
Samuel L. Blumenfeld
Samuel L. Blumenfeld
is the author of six books on education:
How to
Start Your Own School and Why You Need One
(1972),
The New Illiterates
(1973), How to Tutor
(1973), Is Public
Education Necessary? (1981),
Alpha-Phonics: A Primer for Beginning Readers
(1983), and NEA: Trojan Horse in
American Education (1984). His writings have
appeared frequently in major journals as well. He has taught in both public and
private schools, including a private school for children with learning and
behavioral problems.
Editor's Preview: There has been
much talk of a crisis in education and much speculation as to what or who is to
blame for the mediocrity in our schools. Professor Samuel Blumenfeld offers a
clear and convincing explanation of how the goals of the professional educator
have changed and have thus adversely affected the quality and content of
education.
He focuses particularly on the
Progressive theorists James McKeen Cattell, John Dewey, and Edward Thorndike,
who, around the turn of the century, were heavily influenced by the new
behaviorial psychology of Wilhelm Wundt at the University of Leipzig in Germany.
His American converts proposed that the proper aims of education were not
ethical, as Plato and Aristotle suggested, or meant to encourage what Cardinal
Newman called "a philosophical habit of mind," but to teach "social skills," and
to ensure that students will "fit" into society. As pioneers in psychology and
educational philosophy, Blumenfeld states that these men virtually rebuilt
education on a foundation of science, evolution, humanism, and behaviorism.
Their work remains virtually uncontested in many universities today.
New theories of learning were
developed to accommodate their vision. Children, they claimed, are ideally
taught by the method of stimulus and response. The attainment of literacy was
deliberately de-emphasized in favor of acquiring social skills. In Dewey's
words, "learning to read in early school life because of the great importance
attached to literature seems to me a great perversion." He argued that a high
literacy rate bred a "destructive" individualism.
Who killed excellence in
education? Professor Blumenfeld indicts the behavorists, and he remarks that the
future of American education still rests upon resolving the profoundly
philosophical question: What are the proper aims of education?
The history of American
education can be roughly divided into three distinct periods, each representing
a particular and powerful world view. The first period from colonial times to
the 1840s—saw the dominance of the Calvinist ethic: God's omnipotent sovereignty
was the central reality of man's existence. In the Calvinist scheme the purpose
of man's life was to glorify God, and the attainment of Biblical literacy was
considered the overriding spiritual and moral function of education. Latin,
Greek and Hebrew were studied because they were the original languages of the
Bible and of theological literature. Thus, this period in American education is
characterized by a very high standard of literacy.
The second period, lasting from
the 1840s until about World War I, reflects the Hegelian mindset. G. F. Hegel's
statist-idealist philosophy spread throughout the Western world like a malignant
spiritual disease, destroying Calvinism. In this pantheistic scheme the purpose
of life was to glorify man and the instrument through which man's collective
power could be exercised—the state. Hegel dethroned the Jehovah of the Old
Testament and the Christ of the New Testament, and offered a pantheistic view of
the universe where everything was a somewhat formless "God" in the process of
perfecting himself through a dynamic, endless struggle called the dialectic. Yet
even the Hegelian period was one of high literacy, for Hegel had stressed
intellectual development, since he considered man's mind to be the highest
manifestation of God in the universe. Latin and Greek were studied because they
were the languages of the pagan classics.
During this Hegelian period the
public school movement developed, promoting a secular form of education which
gradually eliminated the Bible from the classrooms of America. Discipline,
punctuality, high academic standards and achievement were the hallmarks of the
public schools.
The third period, from World War
Ito the present, I call "Progressive." It came into being mainly as a result of
the new behavioral psychology developed in the experimental laboratories of
Wilhelm Wundt at the University of Leipzig in Germany. The major American
figures who studied under Wundt—James McKeen Cattell, G. Stanley Hall, Charles
H. Judd and James Earl Russell—came back to the United States to revolutionize
American education.
In this scheme, the purpose of
man's life was to deny and reject the supernatural and to sacrifice oneself to
the collective, often referred to as "humanity." Science and evolution replaced
religion as the focus of faith, and dialectical materialism superseded Hegel's
dialectical idealism as the process by which man's moral progress was made. The
word "progressive," in fact, comes from this dialectical concept of progress.
G. Stanley Hall beat the first
path to Wundt's laboratory in Leipzig. Hall had already spent the years 1868-70
studying in Germany and had returned home seething with hatred for his Puritan
New England heritage. He wrote in his autobiography:
I fairly loathed and hated so
much that I saw about me that I now realize more clearly than ever how possible
it would have been for me to have drifted into some, perhaps almost any, camp of
radicals and to have come into such open rupture with the scheme of things as
they were that I should have been stigmatized as dangerous, at least for any
academic career, where the motto was Safety First. And as this was the only way
left open, the alternative being the dread one of going back to the farm, it was
most fortunate that these deeply stirred instincts of revolt were never openly
expressed and my rank heresies and socialistic leanings unknown.
Hall returned from his Wundtian
experience in 1878 and in 1882 created America's first psychology laboratory at
Johns Hopkins University. Two of Hall's students were James McKeen Cattell and
John Dewey. Cattell journeyed to Leipzig in 1884 where he spent two years
studying under Professor Wundt. He returned to the U.S. and created the world's
first psychology department at the University of Pennsylvania in 1887.
One biographical account of
Cattell's life states:
Cattell's student years in
Baltimore, Germany and England—the period of his greatest originality and
productivity in psychology—were laced with inner complaint. Cattell confided
only in his private journal his recurrent feelings of depression, his frequent
need of hallucinogenic drugs, and his underlying philosophic stance as a "sceptic
and mystic."
Is it not interesting that hallucinogenic drugs were already
being used by students of psychology as far back as the 1880s? In 1891 Cattell
established Columbia University's department of psychology. During his years at
Columbia, Cattell trained more future members of the American Psychological
Association than any other institution. Indeed, Cattell was one of the founders
of the American Psychological Association and the
Psychological Review. Under his direction,
psychology at Columbia became one of the strongest departments of research and
advanced teaching.
No doubt Cattell's most
celebrated pupil was Edward L. Thorndike, who had gotten his master's degree
under William James at Harvard, where he had also conducted experiments in
animal learning. Under Cattell, Thorndike continued his experiments which were
to have a devastating impact on American education.
Thorndike reduced psychology to
the study of observable, measurable human behavior—with the complexity and
mystery of mind and soul left out. In summing up his theory of learning,
Thorndike wrote: "The best way with children may often be, in the pompous words
of an animal trainer, `to arrange everything in connection with the trick so
that the animal will be compelled by the laws of its own nature to perform it.'
"
In 1904, Cattell invited his old
friend John Dewey to join the faculty at Columbia. From Johns Hopkins, Dewey had
not gone to Leipzig like Cattell and others. Instead he taught philosophy at the
University of Michigan for about nine years. He had left Johns Hopkins a
Hegelian idealist but became a materialist at Michigan. In 1894 he became
professor of philosophy and education at the University of Chicago where he
created his famous Laboratory School.
The purpose of the school was to
see what kind of curriculum was needed to produce socialists instead of
capitalists, collectivists instead of individualists. Dewey, along with the
other adherents of the new psychology, was convinced that socialism was the wave
of the future and that individualism was passe. But the individualist system
would not fade away on its own as long as it was sustained by the education
American children were getting in their schools. According to Dewey, "…education
is growth under favorable conditions; the school is the place where those
conditions should be regulated scientifically."
In other words, if we apply
psychology to education, which we have done now for over fifty years, then the
ideal classroom is a psych lab and the pupils within it are laboratory animals.
Dewey's joining Cattell and
Thorndike at Columbia brought together the lethal trio who were literally to
wipe out traditional education and kill academic excellence in America. It would
not be accomplished overnight, for an army of new teachers and superintendents
had to be trained and an army of old teachers and superintendents had to retire
or die off.
By 1908 the trio had produced three books of paramount
importance to the progressive movement. Thorndike published
Animal
Intelligence in 1898; Dewey published
School and Society in 1899; and in 1908 Cattell
produced, through a surrogate by the name of Edmund Burke Huey,
The Psychology and Pedagogy of Reading.
Dewey provided the social
philosophy of the movement, Thorndike the teaching theories and techniques, and
Cattell the organizing energy. There was among all of them, disciples and
colleagues, a missionary zeal to rebuild American education on a foundation of
science, evolution, humanism, and behaviorism. But it was Dewey who identified
high literacy as the culprit in traditional education, the sustaining force
behind individualism. He wrote in 1898:
My proposition is, that
conditions—social, industrial, and intellectual—have undergone such a radical
change, that the time has come for a thoroughgoing examination of the emphasis
put upon linguistic work in elementary instruction…
The plea for the predominance of
learning to read in early school-life because of the great importance attaching
to literature seems to me a perversion.
But in order to reform the
system, the mind had to be seen in a different way. Dewey wrote:
The idea of heredity has made
familiar the notion that the equipment of the individual, mental as well as
physical, is an inheritance from the race: a capital inherited by the individual
from the past and held in trust by him for the future. The idea of evolution has
made familiar the notion that mind cannot be regarded as an individual,
monopolistic possession, but represents the outworkings of the endeavor and
thought of humanity.
To Dewey the one part of our
identity that is the most private, the mind, is really not the property of the
individual at all, but of humanity, which is merely a euphemism for the
collective or the state. That concept is at the very heart of the Orwellian
nightmare, and yet the same concept is the very basis of our
progressive-humanist-behaviorist education system.
Dewey realized that such radical
reform was not exactly what the American people wanted. So he wrote:
Change must come gradually. To
force it unduly would compromise its final success by favoring a violent
reaction.
The most important of the
reforms to be instituted was changing the way children were to be taught to
read. Since it had been ordained by Dewey and his colleagues that literacy
skills were to be drastically de-emphasized in favor of the development of
social skills, a new teaching method that deliberately reduced literacy skills
was needed.
The traditional school used the
phonics or phonetic method. That is, children were first taught the alphabet,
then the sounds the letters stand for, and in a short time they became
independent readers. The new method—look-say or the word method—taught children
to read English as if it were Chinese or Egyptian hieroglyphics.
The new method had been invented
in the 1830s by Rev. Thomas H. Gallaudet, the famous teacher of the deaf and
dumb. Since deaf-mutes have no conception of a spoken language, they could not
learn a phonetic—or sound-symbol—system of reading. Instead, they were taught to
read by a purely sight method consisting of pictures juxtaposed with whole
words. Thus, the whole word was seen to represent an idea or image, not the
sounds of language. The written word itself was regarded as a little picture,
much like a Chinese ideograph. Gallaudet thought that the method could be
adapted for use by normal children and he wrote a little primer on that concept.
In 1837 the Boston Primary
School Committee decided to adopt the primer. By 1844 the results were so
disastrous that a group of Boston schoolmasters published a blistering attack on
the whole-word method and it was thrown out of the schools. But look-say was
kept alive in the new state normal schools where it was taught as a legitimate
alternative to the alphabetic-phonics method.
When the progressives decided to
revive look-say, they realized that an authoritative book would be necessary to
give the method the seal of approval of the new psychology. In Wundt's
laboratory, Cattell had observed that adults could read whole words just as fast
as they could read individual letters. From that he concluded that a child could
be taught to read simply by showing him whole words and telling him what they
said.
For some reason Cattell did not want to write a book himself.
So he got one of G. Stanley Hall's students, Edmund Burke Huey, to write a book
arguing that look-say was the superior way to teach reading. The book,
The
Psychology and Pedagogy of Reading, was
published in 1908. What is astounding is that by 1908 Cattell and his colleagues
were very well aware that the look-say method produced inaccurate readers. In
fact, Huey argued in favor of inaccuracy as a virtue!
The book was immediately adopted
by the progressives as the authoritative work on the subject despite the fact
that it was written by an obscure student who had had no experience whatever in
the teaching of reading, who wrote nothing further on the subject, and about
whom virtually nothing is known.
When a nation's leading educational reformers start arguing
in favor of illiteracy and inaccurate reading, and damning early emphasis on
learning to read as a perversion, then we can expect some strange results to
come from our education process. In fact, by the 1950s, the progressives had
done such a good job that Rudolf Flesch could write a book in 1955 entitled
Why Johnny Can't Read. Why indeed! Flesch
minced no words:
The teaching of reading—all over
the United States, in all the schools, in all the textbooks—is totally wrong and
flies in the face of all logic and common sense.
How did this happen? Flesch
explains:
It's a foolproof system all
right. Every gradeschool teacher in the country has to go to a teachers' college
or school of education; every teachers' college gives at least one course on how
to teach reading; every course on how to teach reading is based on a textbook;
every one of those textbooks is written by one of the high priests of the word
method. In the old days it was impossible to keep a good teacher from following
her own common sense and practical knowledge; today the phonetic system of
teaching reading is kept out of our schools as effectively as if we had a
dictatorship with an all-powerful Ministry of Education.
The educators were furious with
Flesch. He had made them appear stupid and incompetent. They knew they were not
stupid. They had pulled off the greatest conspiracy against intelligence in
history. Although Dewey, Thorndike and Cattell were dead, their disciples,
Arthur I. Gates at Columbia and William Scott Gray at the University of Chicago,
were determined to carry on the work of their mentors. In 1955, the professors
of reading organized the International Reading Association to maintain the
dominance of look-say in primary reading instruction. Today, look-say permeates
the educational marketplace so thoroughly and in so many guises, and it is so
widely and uncritically accepted, that it takes expert knowledge by a teacher or
parent to know the good from the bad, the useful from the harmful.
Even the best students have
fallen victim to this "dumbing-down" process. In a speech given to the
California Library Association in 1970, Karl Shapiro, the eminent poet-professor
who had taught creative writing for over 20 years told his audience:
What is really distressing is
that this generation cannot and does not read. I am speaking of university
students in what are supposed to be our best universities. Their illiteracy is
staggering…We are experiencing a literacy breakdown which is unlike anything I
know of in the history of letters.
This literary breakdown is no
accident. It is not the result of ignorance or incompetence. It has been, in
fact, deliberately created by our progressive-humanist-behaviorist educators
whose social agenda is far more important to them than anything connected with
academic excellence. Perhaps their mindset was best expressed by psychologist
Arthur W. Combs in an essay entitled "Humanistic Goals of Education," published
in 1975. Dr. Combs writes:
Modern education must produce far more than persons with
cognitive skills. It must produce
humane
individuals…The humane qualities are absolutely essential to our way of life—far
more important, even, than the learning of reading, for example. We can live
with a bad reader; a bigot is a danger to everyone.
The inference, of course, is
that you can't have both good readers and humane persons, that one must be
sacrificed for the other. Note also the very subtle suggestion that high
literacy may even produce bigotry. If this is what the humanists believe, then
how can we expect them to promote high literacy?
In 1935 Dewey wrote:
The last stand of oligarchical
and anti-social seclusion is perpetuation of this purely individualistic notion
of intelligence.
To kill this individualistic
intelligence, which is the source of excellence, Dewey and his behaviorist
colleagues proceeded to strip education of mind, soul, and literacy. In 1930 the
percentage of illiteracy among white persons of native birth was 1.5. Among
foreign-born whites it was 9.9 percent, and among Negroes it was 16.3. Among
urban blacks the illiteracy rate was 9.2 percent.
In 1935 a survey was made of
Civilian Conservation Corp (CCC) enrollees. Of the 375,000 men studied, 7,369,
or 1.9 percent, were found to be illiterate, that is, they could not read a
newspaper or write a letter. That's a remarkably low rate of illiteracy
considering that most of the men who joined the CCC were in the low
socio-economic group.
Today the illiteracy rate among
urban blacks is probably about 40 percent, while the illiteracy rate among
whites has been estimated to be from 7 to 30 percent. No one really knows the
exact figure, including the Department of Education, which has guessed that
there are about 23 million functional illiterates in America.
In fact, Dr. Flesch wrote another book in 1981 entitled
Why Johnny Still Can't Read. He wrote with
some sadness:
Twenty-five years ago I studied
American methods of teaching reading and warned against educational catastrophe.
Now it has happened.
At the moment every state
legislature in the nation is grappling with an education reform bill. Not one of
them has addressed this basic problem of primary reading instruction. The
trouble is that most would-be reformers are convinced that merit pay, longer
school days, smaller class size, more homework, career ladders, competency
tests, higher pay for teachers, compulsory kindergarten and more preschool
facilities will give us excellence. But they won't for one very significant
reason. The academic substance of public education today is controlled lock,
stock and barrel by behavioral psychologists, and they don't believe in
excellence. The American classroom has been transformed into a psych lab and the
function of a psych lab is not academic excellence.
If education consists of the
interaction between an effective teacher and a willing learner, then you can't
have it in a psych lab which has neither. In the lab you have the trainer and
the trainee, the controller and the controlled, the experimenter and the
subject, the therapist and the patient. What should go on in a classroom is
teaching and learning. What goes on in the psych lab is stimulus and response,
diagnosis and treatment.
Many people think that
behaviorism is simply the study of behavior. But, according to B. F. Skinner,
behaviorism is a theory of knowledge, in which knowing and thinking are regarded
merely as forms of behavior. Although psychology was supposed to be the study of
the life of the psyche—the mind—behaviorists, starting with Thorndike, reduced
the functions of the mind to where today the mind ceases to be a factor in
education. Behavioral objectives are the goals of today's teachers.
Who killed excellence?
Behavioral psychology did. Why? Because it is based on a lie: that man is an
animal, without mind or soul, and can be taught as an animal. And that concept
is based on an even greater lie: that there is no God, no Creator.
And so the future of American
education rests on the resolution of profoundly philosophical questions.
Apparently no compromise between the ruling behaviorists and the rebellious
fundamentalists is possible. As long as the progressive-humanist-behaviorists
control the graduate schools of education and psychology, the professional
organizations and journals, and the processes whereby curricula are developed
and textbooks written and published, there is little possibility that public
education can achieve academic excellence.
It is the better part of wisdom
to admit that the government schools are the permanent captives of the
behaviorists who also seem to control the sources of public and private funding
that sustain them. They seem to be impervious to the pressures for excellence.
There is a growing belief that
the solution lies in abandoning government education and transferring our
energies and resources to the private sector, thereby expanding educational
freedom, opportunity and entrepreneurship. The American people want better
education. They ought to be able to get it. But to do so they will have to sweep
away whatever obstacles to excellence the educators have erected. In fact, that
is the problem—how to break down, overcome or circumvent the obstacles to
excellence.
The exodus of children from the
public schools is an indication that this is already happening. But the millions
of children who remain in the government schools are at risk, in danger of
becoming the functional illiterates, the underclass of tomorrow. Can we save
them? We have the knowledge to do so. But do we have the will? The next few
years will provide the answer.
Reprinted by permission from Imprimis, the monthly
journal of Hillsdale College, featuring presentations at
Hillsdale's Center for Conservative Alternatives and at its
Shavano Leadership Institute.

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