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America : Education
Issues
Test confirms crisis in US education
By Walter Gilberti
18 March 1998
The poor performance of US students in a recent international
study of math and science literacy raises important questions
about the state of cultural and intellectual life in the United
States. It also casts a revealing light upon the motivation behind
the clamor for education reform emanating from sections of big
business and the Clinton administration.
The Third International Mathematics and Science Study (TIMSS),
involving twelfth graders from 23 countries, was the last of a
three-part survey sponsored by the Amsterdam-based International
Association for the Evaluation of Educational Achievement. The
results of the first two segments of the study, which compared
eighth and fourth graders, were released earlier. For reasons
not explained, those Asian countries whose students traditionally
excel in these areas, and which had participated in the earlier
studies, did not take part in the twelfth grade segment.
In combined math and science literacy, US students could do
no better than fourth from the bottom. Only Lithuania, Cyprus
and South Africa scored lower. In advanced mathematics, only Austria
scored lower than the US, and in physics US students stood dead
last.
The abysmal showing of American students has once again prompted
calls for national curriculum standards, teacher and administrator
accountability, and the imposition of "free market"
business practices. Some representatives of big business, intoxicated
by the apparent strength of the US economy, are calling for the
same kind of ruthless competition in education that occurs in
the business world.
In an article in the Wall Street Journal, Louis V. Gerstner,
commenting on the results of the study, wrote: "US businesses
were faced with a stark choice: change or close. They changed....
They invested capital to adapt methods used by the most successful
companies, no matter what the geography. And it worked. The clearest
evidence of that success is the state of the US economy and the
virtual elimination of the federal budget deficit. Our schools
are oddly insulated from marketplace forces and the discipline
that drives constant adaptation, self-renewal and a relentless
push for excellence."
Gerstner's remarks are revealing because what made possible
the eradication of the federal deficit was the destruction of
the social safety net for millions of people. He is advancing
the perspective of Wall Street and a significant section of the
capitalist class who view the vast numbers of working class and
poor students as so much dead weight. Subjecting education to
the same market forces that have created the present level of
economic polarization in American society at large means widening
the already substantial disparity between wealthy school districts
and their poorer working class and inner city counterparts.
Sections of the ruling class are both shocked and embarrassed
by the TIMSS results and, consequently, will step up their attack
on public education. They recognize that the maintenance of the
United States as the world leader in advanced computer and communications
technology is jeopardized by the tangible decline in intellectual
and cultural life.
However, the defenders of capitalism and the profit system
are caught in a contradiction of their own creation. They have
cultivated the notion that the individual accumulation of wealth
is the highest human endeavor, while denigrating the intellectual
development of society as a whole. Meanwhile, millions of working
class children attend dilapidated schools that are starved for
funds.
It should be noted that the TIMSS scores were accompanied by
a note explaining that several countries, including the United
States, did not satisfy all of the requirements for either sample
participation rates or classroom sampling procedures. Since the
test scores used in the comparison were averages, it can be concluded
that every attempt was made to achieve the highest possible average
scores. That this did not occur speaks to the enormous weight
of the decline in the level of education among the general population.
Education is a profoundly social practice. In the process of
constructing what educational theorists call "communities
of learners" in the schools, teachers are confronted with
the enormous social problems endemic to American society today-increasing
poverty and illiteracy, the reemergence of once curable diseases,
and the general level of cultural backwardness. To these problems,
the quick-fix schemes of the Clinton administration and big business
offer no solutions.
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