Posted on 04/07/2020 2:47:19 PM PDT by CheshireTheCat
History may very well show that the biggest casualty of the coronavirus outbreak may not be the body count, but rather the ability of a population to think critically...In a different day, there would be questions about coronavirus statistics in context of comparing them to other infectious diseases. There would be real-time figures of COVID-19 cases, alongside real-time figures of influenza deaths...There would be pundits who frequently reminded that COVID-19 case counts could be rising due to increased testing...In a different day, America would be looking at the links, at the ties, at the curious conflicts of interest. There would be look-sees into the political backgrounds of those issuing the loudest warnings, with the most hyperbolic rhetoric.
(Excerpt) Read more at washingtontimes.com ...
Critical thinking has been under assault by the Left for decades, and this effort has festered in the snowflake phenomenon.
This is why the politicians and MDs refuse to provide firm dates for ending the quarantine. Because they know they will be held accountable. Instead it is easy just to order indefinite home detention and business closures because “science” requires it (without any proof).
The junk science behind climate change has prepared the world for this moment, and no doubt will leverage the power that has been improperly snatched by bureaucrats. Never let a good crisis go to waste.
Critical thinking has been under assault by the Left for decades, and this effort has festered in the snowflake phenomenon.
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Yes all of their “my feelings matter and I should be heard” stuff over thinking.
Speaking of the Fearbros, theyve been noticeably quiet the past couple of days...
Who's science should we believe, and what firm date do the real scientists recommend for ending the quarantine?
In a different day, FR wouldnt be chock full of Fearbros pumping the panic as much as the dems and MSM.l.
Speaking of the Fearbros, theyve been noticeably quiet the past couple of days...
When I first saw all those posts, I immediately thought communist bots.
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HISTORICAL BACKGROUND
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Dumbing-down was certainly not on any citizen’s Wish List. If we got dumbing-down, that has to be because our top educators decided among themselves that dumber was what they desired America to be. And why would they decide that? For ideological reasons. Then, as now, the “enlightened” people tended to be socialists.
In schools, this tendency favored cooperative children, minimal competition, and as much leveling as could be managed. Our educators were concerned with creating peas in a pod. All the things traditionally esteemed in education became irrelevant, even a nuisance.
Have I exaggerated? Not at all. This crusade against knowledge, this campaign against memory, this devotion to ignorance, can be told via endless quotes from the top minds in the field of education. When reading these quotes, imagine you are a teacher. Imagine these injunctions come down to you from Teachers College or your state superintendent. You can probably imagine the damaging changes you would have to make to conform. (There are 8 quotes; skip ahead if you are already familiar with them.) In 1897 John Dewey wrote: “The true center of correlation on the school subjects is not science, not literature, nor history, nor geography, but the child’s own social activity.” In 1899 he added: “The mere absorbing of facts and truths is so exclusively individual an affair that it tends very naturally to pass into selfishness. There is no obvious social motive for the acquirement of mere learning, there is no clear social gain in success thereat.” So there go facts, truths, and learning. In 1911 Professor Stanley Hall made the case for illiteracy: “The knowledge which illiterates acquire is probably a much larger proportion of it practical. Moreover, they escape much eyestrain and mental excitement, and, other things being equal, are probably more active and less sedentary. It is possible, despite the stigma our bepedagogued age puts upon this disability, for those who are under it not only to lead a useful, happy, virtuous life, but to be really well educated in many other ways.” In 1929 Edward Thorndike and Arthur Gates, in their textbook about education, zeroed in on the real problems: “Artificial exercises, like drills on phonetics, multiplication tables, and formal writing movements are used to a wasteful degree. Subjects such as arithmetic, language and history include content that is intrinsically of little value.” In 1936 the NEA Journal summed up the guiding philosophy: "Let us not think...in terms of specific facts or skills [that children acquire] but rather in terms of growing." In 1942 three education professors wrote “Adventures in American Education,” which describes a curriculum under which seventh-grade pupils would devote six weeks to “orientation to school” and 30 weeks to “home and family life.” There is a section on the care of clothing, on jobs, on relationships with parents, brothers and sisters, but no references to reading, writing, or arithmetic. Professor William H. Kilpatrick, who has been hailed as the “Grand Master” of the cult, tended to lump mathematics with Latin and physics, and concluded at about this time, “There is little practical value to warrant the time spent on them.” What Kilpatrick could write purple prose about was practical stuff, which he called “real needs.” Filling out forms, learning to drive, and decorating a house in the suburbs. That’s real! About 1950 educator Wilbur Yauch wrote: “More than 90% of the arithmetic...taught at the typical old-style schools has no future practical value to the average child...[T]he emphasis in these [new] schools is on problems that are down to earth, such as accounting for the school lunch money.” In 1951 A. H. Lauchner, principal of a junior high school, famously said: “Through the years, we've built a sort of halo around reading, writing, and arithmetic. We've said they were for everybody....When we come to the realization that not every child has to read, figure and spell...then we shall be on the road to improving the junior high curriculum.” |
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THE NEXT HALF-CENTURY
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Here’s the fascinating part: those early prescriptions were bluntly candid. (What I’ve elsewhere called dumbing-down in your face!) Starting in the early 1950’s, however, the public began to rebel. Critics wrote bitterly about the anti-intellectualism of educators. In response, the top educators became more cunning and sneaky. They devised what seems to me a dark tide of clever sophistries. Each of these had a handsome sheen; it could be presented to the public as an ingenious gift to children. In practice, these sophistries never delivered what was promised. Typically, they delivered precisely that mediocrity for which our educators had publicly yearned a few decades earlier!
The two best-known gimmicks, discussed elsewhere on this site, sabotaged reading and arithmetic. (Whole Word devastated reading and sparked the Reading Wars. New Math and Reform Math devastated arithmetic and remain a major front in the Education Wars. See "30: The War Against Reading" and "36: The Assault on Math.")
But perhaps the most devastating gimmick of all was not well recognized. It was subtle and operated invisibly. However, it showed up in all subjects, for all ages, from k to college, and thus spread its damage widely. This was the attack on memorization itself. This attack, implicit in Dewey pre-1900, called for the steady demonization of knowing anything, of actually having knowledge inside your head. We might think of it as an officially-promoted cultural amnesia. Memorization was always called “rote memorization” or “rote learning,” and educators made clear that this activity was bad, to be blunt about it. Good students didn’t do this thing; and good teachers would be ashamed if they asked anyone to commit this crime. A new branch of anti-cognitive science or anti-epistomology seemed to arise. It’s all settled: you can’t know anything; you shouldn’t know anything. So a fog of ignorance wafted over the country. You can go on major reference sites today, and find this sophistry in all its well-refined glory. ASK.COM: “Those who criticize rote learning assert that it involves learning facts without developing a deep understanding of them. This lack of understanding makes it impossible to grasp meaning and apply and transfer the knowledge to other areas.” Dreadful nonsense. “Impossible to grasp meaning.” Is that an appropriate description of what happens when a medical student memorizes the names of the nerves; or a child in third-grade memorizes the names of the planets? REFERENCE.COM: “Rote learning is a learning technique which avoids understanding of a subject and instead focuses on memorization...Rote learning, by definition, eschews comprehension, however, and consequently, it is an ineffective tool in mastering any complex subject at an advanced level. Rote learning is sometimes disparaged with the derogative terms parrot fashion, regurgitation, cramming, or mugging because one who engages in rote learning may give the wrong impression of having understood what they have written or said. It is strongly discouraged by many new curriculum standards.” WIKIPEDIA: “Rote learning is a learning technique which avoids understanding of a subject and instead focuses on memorization.” NATIONAL COUNCIL OF TEACHERS OF MATHEMATICS (NCTM): “More than ever, mathematics must include the mastery of concepts instead of mere memorization and the following of procedures. More than ever, school mathematics must include an understanding of how to use technology to arrive meaningfully at solutions to problems instead of endless attention to increasingly outdated computational tedium." A professor from Harvard consulted with a city in Virginia and lamented, in the local newspaper, that some students might “successfully regurgitate facts.” What a metaphor. Knowledge as vomit. That’s the sophistry reduced to its essence. |
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THE GIMMICK AT PRESENT
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Even as this late date (2009), an education professor can come charging along with the whole anti-memory package in hand. Here’s a press release I just found on the web: “Rote Memorization Of Historical Facts Adds To Collective Cluelessness.”
Apparently, in this professor’s world, vast numbers of American are being flogged until they know the dates of battles and the names of leaders. At which point these poor victims of knowledge become hopelessly unhinged---and clueless! “Americans’ historical apathy is also an indictment of the way history is taught in grades K-12, according to a professor who studies and teaches historical instruction....[She] says that teaching history by rote – that is, by having students memorize historical dates and then testing them on how well they can regurgitate that data on a test – is a pedagogical method guaranteed to get students to tune out and add to our collective civic and historical cluelessness.” This timeless drivel goes on for pages. “While it’s important to know facts and dates, the professor believes history teachers should challenge students, especially high school students, to think like historians...Everybody thinks of history as being really boring – and it is, if it’s solely the recitation and recalling of facts,” the professor said. “The concern is always, ‘Our kids don’t know history!’ But if we’re just talking about the recall of facts and dates, that’s not solely what you want to know about history.” “We need to start thinking differently about our students’ abilities,” she said. “They can think critically and engage in historical inquiry if they’re actually given the opportunity. Instead, we make them learn facts and test them on their ability to regurgitate them at the end of the week. I think that’s really insulting to them.” Thinking like a historian, according to the professor, entails studying primary source documents, thinking about the historical context, weighing the evidence and then making an argument – “something all high school students are capable of doing,” she said. “That helps students develop a historical consciousness, which is the ability to ask why a particular historical narrative or a historical concept is advanced or not.” "Teaching students to look at history with a critical eye also helps students see past the jingoism than sometimes passes for history in classrooms. History is used as a way to instill nationalism and patriotism and commitment to a country, and it particularly becomes strong when there’s a threat against the nation, like in the United States after Sept. 11. But that often blinds everyone to unsavory historical events that have happened in the past. That’s why it’s important to foster a healthy bit of critical skepticism in students instead of training a generation of expert test-takers.”
A critical eye, huh? Think like an historian, huh? Why is everything the professor teaches designed to clone more left-wing teachers exactly like herself? Is there a shortage of these people? Repeating cliches but pretending to be some sort of idealized scholar, well, isn't that called pretension? Seems to me an historian should have more self-awareness. Does she really wish her students to know historical context and weigh the evidence? She could have them read this article. |
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TRAIN THE BRAIN, FIND THE MIND
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The thesis throughout this article is that the Education Establishment was anti-knowledge and adopted an anti-memory rhetoric merely as a means to that end. In the process, they had to pretend that memory itself was an irrelevancy, a waste of time and energy, a silly thing. Really? Probably they didn’t even believe this nonsense themselves. Suppose I say to you: “I can never remember your name, but I always forget your face.” I don’t really know you, do I?
I would suspect that in order to memorize things efficiently, you first have to organize them in their most logical way. That in itself is a tremendous achievement for young children. If they can see that three items on a list have a common denominator, that’s a valuable insight. Indeed, that is the beginning of science. If they can find connections, similarities, mnemonic hooks, color codes, or any other gimmick so there’s a pattern as opposed to randomness, that’s a victory. The point is twofold: knowing information is good in itself; and organizing information so you can remember it is a valuable intellectual exercise. |
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IN CONCLUSION
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The thing you have to keep reminding yourself of is that the Education Establishment in this country doesn’t know anything more about memory than the average mushroom knows. The policies were never about memory. The intent was to foreclose the possibility of knowledge; to stop people from remembering anything. That was the shamefully stupid--one can as well say suicidal--policy promoted by people who disliked American culture and civilization, and wished their fellow citizens to be empty-headed and pliable.
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CODA
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Michael Knox Beran, writing in the City Journal, neatly stated the main points:
In Defense of Memorization: If there’s one thing progressive educators don’t like it’s rote learning. As a result, we now have several generations of Americans who’ve never memorized much of anything. Even highly educated people in their thirties and forties are often unable to recite half a dozen lines of classic poetry or prose. Yet it wasn’t so long ago that kids in public schools from Boston to San Francisco committed poems like Shelley’s “To a Skylark” and Tennyson’s “Ulysses” to memory. They declaimed passages from Shakespeare and Wordsworth, the Psalms and the Declaration of Independence. Even in the earliest grades they got by heart snippets of “The Midnight Ride of Paul Revere” or “Abou Ben Adhem.” By 1970, however, this tradition was largely dead. Should we care? Aren’t exercises in memorizing and reciting poetry and passages of prose an archaic curiosity, without educative value? That too-common view is sadly wrong. Kids need both the poetry and the memorization. As educators have known for centuries, these exercises deliver unique cognitive benefits, benefits that are of special importance for kids who come from homes where books are scarce and the level of literacy low. In addition, such exercises etch the ideals of their civilization on children’s minds and hearts. |
If I am a snowflake and I see a number displayed in a large red font and followed by several explanation points, then that number must therefore be larger and more dangerous than any number ever considered before.
/sarc
You cannot arrive at a society that thinks a boy is a girl, or even that homosexuality is inborn, without elevating transient feelings and momentary confusion to the status of unquestionable facts.
BTW ... back in the 90s my very first encounter with George Sonos was on some talking head show and on that very show he openly mocked the human capacity for reason, though I cant exactly remember what form of mocking he employed, probably that Reason is a slave master guff or some permutation of it. Thats bad enough on him but the host said nothing.
To borrow from Socrates by way of Plato to blithely say Reason is a Master is to ignore that it is at least a master you can choose whereas Passion in a slaver you not only cannot usually choose it will if given into steadily rob you of any capacity to ever choose Reason again once youve subsided into Passion.
The only justification for them to kill the economy and become more authoritarian, or if this virus is something very different than what they are telling us. If they know for example that its a military weapon and is going to do something much worse. Kind of the way if an asteroid was heading to hit the earth they would hide it from us
Soros ... darn typos....
In a different day Cheryl and the Flubros would be using the critical thinking skills that they claim to have. If Trump is bright enough to not be tricked by some of these people that are trying to mislead him AND if the numbers those people are giving us clearly aren’t true then this must all be about something else.
The “liberals are tricking that idiot Trump into destroying the economy” flubros are every bit as clueless as those fearbros promoting this as the plague that ends mankind.
If one has been paying attention to Trump then they would know that Trump is clearly not falling into either group. Could there be something else besides and not between these two positions that is true? Another motivation?
Once you realize that you’re arguing with children, there’s no point in continuing.
Re: Critical Thinking
Having read all I had set aside, I pulled an old Horizon hard cover magazine form my stash of same randomly and found an article by Bryan Magee. Although written in the Summer of 75, it is a good analysis of our current situation.
Title: Getting Along Without Doomsday
Quotes:
Many of our leading pundits these days are determined to persuade us that we must give up our librties and submit to some central authority if we hope tp save civilization from the catastrophies they say are at hand.
The simple truth that we are all trying to evade is that we dont know what is going to happen. I apologize for stating an obvious piece of the obvious, but there are few of us who will accrpt it and face the its consequences.
And one that applies to all the issues, The lip-smacking RELISH with which our 20th century ( and 21st )prophets proclaim the imminent destruction of our society is unmistakable. They are THRILLED by it. They want it.
All this from a labour MP in the UK 45 years ago.
Youre insufferably smug and condescending, like all of the Fearbros.
Critical thinking has been abandoned by Rush who everyday embarasses himself by trying to equate covid projections with climate change
Rush has abandoned the President
Fantastic post
Thanks for posting
I know my freshness date isn't 1999, and I wasn't posting way back when (though I was lurking), but if you read the story (!) I believe, with strong evidence, that FR was in fact having exactly the same sort of debate Ms. Chumley says she wished was being had in America:
If you haven't, I recommend bookmarking http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/3830056/posts as THE primary catalog of COVID-19 threads. As I've characterized it, the virtual demolition derby of opinion, research, facts, history, and articles from publications as diverse as The Lancet, NEJM, and WND and The Blaze was played out on this here little website.
Was there hysteria? Certainly. Did people lose their temper? Of course. Did vective spill from people's keyboards? Unfortunately, yes. Was the marketplace of ideas suppressed? Hell no.
Even today, people are STILL posting divergent views characterized as 'flubros' and hysterics. Even today, people are STILL arguing over whether or not any of this is Constitutional, will help preserve the Nation, will vaporize the economy, is all a Deep State sham, is Trump playing 9-D chess, was cooked up so Brady could leave the Patriots without a mass protest, and so on.
Frankly, I think there has been an ABUNDANCE of critical thinking. There's also been a lot of crackpottery, tin foil haberdashery, and zealotry. We've also been graced by doctors, statisticians, and all sorts of professionals (some of whom tried to intimidate via Authority Bias and were laughed at) and non-professionals who may have done a better job than the 'experts.'
In fact, it is that last point that, IMHO, may have rubbed Ms. Chumley and others the wrong way. A bunch of unwashed masses, armed with nothing more than a web browser, Excel, and some reading comprehension skills but lots of guts and the willingness to thrash it all out with hockey brawl-like abandon, were able to better nail what happened and a way out more than the experts. Buckley would be proud: the people in the phone book did a better job than the faculty.
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