I recently attended a lecture by a prominent Texas historian, James L. Haley. The focus of his talk was on the lessons of history in the context of the American revolution against England and Texas' revolution against Mexico. The theme was that the U.S. founders and Sam Houston in Texas used their knowledge of history to create a form of government that could avoid the errors of the past if the voters were educated. The founders were themselves generally quite literate, reading history in the original Greek and Latin and absorbing the ideas of leading formation of a new government Renaissance philosophers.
Haley went on to point out that today our government is imperiled because so many Americans are illiterate and thus incapable of correct knowledge about political issues and electing wise leaders. He presented a litany of statistics showing a shocking percentage of Americans who cannot read at all, cannot read at the fourth-grade level, and cannot read above 8th grade level. The clear implication was that to save our country, we need a more educated pool of voters.
While I accept that literacy is
important, I think it is a myth to attribute our hyper politically correct "woke"
cultural to illiteracy. In the Q&A that followed, I raised the following
point: "I am not persuaded that education is the solution. The origin of
much of our cancel culture originates in the universities." Liberal arts
professors seem to be obsessed with race, gender, revisionist history, and
Marxist ideology. James heartily agreed with my point, but the paradox was not
explored, because time was running out.
How can education be a solution to illiteracy
when the source of our current historical and political dystopia largely originates
with ostensibly the most educated professors in the universities and more and
more youngsters go to college? Could it be there is something wrong with how professors
were educated and how they in turn educate citizens these days?
The answer is a resounding YES.
Civics is no longer taught in K-12. History, when taught at all, is commonly taught
from a revisionist perspective. As a professor with over 58 years of observing
university teaching practices and consulting with the middle school teaching
community, I disparingly conclude that we no longer teach youngsters HOW to
think but focus on WHAT to think. Educators have confused education with
indoctrination. We tell students what they must learn and then test them for
compliance. Too many teachers and professors were trained, not educated in the
classical education sense. The focus of teaching at all levels is on WHAT to
think.
The problem is illustrated by how
few people know about logic and logical fallacies, which I tried to address in a recent
blog post. The problem extends to a general inability to think critically
and creatively about what one reads and hears. Where are the Socratic teachers
of today who are showing students how to engage reading content, ask
penetrating questions, develop reasoned possible answers, distinguish evidence
from opinion, test knowledge for accuracy, and how to learn from history
instead of erasing it? When it comes to reading literacy, many youngsters have
such limited vocabulary and reading skills that they cannot handle the extra cognitive
load of critical thinking about what they read.
In his essay on college graduate
illiteracy, Dale Ahlquist concludes, " The rise of incomplete thinking has
been marked over the last several decades by a near-total loss of true
humanities studies at many colleges and universities. It’s a terrible
scandal that, without authentic humanities education, universities around the
world are manufacturing cohort after cohort of uneducated people " He explains the cause of the
scandal this way: " Everyone agrees, or claims to agree,
that we want citizens who can think for themselves. But our education system,
our commercial culture, and the latent message of our social media are
precisely the opposite. We want everyone to get in line."
Literacy alone is not the answer. We already have too many under educated college graduates, as has been amply documented in numerous surveys. Some shocking examples are found in Walter Williams's essay,
Though I am known as a "Memory
Medic," many of my followers misunderstand my emphasis on improving memory
ability. My whole point is that the quality of thinking depends on what you
remember. Remembered knowledge is what one uses to think with. The less you
recall from past learning, the less knowledge you have to inform rigorous
thought.
Improving the way reading skills
are taught would surely help. But recall that the pupils of Socrates were not
necessarily all that literate in reading Greek. The main value of Socrates'
pedagogy was that he showed his pupils the value of avoiding knee-jerk
thinking, of questioning and thinking about reasonable answers, that his was a
mind-set habit they could learn, and that such practices help to minimize error
and foolishness.
Sources:
Ahlquist, Dale (n.d.) The Scandal of Uneducated College Graduates. Principles from Christendom College. https://www.getprinciples.com/the-scandal-of-uneducated-college-graduates/
Williams, Walter (2016). It's Little Mystery Why So Many
College Students Are Illiterate. March 29. CNS News. https://www.cnsnews.com/commentary/walter-e-williams/campus-lunacy
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