|

|
|
Bruce Logan as a
Christchurch based writer, and founder and retired Director of
the Maxim Institute. |
|
Skip to comments |
NZCPR
Guest Forum
Opinion piece by
Bruce Logan
6 October 07
A
Loss of Confidence
I
can't resist something from Shakespeare’s Measure for
Measure: "liberty plucks justice by the nose;
The baby beats the nurse, and quite athwart Goes all
decorum."
In
1986 The Social Affairs Unit in
London
published The Wayward Curriculum: a cause for parents’
concern; a
criticism of the new curriculum direction in British schools.
A collection of 21 essays by philosophers, teachers and
academics it could easily have described
New Zealand
’s curriculum revolution from the 1970’s. The focus
was on the loss of cultural content and the new emphasis on
teaching skills disconnected from subjects.
Recent
comments in
New Zealand
by Mary Chamberlain, the Group Manager Curriculum Teaching and
Learning Design, Ministry of Education, have reminded me, yet
again, just how "wayward"
New Zealand
education has become. The baby has been beating the nurse for
a long time. Her mind has turned into ideological mush with
little power of self-criticism.
Ms
Chamberlain, not to be confused with the metaphorical nurse,
claims "we've got computers, we don't need people walking
around with them in their heads…. people just have to get
used to that." And, "there is no use
(students) being little knowledge banks walking around on
legs." Moreover, the curriculum "aims to deliver key
competencies." These competencies, she says, are based on
that very vague authority, the best international research.
And, surprise, surprise, we discover that these are no more
than a restatement of the skills we heard so much about in the
1970s. They include critical thinking, being
enterprising and resourceful, setting goals, making plans,
identifying possible hurdles, estimating time and sorting
priorities. And, of course, the emphasis on
collaborative learning crops up again.
During
the 1970s I taught in secondary schools in
Canada
, the
UK
,
Australia
and
New Zealand
, and in each country, the process was the same: English and
history curricula became politicised. Literature was
distorted to promote ready-made social attitudes.
Instead of taking a text for study in order to learn something
about human nature, literature was beginning to be used as a
lever for instilling fashionable social messages around topics
such as ‘racism’ and ‘sexism’, or Neo-Marxist-inspired
insights to ‘class consciousness’. In
New Zealand
, the wider reforms of the mid-1980s ensured that neo-liberal
constructs of the market were added into the melting pot of
curriculum reform. So, by 2006-07, the unique social and
political circumstances of the early 1990’s (which gave us
the New Zealand Curriculum Framework in 1993), remain extant,
but have been tweaked and updated in more contemporary
language. A close look at the curriculum draft issued last
year reaffirms the philosophical tensions between Left and
Right. From the Left and the residue of Neo-Marxism, we have
the more sophisticated theories of poststructuralism and
discourse analysis; while from the Right, perhaps somewhat
less intrusive, the obsession with instrumentalist-inspired
efforts to raise productivity.
Either
way, what we are actually seeing is the continuing victory of
ideology. The former approaches (i.e. pre-1970) grew out of
the belief that the master knew more than his apprentice.
Learning to write well certainly had something to do with
skills but it was a great deal more.
In
the past, the teaching of English literature and grammar was
about both knowledge and character. Coming to terms with
literature (and life, for that matter) demands an engagement
which goes well beyond the learning of skills. For example,
learning to write and speak well carries with it the power to
discern and feel the worth of other speakers and writers.
Learning to write well involves a durable marriage of
intellectual and emotional excitement. The learning of skills
and even empirically ascertained facts is not genuinely
educative. They are learned along the way and are not separate
from being ‘educated’. Writing or study skills, however,
cannot properly be taught in isolation because it is the
quality of content that provides both context and meaning.
A learner must form a relationship with an enduring
insight; even with truth beyond the self.
Before
the 1970s the teaching of history was not controversial
because criticism was concerned with method, not content.
With the advent of the cult of relevance, the cultural
levelling demands of the Neo-Marxists, the shrieks of sexism
from the feminists and the race relations ideologues who saw
‘Eurocentrism’ as a great evil, everything changed.
History became what the renovators said it had been: ideology.
A
new idea seeped into schools; the past was irrelevant to the
needs and interests of children. This of course is the
very point that Ms Chamberlain makes in her reference to
computers and children's heads. The Black Death, the
Spanish Armada, Wilberforce, even Tasman and Cook were
replaced by the need
-
to
understand the world in which we live
-
to
find personal identity
-
to
understand the processes of change
-
to
learn how to use leisure
-
to
think critically
-
to
learn how to set goals
Well,
you might say, “what is wrong with that?”
Essentially, historical method was corrupted, and history
became more like sociology. Teachers began to accept
that ‘social science’, rather than history, provided the
coherent learning structure so foundational to good learning.
In
a 2006 exercise book of a
Christchurch
year 9 pupil (age 13) social science is described as a
"competency-based subject".
Replete with jargon that a 13-year-old is extremely
unlikely to understand we find that pupils will learn three
key "competencies" These are defined as "using
tools interactively, functioning effectively in a
heterogeneous society, and acting autonomously."
The old concrete language of literature and virtue is
unceremoniously replaced by what must become little more than
a sociological and psychological muddle in the mind of the
pupil. In such a
scenario character is lost and morality becomes little more
than identification and clarification of individual desires.
From
the 1970s educational "experts" repeatedly disputed
that there was any ground for pride or reverence in our study
of the past. The claim was consistently made that all
education is indoctrination. Consequently, all political
points of view should be taught, although in practice,
traditional and conservative points of view were frequently
ignored or criticised.
The
teaching of "what one might call moral values" is
unacceptable said Ms S. Purkis, one of the many critics of
traditional literature and history condemned in The
Wayward Curriculum. In a criticism of school texts
written by R. J. Unstead she says, "….his selection of
material is out of date and insufficient for a world where
children see and sympathise with the Vietnamese boat people
and become involved in schemes to buy mini-bikes from
Tanzania
." Purkis, like so many of her fellow travellers seemed
to be unaware that her own position was essentially a moral
one. Significantly we see how the demand for relevance,
assumed to have meaning in the 1970’s has virtually none in
2007. Some new ideological cause must be found.
We
should not be surprised that schools are now places in which
we can find increasing violence, a lack of respect for the
past, a prejudicial ignorance of religion - especially
Christianity - falling academic standards, increasing failure,
particularly among boys and a general atmosphere of ennui
among teachers. Ironically
an increasing demand for children's rights continues to be
reinforced by the state.
Probably
the most obvious reason for this bleak state of affairs is the
loss of confidence in our own culture and past.
And it is that loss of confidence which permits, even
insists, that the baby beats the nurse.
Skip to top |
Your
Comments:
If you
would like to comment on this issue please click
Skip to top |
Send to
a friend:
|