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Imagine
my shock, picking up a book written in 1954 by Mortimer Smith entitled "The
Diminished Mind," to learn that the current problems we are facing in the
public school system are old hat.
Smith's words were, practically verbatim, the words
that I use today, 44 years later, to describe the ailing public schools. Here
I thought I was on to something new and urgent, only to discover that this issue
is older than me. Much older really. Smith begins his book by referring to the
primary problem, the progressive movement away from disciplined knowledge toward
"real life" learning, as already 30 years in the making. Coincidentally,
this time line brings us to the adoption of the "Humanist," drawn up
in 1933 by the NEA as its credo, a doctrine based on socialist ideology.
In "The Diminished Mind," one finds references
to the same problems and practices in schools today, such as group learning, watered
down curriculum, social engineering and psychological assessment. Apparently,
the trend for schools to place more emphasis on adjustment to the group rather
than a student's individual academic experience is hardly new. This movement was
started in the 1930s in response to the newly energized NEA and its conviction
to create a utopian society, one cultivated through the public schools.
The NEA's movers and shakers (Horace Mann, John
Dewey, etc.) viewed the world through socialists' eyes and truly thought they
could manufacture a perfect society using those principles.
| Thankfully,
the equalizer over the decades has been the conviction of American citizens
who loved their freedom, abhorred the idea of a socialist society and continued
to instill religious and patriotic values in their children -- offsetting
the effects of NEA-influenced teachers and propaganda inside the schools. But however similar our current problems in education appear to be to those of the '50s, there are distinct differences. Families are now fragmented and many parents lack principles or moral conviction, offering little to counter the schools' "value" system. In addition, because of the legislation passed in 1994 -- Goals 2000 and School to Work -- the NEA finally has what it never had all those years they have attempted to socialize this country through the schools, a law. |
About the Author:
Eileen
Spatz is the mother of three children whom she now home schools. Because of
extreme disappointment in her children's public school, she was motivated to
became active in researching and writing about educational issues (since 1994).
Although Spatz identifies problems such as questionable teaching philosophies
(outcome based education) and faddish pedagogy (new new math and whole language)
as serious problems in today's public schools, her emphasis these past four
years has been on exposing the disturbing federal education bills (Goals 2000
and School-to-Work) which were signed into law in March 1994.
By informing the public through her writings,
which appear in The Orange County Register, the LA Times, The
Washington Post, and Investor's Business Daily, she is hoping to
encourage other parents to take control of their childrens' education. In addition
to newspaper columns, she has appeared on cable television specials regarding
education, and is currently contributing to a book on the subject.
Eileen lives with her husband, Mark, and kids
(Chelsea, 12; Christopher, 10; and Sammi, 6) in San Clemente, CA.
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