49. The
Meatgrinder Classroom: The Underground HIstory of American Education by John
Taylor Gatto from archive.org
The
Meatgrinder Classroom
The first schoolman to seriously
challenge what is known today as phonics was Friedrich Gedike, a disciple of Rousseau,
director of a well-known gymnasium in
Prussia. In 1791 he published the world's first look/say
primer, A Children 's Reader Without the ABC 's and Spelling. The idea was to eliminate drill. Kids would
learn through pictures following
suggestions the legendary mystic and scholar Comenius set down in his
famous Orbis Pictus of 1657. After a brief
splash and three editions, the fashion vanished for an excellent reason:
As good as it sounds in theory, it
doesn't work well at all in practice (although here and there exceptions are encountered and
infuriatingly enough it can seem to work in the early years of first and second grade). Soon after that the
rapidly developing reading power in
phonetically trained children makes them capable of recognizing in print
their entire speaking and
listening vocabulary, while look/say trained readers can read without
error only the words they have
memorized as whole shapes, a relative handful.
This is devilishly complex terrain.
Gedike's theory held that when enough words are ingested and recognized, the student can figure out for
himself 'the seventy key
phonograms of the English language. Indeed this is the only credible
explanation which could account
for the well-known phenomenon of children who teach themselves to read handily without the use of any system
at all. I have no doubt children occasionally learn to read this way. Yet if true, how do we account for the
grotesque record of whole-word
instruction for over a century and a half in every conceivable school
setting?
Money, time,
attention, and caring adults in profusion, all have been available to make this alternative method work to teach
reading proficiency, yet its record in competition with the old-fashioned alphabet system is horrifying. What
might account for this?
I have a hunch based
on a decade of ruminating. Since no one has yet bothered to assemble a large group of self-taught
good readers to ask them how it happened, let my hunch serve as a working hypothesis for you to chew upon at
your leisure. Consider first the
matter of time. The average five-year-old can master all of the seventy
phonograms in six weeks. At that
point he can readjust about anything fluently. Can he understand everything? No, of course not. But
also, no synthetic barrier to understanding is being interposed by weird-looking words to be memorized whole,
either. Paulo Freire taught ignorant
campesinos with no tradition of literacy at all to read in thirty hours. They
were adults, with different
motivations than children, but when he showed them a sentence and they realized it said "The land
belongs to the tiller," they were hooked. That's Jesuit savvy for you.
Back to this matter
of time. By the end of the fourth grade, phonics-trained students are at ease with an estimated 24,000 words.
Whole-word trained students have memorized about 1 ,600 words and can successfully guess at some
thousands more, but also
unsuccessfully guess at thousands, too. One reigning whole-word expert
has called reading "a
psycholinguistic guessing game" in which the reader is not extracting
the writer's meaning but
constructing a meaning of his own.
While there is an
attractive side to this that is ignored by critics of whole language (and
I number myself among these), the
value doesn't begin to atone for the theft of priceless reading time and guided practice. As
long as whole-language kids are retained in a hothouse environment, shielded from linguistic competition,
things seem idyllic, but once
mixed together with phonetically trained kids of similar age and asked
to avail themselves of the
intellectual treasure locked up in words, the result is not so pretty. Either the deficient kid must retreat
from the field with a whopping sense of inferiority, or, worse, he must advance aggressively into the fray,
claiming books are overrated, that
thinking and judgment are merely matters of opinion. The awful truth is
that circumstances hardly give us
the luxury of testing Gedike's hypothesis about kids being able to deduce the rules of language
from a handful of words. Humiliation makes mincemeat of most of them long before the trial is fairly
joined.
So, the second hunch
I have is that where whole-word might work when it works at all is in a comfortable, protected environment
without people around to laugh derisively at the many wretched mistakes you must make on the way to becoming
a Columbus of language. But in
case you hadn't noticed, schools aren 't safe places for the young to guess at the meanings of things. Only
an imbecile would pretend that school isn't a pressure-cooker of psychodrama. Wherever children are gathered
into groups by compulsion, a
pecking order soon emerges in which malice, mockery, intimidation of the weak, envy, and a whole range of other
nasty characteristics hold sway, like that famous millpond of Huxley's, whose quiet surface mirroring fall foliage
conceals a murderous subterranean
world whose law is eat or be eaten.
That's melodramatic,
I suppose, yet thirty classroom years and a decade more as a visitor in hundreds of other schools have shown
me what a meatgrinder the peaceful classroom really is. Bill is wondering whether he will be beaten again
on the way to the lunchroom; Molly
is paralyzed with fear that the popular Jean will make loud fun of her
prominent teeth; Ronald is digging
the point of a sharpened pencil into the neck of Herbert who sits in front of him, all the while
whispering he will get Herb good if he gets Ron in trouble with the teacher; Alan is snapping a
rubber band at Flo; Ralph is about to call Leonard "trailer park trash" for the three-hundredth time
that day, not completely clear he knows
what it means, yet enjoying the anguish it brings to Leonard's face;
Greta, the most beautiful girl in
the room, is practicing ogling shyer boys, then cutting them dead when she evokes any hopeful smiles in
response; Willie is slowly shaken down for a dollar by Phil; and Mary's single mom has just
received an eviction notice.
Welcome to another
day in an orderly, scientific classroom. Teacher may have a permanent simper pasted on her face,
but it's deadly serious, the world she presides over, a bad place to play psycholinguistic guessing games which
involve sticking one's neck out in
front of classmates as the rules of language are empirically derived. A method
that finds mistakes to be
"charming stabs in the right direction" may be onto something person-to-person or in the environment
of a loving home, but it's dynamically unsuited to the forge of forced schooling.
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