In this guest post on EduShyster’s blog, Susan Altman asks whether education reform is based on antiquated, obsolete ideas about business.

Altman is pursuing a master’s degree in International and Comparative Education and Business Management at Oxford University.

Yes, indeed, she says, the reformers look on schooling as a product, not a service. As a product, they seek to standardize it.

She writes:

“Think manufacturing, think Henry Ford and Model Ts on a conveyor belt. Think Taylorism. Now substitute fourth graders and math class for steering wheels and fenders and you have a disturbingly accurate picture of the business principles that inform much of contemporary education reform. According to this factory vision, students are all identical widgets while teachers are nothing more than mindless factory workers.”

This is not a 21st century paradigm, she says. The Ed reformers are stuck in an early 20th century way of thinking.