Monday 12 October 2015

Utopian Educational Theory

21st Century Enlightenment

Madcap pedagogues control New Zealand government schools.  These are folk whose theology posits that all children are born in absolute innocence, without any moral impairment whatsoever.  When such doctrines are applied to educational theory (and practice) the results are always deleterious.

The modern educator is like a gardener who believes there are no weeds in the creation.  In such a perfect world, the best way to garden is to drop fertilizer on everything in the garden, stand back, and let it grow naturally.  The odd bit of assistance might be necessary, such as staking plants (or weeds) or tying up unruly outgrowth. And, oh, a bit of irrigation from time to time.  But basically the idea is to let the garden rip.

This modern educator we might describe as a gardener participating in a grand utopian innocence project.  Behind him stands endless serried ranks of educrats and unionistas along with unlimited tax payer funds.

The opposite view is the Christian one.  Man was created perfect and sinless, but sinned against God.  A moral, spiritual, and physical disease was imputed to the entire human race.  All of life is a struggle against this death.  To return to the gardening analogy, the Christian educator is like the groundsman who knows that lawns need to be trimmed, weeds uprooted, and trees pruned--constantly.

Once upon a time our culture was familiar with books like William Golding's dystopian Lord of the Flies.  Put a group of civilised teenagers on a remote, isolated island and within hours evil begins to flourish.  Evil comes from within, and must be actively fought against and trained out.  Wilful ignorance is just one aspect of the evil with which we are all born.  Such Christian notions have all fallen into a crevasse in the face of the secularist Utopian Innocence Project.

Here are some examples of the Utopian Innocence Project at work.
  Firstly, a school in the UK:

New Age School Plummets Down Ofsted Ratings After It Told Students Grades ‘Unimportant’

 by Donna Rachel Edmunds
Breitbart London

A primary school which told its pupils that exam grades are unimportant has had its Ofsted rating slashed from “good” to “inadequate”, seven years after its new age head teacher Rachel Tomlinson took the reins. The verdict reverses its previous improvement up the Ofsted ratings scheme achieved under Ms Tomlinson’s leadership.

Over the last year Barrowford Primary school in Lancashire has been the subject of numerous media reports, thanks to its rejection of traditional teaching methods, including any form of discipline. It first hit headlines last year when a letter sent home to its year 6 pupils telling they were all “special and unique” went viral.

The letter read “The people who create these tests and score them do not know each of you. They do not know that your friends count on you to be there for them or that your laughter can brighten the dreariest day. So enjoy your results and be very proud of these but remember there are many ways of being smart.”  In June it emerged that the school, whose motto is “Learn to Love, Love to Learn”, had absolutely no discipline policy, as it did not believe that children should be deemed “naughty”. Instead, school policy states “It should be explained to the child that they have made a wrong choice.”

Barrowford’s 355 pupils, aged between 4 and 11, are encouraged to sort out disputes between themselves using phrases such as “you have emptied my resilience bucket”, whilst teachers dealing with unruly pupils are told not to discipline them, but instead to inform the pupil that they are impacting the teacher’s “emotional well-being”.

At the time the school was still enjoying an Ofsted rating of “good,” gained in September 2012, a designation achieved in all five rated measures. That rating, an improvement from the school’s previous designation of “satisfactory” had been achieved under head teacher Rachel Tomlinson, who joined the school in 2008.  Three years on, and under the same leadership the school has now been downgraded by two grades to “inadequate” overall, the lowest grading that Ofsted can give. It has been rated inadequate on two out of the five measures, quality of teaching and early years provision, and requiring improvement on the remaining three, leadership and management, behaviour and safety of pupils, and achievement of pupils.

“More-able pupils do not reach the higher levels in the national tests and assessments for seven- and 11-year-olds. Pupils’ achievement over time is not good enough, particularly in year groups where teaching is weak,” inspectors noted.  Pupils themselves told inspectors “No one minds if we don’t do our best work,” while the teachers’ assessments were deemed “overly generous,” not accurately reflecting “the current skills, behaviour and abilities of the children.”

On the plus side, inspectors noted “Pupils are prepared socially and emotionally for a life in modern Britain.”  Despite marking the school drastically down from its previous assessment, the inspectors also listed as a strength “Standards are improving and are getting closer to those attained nationally by seven- and 11-year olds as a result of some well-targeted small group teaching, particularly of disadvantaged pupils.”

Chris McGovern, a former head and chairman of the Campaign for Real Education, said “This school has used its pupils for an experiment and should hang its head in shame.  “Children and their parents have been led to believe that these child-centred teaching methods are the way forward but the fact is they are creating a generation of school leavers who are unemployable.”
Ah, yes--they may leave unemployable, but they are "prepared socially and emotionally for life in modern Britain." Quite an indictment upon modern Britain, we would have thought.

And an example in New Zealand?  Watch the utopian gardeners (aka modern teachers) at work.



We sadly predict that, as has happened in the case of Barrowford Primary in the UK, for a few years all will appear to be going swimmingly.  The garden will be luxuriant with growth.  But eventually the educrats, the experts and the utopian advocates of a "21st Century Learning" will conclude that it has been an embarrassing failure.  But for now, these "children centric schools" are the cutting edge of enlightened educational theory and practice.

In a word, pupils in such schools are being entertained, not taught.  The adults in the "class rooms" are utopian gardeners, facilitators--not teachers. 

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