213. Who
Controls American Education? : The Underground History of American Education by
John Taylor Gatto from archive.org
Who
Controls American Education?
James Koerner was a well-known national figure in the
1960s when he headed a
presidential commission looking into the causes of civil unrest after
Detroit's black riots. A former
president of the Council for Basic Education, he had more
than enough information and experience to write a
public guide for laymen in which the players, policies, and processes of the system are laid bare.
His book Who Controls
American Education? was published in 1968. The area even Koerner, with his gilt-edged resume and
contacts, hesitated to tread hard in was that region of philosophy, history, principles, and goals which
might uncover the belief system
that really drives mass schooling. While noting accurately the "missionary
zeal" of those who sell ideas
in the educational marketplace and deploring what he termed the "hideous coinages" of political
palaver like "key influentials," "change agents," and "demand articulators," and
while even noting that experts at the Educational Testing Service "tell us that schools
should seek to build a new social order and that they, the experts, know what the new order should
be," Koerner carefully avoided that sensitive zone of ultimate motives — except to caution laymen to
"regard with great skepticism the
solutions to educational problems that may be offered with great
certitude by experts."
"It is not at
all clear," continued the cautious Mr. Koerner, "that fundamental
decisions are better made by
people with postgraduate degrees than by those with undergraduate degrees, or with no degrees at
all." Toward the end of his book, Koerner defined the upper echelons of school policy as
"progressive, modern, life-adjustment" folk, but ducked away from explaining how people
with these attitudes gained the driver's seat in a democracy from a body politic which largely rejects those
perspectives.
Nor did he explain what keeps them there
in the face of withering criticism. Koerner was impressed, however, with what he called "the staying
power of the ancien regime" and
challenged his readers to resign themselves to a long wait before they
might expect the modern school
establishment "to give all students a sound basic education":
Anyone who thinks
there [will be] a new establishment in charge of the vast industry of training and licensing teachers and
administrators in this country has his head in the sand.
What we miss in Koerner's otherwise
excellent manual on school politics is any speculation about its purpose. We are left to assume that a
misguided affection for the
underclasses — an excess of democracy, perhaps — caused this mess. That
conclusion would be dead wrong.
Such a madcap course could not have been pursued so long and hard without a clear purpose giving
coherence to the melee, if only for the simple reason it costs so much. What Jaime Escalante, whose teaching
career was commemorated in the
film"Stand and Deliver" and Marva Collins (see her book, Marva
Collins Way) — and a host of
teachers like them — understand is that almost anyone can learn almost anything
if a few fundamental preconditions
are met, not expensive to arrange. Such teachers explode the myth of the bell curve — without ever intending
to be revolutionaries, they are.
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