Fareed Zakaria warns that fears about STEM (science, technology, engineering, and mathematics) are greatly overblown.
Zakaria comes close to acknowledging that the “crisis” rhetoric of so-called reformers is a myth,or as Berliner and Biddle called it years ago, “a manufactured crisis.”
The demand fo expand STEM is often accompanied by disdain for liberal education, writes Zakaria:
“If Americans are united in any conviction these days, it is that we urgently need to shift the country’s education toward the teaching of specific, technical skills. Every month, it seems, we hear about our children’s bad test scores in math and science — and about new initiatives from companies, universities or foundations to expand STEM courses (science, technology, engineering and math) and deemphasize the humanities. From President Obama on down, public officials have cautioned against pursuing degrees like art history, which are seen as expensive luxuries in today’s world. Republicans want to go several steps further and defund these kinds of majors. “Is it a vital interest of the state to have more anthropologists?” asked Florida’s Gov. Rick Scott. “I don’t think so.” America’s last bipartisan cause is this: A liberal education is irrelevant, and technical training is the new path forward. It is the only way, we are told, to ensure that Americans survive in an age defined by technology and shaped by global competition. The stakes could not be higher.”
But, he writes, to de-emphasize the humanities would be a huge mistake:
“This dismissal of broad-based learning, however, comes from a fundamental misreading of the facts — and puts America on a dangerously narrow path for the future. The United States has led the world in economic dynamism, innovation and entrepreneurship thanks to exactly the kind of teaching we are now told to defenestrate. A broad general education helps foster critical thinking and creativity. Exposure to a variety of fields produces synergy and cross fertilization. Yes, science and technology are crucial components of this education, but so are English and philosophy. When unveiling a new edition of the iPad, Steve Jobs explained that “it’s in Apple’s DNA that technology alone is not enough — that it’s technology married with liberal arts, married with the humanities, that yields us the result that makes our hearts sing.”
Zakaria then makes a point I have made again and again to those who lament international test scores:
“In truth, though, the United States has never done well on international tests, and they are not good predictors of our national success. Since 1964, when the first such exam was administered to 13-year-olds in 12 countries, America has lagged behind its peers, rarely rising above the middle of the pack and doing particularly poorly in science and math. And yet over these past five decades, that same laggard country has dominated the world of science, technology, research and innovation.”
Sweden and Israel have poor scores on the same tests, yet are high on investment, entrepreneurship, and innovation. There are characteristics that are more important than test scores:
“They are flexible. Their work cultures are non-hierarchical and merit-based. All operate like young countries, with energy and dynamism. All three are open societies, happy to let in the world’s ideas, goods and services. And people in all three nations are confident — a characteristic that can be measured.”
The defining characteristic if a successful society, he concludes, is its ability to hone creativity and critical thinking skills. And for that, both the sciences and liberal arts are necessary.

STEM degrees are not what is needed in this country. Jobs are what is needed.
When there is a demand for workers, companies who need STEM workers will hire. The ones with vision and/or resources will hire those trained in the liberal arts and either train them in the STEM specialty they need or luck out and find those that also are into coding, etc.
The ones who only focus on the short term will continue to hire functionaries with no ability to contribute to long-term growth
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As my handle shows I’m a teacher of technology. However I don’t limit my classes to just technology. I believe very strongly that my students will do best in their post HS lives if they have a variety of experiences with other areas such as art, drama, and all the other content areas. I even give them a list of classes that they should take while in HS that will compliment their love for the tech area I teach that includes many none tech classes such as American Lit.
“Republicans want to go several steps further and defund these kinds of majors. “Is it a vital interest of the state to have more anthropologists?” asked Florida’s Gov. Rick Scott. “I don’t think so.” ”
Seems strange that the Republicans would want to say this type of thing. They talk a lot about the need to keep government out of people’s lives but here is a Republican governor that is basically talking a line that sounds straight out of the old Russian Communist era where the “state” decides what type of jobs people should have. It is not the state’s place to decide what jobs or careers that we need or want. It is up to each individual person to decide what they want to seek as a career. Education, especially HS education, should be about giving students the opportunities to explore what type of career each student wants to go in to. I believe that Scott’s statement is very indicative of the true nature of this “reform” and that is to control the country’s citizens.
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Many years ago at a conference for elected officials a woman spoke about the necessity of art, drama and music in schools. If these are not available, we only use one side of our brains. I believe this is the plan.
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Now that Fareed has said so, we can all breath a sigh of relief! What other gems of wisdom await us? I can hardly contain my excitement.
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What, you sip not the drink proffered by the MSM?
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It is not just Mr. Zakaria. I have seen many voices from many segments of the culture, some that get their views aired in a very public way, like Mr. Zakaria, and others who do not have a voice outside of their personal circle. This is also not a new debate it is essentially the same debate T. H. Huxley and John Henry Cardinal Newman had back in the Victorian Age. Huxley wrote many essays in many venues about specializing and abandoning the traditional Liberal Arts education. Newman’s response was “The Idea of the University.” Just last year Stephen Pinker and Leon Wieseltier had a similar debate. I know not everyone believes that this is an important or even a meaningful debate, but as an English teacher the Newman/Wieseltier viewpoint informs a great deal of what I do. Personally, I think Mr. Zakaria has an audience and he can use that audience to make an important point and get out an important message. Will the world change tomorrow because Zakaria has spoken, probably not, but he might reach a few people and push the ball a bit further down the road. I also know science and math teachers who think the STEM people are right and that the Humanities are a bit of a waste of time. A science teacher once asked why someone as intelligent as me was teaching English and not Science. I didn’t know whether to be flattered or offended.
Cordially,
J. D. Wilson, Jr.
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The irony is that most successful adults would struggle to pass those STEM subject exams that are supposed to define what every student must know to go on to higher education. I suspect 90% of the members of Congress would score very poorly on the 9th grade common core Algebra Regents.
And the irony is that private school students are never tested in those STEM subjects beyond a basic SAT exam they take as many times as their parents can afford to pay the fee. If they attend a very expensive private university that lowers standards for students whose parents can pay full tuition, they don’t even need to take more than a course or two of “Rocks for Jocks” to graduate from college.
As long as private schools get to opt out their students from taking the same tests as public students take, it’s all nonsense. When they do take the same exams, many students — even at the most selective private schools that counsel out struggling students — don’t score much above the average.
The point that the US has NEVER scored high on these exams, and that Israel and Finland students don’t score high on these exams, cannot be repeated enough times. The only reason this is a crisis is due to the completely unethical people who want political power or riches through getting the taxpayers to fund their non-public schools that most assuredly do NOT educate any student who they want to get rid of.
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Reblogged this on History Chick in AZ and commented:
I know I have already discussed Fareed Zakaria’s book promoting the humanities, but the topic is so important it’s worth repeating. Not to mention the fact that Diane Ravitch did a great job highlighting the most important points from his book.
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s t e A m = is an OK education but what about our kinesthetic learners? Even after adding the arts we have forgotten about our more active/phycal students. Everyone has something to contribute. Until we learn the lesson of ‘a place of everything and everything in it’s place’ we will always be leaving someone behind.
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STEAM also omits the social sciences, which are essential in a democracy.
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Social sciences is an oxymoron.
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STEM is not “technical education”! Everyone should stop conflating the two.
There’s no reason you can not study STEM subjects and the liberal arts at the same time – everyone should stop suggesting that is the case. The humanities indeed are under fire from Philistines in government; but don’t lay that at the feet of STEM programs.
There’s absolutely nothing wrong with promoting majors in STEM to our students. But we need more high quality, advanced, STEM majors, not just more. “More” will not help anyone.
International bachelor’s graduates have MUCH more training in STEM than in American degree programs; their degree programs are oriented around their major. American degree programs restrict the number of required credits in a major.
No, there is no STEM shortage and we do mediocre students a disservice by suggesting they can get mediocre grades in school and waltz into a good paying job in engineering or science. STEM expertise is easily imported, and international students have been working at it harder, and for longer, than American students, and they represent the upper few percent of their country’s talent pool. If anything, competition for post-graduate programs and jobs has gotten more intense over the last ten years.
Yes – in the American system students have much more freedom to follow their passions and to be creative, and that is certainly a strength in how we do things. But just as everyone is not going to grow up to be LeBron James, most of us are not going to become Steve Jobs or Bill Gates or Elon Musk. Work hard, and do well in your studies, still goes a long way as advice.
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As a note of interest, Scott’s daughter was an anthropology major, and I guess she will never live it down. This is more smug, narrow minded thinking from one of our worst leaders. I minored in anthropology, and I still consider these courses the best of my undergraduate work and foundation on which I based my teaching career. As an ESL teacher I worked with diverse groups of students from all over the globe. The study of anthropology allowed me to view my students with an open-minded, less judgmental lens enabling me to be more open minded and accepting than I would have been otherwise. In my opinion, the world would be a better place if more people studied anthropology.
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“The demand to expand STEM is often accompanied by disdain for liberal education, writes Zakaria”
This dovetails nicely with the disdain that federal legislators have for science itself, or at least the type of research funded by the government.
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Thank you Dr. Ravitch to post this thread.
I would love to repeat Dr. Zakaria’s words of wisdom, as follows:
[start quote]
The defining characteristic if a successful society, he concludes, is its ABILITY TO HONE CREATIVITY and CRITICAL THINKING SKILLS. And for that, both the sciences and liberal arts are necessary.
[end quote]
I also love to repeat Dr. cary444’s words of wisdom, as follows:
[start quote]
… Everyone has something to contribute. Until we learn the lesson of ‘a place of everything and everything in it’s place’ we will always be leaving someone behind.
[end quote]
In short, people are only HAPPILY doing their best in whatever they are interested in whether it is GOOD or BAD in our seemingly dichotomous, but always dualistic life on earth. Back2basic
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I agree with Zakaria’s thesis, though I think he is wrong to paint memorization as the antithesis of the humanities. Part of the humanities is learning key knowledge by heart –e.g. how Congress works. Our national allergy to memorization and facts has led to a situation in which many adults I meet do not clearly understand the difference between state and federal government, among other basic facts about our democracy. He also trots out a lot of old, unsubstantiated cliches about education like Asian-educated adults are inept at critical and creative thinking. His own career contradicts this.
The humanities are supposed to teach about humans. Science now presumes to teach all the important facts about humans, but it fails. History and literature and philosophy have invaluable contributions, though many self-aggrandizing geeks like Nate Silver cannot grasp this. Sadly it seems to me that most of our college humanities departments are doing a poor job of teaching humanities in a vital, captivating way. It seems that the only thing liberal arts grads learn these days is the arcana of gender theory. Yikes –what a sad reduction of humanity’s grand intellectual inheritance!
Finally, am I the only one who felt a little queasy when he praised his boss Jeff Bezos? Can you imagine him writing a piece that slammed Bezos?
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Yep, Zakaria is absolutely right. The myth of STEM deficiency is debunked already. Lots and lots of international students come to the US for higher education every year, but many of those won’t receive STEM work visa just because they have a degree in that area. Master recipients in STEM degrees far exceed the H1b cap.
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I would like to share with readers a beautifully written PART of an article, ” AT SEA WITH JOSEPH CONRAD” from Dr. Maya Jasanoff. Here is the link for a full article:
(Maya Jasanoff is a professor of history at Harvard who is writing a book about the life and times of Joseph Conrad.)
[start]
By the early 1900s, steamships outnumbered sail on the high seas, and the “age of sail” passed into memory like a beloved grandmother. Conrad published an elegy of sorts with a book of essays called “The Mirror of the Sea” (1906). The sailing ship floats over its pages as an ethereal ghost of “cobwebs and gossamer,” drawing “its strength from the very soul of the world.”
But Conrad wasn’t being emptily nostalgic. He recognized that technological progress, for all its much-heralded benefits, comes with social and ethical costs. To operate a sailing ship was to master a “craft.” You had to
– observe and interpret nature,
– adapt and react to fast-changing conditions,
– obey without question,
– decide without doubt,
– toil without pause.
– The craft connotes more than a clutch of skills; it is a code for how to live.
– It turns a sailing ship into a “fellowship,” a community forged by shared values.
“The taking of a modern steamship about the world,” by contrast, “has not the same quality of intimacy with nature,” Conrad insisted. “It has no great moments of self-confidence, or moments not less great of doubt and heart-searching.” It lacks “THE ARTISTIC QUALITY of a single-handed STRUGGLE WITH SOMETHING much greater than yourself.”
[end quote]
In short, a bad, abusive, and dictatorial authority or leadership MISUSES the meaningfully persevering, wise, compassionate, and caring characters for the well being of his/her subordinates in order to turn around to maliciously use words out of context, so that this dictatorial leadership can GAIN monetary rewards for his/her own GREED, LUST and EGO. Back2basic
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Conrad, like other great writers, thinks in a way that’s so different than scientists. He is not some blinkered specialist academic –he has a holistic mind –he regards everything, not just a specialty. Here he regards sailing, the impact of technological change, nature and the human soul. We need to show kids that this kind of unbounded, holistic, healthy thinking can be done. Our souls need this kind of thing. Science, business and the other practical majors don’t cut it; they leave our souls hungry.
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David Worlick in his blog 2¢ Worth (a wonderful blog I think but, he is not as active as he once was) discussed the problems he had with a uniquely STEM curriculum. I liked what he had to say and wrote this in response.
I think schools are becoming dominated by STEM, and I find this especially true of those trying to introduce more technology into the classroom. Again, I believe it is important to make use of what the technology makes available and that it has the potential to enrich all classrooms in addition to developing skills in students that they will need if their futures are to be happy and productive. I suggest to my students that they supplement STEM with PALLMSS (pronounced “palms”). This is an acronym for Philosophy, Art, Language, Literature, Music, and Social Studies, the traditional Liberal Arts curriculum. I have written on my blackboard “STEM makes us better machines, PALLMSS makes us better human beings. One student asked does that mean STEM enables us to make better machines or that STEM makes us into machines. I said I left the sentence deliberately ambiguous. The premise of STEM is that Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math are more necessary today than ever if students are to succeed in the world of work that is evolving. Again this is true, but these disciplines all take us out of ourselves (put our focus on the outside world and not so much on the world inside of us), and the goal of teaching them is to make us better employees, not necessarily better people.
There was a review of a new book recently in the Washington Post. The book is Beyond the University; Why Liberal Education Matters. In the review the reviewer, Christopher B. Nelson writes, “The book’s supporting framework, which Roth (the author of the book) borrows from the education scholar Bruce Kimball, is the idea that two distinct traditions of liberal education have “uneasily co-existed” in America. The first is a philosophical tradition emphasizing preparation for inquiry; its aim is freeing the mind to investigate the truth about things physical, intellectual and spiritual. The second is a rhetorical tradition emphasizing initiation into a common culture through the study of canonical works; its aim is learning to participate in the culture, to appreciate its monuments and to create new monuments inspired by the old. Roth characterizes the philosophical thread as “skeptical” and the rhetorical thread as “reverential.” Nelson finishes the review with “Beyond the University is a lucid, helpful and accessible account of the current challenges to higher education. My only slight reservation comes from my conviction that liberal education at its best cannot be entirely circumscribed by the philosophical and rhetorical traditions. It rises above them, transcends their oppositions and removes the tension between them. Education serves a unitary soul motivated by love of learning and aware that it lacks something it needs to reach its highest desires. In the end, liberal education must take its bearings from the most fundamental question of all: What does it mean to be human?”
This is what troubles me most about the test culture in which we live and the direction modern education is taking us, making us ready for the world of work while ignoring what it means to be fully human and doing little to help students discover themselves as individual human beings. As people we are more than the skills, the disciplines, the professions we have mastered and it is that something more that the traditional Liberal Arts education helps us realize. Our technology enables us to do amazing things, but it also creates new challenges. The fact that problems come with the technology is not an argument for abandoning the technology, but it does suggest that we ought to give some thought to where this technology will take us and consider some of the long term implications so that we will have given some thought to and anticipated some of the problems before they arise. Our classrooms should not just make better and more efficient and effective use of technology, they should also help us understand ourselves as individuals and our relationship to the world around us and the people that occupy that world.
Cordially,
J. D. Wilson, Jr.
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Bien dicho.
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I have two undergraduate degrees. The first is is BA in Humanities. The second a BS in education. I then earned a master’s degree which married the two degrees together. My first degree required the study of a foreign language. I later had the opportunity of living in a country in which this language is spoken. Because of this, I became bilingual. I cannot even begin to explain how this ability has enriched my life. How do those who espouse only STEM, expect to understand differing countries and cultures without an understanding of language? Language is the basis of communication. Even technology cannot function without language. I look at math as a separate language as well. It has its own grammar and vocabulary. I didn’t understand math until I used this approach. Hello the study of language falls under the humanities. Music, art, dance and literature are communication systems. History and philosophy seek to interpret and define these systems.The reason the gaming systems our children use is so popular is because they marry the humanities with technology.
I fear that one reason that there is such a large push against the humanities is because these define our culture and language. Eliminate these and you can essentially redefine the culture. Tyrannical governments often try this. They have attempted to even wash away people’s usage of their native languages. It has never succeeded. The humanities deal in symbols that have universal understanding and evoke emotional responses. You may stop the study, but you cannot eliminate basic human thought. No matter how hard we try, we have never learned to completely read another’s mind. But failure to understand another’s language and culture can create friction and misunderstanding. This intern can add to our natural instinct to force our ideology on others. It is a major underlying cause of war and genocide. The study of the humanities is more important now than it has ever been.
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My 11th graders read “The Last of the Mohicans.” Twice in that novel characters are deceived by other characters because on one occasion the character does not understand the antagonist’s language and on a second occasion because characters are unaware an antagonist understands their language. In both cases the consequences are disastrous.
I had a professor in college whose brother was a journalist working in France. The brother had an interview with the playwright Ionesco. Ionesco and his valet were Romanian and Ionesco assumed the reporter did not speak Romanian because he was American and Americans are not big on learning languages, and many non-Americans were not big on learning Romanian. But the brother did understand and speak Romanian. As the interview got underway Ionesco would make sarcastic comments to his valet in Romanian, assuming he was not understood. The article that appeared took more from the conversation between Ionesco and his valet than from the interview itself. As you suggest, knowing other languages is important.
A year or so ago someone called into comment on an NPR story about learning foreign languages in public schools. She ranted (it was a rant) that this is America and we shouldn’t be wasting our time learning other countries’ languages. This belief that the study of languages is a waste of time is quite fashionable in some parts of the world. I wonder how these people think we can negotiate treaties and the like with other countries that understand everything we say amongst ourselves while we understand nothing of what is being said by those with whom we are negotiating when they talk amongst themselves.
Cordially,
J. D. Wilson, Jr.
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Bien dicho, también.
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Exactly!
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To Dr. J.D. Wilson, Jr. and Firstgrademonkey:
I really admire your wisdom, and I love every word that you wrote. Thank you for sharing your thought.
IMHO, being a learner, we can learn anything that we put our mind into. However, we ONLY master the subject whenever we are willing to live in it, and work with it.
As a result, we need to distinguish the difference between our human mind perception and the nature principle. The nature principle is THE UNIVERSAL LAW THAT WE CANNOT FATHOM, but we will patiently and genuinely ALTER OUR OWN DESTINATION THROUGH COMPASSION = completely detachment of emotional turmoil such as GREED, LUST and EGO even if for doing good deeds.
To master a “craft.” You had to = TO MASTER ANY FIELD or SUBJECT, we must
– observe and interpret nature, = SCIENCE
– adapt and react to fast-changing conditions, = HUMAN MIND, PERCEPTION
– obey without question, = PRINCIPLE, as in “good deed returns good deed”
– decide without doubt, = PRINCIPLE, as in “being genuinely care for the unfortunate”
– toil without pause. = PRINCIPLE, as in “keep calming our mind and doing good deed”
– The craft connotes more than a clutch of skills; it is a code for how to live.
= PERCEPTION
– It turns a sailing ship into a “fellowship,” a community forged by shared values.
= PRINCIPLE
In short, Buddha had said to his disciple that they did not need to learn about leaves in the forest, but they ONLY needed to understand the root of a tree, any tree.
In the same vein, we do not need to learn many languages, but we must understand the human race principle, any race.
Human race, any race, we love to live in peaceful and harmonious environment; to enjoy learning, working, and excelling in whatever is suiting to our interest, our capability, and our inner peace regardless of the earning potential.
Smile is the universal language that shows happiness in human race.
Cry is the universal language that shows distress in human race.
Anger is the universal language that shows frustration in human race.
Beyond University, beyond any ideology, we need to learn how to:
– observe and interpret nature, = SCIENCE
– adapt and react to fast-changing conditions, = HUMAN MIND, PERCEPTION
– obey without question, = PRINCIPLE, as in “good deed returns good deed”
– decide without doubt, = PRINCIPLE, as in “being genuinely care for the unfortunate”
– toil without pause. = PRINCIPLE, as in “keep calming our mind and doing good deed”
Back2basic
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Thank you for the kind comment, but I must admit that I am not a “Dr.”, I am just a high school teacher with a Master’s degree.
Cordially,
J. D. Wilson, Jr.
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