* Schools “Cheat” to Maintain Graduation
Rates<http://fee.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=9ba24fb79e4b17e34c46a9afc&id=8446fef5f2&e=9041efec7e>
*“As deadlines approached for schools to start making passage of the [exit]
exams a requirement for graduation, and practice tests indicated that large
numbers of students would fail, many states softened standards, delayed the
requirement or added alternative paths to a diploma.” ( *New York
Times*<http://fee.us1.list-manage.com/track/click?u=9ba24fb79e4b17e34c46a9afc&id=429d99aabd&e=9041efec7e>,
Tuesday)

*Maybe the schools are accomplishing just what they set out to accomplish.

**The Central Fallacy of Public Schooling
*By Daniel Hager <http://www.thefreemanonline.org/author/daniel-hager/> •
September 1999 • Volume: 49 • Issue: 9

*Daniel Hager is a writer in Lansing, Michigan.

*When World War II ended, Congress authorized a tax cut to take effect
January 1, 1946.* Young America,* a publication distributed through public
schools, ran an article in its December 13, 1945, issue discussing the
measure and presenting a brief history of American taxation. The article
concluded with a section titled “Then & Now: Taxes Serve Us.”

“One hundred years ago,” the writer stated, “our government helped the
citizens by maintaining order. It did little else. Its expenses were low,
and so taxes were low.” He then quoted Benjamin Franklin’s observation in *Poor
Richard’s Almanack* in 1758: “It would be a hard government that should tax
its people one-tenth part of their income.” The *Young America* writer
continued, “In 1940, our Federal, State and local governments taxed us *
one-fifth* of our incomes. But Franklin could not have guessed the
tremendous growth of this country.” (Emphasis in original.)

The writer then offered justification for such high taxes: “As students, our
young citizens are given school buildings. Our government does hundreds of
things for us in our everyday life.” He finished with a quotation from
Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr.: “I like to pay taxes. It
is purchasing civilization.”

The article vividly illustrates the overriding intent of public schooling,
which has always been indoctrination of the young.


*Who’s in Charge?

*Indoctrination itself is not illegitimate. In fact, it is an intrinsic part
of child rearing. Out of love and concern, parents explicitly or implicitly
formulate desired outcomes for the young lives they have created. Parents
generally hope their children will adhere to their own traditions and belief
systems, which they attempt to inculcate.

The question parents must face is, “Who will do the indoctrinating?”
Schooling is an adjunct to child rearing. The schooling options available
force parents to make decisions regarding the level of autonomy they wish to
exercise. They retain the greatest control over their children’s developing
beliefs by schooling them at home. An alternative is to enroll their
children in an institution where they are certain the indoctrination
conforms to their own values, such as a religious school.

When parents send a child to a tax-funded school, they sacrifice their
autonomy to alien interests. The state has goals of its own that are
distinct from those of parents. Parents are able to economize by availing
themselves of a “free” school, but the bargain is Faustian. The child is
subjected to indoctrination outside parental control. The price of
tax-funded schooling is that parents give up their children to become
instruments of the state.

Under totalitarian regimes, the subjugation of parental belief systems to
those of the state is blatant. Schoolchildren are propagandized into the
doctrines of the leadership, their thoughts molded to the state’s purposes.

But even under a “democratic” regime the state operates manipulatively for
its own ends. Those who govern generally like to continue governing. Their
governance is more easily maintained when the governed are passive and
docile. The state propaganda machine must convince the citizenry of
government’s benevolence. Schoolchildren are taught, as in the *Young* *
America* article, that government “gives” them things and “does” things for
them.

Government schools inevitably become battlegrounds for control by
ideological adversaries. The nature of the indoctrination changes as
advocates of particular ideologies wax and wane in their power to influence
curricula. The constant is that parents have relinquished direct control
over what their children are taught to believe.

This battle has been going on ever since the modern public school emerged in
the first half of the 1800s. Education historian Joel Spring stated, “In the
Western world of the nineteenth century, various political and economic
groups believed that government-operated schools could be a mechanism for
assuring the distribution of their particular ideology to the population. In
this sense, public schools were the first mass medium designed to reach an
entire generation.”[1 <http://www.fee.org/vnews.php?nid=4419#1> ]


*Early Theocracy

*Indoctrination through compulsory schooling originated early in the
nation’s history. Massachusetts Bay Colony was organized unabashedly as a
theocratic government that required citizens to adhere to stipulated
religious beliefs. In 1642 the Massachusetts General Court passed an act
requiring compulsory education of children and giving town selectmen the
authority to maintain orthodox teaching and punish recalcitrant parents. The
civil government was in charge of the schools, which were supported by
taxes. R. Freeman Butts and Lawrence A. Cremin wrote, “Here was the
principle that government had authority to control schools, and it was well
enunciated in the New England colonies early in their histories. It was a
principle of great importance, for it set a precedent in American life
establishing the authority of the state to promote education as a public and
civil matter.”[2 <http://www.fee.org/vnews.php?nid=4419#2>]

However, private schoolmasters were in business in Boston by the mid-1660s,
according to records examined by Robert Francis Seybolt. The number of
private teachers gradually enlarged to the end of the seventeenth century,
partly in response to market demand. He wrote, “The two public schools [in
Boston] . . . admitted only boys who were at least seven years of age and
had learned to read. Girls as well as boys were welcome, at any age, in the
private schools.”[3 <http://www.fee.org/vnews.php?nid=4419#3> ]

In the 1700s in New England, Butts and Cremin noted, private schools
flourished as “colonial legislatures showed a slackening of effort to
require compulsory education and gave greater freedom to private groups to
educate children in schools of their own
preference.”[4<http://www.fee.org/vnews.php?nid=4419#4>]

A wide variety of curricula was offered in eighteenth-century Boston private
schools, Seybolt found. “Unhampered by the control of the town meeting, and
little influenced by traditional modes of procedure, these institutions were
free to grow with the town. This they did as conditions suggested it. The
result was a remarkably comprehensive program of instruction which appears
to have met every contemporary educational
need.”[5<http://www.fee.org/vnews.php?nid=4419#5>
]

Seybolt articulated the benefits of private-sector schooling. “The private
schools were free to originate, and to adapt their courses of instruction to
the interests of the students. The masters sought always to keep strictly
abreast of the time, for their livelihood depended on the success with which
they met these needs. No such freedom or incentive was offered the masters
of the public schools.”[6 <http://www.fee.org/vnews.php?nid=4419#6> ]

This principle was overwhelmed by the swelling tide of nationalism of the
early 1800s. Proponents of common schools, or tax-funded elementary schools
requiring compulsory attendance, viewed them as crucial vehicles for
indoctrinating young people in Americanism. The movement intensified as
immigration increased from continental European cultures that lacked
democratic traditions. Benjamin Labaree, president of Middlebury College in
Vermont, expressed popular fears in an 1849 lecture before the American
Institute of Instruction. He asked, “Shall these adopted citizens become a
part of the body politic, and firm supporters of liberal institutions, or
will they prove to our republic what the Goths and Huns were to the Roman
Empire?”[7 <http://www.fee.org/vnews.php?nid=4419#7>]


*Wartime Indoctrination

*Chauvinistic indoctrination becomes a useful tool of the state in wartime,
as when President Woodrow Wilson created the Committee on Public Information
(CPI) to build support for American participation in World War I and to
blunt opposition by constituencies with European roots. The nation’s high
schools were prime propaganda targets and received hundreds of thousands of
copies of a CPI-produced pamphlet designed to stir anti-German sentiment.
“Germany does not really wage war,” the pamphlet stated.

“She assassinates, massacres, poisons, tortures, intrigues; she commits
every crime in the calendar, such as arson, pillage, murder, and
rape.”[8<http://www.fee.org/vnews.php?nid=4419#8>
] Joel Spring commented, “From the standpoint of the public schools, [the
CPI] was the first major attempt to bring the goals of locally controlled
schools into line with the policy objectives of the federal
government.”[9<http://www.fee.org/vnews.php?nid=4419#9>]

An influential CPI official was William Bagley, who “believed that local
control of educational policy was a major hindrance in adapting the public
schools to the needs of the United States as a world leader. . . . The
combination of the war and the new national spirit opened the door for the
federal government to exercise leadership in a national educational policy.
Included in Bagley’s proposals was a call for federal financing of the
public school system.”[10 <http://www.fee.org/vnews.php?nid=4419#10> ]

During the 1920s, local schools suffered for being dominated by the wrong
kinds of people on their boards, according to public-school champion George
S. Counts. His research showed that “for the most part, [board members] are
drawn from the more favored economic and social classes. They are also
persons who have enjoyed unusual educational advantages. . . . No longer is
the ordinary American community homogeneous as regards interests,
philosophy, and ideals. Hence the need of guarding the integrity of the
various minority groups.”[11
<http://www.fee.org/vnews.php?nid=4419#11> ]The laboring classes were
expressing “lack of confidence in the public
school on the ground that it is under the control of the great capitalistic
and employing interests.”[12 <http://www.fee.org/vnews.php?nid=4419#12> ] As
the high school of that era evolved and expanded in curricula, he noted,
“the institution offers itself as a powerful agency of propaganda to any
group able to secure dominion over
it.”[13<http://www.fee.org/vnews.php?nid=4419#13>
]

Since then the dominion of the federal government over schooling has grown
to a scope of which Bagley would approve. Its power, abetted by the activism
that the collectivist Counts advocated for teacher organizations, enables it
to be the leading propagandist in educational policy.

But the nationalist Bagley would be disappointed in the ideology that has
accompanied the federal growth. The current pre-eminent public-school
propaganda indoctrinates students in an anti-nationalistic collectivist
environmentalism. Meanwhile, Counts’s “capitalistic and employing interests”
attempt to re-establish influence because so many products of public schools
need remediation before they can become employable.

Proponents of public schooling argue against the complete privatization of
schooling on the grounds that the poor would not be able to afford tuition
and that some parents would not provide schooling for their children,
leaving them “uneducated.” However, the rampant levels of ignorance,
subliteracy, and hostility to learning that characterize tax-funded schools
argue that the present system is itself not serving the best interests of
students.

Instead it is clear whose interests are being advanced. Fifty-four years ago
the writer in *Young America* was moved to emphasize in italics that era’s
apparently high tax rates. Since then the average tax burden has doubled.
Yet, as one of my acquaintances has commented, “Americans today are in a
stupor.” In other words, the tax-supported school system has triumphed.
Americans are behaving exactly the way those who govern desire them to
behave.

Children who are turned over to the state become molded by the state. Most
parents cannot conceive of a totally privatized alternative because they
themselves have been indoctrinated by public schooling to believe in its
alleged necessity. However, it is fallacious for parents to think that
children can escape government schooling without having their traditions and
beliefs subverted. “Free” schooling is seductively attractive in the short
run, but it has long-term costs. The dismantling of tax-funded schooling
will not be accomplished until more and more parents say, “My child does not
belong to the state.”
------------------------------

*Notes

*

   1. Joel Spring, *Images of American Life: A History of Ideological
   Management in Schools, Movies, Radio, and Television* (Albany: State
   University of New York Press, 1992), p. 2.
   2. R. Freeman Butts and Lawrence A. Cremin, *A History of Education in
   American Culture* (New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1953), p. 103.
   3. Robert Francis Seybolt, *The Private Schools of Colonial
Boston*(Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1935), p.
   9.
   4. Butts and Cremin, p. 103.
   5. Seybolt, p. v.
   6. *Ibid*., p. 92.
   7. Quoted in Butts and Cremin, p. 192.
   8. Quoted in Spring, p. 25.
   9. *Ibid*., p. 27.
   10. *Ibid*., p. 21.
   11. George S. Counts, *The Social Composition of Boards of
Education*(Chicago: The University of Chicago, 1927), pp. 82, 97. See
also Daniel
   Hager, “Educational Savior?” *The Freeman*, June 1999.
   12. *Ibid*., p. 86.
   13. *Ibid*., p. 91.


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