What Really
Matters
Natural life magazine
by John Taylor
Gatto
New York State Teacher of the Year John Gatto is the author
of the best-selling “Dumbing Us Down: The Hidden Curriculum of
Compulsory Schooling”. The work-in-progress excerpted here has grown
out of speeches and presentations promoting a transformation of
education.
Going to the moon
didn't really matter, it turned out.
I say that from the
vantage point of my six decades living on Planet Earth, but also
because of something I saw not so long ago. It was at Booker T.
Washington High School where I watched an official astronaut - a
handsome, well-built man in his prime, dressed in a silver space
suit with an air of authentic command - try to get the attention of
an auditorium full of Harlem teenagers. It was the Board of
Education's perfect template for dramatic success - a distinguished
black man leading ignorant black kids to wisdom. He came with every
tricky device and visual aid NASA could muster, yet the young
audience ignored him completely. I heard some teachers say, “What do
you expect from ghetto kids?”, but I don't think that explained his
failure at all. The kids instinctively perceived this astronaut had
less control over his rocket vehicle than a bus driver has over his
bus. I think they had also wordlessly deduced that any experiments
he performed were someone else's idea. The space agency's hype was
lost on them.
This man for all
his excellence was only some other man's agent. The kids sensed that
his talk, too, had been written by someone else - that he was part
of what the Protestant theologian Reinhold Niebuhr called the
non-thought of received ideas. It was irrelevant whether this
astronaut understood the significance of his experiments or not. He
was only an agent, not a principal - in the same way many school
teachers are only agents retailing someone else's orders. This
astronaut wasn't walking his own talk but someone else's. A machine
can do that.
It seems likely
that my Harlem kids considered going to the moon a dumb game;
obviously I didn't verify their feelings scientifically but I knew a
lot of them didn't have fathers or much dignity in their lives, and
about half had never eaten off a tablecloth. What was going to the
moon supposed to mean to them? If you asked me that question I
couldn't answer it with confidence, and I had a father once upon a
time...and a tablecloth, too.
If the truth were
told, in my 30 years teaching in New York City, sometimes teaching
prosperous white kids instead of Harlem kids, sometimes a mixed bag
of middle class kids, I never hear a single student - white or black
- speak spontaneously of the U.S. space program. When the Challenger
space shuttle blew up there was a momentary flicker of curiosity,
but even that passed in an instant. Going to the moon didn't matter,
it turned out, though the government threw 100 billion dollars into
the effort.
A lot of things
don't matter that are supposed to; one of them is well-funded
government schools. Saying that may be considered irresponsible by
people who don't know the difference between schooling and
education, but over 100 academic studies have tried to show any
compelling connection between money and learning and not one has
succeeded. Right from the beginning schoolmen told us that money
would buy results and we all believed it. So, between 1960 and 1992
the U.S. tripled the number of constant dollars given to schools.
Yet after 12,000 hours of government schooling one out of five
Americans can't read the directions on a medicine bottle.
After 12,000 hours
of compulsory training at the hands of nearly 100
government-certified men and women, many high school graduates have
no skills to trade for an income or even any skills with which to
talk to each other. They can't change a flat, read a book, repair a
faucet, install a light, follow directions for the use of a word
processor, build a wall, make change reliably, be alone with
themselves or keep their marriages together. The situation is
considerably worse than journalists have discerned. I know, because
I lived in it for 30 years as a teacher.
Last year at
Southern Illinois University I gave a workshop in what the basic
skills of a good life are as I understand them. Toward the end of it
a young man rose in back and shouted at me: “I'm 25 years old, I've
lived a quarter of a century, and I don't know how to do anything
except pass tests. If the fan belt on my car broke on a lonely road
in a snowstorm I'd freeze to death. Why have you done this to me?”
He was right. I was
the one who did it just as much as any other teacher who takes up
the time young people need to find out what really matters. I did it
innocently and desperately, trying to make a living and keep my
dignity, but nevertheless I did it by being an agent of a system
whose purpose has little to do with what kids need to grow up right.
My critic had two college degrees it turned out, and his two degrees
were shrieking at me that going to school doesn't matter very much
even if it gets you a good job.
People who do very
well in schools as we've conceived them have much more than their
share of suicides, bad marriages, family problems, unstable
friendships, feelings of meaninglessness, addictions, failures,
heart by-passes that don't work and general bad health. These things
are very well documented but most of us can intuit them without any
need for verification. If school is something that hurts you, what
on earth are we allowing it for?
Does going to
school matter if it uses up all the time you need to learn to build
a house? If a 15-year-old kid was allowed to go to the Shelter
Institute in Bath, Maine, he would be taught to build a beautiful
post-and-beam Cape Cod home in three weeks, with all the math and
calculations that entails; and if he stayed another three weeks he'd
learn how to install a sewer system, water, heat and electric. If
any American dream is universal, owning a home is it - but few
government schools bother teaching you how to build one. Why is
that? Everyone thinks a home matters.
Does going to
school matter if it uses up the time you need to start a business,
to learn to grow vegetables, to explore the world or make a dress?
Or if it takes away time to love your family? What matters in a good
life?
The things that
matter in a bad life, we know, are: gaining power over others,
accumulating as much stuff as you can, getting revenge on your
enemies (who are everywhere), and drugging yourself one way or
another to forget the pain of not quite being human. School teaches
most kids how to strive for a bad life and succeeds at this so well
that most of our government machinery eventually falls into the
hands of people who themselves are living bad lives. We're all in
deep trouble because of that. It's the best reason I know to keep
the machinery of government just as weak and as primitive as
possible as soon as we figure out how.
It surprises me how
many graduates leave college assuming they know what matters because
they got straight “A”s. If we can believe advertisements, what
matters to these people most is the personal ownership of machinery:
blending machines, cooking machines, driving machines, picture
machines, sound machines, tooth-brushing machines, computing
machines, machines to kill insects, deliver intimacy, send messages
through wires or the naked air, entertainment machines, shooting
machines, and many more mechanical extensions of our physical self.
Indirect control over even more ambitious machine seems to matter a
lot, too: flying machines, bombing machines, heart and lung
machines, voting machines, and a great variety of other mechanical
creations.
All these devices
are meant to defeat what otherwise would occur naturally if they
didn't exist. They are all machines to beat human destiny and confer
on human beings magical powers and the reach and longevity of gods.
Do they deliver
what they promise? Is human life in a net sense better since their
advent? I can't answer that for you, of course, but you can look
into your heart and answer the question for yourself. Someone has
apparently convinced us that what occurs naturally cannot be the way
to a good life, hence these battalions of machinery. What percentage
of your life is spent talking to machines? Buying them, mastering
them, ministering to their needs, then betraying them with ever
newer and newer machine loves?
It takes a lot of
time, but what does it take a lot of time away from? Television has
cost the average 21-year-old about 18,000 hours of time. What would
that time have gone toward otherwise? learning to build a house?
Going to government-run school takes another 15,000 hours from the
young life, 21,000 if you count going and coming and homework. What
might this time have gone toward otherwise? From the very small
amount of time remaining, machinery other than television gobbles a
great deal. What does it give back in return? Hearts-ease? Love?
Courage? Self-reliance? Friends? Dreams?
Here we are, at the
end of the 20th century, well-machined yet lost in a tunnel of
loneliness, cut off from each other, disliking ourselves, envying
those with superior machines, looking for self-respect and
significance. We have fewer and worse human ties than seems possible
if machines justified all the time and money spent on them.
I include, of
course, the social machinery of school in this critique. From age
five to age 21 there are exactly 140,160 hours. We spend 46,720 of
them in sleep and of the remaining 93,000 odd hours, 42 percent are
spent watching TV from a chair or sitting in a school seat.
Something is wrong here. What is going on? How much do these
seemingly essential machines matter? What are they essential for?
Each one taken separately can easily be justified, but taken
altogether: what are they doing to us?
By mid-century we
had reached a point in this machine civilization where we could so
little bear intimate contact with the messy reality of living things
- as compared to the clean simplicity of machines - that we became
willing to lock up our mothers and fathers wholesale. To create a
new investment opportunity in warehousing the old. What a strange
thing to do with our unprecedented wealth, using it, that is, to
divest ourselves of our closest human ties, getting rid of our
history. In doing so a complex circle begun a century earlier when
we first locked our young people away in school warehouses is
completed.
Warehousing the
young; warehousing the aged - good business, I know, but good for
what?
Does it really
matter or not that our parents die among strangers and our children
live penned up by strangers? Does that possibly have an effect on
the quality of the lives neither old nor young who are left
theoretically free of entanglements? Entanglements are, after all,
the core of complete human lives; good lives are all about being
entangled with each other. The assertion that isolation chambers for
the young and old are an advance in human society doesn't square
with any observable reality; it, too, is part of the great
non-thought of received ideas - like pretending a positive
significance to the idiotic space program.
After you fall into
a habit of accepting what other people tell you to think you lose
the power to think for yourself. I suspect that's why so few of us
challenge the premises of old-age homes, television, day-care
centers and schools.
Talking to machines
as we have come to prefer to do does make us intimate with the way
machines think; it also conceals from us the degree to which our own
lives are mechanical and our own thoughts well-controlled like the
thoughts of machinery. Have you noticed that machines don't ever
surprise you after you know their habits? The purpose of market
research is to remove surprise from human behavior, too. When we
lose the power to surprise each other, we lose a chunk of what it
means to be human. Would that matter?
I want to argue
that talking to machines when you should be talking to people and
the natural world is what has clear-cut the Pacific forests,
poisoned the fish in Puget Sound, weakened the soil up and down
America, turned Cape Code Bay into a dead sea, and burned holes in
the stratosphere. Not a single one of those events would matter at
all to machinery, and since machinery is what we have been most
intimate with since early childhood (including social mechanisms
like government schools), they don't matter to us, either,
regardless of what we say. If they mattered we would stop it.
At best we're
ambivalent. Who in his right mind would live without an automobile,
a computer, a fax machine, a telephone, a toaster, lifelong
schooling, or a gun? Everyone who winds life around a core of
machinery like schools and institutions and global corporations, is
affected profoundly, and comes inexorably, I believe, to be a
servo-mechanism of the machinery he or she excessively associates
with.
So far I've asked
you to consider three aspects of modern American life we all have
been accustomed to think really matter: the space program, our
well-funded government schooling, and state-of-the-art technology.
On close inspection all seem to me the obsessions of madmen more
than essential parts of a good life or a good society. How did they
come to matter when many things that really matter (like getting
hugged a lot) are overlooked?
In recent years
I've often heard that what really matters most is competing
successfully in something called the global economy. Try to pass
over the fact that all economies on earth, every single one of them,
including Japan's are overwhelmingly national economies, or that the
economies that seem to make people happiest and proudest are
substantially local ones, and look at what you are being asked to
believe. In effect, it is claimed that America's total
self-sufficiency in food doesn't matter, that our embarrassing
abundance of many fuels, fibers, metals, building materials, roads,
technologies, libraries, colleges, talented labor - no longer
matters decisively because in some mysterious way we stand in grave
danger of losing these things by becoming globally non-competitive.
I will pass over
the fact that with a standing army, navy, and air force of over two
and a half million men and women, a vast bombing fleet, an enormous
arsenal of nuclear missiles and a worldwide network of spies and
saboteurs, it is really impossible to be non-competitive; and I will
pass over our vast ability to manipulate money markets and
currencies which makes being non-competitive quite unlikely for all
the foreseeable future.
But I am puzzled by
the rhetoric of global competition because we already possess
abundantly all the essentials of a good material life, in-house as
it were. What will this global economy exist for if not to produce
and distribute more material, develop more skill, more jobs and more
satisfaction - things out of which good lives are made? But these
things are already here. I'm curious about the kind of human being
who thinks this global economy matters because it's clear to me they
are caught up in a religious vision, a rather peculiar one in which
human nature is disregarded along with the human needs which really
matter - all of which needs are overwhelmingly small scale.
It's easy to see
how a global economy would matter to the spirit of mass-production
machinery or to international banking, with all the urgencies of
those twin mechanisms, but not clear what the point of it is for
flesh and blood.
What if you forgot
all about the globe and concentrated instead on finding a place
where you could feel at home for the rest of your life? What if you
shaped your own work so that it served your spirit and the spirits
of your loved ones, friends and neighbors? In 1776 a full 90 percent
of Americans not in slavery shaped their own work, they had
independent livelihoods, and in 1840, despite the rise of
industrialization the figure was still 80 percent. It was hard then
for any man to get rich on the labors of others because there wasn't
much free-floating labor to be had; people worked for themselves.
That - liberty and independence, not wealth or comfort - was the
American miracle.
You know, machines
can be stored anywhere, can function anywhere, and are indifferent
to other machines they must associate with. But men and women have
to build the meanings of their lives around a few, a very few people
to touch and love and care for. If you're always getting rid of
people, trading them off the way you've been taught to trade-off
things, you can't have much of a life. And you fail in this vital
endeavor of linking up with the right people for you it doesn't
matter at all how healthy the space program is or how many machines
you own. You'll still be lonely in the middle of crowds.
If what I've said
is even partly true, you'll have to join me in sabotaging the global
economy and sabotaging the government schools, because schools and
government and machinery-makers lie to you about what matters every
time. They just can't help themselves.
John Taylor
Gatto is a former New York State Teacher of the Year and now a
strong promoter of home-based learning. He is the author of Dumbing
Us Down.
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