EdWatch
105 Peavey Rd, St 116
Chaska, MN 55318
651-646-0646
www.edwatch.org
06/09/1999
By MARK GOLDBLATT
After years of psychotherapy disguised as pedagogy, ignorance is now buoyed by self-esteem
- which makes students more resistant to remediation since they don't believe there's a
problem. IT'S a freshman writing assignment I give every semester: Respond in your
journals to the following quotation: "Religion is the opiate of the masses."
After the students copy the words into their notebooks, I ask them to name the author. I
do this now out of a mixture of curiosity and masochism; very likely, none of them will
know. In the 10 years I've been assigning the quotation, only five students have
immediately identified Karl Marx as the author - and all five were foreign students. So as
usual, in the semester just ended, after the initial silence, I offered them a hint: The
author was German.
They pondered this for a moment. Finally, an older black student named Maxine raised her
hand. "Was it Martin Luther?"
The class roared with laughter.
Their reaction puzzled me. It didn't seem a bad guess. Luther was German, and he did write
about religion. As Maxine glanced around, another student tapped her on the shoulder.
"Don't you know he was a brother?"
The reason for the laughter suddenly dawned on me. The entire class had assumed Maxine
meant Martin Luther King - their jaws dropped as I explained who Martin Luther was.
The moment has stuck with me because it highlights what, to my mind, are the two great
problems with students now entering college. The first is familiar enough: They don't know
what they should know. The second is more subtle yet even more worrisome: They assume they
know much more than they actually do know. In this instance, not only did the students
fail to identify perhaps the most famous quotation of the last two centuries, or to
recognize the name of the leader of the Protestant Reformation, but they felt secure
enough to laugh at an educated guess far closer to the mark than they realized.
Through the years, we've grown accustomed to New York City's students lagging behind the
rest of the country's on standardized tests; accustomed, as well, to American students
getting blown out of the water by their peers in Far East or European countries - or,
indeed, in any country where hunger does not eclipse education as a parental concern. Less
familiar are surveys in which American students show markedly higher rates of satisfaction
with the poor education they are receiving - in other words, they are utterly ignorant of
their own ignorance.
The trend should worry us because, unlike in the past, ignorance is no longer tempered
with humility. Rather, after years of psychotherapy disguised as pedagogy, ignorance is
now buoyed by self-esteem - which, in turn, makes students more resistant to remediation
since they don't believe there's a problem. This resistance to remediation, indeed, is
part and parcel of a wholly misplaced intellectual confidence that is the most serious
obstacle to their higher education. For the last seventeen years, I've taught freshman
courses at CUNY and SUNY colleges in the city; the majority of my students have been
products of the public schools. I am saddened, therefore, to report that more and more of
these students are arriving in my classes with the impression that their opinions,
regardless of their acquaintance with a particular subject, are instantly valid - indeed,
as valid as anyone's. Pertinent knowledge, to them, is not required to render judgement.
Want to scare yourself? Sit down with a half-dozen recent public high school graduates and
ask them what they believe. Most are utterly convinced, for example, that President
Kennedy was murdered by a vast government conspiracy. It doesn't matter to them that they
cannot name the presidents before or after Kennedy. Or the three branches of government.
Or even the alleged gunman's killer. Most are convinced, also, that AIDS was engineered by
the CIA ... even though they cannot state what either acronym stands for.
Most will voice passionate pro-choice views on abortion - even though they cannot name the
decision that legalized it ... or report the number of judges on the Supreme Court ... or
define the word "trimester." Most will happily hold forth on the hypocrisy of
organized religion - even though they cannot name the first book of the Bible ... or
distinguish between the Old and New Testaments ... or state the approximate year of
Jesus's birth (a trick question).
I'm not talking about stupid kids - though yes, as painful as it is to acknowledge, there
are in fact stupid kids. These are bright kids, talented kids, curious kids - kids who
will occasionally concoct ingenious, if wrongheaded, theories to compensate for what they
don't know. Several years ago, for instance, a student of mine suggested that a semi-colon
got its name because it drew attention to the words around it. She thought the spelling
was: "see me colon." Clearly, if she's clever enough to come up with that, she's
clever enough to learn the proper use of semi-colons; it's just that no teacher ever
bothered to correct her punctuation.
She, and students like her, have been robbed - and not simply of the instruction they
should have received through 12 years of primary and secondary schools. They have been
robbed of their entire into serious cultural debate. Robbed even of the realization that
they are stuck on the outside looking in. They are doomed to an intellectual life of
cynicism without ever passing through knowingness, a life in which they grasp at
platitudes to resolve momentary disagreements and do not possess the analytical
wherewithal to pursue underlying issues.
They are lost generations. It is too late for them to catch up. But we owe it to their
children to do better.
Mark Goldblatt (MGold57@aol.com) teaches at SUNY's Fashion Institute of Technology.