by mgcardin » Thu 13 Apr 2006, 07:55:14
Gatto's exposé of the ideology behind America's public school system makes for worthy reading in a peak oil context, I think. Thanks for mentioning him here. I'm presently in my fourth year of teaching English language arts at a small rural Missouri high school, and from time to time I've explained a few of Gatto's ideas to my students to see how they react. Many of them truly seem interested, and a few of them troubled, when I explain that the very form of the school experience itself, with its isolation of groups of people in separate rooms, its rigid schedule with time divions governed by the omnipresent Pavlovian bell, and all that, is actually the brainchild of social engineers who wanted to design the most effective system for teaching young people to obey authority and tolerate extreme boredom and social regimentation.
I've found it a useful experiment to bring these things up just a few minutes before the bell at the end of the class period is scheduled to ring. Then when it does and the students display the customary response of jumping like they'd heard a starter pistol, I ask them to notice how deeply that mindless fight-or-flight, "Time to go!"-flavored Pavlovian response has been conditioned into their unconscious minds. A few of them truly seem to understand what I'm talking about, and they respond with nervous laughter.