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- <text id=90TT0349>
- <title>
- Feb. 05, 1990: Education:Doing Bad And Feeling Good
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Feb. 05, 1990 Mandela:Free At Last?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ESSAY, Page 78
- Education: Doing Bad and Feeling Good
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By Charles Krauthammer
- </p>
- <p> A standardized math test was given to 13-year-olds in six
- countries last year. Koreans did the best. Americans did the
- worst, coming in behind Spain, Britain, Ireland and Canada. Now
- the bad news. Besides being shown triangles and equations, the
- kids were shown the statement "I am good at mathematics."
- Koreans came last in this category. Only 23% answered yes.
- Americans were No. 1, with an impressive 68% in agreement.
- </p>
- <p> American students may not know their math, but they have
- evidently absorbed the lessons of the newly fashionable
- self-esteem curriculum wherein kids are taught to feel good
- about themselves. Of course, it is not just educators who are
- convinced that feeling good is the key to success. The Governor
- of Maryland recently announced the formation of a task force
- on self-esteem, "a 23-member panel created on the theory,"
- explains the Baltimore Sun, "that drug abuse, teen pregnancy,
- failure in school and most other social ills can be reduced
- by making people feel good about themselves." Judging by the
- international math test, such task forces may be superfluous.
- Kids already feel exceedingly good about doing bad.
- </p>
- <p> Happily, some educators are starting to feel bad about doing
- bad. Early voice to the feel-bad movement was given by the 1983
- Nation at Risk study, which found the nation's schools
- deteriorating toward crisis. And Bush's "education summit" did
- promise national standards in math and science. The commitment
- remains vague but does recognize that results objectively
- measured, not feelings, should be the focus of educational
- reform.
- </p>
- <p> Now the really bad news. While the trend toward standards
- and testing goes on at the national level, quite the opposite
- is going on in the field, where the fixation on feeling is
- leading to the Balkanization of American education.
- </p>
- <p> The battle cry is "inclusion" in the teaching curriculum for
- every politically situated minority. In California, for
- example, it is required by law that textbooks not just exclude
- "adverse reflection" of any group but include "equal portrayal"
- of women, minorities and the handicapped. In texts on "history
- or current events, or achievements in art, science or any other
- field, the contributions of women and men should be represented
- in approximately equal numbers."
- </p>
- <p> Says a respected female historian: "I'm beginning to think
- that in the future it will become impossible to write a history
- textbook and satisfy these kinds of demands. After all, how do
- you write a history of the Bill of Rights giving equal time to
- the contribution of women?"
- </p>
- <p> In New York State, a report from the Task Force on
- Minorities (A Curriculum of Inclusion) has launched a fierce
- attack on "Eurocentrism" in the schools. It begins, "African
- Americans, Asian Americans, Puerto Rican/Latinos and Native
- Americans have all been the victims of an intellectual and
- educational oppression that has characterized the culture and
- institutions of the United States and the European-American
- world for centuries." Result: "Terribly damaging" to the
- "psyche" of minority youth. Recommendation: Prepare all
- curricular materials "on the basis of multicultured
- contributions to the development of all aspects of our
- society."
- </p>
- <p> This is ideology masquerading as education and aspiring to
- psychotherapy. It demands outright lying. Not all groups in
- America have contributed "to the development of all aspects of
- our society." There is little to be said, for example, about
- the Asian-American contribution to basketball, about the
- Jewish-American contribution to the Pequot War or about the
- contribution of women to the Bill of Rights. Some connection
- could, of course, be found--manufactured--if one pushed it.
- But pushing it would be entirely in the service of ideology,
- not truth. American history has not been smoothly and
- proportionately multicultural from the beginning. Honesty
- requires saying so.
- </p>
- <p> But honesty is not the object of the inclusion movement.
- Psychic healing is. The fixation on inclusionary curricula is
- based on the widespread assumption that the pathologies
- afflicting many minorities, from teen pregnancy to drug abuse
- to high dropout rates, come from a lack of self-esteem. Which,
- in turn, comes from their absorbing (as the New York task force
- puts it) "negative characterizations" of themselves in school
- books.
- </p>
- <p> This argument is wrong on its face. This is the era of Cosby
- and affirmative action. If today's high dropout rates, drug
- abuse and teen pregnancy stem from negative characterizations
- of minorities, then 40 years ago--the era of Amos 'n' Andy
- and parks with NO DOGS OR NEGROES signs--self-esteem should
- have been lower and social pathology worse. Of course, the
- opposite is true. In 40 years negative characterizations have
- decreased and social pathologies have increased.
- </p>
- <p> The real tragedy of this obsessive preoccupation with
- Eurocentrism is that it is a trap and a diversion. Of all the
- reasons for the difficulties encountered by the minority kids
- in and out of school, curricular Eurocentrism ranks, if at all,
- at the bottom. That New York State, in the midst of an
- education crisis, should be devoting its attention to cleansing
- the grade school curriculum of Eurocentrism is a waste, a
- willful turning away from real problems.
- </p>
- <p> The attack on Eurocentrism did not start in the New York
- public schools. It started at the elite universities. Last year
- Stanford University changed its course on Western civilization
- into a curriculum of inclusion by imposing a kind of ethnic and
- gender quota system for Great Books.
- </p>
- <p> Stanford can afford such educational indulgences. Its
- graduates will get jobs even if their education is mildly
- distorted by this inclusionary passion. Not so inner-city
- third-graders, whose margin of error in life is tragically
- smaller. And for whom any dilution or diversion of education
- to satisfy the demands of ideology can be devastating.
- </p>
- <p> The pursuit of good feeling in education is a dead end. The
- way to true self-esteem is through real achievement and real
- learning. Politically Balkanized curricula will only ensure
- that our schools continue to do bad, for which feeling good,
- no matter how relentlessly taught, is no antidote.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-