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What does the word “education” mean to us? Does it refer to the state’s power to shape the minds and attitudes of citizens to provide human capital for economic and political purposes? Or is education, instead, an intimate human encounter between caring elders and young people with their own aspirations and potentials?

If we believe that genuine education has more to do with the latter, then the hierarchical and authoritarian structure of our present system of schooling is absurdly inappropriate. Through much of the history of public schooling, but especially since the publication of the Reagan Administration’s report A Nation at Risk in 1983, educational decisions have not been made by those most intimately involved in the educational endeavor—teachers, parents, or young people—but by technocrats pursuing their agenda of centralized social management. All important educational decisions are made by distant, impersonal forces completely out of human scale, turning teachers into technicians, parents into consumers, and young people into products. The standardization of teaching and learning through prescribed curricula and textbooks, and the obsessive pursuit of accountability through relentless testing, reflect the concentrated power of political leaders, corporate CEOs, influential foundations, and the mass media.

Policymakers are not concerned with the experiential quality of life or learning in schools, but only with measurable results, with “outputs,” with the economic value of the nation’s human resources. People don’t much matter—systems do. Standardization endorses the ruthlessness and rootlessness of the global corporate system and insists that young people dutifully play their roles as producers and consumers to keep the system functioning. Standardization rewards robotic learning, not creativity or imagination or critical thinking or self-awareness or moral judgment or compassion or wisdom or loyalty to community or place.

This is not an education for democracy or human fulfillment, it is explicitly an education for empire.

Authoritarian educational policy is truly a bipartisan effort. The Bush administration’s “No Child Left Behind” was followed by the Obama policy called “Race to the Top.” While “No Child Left Behind” was a dishonest, deceptive term for a draconian policy of intellectual confor­mity (it should more accurately have been entitled “No Child Left Untested”), at least we can embrace its literal meaning, which is the polar opposite of “Race to the Top,” as the goal of a truly decent and democratic education. To conceive of education as a “race”—a competi­tion forcing schools, teachers, and students to contend for some sort of victory—is to poison the inherent human striving for understanding and meaning.

Defined as a competitive race, education is not a collaborative art of mentoring and nurturing the young, but a frenzied scramble to succeed according to some external measure of success—to reach some goal line established by those in authority. Teachers and schools are considered to be successful if students score well on tests. Period. The actual qual­ity of their knowledge and understanding and the moral, emotional, and cultural meanings of what young people experience in schools are irrelevant and disregarded. Education is defined as mechanical academic performance, diminishing the possibility of providing a meaningful journey toward ethical maturity and democratic citizenship.

We need to ask, as Wendell Berry once did, what are people for? and the question that should follow from it: what are schools for? There is a funda­mentally different way to define education, success, and the purpose of a life well-lived. As Berry and many others have described it, it is the way of authentic human encounter, collaboration, and fellowship, not the way of empire. It is the way of community, stewardship of place, and human scale. It is the way of decentralized power and authority, of part­nership, not domination.

Numerous educational alternatives challenge the agenda of tech­nocratic schooling. They give parents and students a wider range of learning options and engage them in meaningful ways in the decisions affecting their education. The alternatives movement represents the decentralization of educational authority. It redefines learning as an intimate, human-scale relationship through which young people are empowered to discover their own inner resources and their own unique relationships to the community. Young people thrive in these learning environments and come out brimming with self-confidence, multiple competencies, and a strong sense of purpose. They consistently prove that abstract, rigidly imposed standards are not necessary for equipping youth with essential life skills.

Let’s consider a few examples already operating in Vermont. There are several Waldorf schools around the state, and each of them has attracted a community of parents and educators who seek organic, holistic, “green” variations on modern life, such as whole food, holis­tic healthcare, and a more deliberate connection to the rhythms of nature through festivals, stories, art, and other endeavors. These school communities give people who hold a transformative cultural vision places to share, refine, and practice their ideas. Another educa­tional community thriving under the radar in Vermont is the network of “unschoolers”—families who believe that the most authentic learn­ing takes place in daily life, when young people become engaged in the social and natural world around them and pursue their own purposes and questions. This practice promotes the sort of intellectual and civic self-reliance that our most visionary thinkers, such as Thomas Jefferson, Henry David Thoreau, and Ralph Waldo Emerson, considered essential to a democratic society.

A few years ago, an idealistic teacher named Tal Birdsey started an alternative school for young adolescents in Ripton, Vermont, called North Branch School. He tells its story, with delightful wit and penetrat­ing insight, in his inspiring book A Room for Learning. We see how an authentic teacher builds a caring, loving community of learners. Every page, every incident and observation Birdsey relates, is a gentle but firm repudiation of technocratic schooling. “The first parents gravitated to the school,” he tells us, because

something entirely different could be made. . . .[C]urrent politi­cal debates about accountability or state funding fell far short of meaningful discourse about the education of children. These parents, no matter their income, education, or political views, were seeking education that involved something closer to the heart. In particular, they seemed to want something more creative and free . . . in contradistinction to schools tethered to right, standards-based approaches or school officials bombarded with federal mandates to test (pp. 31–32).

A Room for Learning shows exactly what “something closer to the heart” looks like in education. Birdsey sees each of his students as whole persons, with their own challenges, inclinations, learning styles, quirks, and insecurities. Most of them have been “wounded by school” (as Kirsten Olson systematically documents in her compelling book by that title); they are afraid of ridicule and rejection, suspicious of adults who judge them and of peers who band together in cliques to exercise power. They are reluctant to open themselves to others, to test their own limits or pursue their deepest dreams. Birdsey tells how he created a safe, nurturing space in which these young teens could find and test their best, authentic selves. “I asked them to embrace the personal pronoun I so that we might come closer to what was sacred inside of them. Those truths—their truths—would bring us closer to what mattered” (p. 59). Ultimately, what really matters to Birdsey and his students is a commu­nity where everyone feels cared for, a community rooted in love. This, not triumph in the corporate race, is what people are for.

Educational alternatives promote participatory democracy. As described by Vermont’s own progressive philosopher, John Dewey, “participatory democracy” means a society that encourages individuals to take an active part in shaping the social and political lives of their communities rather than entrusting decisions to policymakers and other elites. Dewey explained that education must encourage active, person­ally meaningful learning and critical inquiry; he argued that the coer­cive transmission of an authorized curriculum can only educate youths to become passive citizens in an authoritarian social order.

Educational democracy involves the redistribution of cultural power from the hands of a few policymakers to local communities, parents, teachers, and youths themselves. By repealing standardization and obses­sive testing, we would enable those most closely involved in the learn­ing process to determine their own educational goals and methods. In taking greater responsibility for education, citizens would participate more vigorously in shaping the intellectual and moral climate of their communities.

Decentralizing education would allow all families to find learn­ing environments aligned with their values and with their children’s personalities and styles of learning. Alongside progressive and cultur­ally alternative places for learning, there would continue to exist schools (and homeschooling situations) that are more highly struc­tured or academically oriented, or more concerned about moral or reli­gious instruction. The educational alternatives movement transcends conventional liberal and conservative ideologies; the coexistence of diverse educational visions and experiments would nourish a more vibrant democracy.

A frequent objection to this goal of educational freedom is that it would surrender the public school ideal of a shared social purpose, a common good that transcends parochial interests (which Dewey also emphasized as a key element of democratic life). Wouldn’t our society splinter along lines of religion, ethnicity, class, race, political belief, or petty local inter­ests? If we allow people to gather in separate enclaves to practice their own educational philosophies, wouldn’t this give a green light to all sorts of religious extremists, left-wing radicals, white supremacists, or tree huggers to freely teach the next generation their weird beliefs?

There are at least two ways to address this concern, both of which challenge the very basis of the technocratic model of schooling. First, we need to separate the educational task of mentoring young people from the political task of forging a democratic community in a diverse society. We need to get over, once and for all, the Platonic notion that the state should be molding children into citizens. When Jefferson proposed a system of public education to support the new American democracy, he sought to spread the intellectual tools of reason, skepticism, and critical inquiry among the population, not to establish a “curriculum” autho­rized by elite policymakers, especially one that promotes mindless cele­bration of existing institutions. (He would be horrified, I think, by No Child Left Behind.) When we put educational and political tasks in their proper places, we will see that children who have their developmen­tal needs (such as the need to learn through play) and their individual learning styles well met are more likely to become thoughtful, caring, engaged citizens than those who are bullied and processed by the system of social engineering the technocracy has established. The proof is in the creative, active, generous, socially engaged lives of many thousands of alumni of independent schools and homeschooling.

The second answer to the fear of social fragmentation is to recog­nize that people will always identify with communities that share their beliefs and values, and that this is a basic, normal human need. Unlike a managed social system or a colossal nation-state, a genuine community provides the experience of communion with others; we become involved with people who know us, who understand and appreciate us, who share certain aspects of our identities. In a healthy democracy, as Tocqueville keenly observed in the pre-imperial American republic, there is space for these kinds of connections; they do not threaten the political coherence of the larger community.

Granted that a functioning democracy requires citizens to reach out to each other across partisan or parochial lines to find common ground and collaborate for a common good, the desire for cultural uniformity can be pushed too far, until it becomes oppressive, even totalitarian. Social engineering is counterproductive: By forcing everyone into the ideological mold demanded by standardized education, the state drives people to separatist enclaves and makes them suspicious of commonal­ity. Standardization fans the flames of extremism, while honoring diver­sity invites participation in the larger society. There is a huge difference between a democratic sense of social responsibility and public spirited­ness (which Dewey so thoroughly described), and the technocrats’ goal of social control.

Rejecting the yoke of standardization and enforced conformity does not mean “privatizing” education, making it a commodity that only the privileged can afford. A democratic society must provide all its youths equitable opportunities for cultivating their unique gifts and achieving their potentials. It will surely be a challenge to publicly fund a decen­tralized system without standardized accountability, but that is a task we must take on. We need to figure out how to encourage educational democracy without invoking the awesome power of the national state to enforce some authorized model of cultural conformity. For when the state becomes an all-consuming empire, this power is dangerous indeed.

One vital goal of Vermont independence is an educational culture that respects and encourages learning on a human scale, that supports caring and loving communities of learning. National educational policy is one more reason why we need to challenge the burgeoning power of the American empire. Because Vermonters value genuine democracy, trea­sure individuality, and hold as precious the local land and community, we ought to decline the federal government’s inducements to participate in any “race to the top.”

September 14, 2009

Decentralizing Educational Authority

What does the word “education” mean to us? Does it refer to the state’s power to shape the minds and attitudes of citizens to provide human capital for economic and political purposes? Or is education, instead, an intimate human encounter between caring elders and young people with their own aspirations and potentials?
September 14, 2009

Beyond Facebook: Building an Electronic Front Porch

Michael Wood-Lewis is the founder of Front Porch Forum, a social- and community-networking website primarily serving (thus far) Chittenden County. The following interview was conducted by Vermont Commons editor/publisher Rob Williams.
May 14, 2009

What Will You Eat if Vermont Secedes?

“What will you eat?” is a good question to ponder whether or not you support secession. In James Howard Kunstler’s recent novel, World Made By Hand, food becomes a kind of currency after the governmental and economic infrastructure collapses. People in this story are forced to eat locally because they have little access to the outside world. Although secession is a much different scenario, it is worth considering what types of questions would need to be answered and what areas of the food system might need to be built up for Vermont to have true food security, and even food sovereignty.
October 14, 2008

The Case for Local Wheat and Bread in Vermont

April 18, 1775, Dijon, France: An angry mob gathered outside the shop of a wealthy miller suspected of mixing bean flour with wheat flour to cut costs. The miller was assaulted and his house and mill plundered for flour, then burned to the ground. In the weeks that followed, similar scenes followed at bakeries and mills throughout France. Everywhere, people were angry about the same things: flour was too expensive, often of poor quality, and bread, priced at fourteen sous nationwide, was unaf­fordable to many. At dawn on the second of May an angry mob arrived at the gates of Versailles, demanding action. Surprised and outnumbered, the commander of the palace guard managed to disperse the crowd with assurances that the king would lower the price of bread.
May 22, 2008

Designing Our Future in a Changing World: An Interview with Ben Falk

Whole Systems Design, Inc., describes its work as “occurring at the inter­face of people and land—where the built and biological environments meet.” Based in Vermont’s Mad River Valley, Whole Systems Design integrates ecology, landscape architecture, site development, construc­tion, farming, education, and other disciplines. Founder Ben Falk holds a master’s degree in landscape design and has taught at the University of Vermont and Harvard’s Arnold Arboretum. Vermont Commons editor Rob Williams conducted this interview.
September 14, 2007

The Food Less Traveled

When I heard Michael Ableman, of the Center for Urban Agriculture, speak in Vermont last year, there was one statement he made that I have returned to frequently throughout the year—“pleasure is a better moti­vator for change than guilt.” He continued, “How do we provide an invi­tation, rather than a harangue?” It is hard to determine what thing or combination of things motivates social change—this is a question that traverses disciplines, whether studying educational change or political change.
May 9, 2007

The Great Hydropower Heist: How Corporations Colonized Our Watershed Commons

From Vermont’s founding as a Republic in 1777 until the early 1900s, its citizens were far more energy independent than we find ourselves now. The old-timers traveled and transported goods with an efficient blend of the original horse power and coal-fired steam trains. They heated largely with wood and built hundreds of small hydropower facilities—initially, mechanized mills that utilized raw waterwheel power and were later retrofitted with electric generators and complementary coal-fired steam-powered systems. Hence, the claim: “Hydro—the power that built Vermont.” Now Vermonters spend roughly $2 billion every year on out-of-state fuels for transportation, heating, industrial applications, and electricity. More than $1 billion pays for imported oil and gas alone.
September 9, 2006

Local Currency: A Revolution That Sounds Like a Whisper

When the French and Russian revolutions overthrew the estab­lished orders in their countries (in 1786 and 1917, respectively), they changed just about everything, but not their monetary systems. — Bernard A. Lietaer, Of Human Wealth
September 9, 2006

Money and Liberty

The U.S. monetary system has been a scandal for a long time; whether it can continue much longer without intolerable social, political, and ecological consequences is an open question. Yet most Americans don’t have a clue about it. “It is well enough that people of the nation do not understand our banking and monetary system,” Henry Ford said, “for if they did, I believe there would be a revolution before tomorrow morning.”
April 9, 2006

Powering Vermont’s Future by Embracing the Peak-Oil Challenge

Oil. We’re using it up like there’s no tomorrow. But there is. Why is it, then, that nobody wants to talk about peak oil? We’re will­ing to discuss climate change; even send a tripartisan proposal to the governor in an attempt to move Vermont toward a less fossil-fuel driven energy portfolio. But the “P” word hardly ever gets any press. At what cost, this silence?
February 25, 2006

Economics of Scale vs. the Scale of Economics: Toward Basic Principles of a Bioregional Economy

Economics of scale is what conventional industrial economies are all about, finding ways to more profitably and efficiently exploit nature. But the scale of economics is what the economies of the future must be about, finding ways to live so that healthy communities may foster a healthy earth. There are only two essentials to consider in coming at the problem of the optimum scale for an economy to produce and distribute goods and services: the natural ecosystem and the human community.
February 22, 2006

From Common Wealth to Common Property

We all know what private wealth is, even if we don’t own much. It’s property we inherit or accumulate individually, including our fractional claims on corporations and mutual funds. When President Bush speaks of an “Ownership Society,” it’s this kind of wealth he has in mind. But there’s another trove of wealth that’s not so well known: our common wealth. Each of us is the joint recipient of a vast inheritance. This shared inheritance includes air and water, habitats and ecosystems, languages and cultures, science and technologies, social and political systems, and quite a bit more. Though the value of these manifold gifts is hard to calculate, it’s safe to say they’re worth trillions of dollars. Indeed, accord­ing to Friends of the Commons, their aggregate value probably exceeds that of everything we own privately.