90. In Opposition to Centralization (1839).: The Underground History of
American Education by John Taylor Gatto from archive.org
90. The
Prussian Reform Movement
The
devastating defeat by Napoleon at Jena triggered the so-called Prussian
Reform Movement, a transformation
which replaced cabinet rule (by appointees of the national leader) with rule by permanent civil
servants and permanent government bureaus. Ask yourself which form of governance
responds better to
public opinion and you will realize what a radical chapter in European
affairs was opened. The familiar three-tier system of education emerged in the Napoleonic era, one private tier,
two government ones. At the top,
one-half of 1 percent of the students attended A kadamiensschulen,' where, as
future policy makers, they learned
to think strategically, contextually, in wholes; they learned complex processes, and useful
knowledge, studied history, wrote copiously, argued often, read deeply, and mastered tasks of
command.
The next level,
Realsschulen, was intended mostly as a manufactory for the professional proletariat of engineers, architects,
doctors, lawyers, career civil servants, and such other assistants as policy thinkers at times
would require. From 5 to 7.5 percent of all students attended these "real schools," learning in a
superficial fashion how to think in context, but mostly learning how to manage materials, men, and situations
— to be problem solvers. This
group would also staff the various policing functions of the state, bringing
order to the domain. Finally, at
the bottom of the pile, a group between 92 and 94 percent of the population attended "people's
schools" where they learned obedience, cooperation and correct attitudes, along with rudiments
of literacy and official state myths of history.
This universal system of compulsion
schooling was up and running by 1819, and soon became the eighth wonder of the world, promising for a brief
time — in spite of its
exclusionary layered structure — liberal education for all. But this
early dream was soon abandoned.
This particular Utopia had a different target than human equality; it
aimed instead for frictionless efficiency.
From its inception Volksschulen, the people's place, heavily discounted reading; reading produced
dissatisfaction, it was thought. The Bell- school remedy was called for: a standard of virtual
illiteracy formally taught under state
church auspices. Reading offered too many windows onto better lives, too
much familiarity with better ways
of thinking. It was a gift unwise to share with those permanently consigned to low station.
Heinrich Pestalozzi,
an odd 2 Swiss-German school reformer, was producing at this time a nonliterary, experience-based pedagogy,
strong in music and industrial arts, which was attracting much favorable attention in Prussia. Here seemed
a way to keep the poor happy
without arousing in them hopes of dramatically changing the social
order. Pestalozzi claimed ability
to mold the poor "to accept all the efforts peculiar to their class."
He offered them love in place of
ambition. By employing psychological means in the training of the young, class warfare might be avoided.
A curiously prophetic note for the
future development of scientific school teaching was that Pestalozzi himself could barely read. Not that he was a
dummy; those talents simply
weren't important in his work. He reckoned his own semiliteracy an
advantage in dealing with children
destined not to find employment requiring much verbal fluency. Seventeen agents of the Prussian government acted
as Pestalozzi's assistants in Switzerland, bringing insights about the Swiss style of schooling home to
northern Germany.
While Pestalozzi's raggedy schools
lurched clumsily from year to year, a nobleman, von Fellenberg, refined and systematized the Swiss reformer's
disorderly notes, hammering the
funky ensemble into clarified plans for a worldwide system of industrial
education for the masses. As early
as 1808, this nonacademic formulation was introduced into the United States under Joseph Neef,
formerly a teacher at Pestalozzi's school. Neef, with important Quaker patronage, became the principal
schoolmaster for Robert Owen's
pioneering work-utopia at New Harmony, Indiana. Neef's efforts there
provided high- powered
conversational fodder to the fashionable Unitarian drawing rooms of Boston
in the decades before compulsory
legislation was passed. And when it did pass, all credit for the political victory belonged to those
Unitarians.
Neef's influence resonated across the
United States after the collapse of New Harmony, through lectures given by Robert Owen's son (later a
congressman, then referee of J.P.
Morgan's legal contretemps with the U.S. Army 3 ), and through speeches
and intrigues by that magnificent
nineteenth-century female dynamo Scottish emigre Fanny Wright, who demanded the end of family life and its
replacement by communitarian schooling. The tapestry of school origins is one of paths crossing and
recrossing, and more apparent
coincidences than seem likely.
Together, Owen and
Wright created the successful Workingman's Party of Philadelphia, which seized political control of that
city in 1829. The party incorporated strong compulsion schooling proposals as part of its political
platform. Its idea to place working-
class children under the philosophical discipline of highly skilled
craftsmen — men comparable
socially to the yeomanry of pre-enclosure England — would have attracted favorable commentary in Philadelphia
where banker Nicholas Biddle was locked in struggle for control of the nation's currency with working-
class hero Andrew Jackson. Biddle's
defeat by Jackson quickly moved abstract discussions of a possible social technology to control working class
children from the airy realms of social hypothesis to policy discussions about immediate reality. In that instant
of maximum tension between an
embryonic financial capitalism and a populist republic struggling to emerge,
the Prussian system of pedagogy
came to seem perfectly sensible to men of means and ambition.
8.
I've exaggerated the neatness of this tripartite division in order to make
clear its functional logic. The system as it actually grew in those days without an electronic technology of
centralization was more whimsical than I've indicated, dependent partially on
local tradition and resistance,
partially on the ebb and flow of fortunes among different participants in
the transformation. In some places, the "academy" portion didn't
occur in a separate institution,
but as a division inside the Realsschulen, something like today's "gifted
and talented honors" programs as compared to the common garden variety "gifted and talented"
pony shows.
9.
Pestalozzi's strangeness comes through in almost all the standard biographical
sketches of him, despite universal efforts to emphasize his saintliness. In a recent study, Anthony
Sutton claims Pestalozzi was also director of a secret lodge of
"illuminated" Freemasonry — with the code name "Alfred." If true, the Swiss
"educator" was even stranger than I sensed initially.
10.
During the Civil War, Morgan sold back to the army its own defective rifles
(which had been auctioned as scrap) at a 1,300 percent profit. After a number of soldiers were killed
and maimed, young Morgan found himself temporarily in hot water. Thanks to Owen
his penalty was the return of
about half his profit!
Travelers' Reports
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