I remember hating how school worked. I hated how early it started, and I never really under? stood why that was necessary. I hated the four minute time I had to walk between classes, in forty minute intervals, for six hours days ?plus the forty five to ninety minutes I had to spend in detention for being late for school in the morning, as I regularly was. --- The classes were easy, the tests were easy, the teachers were nice for the most part ? and for some reason, I still found myself failing classes and ending up in summer school and detention. Why? Because of the way schools are structured. ---- Public education isn't really about education, and it never really has been. People who do well are people who turn in assignments on time, stick to a strict schedule, orga? nize their materials, and come to class prepared. These are all good skills for college, but they're also things people with power and money don't have to worry about. My senior year we had a cool substitute everyone liked for chemistry class . Very talkative, very friendly. In a lab session towards the end of the year not much was going on. I shared some musing on my education and anar? chism (at the time I thought I was completely alone), and he told me that part of the state's mission state? ment for schools was to "create good citizens," above giving stu? dents an education. It's true that the public edu? cation system was created for the children of the working class, to prepare them for a working class future. It's also easy to see how they aim to squash rebellion early on if you take a moment to remem? ber all the conditioning we went through in our homerooms and his? tory classes. The pledge of Alle? giance has been recited in the morn? ing every day, all year. In kinder? garten, my teacher made it fun ? and we got to wear our name?hats and she'd pick students to get to hold the flag. Then we'd sing the national anthem after the pledge, because it was a fun group activity. Then there was flag day; our little parade around the neighborhood ? and local grown ups would even come outside and cheer for us. The history classes deserve special recognition. I remember "learning" Christopher Columbus discovered America, I remember learning communism was "bad" and "doesn't work," I remember "why did communism fail?" being on a test. My teachers spouted horrors done by other governments' leaders, like Hitler for instance ? when the fact is that the United States would? n't have been involved in the war if Japan hadn't attacked Pearl Harbor and the US didn't get involved in a complicated web of alliances that pushed them into Europe by obliga? tion. Politics, not morals. I also remember wishing I had more of a world?context in class. For instance, I remember ask? ing a teacher why we weren't learn? ing about wars we weren't involved in, like the Spanish Civil War, and he told me that there were far too many little wars to talk about, and said that the only significant thing about the Spanish Civil War was that it served as a preview of the technology to be used in WWII. What it all comes down to is that the lack of freedom in schools teaches us not to expect much as adults, the biased views teach us to reject philosophies millions of peo? pled believed in in another part of the world because they're somehow ridiculous and impossible, that the decisions made by authority figures are morally correct, and that some times we little people just can't expect to understand what goes on up there. One thing to consider is that though there are "rich" school dis? tricts like Clarance and Amherst, the people who are truly wealthy aren't sending their children to pub? lic schools. They've got tutors and private schools that cost more in tuition than I pay for college. There are even exclusive and expensive day care centers for wealthy tod? dlers. Some wealthy parents even send their children to Europe for classes, where they learn a number of languages, arts, etiquette, and sci? ence and are immediately upon graduation accepted into expensive Ivy League schools based on their high quality education, worldliness and of course, affluence. When I hear someone tell a child they could be anything, I can't help but think of the mediocre life they're being conditioned for. ---------------------------------- Who we are Buffalo Class Action is a revolutionary organization of Anarchist Communists in Buffalo. We strive to further our ideas of social revolution while participating directly in the day to day struggles of the working class. BuffaloClassAction.com
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woensdag 26 december 2012
(en) US, Buffalo Class Action - The Free Times #3 - The Purpose of School by Sophie Seeker
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