83.
William Rainey Harper: The Underground History of American Education by John
Taylor Gatto from archve.org
William
Rainey Harper
Three decades later
at the University of Chicago, William Rainey Harper, former Chautauqua wizard, began a revolution
that would change the face of American
university education. Harper imported the university system of Germany
into the United States, lock,
stock, and barrel. Undergraduate teaching was to be relegated to a form of Chautauqua show business, while research
at the
graduate level was where prestige
academic careers would locate, just as Bacon's New Atlantis had
predicted. Harper, following the
blueprint suggested by Andrew Carnegie in his powerful "Gospel of Wealth" essays,
said the United States should work toward a unified scheme of education, organized vertically from
kindergarten through university, horizontally through voluntary association of colleges, all supplemented
by university extension courses
available to everyone. Harper wrote in 1902:
The field of
education is at the present time in an extremely disorganized condition.
But the forces are already in
existence [to change that]. Order will be secured and a great new system established, which may be
designated "The American System." The important steps to be taken in working out such a
system are coordination, specialization and association.
Harper and his backers regarded education purely as a
commodity. Thorstein Veblen
describes Harper's revolution this way:
The underlying business-like presumption
accordingly appears to be that learning is a merchantable commodity, to be produced on a piece-rate plan,
rated, bought and sold by standard
units, measured, counted, and reduced to staple equivalence by impersonal, mechanical tests.
Harper believed
modern business enterprise represented the highest and best type of human productive activity. He believed
business had discovered two cosmic principles — techniques implicit in the larger concept of survival of the
fittest: consolidation and
specialization. Whatever will not consolidate and specialize must
perish, he believed. The
conversion of American universities into a system characterized by
institutional giantism and
specialization was not finished in Harper's lifetime, but went far enough that
in the judgment of the New York
Sun, "Hell is open and the lid is off!"
Harper's other main contribution to the
corporatization of U.S. scholarly life was just as profound. He destroyed the lonely vocation of great teacher
by trivializing its importance.
Research alone, objectively weighed and measured, subject to the
surveillance of one's colleagues
would, after Harper, be the sine qua non of university teaching:
Promotion of younger
men in the departments will depend more largely upon the results of their work as investigators than
upon the efficiency of their teaching.... In other words, it is proposed to
make the work of investigation primary, the work of giving instruction secondary.
Harper was the
middleman who introduced the organization and ethics of business into the world
of pedagogy. Harper-inspired university experience is now virtually the only ritual
of passage into prosperous adulthood in the United States, just as the
Carnegie Foundation and
Rockefeller's General Education Board willed it to be. Few young men or women
are strong enough to survive this passage with their humanity wholly
intact.
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