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FEATURES: The Schools They Deserve
By Mary Eberstadt
Howard Gardner and the remaking of elite education
OUR POSTMODERN TIMES, it is often observed, are rough times for orthodox belief. But
religious beliefs arent the only ones being put to the test these days. Certain
established secular creeds, too, seem to be taking their lumps.
Consider the ostensible fate of one particularly
long-running such orthodoxy, educational progressivism. It is true, of course, that
classrooms across the country continue to exhibit progressively inspired practices, from
"natural" ways of teaching math to "whole language" rather than
phonetic reading methods; true, too, that one of the doctrines most cherished dicta
its preference for "critical thinking" over what is disdainfully called
the "mere" accumulation of facts is enshrined in the heart of almost
every teacher and embedded in textbooks and teaching plans from kindergarten on. All this
has long been so, and must bring some consolation to the rank and file.
But it is also true that educational progressivism, in practice and in theory, is fast
losing ground. For almost two decades, in fact, that particular set of ideas
grounded in Rousseau, transplanted in America by John Dewey and his followers, and
disseminated through the educational establishment by generations of loyal acolytes ever
since has suffered what must only appear to the faithful as one ignominious setback
after another.
There was, to begin with, that famous some would say infamous 1983 report
by the National Commission on Excellence in Education, America at Risk, documenting
the distinct mediocrity of the nations students and by corollary the impressive
failings of its schools. These failings, certain observers were quick to point out, had
risen more or less exactly alongside the ascendance of progressive ideas in the public
schools. At the same time, and even more annoying to progressives, such critics were
turning out to have echoes at the highest levels of politics. After 12 years of Republican
governance including most notably William J. Bennetts tenure as secretary of
education "standards," "testing," "achievement," and
other terms regarded by progressives as ideological fighting words were once more in
national circulation.
Yet even that much in the way of public criticism,
one suspects, could have been comfortably countenanced by the flock; they had, after all,
grown accustomed in the course of their long history to challenges from traditionalists of
different stripes. But then, as the 1980s wore on into the 90s, came an outpouring
of influential books and articles from critics who could not possibly be written off as
tools of reaction. Some of these claimed sympathy with progressivisms aims while
dissenting from what had been committed in its name. For these critics, what mattered was
not the "otherwise unassailable precepts" of progressivism, as the historian
Diane Ravitch once put it, but the fact that these precepts had gotten twisted around in
practice to become "justification for educational practices that range from the
unwise to the bizarre." It was a message that reached an ever-wider audience of the
concerned, as the statistics on everything from reading to the sats piled up worse by
the year.
But the harshest blow to progressive ideas, and what ought
to have been the most demoralizing, came in the even more unexpected form of the writings
of literary scholar E.D. Hirsch. A Gramsci-quoting, self-described political liberal,
Hirsch did more than deplore the excesses of progressivist practice; he attacked the creed
itself head-on, and on moral grounds to boot. In 1987, his profoundly influential book Cultural
Literacy argued that progressive ideas in the schools were depriving all students,
particularly those least advantaged, of the knowledge required for citizenship and a
decent life. Some years later, in The Schools We Need and Why We Dont Have Them
(1996), Hirsch went even further, arguing in meticulous detail that "the mistaken
ideas" of progressivism had led to "disastrous consequences," and that
"since mistaken ideas have been the root cause of Americas educational
problems, the ideas must be changed before the problems can be solved." Whatever the
educational establishment may have made of all this was of little moment next to
Hirschs actual resonance with readers across the country. The ideas in his books
along with his Core Knowledge Foundation and its grade-by-grade, content-laden K-6
curriculum effectively laid the groundwork for what was, and is, an
anti-progressive educational counterculture.
Nor is that all. What must have been even more galling to progressives, priding
themselves as they do on the traditions claim to speak for the common man, is that
during the same years in which their creed itself was being thrashed in the middle and
higher reaches of public opinion, millions of people who had never even heard of Rousseau
or Dewey turned out to be busily repudiating their legacy down below. This is the real
meaning of what is often referred to as "the ferment in American schools." For
almost two decades now, alarmed by all the same things that alarmed the authors and
readers of America at Risk, parents and school boards across the country have
seized on one educational experiment after another in the hopes of improving the schools
experiments that by their very design send shudders through the enlightened heirs
of Dewey.
Many districts and states, for example, have opted for mandatory standardized testing.
They have, further, adjusted the curriculum to cover the contents of those exams in
the deploring phrase of progressive educators, "teaching to the test." Other
districts are experimenting with financial incentives that these same educators also
deplore merit pay for teachers, school vouchers for disadvantaged families. Some
schools have completely reconfigured their courses according to exactly the sort of
fact-based learning progressives most heartily oppose; some 400 schools across the
country, for example, the vast majority of them public, now claim to be based in whole or
in part on Hirschs Core Knowledge program. Finally, and just as dramatic, is the
fact that still other parents have voted for standards and content with their feet by
fleeing to the burgeoning rolls of private and parochial schools or in a phenomenon
that progressively-inclined educators barely even mention, so much does it affront their
first principles into the also-burgeoning home school movement, now numbering some
one and a half million students.
It is all the more curious, then it is in fact a puzzle begging for solution
that in the elite circles of higher education where the progressivist tradition
still burns bright, the public drubbing their doctrine has endured for nearly two decades
now has induced little more than the occasional flinch. In these circles, quite unlike
those school districts across the country now noisy with democratic experimentation, an
altogether different atmosphere reigns. Here, the very innovations for which many in the
public clamor vouchers, school choice, charter schools, standardized tests, and all
the rest continue to be designated, when they are mentioned at all, as reactionary
or nostalgic exercises in discontent. Here, the ideas of the progressive traditions
sharpest recent critics, above all those of Hirsch, continue to be dismissed with genteel
contempt. Here, as anyone can see, the long-running doctrine of progressivism continues to
reign serenely, exactly as if the rising tide of criticism and the mass defections into
enemy territory were not shaking the philosophys throne to its foundations. All of
which suggests that this may be a particularly opportune time to examine what form
progressivism now survives in, and the source of that forms appeal.
"First among equals"
LIKE ANY OTHER successful academic orthodoxy, including others that have come to be rejected by
the ordinary people in whose name they were devised, the tradition of educational
progressivism has never lacked for friends in high places. Indeed, it is no exaggeration
to say that in the professional world of education itself, the doctrine has a near-perfect
monopoly on academic prestige. One highly eminent figure in this world is Theodore Sizer,
chairman of the Education Department at Brown, whose Coalition of Essential Schools
project includes over 200 high schools organized according to progressive principles
student "exhibitions" rather than tests, an emphasis on "habits of
mind" rather than accumulation of knowledge, a passion for relevance (one class
recently studied Othello for its parallels to the O.J. Simpson trial), and so on.
Many other figures less well known bring a similar cast of mind to related experiments and
projects. And, of course, given the ideological homogeneity of the field, these
like-thinking educators often work together, with the largest and most heavily funded of
their projects typically collaborative efforts.
Yet if, in this collegial world, a single figure could be
said to be "first among equals," as James Traub put it recently in the New
York Times, or "the premier American scholar addressing educational reform,"
in the words of the like-thinking Sizer, it would have to be psychologist and celebrity
intellectual Howard Gardner professor of Cognition and Education and adjunct
professor of Psychology at Harvard University; adjunct professor of Neurology at the
Boston University School of Medicine; co-director since the early 1970s of Project Zero at
the Harvard Graduate School of Education, whose many programs and institutes continue to
attract educators from all over; author of some 18 books and hundreds of articles; and
recipient of 12 honorary degrees and "many honors," as his latest book jacket
copy puts it, including but hardly limited to a 1981 MacArthur fellowship. Gardners
ubiquity both inside the world of education and out almost challenges description. He is a
leader in more projects and studies than can be listed here, a steady contributor to tomes
from the higher journalism to the specialized literature on down, and a fixture on the
lecture circuit (he delivers some 75 talks a year) whose professional interests span
everything from classical music to studies of the brain damaged, political advocacy to
developmental psychology, oversubscribed teacher workshops at Harvard to a more recent
sideline in corporate consulting.
Daunting though it may be to contemplate, this resume does not even begin to convey
Gardners overriding influence in one particular realm of American education, and
that is the world of elite private schools. Today, more than any other single figure, he
seems poised to leave his stamp on a generation of students at many of the countrys
most prestigious schools.
Gardners influence has a surprising history, as he himself has written and other
reports agree. In 1983, the story goes, Gardner published what is still his best-known and
most influential book, Frames of Mind. There, he challenged the professional
convention of dividing intelligence into verbal and mathematical forms, and insisted
instead on the existence of seven (he would later say eight, and is now equivocating about
a ninth) separate "intelligences" of "equal priority," those being the
mathematical-logical, linguistic, spatial, bodily kinesthetic, musical, interpersonal, and
intrapersonal. Dense and jargon-ridden, as well as mildly esoteric its main target,
as Gardner has written, was Jean Piagets conception of intelligence as scientific
thinking Frames of Mind was executed, and indeed intended, for a limited
scholarly audience. "I believed," as the author himself put it later, "that
my work would be of interest chiefly to those trained in my discipline, and particularly
those who studied intelligence from a Piagetian perspective."
The professional world, for its part, was unconvinced. As Gardner accurately summarized
the books reception later, "a few psychologists liked the theory; a somewhat
larger number did not like it; most ignored it." In the New York Times Book Review,
psychologist George Miller pronounced the theory "hunch and opinion"; in the New
York Review of Books, meanwhile where Gardners own essays on subjects
inside and out of his chosen fields are frequently featured psychologist Jerome
Bruner praised the book for its timeliness, but went on to conclude that Gardners
"intelligences" were "at best useful fictions."
And these were just the friendly critics. In The Bell Curve (1994), to no
ones surprise, Charles Murray and Richard J. Herrnstein dismissed Gardner as a
"radical" whose work "is uniquely devoid of psychometric or other
quantitative evidence." Yet others with no visible dog in the fight over intelligence
turned out to echo the charge. Robert J. Sternberg of Yale observed that "there is
not even one empirical test of the theory"; Australian specialist Michael Anderson
complained similarly that "the scaffolding is the theory." Though some put their
kindest face forward, praising the author of Frames of Mind as
"brilliant" and his thesis as "original" or "powerful," few
of his professional peers would venture, then or since, that anything Gardner was up to
amounted to science. Piaget, at least so far as the professional world was concerned, did
not stand corrected.
Nonetheless, there was one audience-in-waiting positively electrified by Gardners
message, and it was moreover enthusiastically indifferent to the books scholarly
critics. That audience, as it turned out, came from the ranks of private school
administrators and teachers. As Traub put it last year in the opening of another article
on Gardner, this one for the New Republic, "Howard Gardner first realized that
he had struck a chord in the national psyche when he gave a speech to private-school
administrators on his new theory of multiple intelligences and saw the
headmasters elbowing each other to get into the hall." Gardner himself recalls the
moment with dramatic detail in his 1993 Multiple Intelligences: The Theory in Practice:
Some months after the
publication of Frames, I was invited to address the annual meeting of the National
Association of Independent [i.e., private] Schools. . . . I expected the typical audience
of fifty to seventy-five persons, a customary talk of fifty minutes followed by a small
number of easily anticipated questions. Instead . . . I encountered a new experience: a
much larger hall, entirely filled with people, and humming with excitement. It was almost
as if I had walked by mistake into a talk given by someone who was famous. But the
audience had in fact come to hear me: it listened attentively, and grew steadily in size
until it spilled into the hallways on both sides of the room. . . . [A]fter the session
had concluded, I was ringed by interested headmasters, teachers, trustees, and journalists
who wanted to hear more and were reluctant to allow me to slip back into anonymity.
The event that proved a turning point in Gardners
personal life would also mark a turning point for his admirers in the tonier schools.
Today, as if in vindication of the judgement of those enthusiasts who catapulted his ideas
to celebrity heights, Howard Gardner bestrides their world as no other single influence or
figure of inspiration. In addition to his omnipresence on the lecture circuit,
Gardners books and videotapes and software are in constant demand (his cd-rom tour
of the intelligences sells for $435 for a set of five); his workshops for teachers and
other educators at Harvard are early sell-outs; and hundreds of schools now claim, in
varying degrees, to have remade themselves in keeping with multiple-intelligence theory.
And though some of those schools are public there is no shortage of funders or
educators interested in trying Gardners ideas there can be no doubt that it
is the private school world, today as in 1983, that is clamoring for multiple-intelligence
products, paying for Gardneriana, and conforming their classrooms to his dicta. Indeed: In
what may be the single most telling detail of Gardners influence in the world of
elite education, Traub reports that "when the directorship of one of New Yorks
most prestigious private schools recently came open, almost every candidate for the job
mentioned Gardner in his or her one-page educational-philosophy statement." In sum,
as one educator put it to Traub, "Howard is the guru, and Frames of Mind is
the bible."
Progressivism, properly understood
IF SO, THE HOLY WRIT has now been enlarged once more, and the reader curious as to what
the private schools are clamoring for need look no further. For this year Gardner has
published yet another book, The Disciplined Mind: What All Students Should Understand
(Simon & Schuster, $25.00). Unlike Frames of Mind, which as we have seen
reached the general reader only inadvertently, The Disciplined Mind takes no such
risk; it is overtly aimed at "individuals" indeed, "individuals all
over the world" who "care about education." Here, the author
promises with typical sweep, he "seek[s] to synthesize over thirty years of research
in the cognitive and biological sciences, and over fifteen years of involvement in
precollegiate education," to find the features of "good educations . . .
everywhere in the world."
Somewhat incongruously, progressivisms most visible
public defender opts here for an Olympian tone. He is "weary," he explains,
"of debates that array one educational philosophy against another." Though it is
true, he elaborates later, that "much of what I write about can be identified with
the educational tradition of John Dewey with what has been called progressive or
neo-progressive education," it is also true, as he acknowledges, that this tradition
has become a code word in the minds of some for low or no standards and poor work. In that
sense, Gardner writes, "I reject the baggage that has . . . come to be associated
with this label." Contrary to what critics have suggested, "one can be
progressive while also espousing traditional educational goals and calling for the highest
standards of work, achievement, and behavior." This book, in the authors
telling, is a statement of that other progressive philosophy, progressivism properly
understood not the old and tarnished version of yesteryear, but a kind of souped-up
version, a muscular version, a kind to which even conservatives and traditionalists, or so
the author seems to hope, might warm.
Where does this new progressivism lead? The answer is something of a mystery, at least
at first. For Gardner is also "weary," as it turns out, of what he calls the
"instrumental or momentary" issues in education today issues like
"vouchers," "charter schools," "teachers unions,"
"local control," "national standards," "international
comparisons," and all the quotidian rest. Such issues, Gardner argues, "skirt
the most fundamental question" of the purposes of education itself. These purposes he
identifies as a "quartet" across "educational time and space":
"to transmit roles; to convey cultural values; to inculcate literacies; and to
communicate certain disciplinary content and ways of thinking."
Alongside this quartet of purposes, the author simultaneously outlines a "trio of
virtues" that "should animate education" truth, beauty, and morality
and produces examples of how each of these realms might be approached. To gain an
understanding of truth, he suggests, students might study the theory of evolution; of
beauty, Mozarts The Marriage of Figaro; and of morality, the Holocaust. These
choices, the author readily acknowledges, are "time-bound,"
"place-bound," and even "personal"; they are not intended to signal a
"fixed canon," which the author himself ardently opposes. One could easily
substitute other instantiations in their place, he goes on to explain for example,
approaching truth through "folk theories about healing or traditional Chinese
medicine," beauty through "Japanese ink and brush painting" or
"African drum music," and good and evil through "the precepts of Jainism,
the stories of Pol Pot and Maos Cultural Revolution," or "the generosity
of bodhisattvas." The point, it appears, is not to "privilege" any
particular set of examples; not one is "sacrosanct," and in any event, Gardner
writes, "I do not believe in singular or incontrovertible truth, beauty or
morality." "No doubt," the author goes on to acknowledge, "there are
various routes" to such understanding (later in the book, he will identify six such
"pathways"); the one outlined here is merely his own "preferred path."
Anyone reading this far into his argument may long since have started wondering what a
curriculum to say nothing of a lowly classroom might look like when cut to
the specifications of all these purposes, virtues, and pathways. But the reader must be
patient; list-wise, we have only just begun. The Six Forces That Will Remake Schools are
easy enough to digest (as is the by-now obligatory point that "changes in our world
are so rapid and so decisive that it will not be possible for schools to remain as they
were or simply to introduce a few superficial adjustments"). Similarly, the Six
"most prominent ideas ushered in by the cognitive revolution" can be managed
without headache. So can the Seven "mind and brain findings" that "ought to
be kept in mind by anyone concerned with education," off the track of Gardners
main point though they may be.
It is when the author returns to his main subject that the conceptual challenge begins
in earnest. For it turns out that there are not only Four Approaches to Understanding
("learning from suggestive institutions," "direct confrontations of
erroneous conceptions," "a framework that facilitates understanding," and
"multiple entry points"), but that the fourth of these, in keeping with
multiple-intelligence theory, is itself subdivided into seven further categories (the
entry points in question being narrative, numerical, logical, existential/foundational,
aesthetic, hands-on, and interpersonal), and that room must be left for metaphor,
similes, model languages, and other means of making sense of the consequent "multiple
representations of the Core Concept."
What all this means for the classroom is anybodys guess, but what Gardner himself
says it means looks something like this: A "narrative entry point" into the
subject of evolution, for example, might be the story of Darwins voyage on the
Beagle, or the tale of his fellow evolutionist and grandfather, or the saga of the
Galapagos finches. A "numerical entry point" might be a study of the beak size
of the same finches. Other entry points might include, say, breeding fruit flies
("hands-on"), watching a documentary ("aesthetic"), or recreating the
debates that followed publication of Darwins theory. Similarly, the Marriage of
Figaro might be studied via the human struggles it contains
(existential-foundational), comparison of meter and rhythm in two arias (numerical), or
performing parts of the score (hands-on). As for the Holocaust, one might, say, study the
history of artists persecuted under Hitler (aesthetic entry point), read the literature of
survivors (existential-foundational), or focus on a specific event such as the Wannsee
conference (narrative). A classroom designed by Gardner, in other words, might do all
these things or it might, even more important, do none of the above; we are
reminded repeatedly, as he puts it toward the end, that "these choices are
illustrative only."
Well, so be it. Now, if the content of such an education is indeed ad hoc, arbitrary,
in permanent flux, then we can only evaluate that education by means of its methodology.
About that methodology Gardner is quite clear he favors "depth over
breadth," (pursuing a small number of topics rather than conveying large amounts of
information); "construction over accumulation" of knowledge (an emphasis on
personal questioning rather than memorization); "the pursuit of knowledge for its own
sake over the obeisance to utility"; "an individualized over a uniform
education" (a preference that allows "the natural inclinations of the human
individual to unfold and endure"); and "student-centered" rather than
"teacher-centered" education (meaning that students join in the process of
"assessing" themselves). Personal relevance, student-led classrooms, hands-on,
performance-oriented activities does any of this sound familiar?
"Learning by doing" was a central element in the . . . curriculum . . . [as
were] educational methods that discarded the mere accumulation of knowledge and made
learning a part of each students life, connected to his or her present situation and
needs. These were schools of the future
. . . because they exhibited "tendencies toward greater freedom and an
identification of the childs school life with his environment and outlook."
The description here comes from Diane Ravitch in The Schools We Deserve, and she
is quoting John Dewey. The year in question is 1915.
The shock of the old
IN SUM,
the vision on which Gardner insists so passionately in The Disciplined Mind is not
exactly new. It is, in fact, older than most people now alive, as was demonstrated most
elegantly by the progressives nemesis, E.D. Hirsch, three years ago in The
Schools We Need and Why We Dont Have Them. Gardner, of course, is profoundly
aware of Hirschs opposing perspective, which he describes in his latest book as
"a view of learning that is at best superficial and at worst anti-intellectual."
(Thats when Gardner is minding his literary manners. On the lecture trail, he
prefers the jab of "Vanna White knowledge.") Yet it is an interesting fact that
Gardner, for all that he describes his own latest book as part of a "sustained
dialectic read disagreement," with Hirsch himself, in fact mentions his
adversary only a few times, while The Schools We Need and Why We Dont Have Them
appears not at all.
Interesting, but not at all surprising. For that last book
of Hirschs, predating Gardners though it did by three years, uncannily
provides the intellectual genealogy of just about every tenet of The Disciplined Mind,
most of them presented by the author as if they were thought up just yesterday.
"Changes in our world are so rapid and so decisive," Gardners argument
begins, "that it will not be possible for schools to remain as they were."
"The claim that specific information is outmoded almost as soon as it has been
learned," writes Hirsch in The Schools We Need and Why We Dont Have Them,
"goes back at least as far as [William Hearst] Kilpatricks Foundations of
Method (1925)." Subject matter, Gardner argues, should not be
"privileged"; what matters is that education be centered on the child rather
than the subject. "Deweys words, disposing of the polarity between
child-centered and subject-matter-centered education," Hirsch observes after quoting
them, "were published in 1902." What of the concomitant idea also part of
the "child-centered" curriculum that testing amounts to "spitting
back" material, and that children should instead "construct" answers for
themselves? "The campaign against giving students tests," Hirsch explains,
"is an integral part of a Romantic progressivism that goes back to the 1920s. . . .
[O]rthodox educational doctrine since the 1920s has been consistently opposed to testing
and grading."
And so on, and on and on. The superiority of "hands-on"
experimentation versus "drill-and-practice" teaching, the importance of
"individual differences," "learning styles," and an "active
learning environment"? These buzzwords and all they represent, the nuts and bolts of The
Disciplined Minds imagined classroom, turn out to date to an exceedingly
influential document published by the Bureau of Education and called The Cardinal
Principles of Secondary Education published in 1918. The main focus of this
document, as it happens, was an attack on the idea one resonating these 80-plus
years later in Gardners arbitrary trio of evolution, Mozart, and the Holocaust
that subject matter per se should anchor a curriculum. "This hostility to
academic subject matter," writes Hirsch, "has been the continued focus of
educational reform ever since Cardinal Principles a tradition
that needs to be kept in mind when current reformers attack mere facts and
rote learning. "
Just as what is significant in The Disciplined Mind is not new, so its
particular novelty that architectonic of trios, quartets, sextuplets, and
septuplets of principle, intelligences, and entry points and all the rest is not
terribly significant. In fact, the most vaunted part of that architectonic the
identification of the multiple intelligences, and the insistence on a curriculum intended
to elicit all of them is, unfortunately for the rest of Gardners argument,
its weakest link.
Consider only what multiple-intelligence theory forces him to say about one of his own
chosen subjects, the teaching of the Holocaust. No one could object to the reading of
survivor stories, say, or to an in-depth look at Eichmanns trial in Israel in 1961,
or to reviewing the literature on the Wannsee conference. But the insistence that these
are mere "entry points" for certain kinds of "intelligences," entry
points no more or less "privileged" than any other, will not stand up. It is
very difficult to accept that the author himself believes it. After all, the Holocaust
could also be "entered" through a study of, say, how concentration camps boosted
local employment rates. Would Gardner really sanction that approach, rather than appear to
"privilege" conventional sources?
Even worse are the tortured passages where the cumbersome requirements of his theory
force him to invent other "entry points" aligned to the more avant-garde
"intelligences." It is hard, for example, to read under "interpersonal
points of entry" his assurance that "The Holocaust provides many opportunities
for role play" without a twinge of uneasiness. Occasionally, one feels the strain of
his material stretching round his theory to the ripping point as in his admission
that "when it comes to the relationship between the Holocaust and artistry, one must
tread carefully," or in the howler, "Hands-on involvement with the Holocaust
must be approached carefully, especially with children." To say that the
multiple-intelligences approach runs the risk of trivializing serious subjects a
risk Gardner briefly acknowledges here is one thing. But to advance beyond those
claims about entry points to say that it does not even matter whether the Holocaust
is taught, much less how, is to enter a zone of relativism where few readers would care to
follow. Clearly, Gardner expects good taste to govern the classroom. But this preference
must go unspoken, since to introduce it is to open the way to objective
"standards" and other rigidities he disavows.
What, finally, of the authors promise to deliver progressivism with a difference?
For all the reassurances ("I am a demon for high standards and demanding
expectations"), for all the talk of "rigor," "high standards,"
and the rest, no ways and means are introduced here that would translate these terms into
accountability none, that is, beyond the upholding of "regular
assessments," and what that means is anybodys guess. As James Traub put it
pointedly in the New York Times Book Review, "One would like to ask Gardner,
an erudite and wide-ranging thinker, if that was how school equipped his own mind."
Gardner, of course, would protest that such ideas have never really been tried.
"Educational experimentation" in this century, he believes, "has occurred
chiefly on the margins"; progressive educators "have had relatively little
impact on the mainstream of education throughout the contemporary world." The
argument that something has never been tried, that last gasp of exhausted ideology, is in
this particular case quite wrong; the Everyclass all these educators love to hate
one with "prevalent lecturing, the emphasis on drill, the decontextualized materials
and activities ranging from basal readers to weekly spelling tests," as Gardner puts
it has been out of fashion and in many schools stigmatized, apparently without the
progressives ever having noticed it, for decades now. To the extent that it is
reviving in American schools today, it is on account not of the establishment educational
culture, but of a counterculture that is now declaring, whether overtly like the
educational reformers or tacitly through the many experiments now under way in the
schools, that a hundred years of progressive experimentation is enough.
To each, according to his means?
IT APPEARS, then, that progressive educational ideology has come full circle. Born near the
turn of the century in hopes of raising the downtrodden up, it survives now as the
ideology of choice of, by, and for the educational elite.
Indeed, it is increasingly recognized as such. Consider
this comment by Nathan Glazer, writing last year in the New Republic of the sharply
opposed visions of E.D. Hirsch and progressive educator Theodore Sizer. "The question
of whats best for the classroom," Glazer concluded, "may simply be a
matter of class social class. In some schools, with some students, one can teach
for understanding and depth. . . . For others frankly and regrettably there
are no such things." Gardner, similarly, for all his talk of an "education for
all human beings," notes that "for those disadvantaged children who do not
acquire literacy in the dominant culture at home, such a prescribed curriculum [as that
recommended by Hirsch and others] helps to provide a level playing field and to ensure
that future citizens enjoy a common knowledge base." Progressivism, it appears, is
not for the weak or the backward, or the poor.
So whats in it for the elite all those headmasters and teachers and
parents still elbowing their way into Gardners lectures? Why the enduring appeal to
them of progressive ideas? Three sorts of explanations come to mind.
The first is institutional. The means by which academic ideologies perpetuate
themselves have been closely studied elsewhere; the particular case of progressive
ideology has probably been explained best, again, by Hirsch in The Schools We Need and
Why We Dont Have Them. Almost all the leading figures in the field of education
all the most prestigious institutions are considered, and consider
themselves, heirs to Deweys tradition. This fact is important. It means, for
example, that graduate students seeking out the "best" schools and professors
will find themselves educated and, of course, penalized or rewarded in their
professional lives by people imbued with the ideas that overwhelmingly dominate
these schools. It also means that teachers, headmasters, and others who pride themselves
on staying au courant will likewise gravitate to the same ideological home base.
A second way of explaining progressivisms latest lease on life is more prosaic,
and concerns those on the consumer end of private education. In a review of Gardner and
his ideas for the Richmond Times-Dispatch, Robert Holland recently quipped that
multiple-intelligence theory "encourages the egalitarian delusion that we all are
utterly brilliant in equally important ways," thus providing "an escape route
from accountability." He is, of course, absolutely right; that "delusion"
is the main source of the theorys very human appeal.
On any bell curve, after all, half the results will fall below the norm; somebody
is going to be in that bottom quintile, or two quintiles, and so on. Now, parents
everywhere have a natural aversion to thinking their own child is average or worse; from
the parental point of view, as the Russian joke has it, every baby is a "normal
genius child." Add to that natural aversion the fact that, at the upper reaches of
the private school world, some parents are paying $10,000 to $14,000 a year per child;
these sums alone are a powerful disincentive against giving parents bad news. Many parents
send their children to private school, after all, precisely so that they do not have to
worry about their education. Grades and standardized tests are a constant reminder that
problems might still surface at any time. Thus, private school parents, possibly more than
others, may be susceptible to multiple-intelligence-style ideas that emphasize the talents
of their children, while not putting those talents on the line in any way that will rouse
parental concern. There is also, of course, no denying the fact that classrooms like these
have always had a certain snob appeal. Grades and tests, they imply, are for the ordinary
kids; no means of measurement could do justice to ours.
But there is a larger, more sociological explanation for the success of such a vision
in the private schools today, an explanation that ought to make progressives themselves
uncomfortable if they ever take occasion to reflect on it. For the fact is that in placing
their bets on the most advantaged children those children of the kind of people who
have taken multiple-intelligence theory to heart progressive educators can hardly
lose.
How could they? Teach those children Inuit and
Swahili all you like; they, unlike their less advantaged counterparts, will pick up the
French or Italian or whatever they need when the time comes for travelling abroad.
Withhold from them all that distasteful factual information with no fear of penalty
most of them, again unlike their less fortunate fellows, will pick up the facts from their
reading and conversation outside the classroom. Deny them, if you like, geography; they will find,
say, Madrid or the Euphrates from the airport when they get there. Refuse to administer
tests excepting of course the intelligence tests so tellingly required by almost
every private school in the land again, with impunity; most of them will have
individual tutors for the sat and ap exams when the time comes.
All of which is to say that when the children of
todays Gardner- or Sizer-influenced schools go on from strength to strength later in
life, that fact will tell us very little about the intrinsic worth of progressive ideas or
the merits of the classrooms where those ideas roam free. All success will prove is that
the overwhelming advantages with which most of those students are blessed the homes
packed with books, the money that makes travel and other forms of personal enrichment a
fact of life, the literate and high-functioning parents and peers, the expectations and,
for many, the genetic advantages with which they are born amount to more human
capital than any classroom, including mediocre and worse ones, can reduce by much.
Viewed this way, the revival of progressive ideas among elite schools and students may
seem a harmless enough experiment; and so, from the perspective of those particular
individuals, it probably is. All the same, this ideological renascence has its dark side.
The more the private schools tack to the wind abolishing grades, eradicating tests,
and otherwise disposing of the instruments that have traditionally allowed worse-off
students the means by which to elevate themselves the harder it will become for any
child to join those schools except through accident of birth.
After all, they will not be able to join them by dint of hard work; the curriculum is
constantly in flux, so there is nothing to prepare for. Nor will their graded schoolwork
elsewhere grant them entrée; this merely proves they have been "force-fed"
facts. As for more subjective measures, like a teachers recommendation well,
that teacher was almost certainly not trained according to theory; she probably just was
"privileging" certain kinds of performance in the usual suspect way. The school
without recognizable assessments and a fixed curriculum the school of which
progressive educators, today or yesterday, continue to dream is a school stripped
of handholds from below.
As for the poor and disadvantaged themselves well, as enlightened voices are now
saying, let them have Hirsch. Come to think of it, the implied contest there has a certain
charm. Let the games begin.
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