a student-drawn cartoon. The
connection made, the trajectory is clear. The classroom gradually
becomes a haven, a precious space of bonding and learning set
against a sea of social violence and family tragedy. The teacher as
hero or heroine pays a price—loss of a less heroic lover or
spouse, disdain and opposition from colleagues and school
administrators (always portrayed as cynical and patronizing), even,
in one case, martyrdom for the cause.
Too often formulaic, these are not great
movies. In Freedom Writers, the latest product of the genre, Hilary Swank
looks continually uncomfortable in the leading role. Based on
events in the 1990s at a high school in Long Beach, California, the movie tells how a teacher evokes the
Holocaust to connect her students with the universality of human
suffering. The result is a life-changing experience in which her
Hispanic and African American students and the Jewish Holocaust
survivors they encounter bear witness to a common humanity and
hope. As educators in a pluralist democracy, we are tempted to
forgive the film’s weaknesses and celebrate the heroic
teacher as she fights for the souls of her students. Stand and Deliver, Dangerous Minds, 187, and now Freedom Writers continually tap into our need to believe in the
narrative of the “great teacher,” capable of saving
students in need. (187, alone in the genre in lacking final hope, was a
commercial failure.)
The exemplar of the great teacher, past and
present, is a staple of Western European culture. Among the many,
Socrates remains the seminal figure. In the 12th century, Abelard,
known to us today through his tragic love affair with Heloise,
became a legendary teacher, gathering students from throughout
Europe. A century later, St. Thomas Aquinas, offering lessons at
the University of Paris, became recognized as the master teacher of
Catholicism. In the
16th century, the Maharal of Prague, Judah Loew
ben Bezalel, founded the Talmudic Academy known as the Klausen; he
defined Torah and kabbalistic studies for generations. Centuries later,
as rector of the Nuremberg Gymnasium, Hegel would begin his epochal
rethinking of the history of philosophy, a project Heidegger would
continue in Freiburg, achieving, in the words of Hannah Arendt,
“the kingship among teachers.”
In the much briefer history of the United
States, the teacher as a great cultural or philosophical voice is
largely absent. Leo Strauss, whose influence is now hotly debated
by analysts of American foreign policy, was European-born. John
Dewey is a rare example of an educator whose thinking about
pedagogy and engagement with broader political issues achieved
national status, but he was not a great teacher. Writing about
France, my father could cite the high school teacher
Émile-Auguste Chartier, commonly known simply as
“Alain,” as “a commanding presence in European
moral and intellectual history” from 1906 to the late 1940s;
there are no American equivalents.
Moreover, American literature has little place
for the great teacher: in Washington Irving and J.D. Salinger, the
schoolteacher is largely weak and useless. Whereas in Europe, great
teaching is grounded in the power of their ideas, in America it is
a matter of ideals: the lone warrior who overcomes the odds, who
triumphs over the socioeconomic and cultural conditions of the
urban public school. The heroes depicted—Jaime Escalante (Stand and Deliver),
LouAnne Johnson (Dangerous Minds), and Erin Gruwell (Freedom
Writers)—shine against backcloths
of deprivation and despair. This is an ironic form of heroism,
dependent as it is on conditions for which we all bear continuing
responsibility. Heroism is surely a virtue. To depend on public
school teachers to display it is not.
David Steiner is dean of the School of
Education at Hunter College, CUNY. He is former director of
arts education at the National
Endowment for the Arts in Washington, D.C.
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