Many years ago, around 2009 - it was the time of the Gelmini "reform",https://www.almadiploma.it/info/pdf/scuole/profilo2022/02_Profilo%20dei%20Diplomati%202022.pdfhttps://www.sicilialibertaria.it/ _________________________________________ A - I N F O S N E W S S E R V I C E By, For, and About Anarchists Send news reports to A-infos-en mailing list A-infos-en@ainfos.ca
one of the many legislative disasters that have befallen Italian schools since 2000 - I wrote a few pages, which I titled "From class school to school class". The meaning of my reasoning is therefore clear from the title: Italy started from a class school, so to speak the pre-1968 school, and arrived at a class school, that of today. However, there has been a long journey involved and, although the landing point is the same, differences and new situations have arisen. I need the preamble to clarify that, when talking about class school, we are referring to a medium-long term phenomenon, which starts from the beginning of the twentieth century and has long touched our present. Since the state school is the main Italian educational institution, it will not be surprising that a classist society corresponds to a classist school: the more vague and inoperative certain key concepts become in society, such as that of equality (not only formal) between citizens, the more the school will adapt to this social order. But let's start from objective data. We can affirm that the only reform that has changed Italian schools in a progressive sense was the one that, in 1962, established the single middle school, as a single, free and compulsory path for boys and girls aged 11 to 14. Keeping the children together, regardless of their social class of origin, at least for three years, seemed - and was - a democratic achievement. The single middle school is an important piece of that mosaic of social initiatives that made the decade that followed a period marked by a strong emancipatory push. The class school, however, was certainly not eradicated forever. Indeed, the single middle school itself was indicated as a potentially regressive factor: to affirm this, not even fifteen years after 1962, a non-conformist and acute intelligence was needed. It was Pier Paolo Pasolini who suggested a radically paradoxical way out to overcome what he saw as an unsustainable state of corruption of consciences, in an attempt to stem the monstrous "anthropological mutation" which had as its result the brutalization of the youth masses and "a widespread criminal or criminaloid behaviour". The "modest proposal" to abolish middle school and television caused a scandal. Pasolini's last intervention on this theme appears in the Corriere della Sera on 29 October 1975. Compulsory schooling, the results of which Pasolini sees with a sharp eye, cannot do anything other than create "a small bourgeois slave in place of a free proletarian or sub-proletarian (i.e. belonging to another culture, which leaves him a virgin to understand new real things)[...]. Furthermore, reaching the eighth grade or, better yet, the fifteenth grade, is evidently the optimum": but for now, Pasolini insists, it is better to abolish compulsory schooling, "while waiting for better times; that is, of another development. (This is the crux of the matter)1 After more than half a century, "the crux of the question" remains the same: to change the school, the socio-economic structure must be changed. Mass schooling is an (almost) accomplished fact but the drift of Italian schools is becoming more and more evident from year to year. The many wasted words, the various attempts at "school reform from above", the laudable but useless attempts at "reform from below" have only served to hide the hard truth and that is that the school limits itself to accepting the requests of the productive system. The links between school and the world of work exist and are very strong, but it is not the school that establishes their nature. For an unstructured world, in which the condition of a growing number of human beings is becoming increasingly precarious, what is needed is not a good school but a school that is effectively preparatory to the "liquidity" of the world of work, a school that trains existential "flexibility". In the three decades of the "inglorious thirty years", we have witnessed the affirmation of an idea of knowledge submitted to the needs of the economy, of a knowledge which, in the renunciation of the solid structure which guarantees its transmission from one generation to the next, finds the main figure of its "modernity". Our "mass school" prepares us, more or less consciously, for this - which is, of necessity, a class school, created to train a limited ruling class and large subordinate strata, whose fragmentary and approximate education is a good viaticum for the acceptance of an existential condition without certainties, which can fall at any moment into the abyss of a "life of waste", to quote Bauman. According to the Invalsi 20222 tests, which involved students in the last year of secondary school, "52% of students reach at least the basic level in Italian": that is to say, 48% of our graduating students do NOT reach the basic level and therefore is unable to understand a banal journalistic article. As regards the family of origin, "the share of graduates with graduate parents behind them ranges from 42.4% of high school graduates (with peaks of 66.7% among classical graduates and 48.4% among scientific graduates) to 18.1% of technicians and 13.2% of professional paths". Social background also has a strong impact on achieving top marks at high school diploma. What happens one year after graduation? "The share of graduates dedicated exclusively to university studies is significantly higher among high school graduates (65.7%) compared to technical (33.5%) and professional graduates (19.4%)". This is what "class school" is. For many reasons the school does not fulfill its emancipatory mandate. Yet, although it is difficult, we must focus on it as a place where education can train individuals animated by the desire to make the world in which they live better. We must not lose faith: tomorrow's adults are formed at school and sowing egalitarian ideas, opening up to love for Nature and what is beautiful, giving rise to the desire to know is no small thing. School workers must demand dignified working and study conditions without forgetting that, in an asphyxiated world, in which the virtual overlaps and is confused with the real and knowledge is considered useless old iron, replaced as it is by information just in time and on demand provided by the Internet, the teacher has the duty to indicate another way of being, in which the distortions of the present are eliminated in the name of a less unjust, less violent - in short, more humane society. 1Pasolini, P.P. (1976), Lutheran Letters, Turin, Einaudi, 1976, pp. 168-169 - the underlining of "other" is by Pasolini. 2The data reported here are taken from the results of the Invalsi tests and from the Profile of the 2022 graduates which can be found on the websiteSPREAD THE INFORMATION
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