Showing posts with label public schools. Show all posts
Showing posts with label public schools. Show all posts

Monday, May 27, 2019

Classical Education - Ancient Answers for Modern Problems


          If you do a quick Google search for the term ‘Classical Education’ you will be flooded with links to various forums, curriculum companies, and blogs giving advice on how to best practice the system. The modern classical education movement, an educational method rooted in the traditions of the medieval university system, is enjoying a resurgence of popularity today. It bills itself as an answer to the crisis in which the public education system finds itself.

I am something of a unicorn in the public education system. I am a state certified teacher who teaches classically. I don’t teach to our state test (I don’t even mention it until the day before they take it, and they still do amazing). My students read great works of literature, we have Socratic seminars, memorize and recite poetry, engage in debate and public forums, and learn about things like logical syllogisms and ancient rhetoric. What’s more, I even teach in a public classical school! And yet, in my own sphere, the majority of my colleagues, administrators, superintendents, and board members are ignorant of or hostile to the aims of classical education (for those wondering how this can be, I work in a public charter school owned by a parent company. The CEO of our company has a classical vision, but that doesn’t mean that everyone in the company shares this, and in fact, many don’t).

 In professional teaching circles there is a doubling down against methods of teaching or ideas about education that go against whatever passes for the professional consensus, and there is a reluctance to admit that education needs to change at a fundamental level. If you ask most public school professional educators today what classical education is you'll most likely get blank stares. If you do get a reaction, it is likely to be hostile, ill-informed, or both. In the minds of many state certified teachers, classical education is associated with rote-memorization (a Bad thing), teaching out of textbooks, and learning that is derived primarily from the works and ideas of white, European, Christian men (another Bad thing).   

However, many normal people (read, not professional teachers) have lost confidence in this ‘Traditional’ model of education (educational methods developed in the 1970’s).  According to a Gallup poll, in 1973 nearly 60% of the American people had a great deal of confidence in the American education system, while less than 10% had little confidence. As the years have gone on there has been a dramatic shift in people’s perception of American education. The percentage of people who have high confidence in our education system has suffered steady decline, while the number of people who have low confidence in our system has continued to rise.
(Gallup poll) (Jack Schneider/Gallup)

Because of this loss of confidence, many educational alternatives have been developed and sought. This can be seen in the rise of the charter school movement, the increase in private schools, and the boom of the home school community. In recent years the alternative education movement has tended to turn more and more to the past – seeking better teaching methods and increased educational quality in the Classical Education movement.

          The world of education is in crisis – even if it is only a crisis in confidence. This blog is my letter to the professional educational community. It’s time to start teaching students how to think logically and critically, and not how to test. It’s time to stop focusing so much on what is relevant or useful and focus on what is timeless and valuable. It’s time to stop trying to create good citizens and start working together with families and communities to create good individuals. Modern public education is philosophically opposed in its methods and curriculum to these goals, and yet many individual teachers understand that the goal of education is to help immature people become good and decent human beings. Traditional education can’t do that. It’s time to give classical a try.