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An American Affidavit

Wednesday, February 12, 2020

170.Cleaning The Canvas: The Underground History of American Education by John Taylor Gatto from archive.org


170.Cleaning The Canvas: The Underground History of American Education by John Taylor Gatto from archive.org


Cleaning The Canvas 

    Traditional education can be seen as sculptural in nature, individual destiny is written  somewhere within the human being, awaiting dross to be removed before a true image  shines forth. Schooling, on the other hand, seeks a way to make mind and character  blank, so others may chisel the destiny thereon.  


      Karl Popper's book The Open Society and Its Enemies reveals with great clarity how old  the idea of tabula rasa (erroneously attributed to John Locke) actually is. In writing of  Plato's great Utopia, The Republic, Popper shows Socrates telling auditors: "They will  take as their canvas a city and the characters of men, and they will, first of all, make their  canvas clean — by no means an easy matter.... They will not start work on a city nor on an  individual unless they are given a clean canvas, or have cleaned it themselves." (emphasis  added) Popper continues:  

     In the same spirit, Plato says in The Statesman of the royal rulers who rule in accordance  with the royal science of statesmanship: "Whether they happen to rule by law or without  law, over willing or unwilling subjects;... whether they purge the state for its good by  killing or banishing some of its citizens — as long as they proceed according to  science. ..this form of government must be declared the only one that is right." This is  what canvas-cleaning means. He must eradicate existing institutions and traditions. He  must purify, purge, expel, banish and kill. 

      Canvas-cleaning frees the individual of all responsibility. Morality is voided, replaced by  reinforcement schedules. In their most enlightened form, theories of a therapeutic  community are those in which only positive reinforcements are prescribed.  

     The therapeutic community is as close as your nearest public school. In the article  "Teacher as Therapist" (footnote, pages 270-271), a glimpse of Emile programmed on a  national scale is available. Its innocently garrulous author paints a landscape of therapy,  openly identifying schools as behavioral training centers whose positive and negative  reinforcement schedules are planned cooperatively in advance, and each teacher is a  therapist. Here everything is planned down to the smallest "minimal recognition,"  nothing is accidental. Planned smiles or "stern looks," spontaneity is a weed to be  exterminated — you will remember the injunction to draw smiling faces on every paper,  "even at the high school level." 

      An important support girder of therapeutic community is a conviction that social order  can be maintained by inducing students to depend emotionally on the approval of  teachers. Horace Mann was thoroughly familiar with this principle. Here are Mann's  words on the matter:  

     When a difficult question has been put to a child, the Teacher approaches with a mingled  look of concern and encouragement [even minimal recognition requires planning, here     you have a primer of instructional text]; he stands before him, the light and shade of hope  and fear alternately crossing his countenance. If the little wrestler triumphs, the Teacher  felicitates him upon his success; perhaps seizes and shakes him by the hand in token  congratulation; and when the difficulty has been formidable and the effort triumphant, I  have seen Teacher catch up the child and embrace him, as though he were not able to  contain his joy.. .and all this done so naturally and so unaffectedly as to excite no other  feeling in the residue of the children than a desire, by the same means, to win the same  caresses, (emphasis added)  

     Children were to be "loved into submission; controlled with gestures, glances, tones of  voice as if they were sensitive machinery." What this passes for today is humanistic  education, but the term has virtually the same magnitude of disconnect from the historical  humanism of the Erasmus/DeFeltre stripe (which honored the mind and truly free choice)  as modern schooling is disconnected from any common understanding of the word  education. 

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