|
|
- NEWSLETTERS
- MOBILE APPS
-
ADD TIME NEWS
Education: Looking Backward, Sourly
At its most caustic, social satire is brewed from sweet reasonableness, and nothing could be more reasonable than the modest educational proposal that is the basis of a spoofing report from the 21st century by British Sociologist Michael Young. First premise of The Rise of the Meritocracy, 1870-2033, published in London, is merely this: every bright child, regardless of his parents' wealth or lack of it, should get the best education he is capable of absorbing. The proposition is hardly alarming, but by the book's end it has left a trail like a runaway milkwagon horse. Among the casualties: the British Labor Party (which Young served as research secretary from 1945-51); the commissar's cast of mind that sees education solely as a means for national advancement; the sociologist's view of the individual as a cell that lives for the benefit of the organism, society; and the psychologist's notion that intelligence and aspiration can be measured like prize trout.
I + E = M. With roundabout humor, Young reminds his readers of the events, starting in the 1940s, that led to a blossoming Utopia. By mid-20th century, he assumes, Britain's best minds had realized that their country's economy could no longer compete with those of the U.S., Russia and China under a haphazard system that prevented some bright children of the poor from reaching responsible jobs rightfully theirs, and fortified doltish sons of the rich and well-born in positions of power. The answer: meritocracy, which is rule by the most talented, determined according to the formula I+E = M (Intelligence plus Effort equals Merit).
Britain's socialists, dedicated opponents of wealth and high birth, helped to get things going, Young reports, but they nearly ruined everything by insisting that equality of opportunity meant educating all children, bright and dull, in the same comprehensive schools (this, very roughly, is what the Labor Party currently proposes). Clearly, this plan was too American, writes Young: "Americans, far from prizing brainpower, despised it . . . In the continent of the common man, they established common schools which recognized no child superior to another." Another kind of education was necessary for Britain; "Englishmen of the solid centre never believed in equality. They assumed that some men were better than others, and only waited to be told in what respect."
By 2020 intelligence tests had been developed that could spot a child's ability and bent at three. Children with IQs of 116 and up were sent to state-supported grammar schools; dullards were taught to read, write and play games at common schools. Uplifting leisure activities were planned for bright students, who "no longer need to spend any of their spare time with their families. Their homes have become simply hotels, to the great benefit of the children." Students, of course, received a "learning wage," were members of the B.U.G.S.A. (British Union of Grammar School Attenders).
- 1
- 2
- NEXT PAGE »
Most Popular »
- Obama's Falling Poll Ratings: Why He Has To Worry
- Will Your Next Car be Made in India?
- The Pentagon Prepares for a Missile Attack from 'Iran'
- Israel vs. Hizballah: Drumbeats of War
- In Cleveland, Worker Co-Ops Look to a Spanish Model
- The '00s: Goodbye (at Last) to the Decade from Hell
- Top Stocks of the Decade
- Dear President Obama: What North Korea Might Say
- Made in India: The $12,000 Electric Car
- The Eurostar Breakdown: 'Tis the Season to Be Livid
- In Cleveland, Worker Co-Ops Look to a Spanish Model
- Dear President Obama: What North Korea Might Say
- Obama's Falling Poll Ratings: Why He Has To Worry
- Top Stocks of the Decade
- Despite U.S. Help, Yemen Faces Growing Al-Qaeda Threat
- Will Your Next Car be Made in India?
- Agent Orange Poisons New Generations in Vietnam
- The Importance of Economic Equality
- The Pentagon Prepares for a Missile Attack from 'Iran'
- Super-Earth: Astronomers Find a Watery New Planet





RSS