Paul Horton teaches history at the University of Chicago lab School. He has been writing brilliant critiques of corporate reform. In this post, he reviews the history of efforts to make education rational, predictable, and measurable.
A few nuggets:
“Have you ever read Dr. Seuss’, The Butter-Battle Book? It made perfect sense to me, a Cold War military brat. The “boys in the backroom” were very smart. They were data whizzes and they invented computers that made them a lot smarter than everybody else. Both the “Yooks” and the “Zooks” believed that those “boys in the back room” could figure out solutions to every problem. But the biggest problem was that only human beings who could effectively communicate, not computers or data, could solve the world’s problems. “The boys in the backroom” were only doing what they were told: they were the smartest, but not the best communicators in town. None of those “boys” said, “making more weapons that can kill more people might not be the best way to go.” But everybody believed in them, almost religiously, to the brink of nuclear war. Slim Pickins didn’t bat an eye when he decided to ride his big A-bomb to victory.
“This might seem strange to you, but, from my very humble perspective, we might need another Dr. Seuss to write a book with a similar theme, but in a different setting. The question has become, what happens when the “boys in the backroom” take over after the “Yooks” and the “Zooks” have stopped threatening each other? What happens when one of the “boys in the backroom” becomes the richest guy in the world and decides that he wants to build “Gatopia”? What happens if he convinces many of the other richest guys that our country is doomed unless we completely tear down and rebuild the way that we teach our kids? And what happens when he and many of his very wealthy friends tell the red and blue politicians that he and his friends can make sure that they will not get campaign funding if they don’t support “Gatopia”?”
Gatopia “seeks to turn human beings into computers that are efficient and well behaved. Most importantly, computers do not ask questions or demand accountability: they do what they are told.”
Horton describes how he fell in love with learning and recognizes that Gatopia has no room for the experiences he had:
“Learning for me was about connecting with a human being. Learning was reflected in my ability to write something. I wanted to please my very demanding teachers, I wanted to conform to their expectations of excellence. I dreaded the conference to go over a paper that fell hopelessly below those standards, but respected my teachers for holding me to them.
I want my son to have teachers like I had, and I want the same for his kids. I do not want “the boys in the back room” telling me how my kid and grandkids should be educated. Sometimes the smartest people can’t think up the most important questions. Democracy requires citizens, and computers cannot produce citizens. Computers often mask deficits that we most need to develop. Data is not knowledge. We are in grave danger if we are tempted to believe that it is.”

“Democracy requires citizens.” “Data is not knowledge (or wisdom).”
There’s our summary, the framework of our critique and our mission.
Instead of “collaborating” on Corporate Common Core, teachers must be allowed to reclaim their students & classrooms in behalf of the knowledge and wisdom that constitutes a vibrant/creative citizen.
Children of every community, every color, every class – now wouldn’t that breathe an entirely new life into the term “common core”!
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What Paul Horton wants for his kids is, ironically, exactly what Emanuel and Pritzker want for their kids – that’s why they send them to teachers like Horton. “Gatopia” is for other people’s kids.
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Exactly what I was thinking as I read this!
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I think a lot of the “back room boys” (Gates, Rhee, Kopp, Duncan, Bush) are what you might call misguided angels. And there has been a seductive element to what they have presented. So I think of two songs. One, because so many in our country have given in to this seduction, I think of Lucinda’s early “Just another one night stand. Just another man to forget. Just another empty hand, with nothing left to bet.”
And of course the Cowboy Junkies paint that seduction just right, with these misguided education angels hanging over all our heads:
Angel” Ringtone to your cell
I said “Mama, he’s crazy and he scares me
But I want him by my side
Though he’s wild and he’s bad
And sometimes just plain mad
I need him to keep me satisfied”
I said “Papa, don’t cry ’cause it’s alright
And I see you in some of his ways
Though he might not give me the life that you wanted
I’ll love him the rest of my days”
Misguided angel hangin’ over me
Heart like a Gabriel, pure and white as ivory
Soul like a Lucifer, black and cold like a piece of lead
Misguided angel, love you ’til I’m dead
I said “Brother, you speak to me of passion”
And you said “Never to settle for nothing less
Well, it’s in the way he walks, it’s in the way he talks
His smile, his anger and his kisses”
I said “Sister, don’t you understand?
He’s all I ever wanted in a man
I’m tired of sittin’ around the TV every night
Hoping I’m finding a Mr. Right”
Misguided angel hangin’ over me
Heart like a Gabriel, pure and white as ivory
Soul like a Lucifer, black and cold like a piece of lead
Misguided angel, love you ’til I’m dead
He says “Baby, don’t listen to what they say
There comes a time when you have to break away”
He says “Baby there are things we all cling to all our life
It’s time to let them go and become my wife”
Misguided angel hangin’ over me
Heart like a Gabriel, pure and white as ivory
Soul like a Lucifer, black and cold like a piece of lead
Misguided angel, love you ’til I’m dead
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Are misguided angels the same as fallen angels? If so then they would be devils, eh!!
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ah, the beauty of poetry and song.
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It is scary how Dr. Seuss seemed to be able to write such timeless stories. Almost as though he could predict the future. I wonder who his teachers were. I wonder if our EduDeformers should go back and read some of his books. I wonder if Gates ever read a Dr. Suess story. I wonder if these high stakes tests are squashing the creativity of a future Dr. Suess…
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“I wonder if Gates ever read a Dr. Suess story.”
Perhaps inadvertently you have stumbled across the fundamental reason ol Billy is the way he is.
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Or maybe not so inadvertently???
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Smiley face with a wink. (Not sure how to do that on this blog!)
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I attended the Chicago City Council Hearing on the CPS Budget yesterday. The CPS Budget Director, must have blamed the budget shortfall at least ten times on the Teachers’ pension which is in her view about 11% of the budget. When asked about the specifics on the charter schools, the CPS representatives said that they would have to get back to the aldermen who asked the questions. What they did say provided one with the ability to connect some of the dots such as the use of student based budgeting which seems to have some real flaws. Overall, some of the aldermen asked some great questions and seemed to understand what is going on with the CPS and its push for charter schools . To add to this, a researcher from the CTU said that while cutting from the public schools, there seems to be in his opinion an increase of funds to the charter schools.
.
Barbara Byrd-Bennett and the Mayor were not in attendance and it appears that Ms. Byrd-Bennett has never attended any of the City Council Committee on Education meetings.
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“Hooray for Diffendoofer Day” by Dr. Seuss, Jack Prelutsky and Lane Smith covers high-stakes testing.
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Gattaca …
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZppWok6SX88
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Dr. Seuss was a sad adventure.
He took various words and letters to satisfy publishers who began programing children’s literature to phonics bringing nonsense to schools.
This was the end of authentic children’s literature.
Dr Seuss has become a cult for teachers, political leaders and publishers more than children.
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Thank God for Dr. Seuss! Young people are not pushing the electric shock button as often when the Milgram experiments are replicated.
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Hello
This is not related to the post but I did not know how to get this to Dr. Ravitch. Re: the accountability reports in TX charter schools had approximately double the “needs improvement” as public schools…why is nobody reporting on this? I emailed Matthew Haag at DMN…wonder if that will work?
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Where would we be without Dr. Seuss??? He is probably rolling over in his grave in regards to Common Core and its reduction of fiction reading and abolishment of fiction writing. The jingle is “College and Career Ready”. Well, what if you were meant to be a fiction writer like Jan Brett and Ann Rice? I’ve worrid for a while now about the next generation of writers.
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Unfortunately Gatopia results in a rather twisted cost/Benefit analysis. Let’s say you have a school that is working on a 1-4 spectrum of reading/writing. 3 is “proficient” – you can bet your boots that resources will be targeted at your 2s, and they’ll ignore their 4s altogether, and do just enough to keep their 3s in the game. 1s will be considered hopeless unless there are just so many of them that you can’t. At that point, they’ll exclude special needs 1s in favor of those with no learning/emotional/mental disabilities.
It will be scientific social darwinism at its finest. To get those scores up, target those with the most potential, and abuse those with the least.
Thank you Mr. Gates for being a truly sick individual in promoting this culture.
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