The word “great” appears with irritating frequency in the educational media and speeches by Australian political leaders. Former prime minister Julia Gillard spoke of the “great” education she received at Unley High School, and in her September 2012 address to the National Press Club, responding to the Gonski report, the then-prime minister used “great” nine times. The Department of Education, Employment and Workplace Relations’ monthly newsletter is called Making Every School a ‘Great’ School. In March the NSW government launched its “Great” Teaching, Inspired Learning initiative to lift the quality of entrants. Rewards for “great” teachers have been mooted.
Dr Andreas Schleicher, deputy director for education and skills to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, is in Australia advising education bureaucrats, and he also likes to speak about a “great” education.
But where did this idea of a great education come from, and is it really any better than a good one?
In 2007 global consulting firm McKinsey & Company published How the world’s best–performing school systems come out on top, a project that looked at 25 school systems, ranking the top 10 performers. High-performing school systems were measured by the OECD’s Programme for International Student Assessment, an assessment of reading, mathematics and science of 15-year-olds. McKinsey’s research didn’t focus on curriculum, paedagogy or assessment; instead McKinsey looked at the system itself — the infrastructure — and how it delivers a “great” education.
McKinsey looked at what high-performing school systems have in common and what tools they use. These school systems show that best practices work irrespective of where they are applied. McKinsey recommended reform to “instruction”, a concept framed around three core propositions, and characterised as the “black box” of school reform.
Schleicher, who has been described as the most important man in English education, wrote the forward to McKinsey’s 2007 report in which he made a number of fearless claims. He also said, heroically:
“The world is indifferent to tradition and past reputations, unforgiving of frailty and ignorant of custom or practice. Success will go to countries which are swift to adapt, slow to complain and open to change.”
Schleicher believes countries cannot be economically competitive unless they measure student performance; he also has a capacity to turn numbers into policy. At The Sydney Ideas forum last Friday, Schleicher said: “if you have to make a choice between a great teacher and a small class, go for the great teacher.”
The OECD is an economic organisation, not an educational one, yet the reach and impact of the OECD on schooling globally is profound. Some 70 countries, or 87% of the world’s economy, now take part in PISA; the World Bank requires countries seeking development capital to submit their PISA results. It follows that national education systems are steered towards narrow indicators of school performance.
Global consulting firms and international economic organizations exert pressure to promulgate a singular model of school reform. The tools of instructional effectiveness and market efficiency can be flown in to right listing schools systems wherever they are. Australian lawyer Noel Pearson describes McKinsey’s work as “seminal”; Pearson also uses the word “great”.
The ideal of equality used to hold a central place in the purposes of schooling: UNESCO once held that every child had an inalienable right to a “good” education. A “good” education includes the idea of equal treatment and fairness. For Aristotle the “good” was an education in which “equals were treated equally, and unequals unequally”, what Martha Nussbaum called “need and dignity subtly intertwined”. “Great” leaves all of this out.
Apart from its colloquial cachet, a “great” education is nothing more than a rhetorical side-step; it avoids being sullied with a political narrative about equality or the contribution schooling makes to the common “good”; it limits thinking about the purposes of education to its practice; and it implies its own narrative normalising the idea that education is no more than an instrument of production in a globalised economy.
The language of global school reform is managerial, naively or disingenuously value-free, and the hubris suggests the keys to education reform fit all the locks, and work anywhere independent of culture, institution or tradition. As a consequence values such as equity are rendered in morally benign terms and function atonally in the lexicon of global school reform.
Beneath the language of the black box is a vision, a dark one, of societies composed of agile and economically aroused individuals, shedding the past, eyeing the future, and along the social fault lines where purpose yields to performance and meaning gives way to metrics, everyone has moved up, avoiding the snakes and climbing the ladders.
*Chris Duncan is the principal of Lindisfarne Anglican Grammar School and a PhD candidate at the Melbourne Graduate School of Education
The real tragedy is that today’s “outcome based education” system is designed to produce monkeys, not people. Kids are not taught to think for themselves, they are taught what to think. Pseudo science is taught as fact, while the latest trend in moral relativity is gently spoon fed to them. Whereas, 150 years ago kids were taught using the classic education, or “trivium” (most of us probably have not even heard of this today). The trivium consisted of logic, grammar and rhetoric. Logic being the ability to use our God-given critical thinking skills to eliminate contradiction, isolate ambiguities or paradoxes until we have more information, and identify facts and truth so that they can be dealt with with clarity. Grammar being the common body of knowledge that constitutes the child’s native tongue (i.e. all the English words), and rhetoric being the ability to verbally express themselves, question authority and argue their point. In other words, the kids were given from a very young age and intellectual self-defense system, today we might call it a “bullshit filter”.
Unfortunately, now that our children have been, for the most part, stripped of this intellectual self-defense system they believe just about anything mainstream media feeds them, and anything that ranks on page one of Google. They have developed a new superstition, that authority can be trusted, whatever format authority takes (i.e. journalists, search engines, politicians, Oprah) whereas, if you were to time-travel thirty 12-year old kids from 1895 to be with us now, give them a few months to adjust, and then let them read the newspapers. I can guarantee they would teach us a thing or two about calling bullshit for what it is. My fanciful hypothesis is supported by this 1895 grade 8 final exam from Kansas:
http://www.mindingthecampus.com/forum/2008/04/then_and_now.html
It is for this reason that 150 years ago, a much larger proportion of the population were entrepreneurs, not that there is anything wrong with rank-and-file workers, but it is a sign of the times. Each has his or her own gifts, I believe that today’s education system stifles those gifts. Those entrepreneurs may have taken the form of a humble shoemaker on the corner or an intellectual and entrepreneurial giants like Edison and Tesler (Edison started his first business at 12).
The liberal education of yesteryear was achieved through classrooms that consisted of young primary school students all the way to seniors or “upperclassmen”, who would assist the teachers with the younger students. Subsequently kids have been bundled together in peer groups or “cohorts”, a whole new range of negative social phenomenon have emerged, most obvious being foolish decisions made under “peer pressure” and bullying (naturally this is always to existed but not the pandemic it is today).
I was working in the United States and Europe for about 15 years, circumstances necessitated that my now teenage son participate in a some homeschooling, which is similar to the old way of doing things. He is a bright kid, but one thing that stands out as he can hold his own in a conversation with adults, with respect and deference to the authority of his elders, and yet still independently. Have you noticed the way so many teenage kids these days are unable to communicate effectively or confidently unless they have the support of others about the same age? Often they appear to bloom with verbosity in peer groups, but if we take them to a family gathering, a wedding or something where they don’t have the peer support, they can hardly string two sentences together.
The author of the above article noted: “Some 70 countries, or 87% of the world’s economy, now take part in PISA [Programme for International Student Assessment]; the World Bank requires countries seeking development capital to submit their PISA results. It follows that national education systems are steered towards narrow indicators of school performance.”
Why is it the World Bank requires this? It is because monkeys are profitable for the World Bank and those who own it (yes it is run by privately interests if you use logic to observe what it does), whereas self-sufficient entrepreneurs do not need the world or bank in general (except to hold their funds), they can hold their own. The World Bank’s best interests are served by ensuring a steady stream of monkeys come out of the monkey factories that we call schools today.
In today’s world of 30-second YouTube videos, all the world’s news in 15 minutes (including celebrity gossip but excluding tragedies in the Third World), I’m guessing that very few people have read to the end of my few short paragraphs. Those that have, and to those who care for their children and want to give them the best chance in life possible, I would recommend that you first take back the ground that has been lost with your own education. I highly recommend the following book by John Taylor Gatto, which will help you understand the problem.
Name the illness, and it loses some of its power:
“Dumbing Us Down: The Hidden Curriculum of Compulsory Education”
http://www.johntaylorgatto.com/bookstore/dumbdnblum1.htm
This marathon video is essential viewing for those who wish to understand the education dilemma:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GxCuc-2tfgk
The actual interview with this retired teacher (3 times NY teacher of the year) begins 17 minutes in.
Mike R
Do you really believe that the products of modern education do not understand logic? I’m not sure about other career choices but as a software engineer one doesn’t get very far without it. I don’t remember where I formally learnt it now – probably as part of my maths curriculum in the 80’s. I also remember the Engineers I went to university with taking philosophy as their optional humanities subject as they easily understood the concepts that many of the humanities students struggled with. Maybe the fact that Engineers were required to use it as part of a basic toolset rather than a separate subject made it easier for them to comprehend.
By the way, if you want a sample of what one needs to learn if you desire to get into university these days I suggest you try these sample questions – http://www.acer.edu.au/documents/STAT_CIB_Website.pdf
They are very similar to the stuff my 14 year old nephew is doing in (a government) high school. Admittedly he is very bright.
oh and here’s some sample questions for year 6 students:
http://www.acer.edu.au/documents/Scholarships_Example_questions.pdf
No calculators to be used. Enjoy.
G’day Shaniq’ua. I deliberately used sweeping all-inclusive assertions in my rant for emphasis (I know, I am guilty of logical fallacies in that;).
You asked “Do you really believe that the products of modern education do not understand logic?”
I would say no, I believe we are all given rudimentary critical thinking (logic) gifts from birth. Ergo, most of us understand or can apply logic because of that gift, albeit with varying capacity. What I am asserting is that the modern education system no longer FOCUSES on enhancing basic logic abilities the way it once did (except for Ivy League type schools attended by the elite)
You wrote “I also remember the Engineers I went to university with taking philosophy as their optional humanities subject as they easily understood the concepts that many of the humanities students struggled with.”
This is very telling. My guess is that the linear thinking skills of those engineers is directly related to their elevated natural logic gifts, which in turn contributed to their vocational pursuits. Although, the cross sectional studies needed to prove my guess would be massive.
Cheers,
Michael