The author of the article “Is Literature Necessary?” writes a comment:
| Thanks for mentioning my essay. I agree that the reform movement is getting more Orwellian by the day. We are told test scores are way up when they are stagnant. We are told that poverty doesn’t matter. We are told that “enthusiasm” trumps experience.People who have spent little or no time in the classroom, like Gates, Rhee, and Coleman, are now the architects of public education going forward. Who needs algebra, literature, music, or any of the arts? In the face of an obesity epidemic among our children, the mayor mandates smaller soda cups while eliminating or reducing physical education. It all feels surreal, but it is happening all the time and unless the trend changes, I fear we may lose public education altogether. |
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Isaac Asimov wrote a short story in 1951 titled “The Fun They Had.” It was a story for children and a vision of a future cyber education industry.
Click to access thefuntheyhad.pdf
If public education continues to be sold to the highest bidder I fear that we’ll lose the magic of learning. In the early grades (where my experience is), the human interaction between teacher and student is every bit as important as the content.
Test prep factories, cyber schools, inexperienced-high-turnover teachers…the damage to public education is devastating. The damage to learning is also devastating.
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