28. A Change In The Governing Mind: The Underground History of American
Education by John Taylor Gatto from archive.org
CHAPTER
TWO An Angry
Look at Modern Schooling
Today 's corporate sponsors want to see their money used in ways to line
up with business objectives....
This is a young generation of corporate sponsors and they have discovered the
advantages of building long-term
relationships with educational institutions. — Suzanne Cornforth of Paschall & Associates, public
relations consultants. As quoted
in The New York Times, July 15, 1998
Sometimes the best
hiding place is right in the open. It took seven years of reading and reflection for me to finally figure out
that mass schooling of the young by force was a creation of the four great coal powers of the nineteenth
century. It was under my nose, of
course, but for years I avoided seeing what was there because no one
else seemed to notice. Forced
schooling arose from the new logic of the Industrial Age — the logic imposed on flesh and blood by fossil
fuel and high-speed machinery.
This simple reality
is hidden from view by early philosophical and theological anticipations of mass schooling in
various writings about social order and human nature. But you shouldn't be fooled any more than Charles Francis
Adams was fooled when he observed
in 1880 that what was being cooked up for kids unlucky enough to be snared
by the newly proposed
institutional school net combined characteristics of the cotton mill and the railroad with those of a state
prison.
After the Civil War,
Utopian speculative analysis regarding isolation of children in custodial compounds where they could be
subjected to deliberate molding routines, began to be discussed seriously by the Northeastern policy elites
of business, government, and
university life. These discussions were inspired by a growing
realization that the productive
potential of machinery driven by coal was limitless. Railroad development made possible by coal and startling new
inventions like the telegraph, seemed suddenly to make village life and local dreams irrelevant. A new
governing mind was emerging in
harmony with the new reality.
The principal
motivation for this revolution in family and community life might seem to be greed, but this surface appearance
conceals philosophical visions approaching religious exaltation in intensity — that effective early
indoctrination of all children would
lead to an orderly scientific society, one controlled by the best
people, now freed from the
obsolete straitjacket of democratic traditions and historic American
libertarian attitudes.
Forced schooling was the medicine to
bring the whole continental population into conformity with these plans so that it might be regarded as
a "human resource" and
managed as a "workforce." No more Ben Franklins or Tom Edisons
could be allowed; they set a bad
example. One way to manage this was to see to it that individuals were prevented from taking up their working
lives until an advanced age when the ardor of youth and its insufferable self-confidence had cooled.
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