« Re-education and alpaca spit | Main | From communication strategies to emergence »

Creating excellent sheep

Catching up on my RSS feed late last night while watching Godfather II into the early hours of the morning, I found this post on leadership from Walter Smith's ever thoughtful blog. He is building on a speech at West Point by William Deresiewicz entitled Solitude and Leadership. As it happens solitude was a personal theme last night so I was probably sensitised to the subject. Unusually I had spent the last two nights eating with a family engaged in multiple conversations. Last night was with David Rooney of Queensland University, his spouse and two daughters engaged in a conversation that ranged from genetics to German literature. When you travel a lot the rhythms of family life are disrupted when home, and travel means a lot of solitary nights in various hotels. Now I am not complaining, there are advantages as well as disadvantages, but its always good to be reminded that people have lives away from seminars, lectures and consultancy practice.

Walter Smith picks up on some key quotes which I repeat below:

  • In an observation about students at Yale: So what I saw around me were great kids who had been trained to be world class hoop jumpers. Any goal you set them, they could achieve. Any test you gave them, they could pass with flying colours. They were as one of them put it herself, "excellent sheep".
  • The head of my department had no genius for organising or initiative or even order, no particular learning or intelligence, no distinguishing characteristics at all. Just the ability to keep the routine going.
  • What we have now are the greatest technocrats the world has ever seen, people who have been trained to be incredibility good at one specific thing, but who have no interest in anything beyond their area of expertise.

Now these quotes mirrored virtually all conversations I have had with thinking academics over the last year or so when the subject has turned to education and the way we are treating the next generation's intellectual development. It also matches my own experience with Daughter's first year of studying anthropology and realising that she will not be able to get through exams the way I did; picking off the open questions and producing enough originality to prick the examiners interest. Instead the only way she can succeed it to repeat and summarise the thoughts of others. She said it herself in a skype chat where her frustration at a recent project bubbled over and she said i get good results when its my ideas.

These days the curriculum and lesson plan has to be fixed, the marking plan made explicit, the readings printed off in a brick of extracts and other material. There is no scope to explore new areas, to move with the flow of a students conversation, to reward original thinking that does no reference established material. In the humanities this is a recipe (sic) for entropy death in human learning. We are destroying variety in the interests of explicit conformity. Even more depressingly the generation of students who know it can be different (and are now teachers) are been homogenised by measurement systems that require inauthentic behaviour and the generation who follow will not even know that there is an alternative.

Comments (5)

I hear ya. Education is something I will be touching on when I guest blog later this month.

Oh yes - if excellent sheep are being created, I have to wonder who then are becoming the shepherds.

Stuart Norfolk:

I think the shepherds have / will be made redundant and the landowners will keep the sheep in order at a greatly reduced cost.

Tony Quinlan [TypeKey Profile Page]:

With you - I remember you commenting years ago on "God help us when Thatcher's children get into senior positions" (I paraphrase, naturally). Situation could be far worse when the current children get there.

In the past couple of years, I've seen a newly-formed Trust of schools talking about extending the engineering speciality of the Upper School right through to Lower Schools: "So they can decide to be engineers and start training in Primary..." (If my choices/intent at that age had prevailed, I would currently be the world's greatest train driver.)

But even at one of the schools my girls go to (which I'd like to think was slightly better than the mean), the kids can tell you what the Learning Objective is for the day/lesson...

John Pini:

I was reading this post just after I had battled through the new system of booking for a Parent Teacher Interview for my 14 year old.
In using this new structured online booking process which eliminated me having to speak to anyone, I reflected in the delays in the system just what my 14 year old had learnt at his school.
The links between the sheep post and what I thought my son had learnt were quite chilling. The best parts of his educational experiences have not been because of the school system and structure but despite.
I am proud that he has chosen that he wanted to do something extra and therefore had to learn some new things but that was external to schooling even though his school has benefited.
Sadly I think we have a Government Education Department that thinks it is good at running schools (questionable) but doesn't seem to understand about education and learning.

Post a comment




Remember Me?

(you may use HTML tags for style)