"What Students Should be Taught"
Sydney M. Williams
Thought of the Day
“What Students Should
be Taught”
October 2, 2014
The
“skills gap” has been blamed for both the persistent high unemployment and the
sluggish economic growth we have experienced. Our schools, which have received
the bulk of the blame, are only in part culpable. Responsibility must be shared
with government immigration policies that have admitted an insufficient number of high-skilled
immigrants, and with employers who, for expediency’s sake, have bypassed the
training process. But, perhaps even more important has been the decline in
cultural lessons and values. We live so much in the present, while focusing on
the future, that we have too often ignored the great literature of the past,
with their tales of human behavior under myriad conditions and the moral lessons
that were integral to the stories.
A
consequence of our concern regarding the preparedness of our youth has been a
renewed effort to ensure that high school and college students are well versed
in STEM courses (science, technology, engineering and math). Since a major
purpose of a high school and college education is to get a job, such courses
make sense. The practical application of theory is how we build better
computers, hospitals, automobiles, bridges, insurance companies and fighter
jets.
Our
young people face a far more complex world than simply finding and honing a
skill for today’s needs. The skills that today seem adequate may not fit needs
ten or twenty years hence. Ray Kurzweil, in The Singularity is Near,
argued that humans will transcend the limitations of our biology – that the
distinction between man and machine will blur more than they have. He writes
about this disruptive transformation: “The nonbiological intelligence created
in that year (2045) will be one billion times more powerful than all human
intelligence today (2005).”
While
Mr. Kurzweil’s predictions stretch even the most futuristic imagination, there
is no question that the amount of knowledge is growing exponentially. In 1982,
with the publication of Critical Path, Buckminster Fuller wrote of the
“Knowledge Doubling Curve.” He noted that until about 1900, knowledge doubled
roughly every 100 years. Then growth, which had been linear, became
exponential. Today, knowledge is doubling every one to two years. There are
some who believe we are on track to a doubling every twelve hours. Whatever the
real speed, the amount of information available to our children and
grandchildren is far vaster than what we had to learn. That fact alone
explains, in part, why we are so often surprised by the lack of familiarity the
young have with literature, history and geography that we took for granted. It complicates
the education process. With so much material available, what should be taught?
Our
young do need the skills embedded in STEM courses, or should at least be
exposed to them. For no matter our curiosity or the desire to learn, without
jobs we cannot survive. Like it or not, we will increasingly become specialized
in relatively narrow fields.
That
is all for the good, but I believe that we must also help young students learn
judgment – to make wise decisions. Obviously wisdom and judgment are skills
necessary in leaders, be they in politics, business, academia, law or medicine.
But such skills are crucial for everyone, because everyday all of us make
hundreds of judgment calls, whether it is a teenager deciding who to hang with,
a pedestrian crossing a busy street, a homemaker weighing the value of a
bio-degradable detergent against its higher cost, a politician deciding between
a pragmatic or a moral response, or a company CEO considering an offer for his
business. Age and experience help the process, but education can abet the
process.
It
is through the study of classics and Great Books that we learn how men and
women respond to emotions common to all of us – the value of faith,
thankfulness for the freedom we have. These are as relevant today as they were
when the novels and histories were written. While writers in all ages wrote to
entertain, those of an earlier era also wrote to instruct. Most of them
expressed a moral sentiment, or, at a minimum, displayed the behavior of their
protagonists. The study of Latin helped students think logically. It underlined
the value of listening and was valuable when debating a premise without reverting
to antagonistic argument. From Greek mythology to Dickens, stories were told
with a lesson. Examples of virtually all human emotions – fear, pride, greed, lust,
love, patriotism and hate – can be found within the pages of Shakespeare, Tolstoi
and dozens more.
The
story of Pip in Dickens’ Great Expectations is a coming-of-age story, with
foster parents and a scary, but ultimately beneficial Abel Magwitch. We read of
doomed love in Anna Karenina, in Dostoevsky eponymous novel, and of youthful
hubris in Jane Austen’s Emma. We learn of misplaced passion when we
study Balzac’s Père Goriot, and we better understand shameless greed in getting
to know his daughters. Lear and Ahab were men whose self-absorption doomed them
to madness. Before film, authors had to create characters that were live on the
page. One cannot read about George Eliot’s Maggie Tulliver today without tears
coming to one’s eyes for the purity of her love for her flawed father and for
her hunch-backed friend Philip Wakem and the tragic consequences of her last
years and death. More recently, Stuart Little’s quest is a morality tale, as is
Tolkien’s trilogy, The Fellowship of the Ring. Books of this caliber
should be read and discussed by all students, regardless of career plans.
There
is no question that schools and colleges should provide the young with the
skills needed to become employed, but they should also provide the tools that
will help them become better citizens and more astute judges of character, to
help them in the myriad decisions that comprise everyday life. Professor
emeritus Donald Kagan’s impressive op-ed in last weekend’s Wall Street
Journal, on the need to incorporate patriotism into the curriculum is on
the mark. With the federal government assuming unprecedented powers, a better
understanding of democracy is critical.
Our
youth must learn to differentiate between right and wrong, to be respectful of
others and appreciate the freedoms we have. The amount of knowledge has
increased and will continue to do so at exponential rates. But our behavior has
not changed. It is because we are individuals incapable of absorbing all there
is to learn that we must recognize that which is permanent. We must provide the
tools to help our students to properly judge the options they will have.
Labels: TOTD
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