The Origin of Modern Schooling

mzeiya

Elder Lister
Once upon a time, the king of Prussia was furious because instead of suicidally attacking the French army, his soldiers went home to their families and farms. And that's why we got the schools we have. Here's a 3-minute history of public schools...
Origin-of-schools-USA.jpg

Photos: Whether in colonial Madagascar of 1908 (top of page) or 1920s America (above), public schools have evolved in remarkably similar ways.
All around the world, students attend schools that have an astonishing degree of similarity.
  • Children are required to attend.
  • It runs from kindergarten to grade 12.
  • Students are divided by age, not by what they need or want to learn, nor by what they’ve already learned.
  • The teacher is the authority. The children provide heads that the teacher is supposed to fill.
  • There is little or no opportunity for students to explore a subject in-depth, to develop a passion, to hone a skill. There’s an hour for one subject, then an hour for another.
  • Teachers are considered qualified if, and only if, they have the required certificate.
  • Whether they can teach well is irrelevant.
  • Whether they love or hate children is irrelevant.
  • The curriculum is fixed, and taught at a fixed rate, even if that doesn’t work for some students… even if it doesn’t work for anybody at all.
  • It centers around a standardized curriculum and lesson plans, not real-life experiences.
  • Students and teachers alike believe that the main purpose of school is preparing students to pass the exam.
If you were starting from scratch and wanted to help children become contributing, well-rounded members of society, would you have invented this plan? Surely not. Nobody else did. With one exception.
For many centuries, the favorite pastime of European rulers was invading one another to win more territory. The King of Prussia encountered a problem: Most of his troops were farmers who had been drafted to serve him. When the enemy shot at them, they had an annoying tendency to go home to their family and farm. He wouldn’t win more land with that army! He wanted soldiers who, if ordered to make a suicidal charge, would blindly obey — not soldiers who might shoot their captain and go home.

To create them, he instituted a system of schools that focused on making students respect and obey the authority figure — a teacher. When young men arrived for their first day in uniform, they already knew how to stand in a straight line. Prussia became a military powerhouse by following Frederick’s plan. It expanded its territory, and today we call it Germany.

But the king couldn’t tell parents, “Send us your children so we can teach them to be cannon fodder.” Schools also taught reading and arithmetic. History does not tell us if the king’s primary goal was to mold obedient soldiers or obedient citizens. He got both. Students did not, however, learn to think independently. The teacher had the answer; the students’ job was to memorize it.

This, alone, would have been enough to persuade other rulers to adopt what became known as the Prussian System. Soon another incentive appeared: The Industrial Revolution. Previously, most Europeans lived in the countryside and worked for themselves — typically as farmers, shopkeepers, blacksmiths, or carpenters.
The invention of the steam engine changed all that. Within a few decades, urban factories sprang up. Farmers — sometimes seeking a better life, other times forced off their land — moved to the city. But they weren’t reliable factory workers. Owners needed workers who would show up on time, follow orders, and accept boredom as their fate in life. Prussian-style schools churned them out.

More support came from a different direction. Horace Mann, an American reformer, thought the Prussian school system could improve the lives of poor people in the United States. He got Massachusetts to adopt it and other states soon followed.

European nations introduced the Prussian system in their colonies. It created the docile, low-level workforce that they needed while appearing to benefit the local population. In most countries today, school enrollment has increased but the Prussian system still predominates.

Today, further support for this Prussian system comes from a new source: The education industry. A vast network — administrators, teachers, and government officials; textbook and curriculum publishers; teacher training colleges; aid workers in developing countries; and the inevitable consultants — all derive their income from the public school system that has evolved. Many of them genuinely care about children and education. But they also care about their income and job security. That shapes their thinking and limits their enthusiasm for deep change.

And so here we are today, with a model of schooling intended to mold soldiers who wouldn’t run away when the enemy started shooting, and which evolved to meet the needs of factory owners but also to make everyone feel good about sending their children into it. The origins of this system are still in evidence.
Origin-of-schools-GPE-lockstep.jpg


This year the Global Partnership for Education, a Western NGO that has spent $6 billion to influence school policies in developing regions, proudly announced its latest grants with this photo of schoolgirls marching in lockstep. (The boys, in back, aren’t so enthusiastic about the lockstep thing.)
A never-ending stream of critics, in the global South and North alike, see plainly that the system doesn’t work, and think this is so obvious, it shouldn’t be hard to improve it.

But the system does work — for many people. And so, it continues to thrive.

Source: https://karmacolonialism.org/
 
Good article @mzeiya

During a large family and friends meeting some years back, one of our wazee asked, "What is education?" to the group,and proceeded to explain the above.

Current, a good number of the women in my family are either homeschooling their kids or doing online specialist courses(walitolewa kwa shule za kawaida). They still get their social time with other kids, but a majority of their time is spent learning the environment around them and how to master it(rather than turn into zombies for a non existent system)

I have a 6 year old neice who commands dogs, paints their house, grows veggies, shops, can do grade 3 math and has a logical flow of thoughts. And she still retains her childhood innocence.

My point is, the days of someone from North Eastern studying marine biology at UON instead of methods of survival and thriving in the desert should be long behind us. But as the article has explained above, the system works for those it works for, just not the individual.

I'm not saying we all take our kids out of school, but we should at least ask the question, "What does education mean to me and my kids?".
 
I was always rebellious in school, My teachers considered me stubborn, didn't do homework and was always looking for more adventure and answers unable to get from teachers. Most of my knowledge back then was from a university library where my Old man worked so with that access I would look at books on religion, biology and any other interesting books which assisted me in my exams.
I knew of Moraines at young age, different types of amphibians(Newts and Salamanders), Capital Cities and Administrative cities of All the countries by age 10, I knew Mugomo tree was parasitic and questioned religion Kama siku niliuliza Mwalimu was Sunday school how big God is and why does He need our money if He owns everything including Us?

Our current education system is BS geared to making kids future robots/slaves that work for their employees and still manage to feed,clothe and rent for themselves.

Sorry for the rant but Mimi hukasirika Sana niliona kids that can't solve or reason well in life.
 
Good article @mzeiya

During a large family and friends meeting some years back, one of our wazee asked, "What is education?" to the group,and proceeded to explain the above.

Current, a good number of the women in my family are either homeschooling their kids or doing online specialist courses(walitolewa kwa shule za kawaida). They still get their social time with other kids, but a majority of their time is spent learning the environment around them and how to master it(rather than turn into zombies for a non existent system)

I have a 6 year old neice who commands dogs, paints their house, grows veggies, shops, can do grade 3 math and has a logical flow of thoughts. And she still retains her childhood innocence.

My point is, the days of someone from North Eastern studying marine biology at UON instead of methods of survival and thriving in the desert should be long behind us. But as the article has explained above, the system works for those it works for, just not the individual.

I'm not saying we all take our kids out of school, but we should at least ask the question, "What does education mean to me and my kids?".
I was always rebellious in school, My teachers considered me stubborn, didn't do homework and was always looking for more adventure and answers unable to get from teachers. Most of my knowledge back then was from a university library where my Old man worked so with that access I would look at books on religion, biology and any other interesting books which assisted me in my exams.
I knew of Moraines at young age, different types of amphibians(Newts and Salamanders), Capital Cities and Administrative cities of All the countries by age 10, I knew Mugomo tree was parasitic and questioned religion Kama siku niliuliza Mwalimu was Sunday school how big God is and why does He need our money if He owns everything including Us?

Our current education system is BS geared to making kids future robots/slaves that work for their employees and still manage to feed,clothe and rent for themselves.

Sorry for the rant but Mimi hukasirika Sana niliona kids that can't solve or reason well in life.
Very well put, gentlemen
 
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