Ben Wildavsky does a good job of laying out some of those reasons in today's Wall Street Journal. For example:
International tests show that students in many other nations bypass American kids in reading and math. Could such comparative results really be a function of higher raw intelligence overseas -- or are they more likely to reflect superior educational practices? It is telling that hard-headed education reformers like Eric Hanushek, Chester E. Finn and Jay Greene believe that we can do much more to boost the academic achievement of children upon whom Mr. Murray would essentially give up.And:
In his brave new world, the bell curve of abilities is cheerfully acknowledged; students and workers gladly accept their designated places in the pecking order; and happy, well-paid electricians and plumbers go about their business while their brainy brethren read Plato and prepare for the burdens of ruling the world. It is hard to believe that a dynamic, upwardly mobile society would emerge from such an arrangement, or "dignity" either. The view outlined in "Real Education" seems far from the one that Mr. Murray put forward in "Losing Ground" (1984). In that influential book, a headlong assault on the welfare state, he called for an "infinitely forgiving" education system in which students can try over and over to succeed, even if only some will.Well said. I'd also note that Murray's preferred educational regime of IQ testing, tracking, and limiting opportunities for advanced degrees would invest a great deal of new power in government-run schools. That seems very un-conservative to me. And dangerous, given the way such power tends to refract through underlying social biases. Several years ago, I listened to the president of Dillard University, a historically black institution, give a speech about education. When he was in high school, the school tried to put him in the vocational track, because it didn't think he was smart enough for college-level work. They wanted him to be a repairman. He wanted something more.
2 comments:
Am I the only one who's noticed the frequent comment by blogs (this one and others) to the effect that electrician and plumber are jobs for people who aren't smart enough for college? don't people realize that the thinking skills needed to be a good electrician, plumber, (fill in almost any of the skilled trades) are very substantial; many college educated people could not do these jobs, if they could even get into an apprenticeship program.
I agree with anonymous, above. In today's economy, these jobs can pay better than some "white collar" jobs. Just see what a plumber or electrician can charge for an emergency weekend call!
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