Scott Newstok, an English professor at Rhodes College in Tennessee, wrote this beautiful essay, published in The Chronicle of Higher Education. It is addressed to the Class of 2020, whose entire academic lives were shaped under the disastrous influence of No Child Left Behind. The relentless testing regime, he says, has stunted their imaginations, so it now becomes the job of their professors to revive what was for so long discouraged by federal law.
He writes:
In response to the well-intentioned yet myopic focus on literacy and numeracy, your course offerings in art, drama, music, history, world languages, and the sciences were all too often set aside “to create more time for reading and math instruction.” Even worse, one of the unintended consequences of high-stakes testing is that it narrowed not only what you were taught but how you were taught. The joy of reading was too often reduced to extracting content without context, the joy of mathematics to arbitrary exercises, without the love of pattern-making that generates conjecture in the first place.
You’ve been cheated of your birthright: a complete education. In the words of Martin Luther King Jr. (at your age of 18), a “complete education” gives “not only power of concentration, but worthy objectives upon which to concentrate.”
But now your education is in your own hands. And my advice is: Don’t let yourself be cheated anymore, and do not cheat yourself. Take advantage of the autonomy and opportunities that college permits by approaching it in the spirit of the 16th century. You’ll become capable of a level of precision, inventiveness, and empathy worthy to be called Shakespearean.
Building a bridge to the 16th century must seem like a perverse prescription for today’s ills. I’m the first to admit that English Renaissance pedagogy was rigid and rightly mocked for its domineering pedants. Few of you would be eager to wake up before 6 a.m. to say mandatory prayers, or to be lashed for tardiness, much less translate Latin for hours on end every day of the week. Could there be a system more antithetical to our own contemporary ideals of student-centered, present-focused, and career-oriented education?
How, then, do we teach and learn what really matters, the four C’s: critical thinking; clear communication; collaboration; creativity, and curiosity?
Here is an excerpt from an essay that you should read and savor:
Antonio Gramsci described education in this way: “One has to inculcate certain habits of diligence, precision, poise (even physical poise), ability to concentrate on specific subjects, which cannot be acquired without the mechanical repetition of disciplined and methodical acts.” You take it for granted that Olympic athletes and professional musicians must practice relentlessly to perfect their craft. Why should you expect the craft of thought to require anything less disciplined? Fierce attention to clear and precise writing is the essential tool for you to foster independent judgment. That is rhetoric.
Renaissance rhetoric achieved precision through a practice that might surprise you: imitation. Like “rhetoric,” “imitation” sounds pejorative today: a fake, a knockoff, a mere copy. But Renaissance thinkers — aptly, looking back to the Roman Seneca, who himself looked back to the Greeks — compared the process of imitation to a bee’s gathering nectar from many flowers and then transforming it into honey. As Michel de Montaigne put it:
“The bees steal from this flower and that, but afterward turn their pilferings into honey, which is their own. … So the pupil will transform and fuse together the passages that he borrows from others, to make of them something entirely his own; that is to say, his own judgment. His education, his labor, and his study have no other aim but to form this.”
The honey metaphor corrects our naïve notion that being creative entails making something from nothing. Instead, you become a creator by wrestling with the legacy of your authoritative predecessors, standing on the shoulders of giants. In the words of the saxophone genius John Coltrane: “You’ve got to look back at the old things and see them in a new light.” Listen to Coltrane fuse experimental jazz, South Asian melodic modes, and the Elizabethan ballad “Greensleeves,” and you’ll hear how engaging with the past generates rather than limits.
The most fascinating concept that Shakespeare’s period revived from classical rhetoric was inventio, which gives us both the word “invention” and the word “inventory.” Cartoon images of inventors usually involve a light bulb flashing above the head of a solitary genius. But nothing can come of nothing. And when rhetoricians spoke of inventio, they meant the first step in constructing an argument: an inventory of your mind’s treasury of knowledge — your database of reading, which you can accumulate only through slow, deliberate study.
People on today’s left and right are misguided on this point, making them strange bedfellows. Progressive educators have long been hostile to what they scorn as a “banking concept” of education, in which teachers deposit knowledge in passive students. Neoliberal reformers — the ones who have been assessing you for the past dozen years — act as if cognitive “skills” can somehow be taught in the abstract, independent of content. And some politicians seem eager to get rid of teachers altogether and just have you watch a video. You, having been born when Google was founded, probably take it for granted that you can always look something up online.
But knowledge matters. Cumulatively, it provides the scaffolding for your further inquiry. In the most extreme example, if you knew no words in a language, having a dictionary wouldn’t help you in the least, since every definition would simply list more words you didn’t know. Likewise, without an inventory of knowledge, it’s frustratingly difficult for you to accumulate, much less create, more knowledge. As the Italian novelist Elena Ferrante said, “There is no work … that is not the fruit of tradition.”
There is more, as well as links. Well worth your time to read!

I just fundamentally don’t buy that “21st century people” are different than “20th century people”.
My son works in tech and he told me if you can teach a person a language you can teach them to code- a language, building a birdhouse, knitting a sweater- he doesn’t think this basic idea is different. People have the capacity to take one skill and transfer it to another.
Because everyone believes this, right? That the time they’re in is uniquely challenging and new, and that’s true! The time they’re in IS uniquely challenging and new but peoples basic make-up isn’t “new” at all.
They keep saying that schools look like they did a hundred years ago. A 3 year old digging in the garden with a spoon looks the same too. It doesn’t mean they’re not learning things they can use.
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It is a lovely essay. I hope you read it. The point is not to contrast centuries, but to contrast students who came through the NCLB-RTTT era to previous cohorts.
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Chiara,
Some practices of 21st century young people may be different from 20th century. A social studies supervisor in a well-resourced, highly regarded NJ regional high school district told me that students are so used to scanning online that they have little interest in concentrated reading. He thought that could have an impact on their critical thinking.
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Great essay, except we have to get past this notion that the rephormers are “well-intentioned”. Well-intentioned people look at the results of their actions and adjust accordingly if they see negative outcomes. First, do no harm. The rephormsters either refuse to see the harm they’re doing, or they see it and they double down. Neither is well-intentioned.
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Dienne, I would say their intentions are irrelevant. When you hurt people and damage kids and schools, who cares what your intentions were? When you keep doing harmful things after seeing they fail to do what you promised, your intentions are bad.
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Exactly, both D’s-Dienne and Diane!
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I am grateful that my university required all majors to complete two years of “basic studies.” We were required to take English, math, an arts course, a year of science, three years of foreign language and a few social science electives. While it did not make us “men and women of letters,” it did enhance our education. Each course required us to complete a hefty reading list, several books in their entirety, followed by lively discussions including expressions of points of view. We were also required to write frequent papers and essays that forced us to analyze, make connections and synthesize the material with our own views. This type of instruction promotes deep thinking far beyond the level of thought it takes to choose a correct answer on a bubble test.
Our young people today rarely get to participate in “sustained intellectual apprenticeship” on the same level as students in generations of the past. Our obsession with testing plays a part as does technology. Those long reading lists have been reduced to books of short essays and survey courses. Today a brilliant person is a coder, a person with binary thinking, black and white, right or wrong. The real world is much more complex with subtle differences with lots of room for understanding different points of view and lots of shades of grey. Our young people must learn to question, make ethical choices, take responsibility and understand consequences. These judgments are an essential part of informed decision making in a democracy.
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Newstok calls this ability to entertain multiple viewpoints “negative capability”. Both Left and Right fear this. Yes, even the Left, even though they preach “critical thinking”, they often just want to install the right opinions in kids’ brains and close off dangerous alternative pathways of thought. Negative capacity does seem regrettably rare. I think part of the reason is that we’re in a culture that values Getting Things Done, and getting things done requires settling on some basic assumptions. Questioning basic assumptions is often a hurdle to Getting Things Done, though it should, in the end, help ensure that bad things don’t get done, and that things get done well.
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Well stated both retired teacher and ponderosa!
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Brilliant so thanks Diane for sharing. I am saving this to read to my grandsons when they are a bit older & even know the 16th century names mentioned. You called the essay beautiful and you are right!
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I appreciate the quotes – but have a problem with your comment, “How, then, do we teach and learn what really matters, the four C’s: critical thinking; clear communication; collaboration; creativity, and curiosity?”
Please note that the quotes from the authors were written by people who went to school under the old fashioned system of learning reading, writing and arithmetic. Who went to school under the “repetition” system and the learning of facts.
In other words: education done the old fashioned way. And still learned critical thinking skills, without having unfiltered access to the Internet. Where you had to concentrate for more than 10-15 minutes at a time. Where teachers taught, and it was mostly a one direction process.
You were taught under that system. Most senior teachers were. 59% of the teachers I worked with when I started 19 years ago.
But by constantly changing didactic methods, without ever giving them enough time to settle in, damage was caused. By a constant search for THE silver bullet irrevocable damage was caused.
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After I read comments, I realized we are still missing SomeDAM Poet. I hope SDP will return–in the spirit of “Back to School” time of year.
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I love it all, but especially this part:
“You’ve repeatedly heard the buzz phrase “critical thinking” during your orientation; who could be against such an obvious good? Yet we might do better to revive instead the phrase “negative capability”: what the poet John Keats called Shakespeare’s disposition to be “capable of being in uncertainties, Mysteries, doubts.” In the Renaissance, the rhetorical tradition encouraged such “play of the mind” through the practice of disputation. Students had to argue from multiple perspectives rather than dogmatically insist upon one biased position.”
If only our education schools took this to heart. My ed school did the opposite: suppress alternative viewpoints; pound in one dogma. Ironically, hypocritically, the very same professors who preached “teaching critical thinking” abolished it in their classes. There is such a rich and fertile literature about education out there; so sad that few educators are aware of it, much less well-versed in it. And you must be well-versed in it to think well about education; you must have, as Newstok says in this essay, “inventio” –a mental inventory to look over as you form your thoughts. The state of education schools is a scandal –in this, the “reformers” have a valid point. They are intellectually bankrupt. It’s no coincidence that the best writing about education comes from OUTSIDE the ed schools: the author of this piece is an English professor. The teachings of cognitive scientist Dan Willingham are worth more than all of the ed school professors combined. Reading Diane’s Left Back, a history of American education, gives so much food for thought –a close study of that would be worth more than the typical ed school indoctrination in a shallow, debased, and often outright false dogma.
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“How, then, do we teach and learn what really matters, the four C’s: critical thinking; clear communication; collaboration; creativity, and curiosity?”
I hate to nitpick (ahh, who am I kidding? – I love to nitpick 🙂 ), but that’s 5 C’s; & here I’d like to put in a good word, if I might, for math. 🙂
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6 c’s really.
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I had the same thought, Lenny, but upon “close reading” I think what we have is a misplaced comma. Notice that most of the concepts are separated by semicolons except for creativity and curiosity. I think creativity and curiosity are supposed to be one item, and the comma should not have been used between the two. In fact, it is highly confusing. I would argue that creativity and curiosity are hardly the same thing but that’s neither here nor there.
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I think Diane conflated the original 4 with the 5th that I suggested — see the article:
“This education fostered some of the very habits of mind endorsed by both the National Education Association and the Partnership for 21st Century Learning: critical thinking; clear communication; collaboration; and creativity. (To these “4Cs,” I would add “curiosity.”)”
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I should have read to the end of the comments first, but that anomaly had really been bothering me and I couldn’t resist when someone else noted it.
Of course then reading the full essay explained things quite well, thank you very much. I thoroughly enjoyed revisiting the education I had where developing a base of knowledge and practicing the craft attached to that base was the traditional progression of things before anyone expected us to be truly creative.
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Please know – in the midst of the madness before I was forced out – I DID teach my kids at Snowden to think like Shakespeare and Poe until it was called into question bc they couldn’t write like the test… I’m appreciated now.
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This reminds me of what Whitman wrote:
Starting from Paumanok
5
Dead poets, philosophs, priests,
Martyrs, artists, inventors, governments long since,
Language-shapers on other shores,
Nations once powerful, now reduced, withdrawn, or desolate,
I dare not proceed till I respectfully credit what you have left wafted hither,
I have perused it, own it is admirable, (moving awhile among it,)
Think nothing can ever be greater, nothing can ever deserve more than it deserves,
Regarding it all intently a long while, then dismissing it,
I stand in my place with my own day here.
Here lands female and male,
Here the heir-ship and heiress ship of the world, here the flame of materials,
Here spirituality the translatress, the openly-avow’d,
The ever-tending, the finalè of visible forms,
The satisfier, after due long waiting now advancing,
Yes here comes my mistress the soul.
Walt Whitman
I think, among other things, Whitman is suggesting that we must first recognize, own, and internalize our heritage, the traditions out of which we come and then abandon them in a sense to find our own place in our own day. The new that we make arises out of the old we have mastered. Ezra Pound wrote a short two line poem, “In the Station of the Metro”:
The apparition of these faces in the crowd;
Petals on a wet, black bough.
The poem is haiku-esque and captures an ancient “Eastern” traditional form. It also has fourteen words with a turn, a subtle change of thought, from literal to figurative language at the ninth word, suggesting the Italian Sonnet, an ancient “Western” traditional form. It takes some things that are old an, in Pounds phrase, “makes it new.” As you can probably see this sort of thing excites me and I do believe it can excite our students.
Cordially,
J. D. Wilson, Jr.
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Excellent essay. Thanks for sharing it, Diane!
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