The
Dumbing-Down of America
by
Patrick
J. Buchanan
Recently
by Patrick J. Buchanan: Fed
Up With Freeloaders
"Is our children
learning?" as George W. Bush so famously asked.
Well, no, they
is not learning, especially the history of their country, the school
subject at which America's young perform at their worst.
On history
tests given to 31,000 pupils by the National Assessment of Education
Progress, the "Nation's Report Card," most fourth-graders could
not identify a picture of Abraham Lincoln or a reason why he was
important.
Most eighth-graders
could not identify an advantage American forces had in the Revolutionary
War. Twelfth-graders did not know why America entered World War
II or that China was North Korea's ally in the Korean War.
Only 20 percent
of fourth-graders attained even a "proficient" score in the test.
By eighth grade, only 17 percent were judged proficient. By 12th
grade, 12 percent. Only a tiny fraction was graded "advanced," indicating
a superior knowledge of American history.
Given an excerpt
from the Supreme Court's 1954 decision Brown v. Board of Education
– "We conclude that in the field of pubic education, separate but
equal has no place, separate education facilities are inherently
unequal" – and asked what social problem the court was seeking to
correct, 2 percent of high school seniors answered "segregation."
As these were
multiple-choice questions, notes Diane Ravitch, the education historian,
the answer "was right in front of them."
A poster put
out by the Committee to Defend America by Aiding the Allies, circa
1940, was shown and the question asked, "The poster above seeks
to protect America and aid Britain in the struggle against ..."
Four countries were listed as possible answers.
A majority
did not identify Germany, though the poster contained a clue. The
boot about to trample the Statue of Liberty had a huge swastika
on the sole.
"We're raising
young people who are, by and large, historically illiterate," historian
David McCullough told The Wall Street Journal.
"History textbooks,"
added McCullough, "are "badly written." Many texts have been made
"so politically correct as to be comic. Very minor characters that
are currently fashionable are given considerable space, whereas
people of major consequence" – such as inventor Thomas Edison –
"are given very little space or none at all."
Trendies and
minorities have their sensibilities massaged in the new history,
which is, says McCullough, "often taught in categories – women's
history, African American history, environmental history – so that
many students have no sense of chronology ... no idea of what followed
what."
But if the
generations coming out of our schools do not know our past, do not
who we are or what we have done as a people, how will they come
to love America, refute her enemies or lead her confidently?
This appalling
ignorance among American young must be laid at the feet of an education
industry that has consumed trillions of tax dollars in recent decades.
Comes the retort:
History was neglected because Bush, with No Child Left Behind, overemphasized
reading and math.
Yet the same
day the NAEP history scores were reported, The New York Times
reported on the academic performance of New York state high school
students in math and English. The results were stunning.
Of state students
who entered ninth grade in 2006, only 37 percent were ready for
college by June 2010. In New York City, the figure was 21 percent,
one in five, ready for college.
In Yonkers,
14.5 percent of the students who entered high school in 2006 were
ready for college in June 2010. In Rochester County, the figure
was 6 percent.
And the racial
gap, 45 years after the federal and state governments undertook
heroic exertions to close it, is wide open across the Empire State.
While 51 percent
of white freshman in 2006 and 56 percent of Asian students were
ready for college in June 2010, only 13 percent of New York state's
black students and 15 percent of Hispanics were deemed ready.
The implications
of these tests are alarming, not only for New York but for the country
we shall become in this century.
In 1960, there
were 18 million black Americans and few Hispanics in a total population
of 160 million. By 2050, African Americans and Hispanics combined
will, at 200 million, roughly equal white Americans in number.
If
the racial gap in academic achievement persists for the next 40
years, as it has for the last 40, virtually all of the superior
positions in the New Economy and knowledge-based professions will
be held by Asians and whites, with blacks and Hispanics largely
relegated to the service sector.
America will
then face both a racial and class crisis.
The only way
to achieve equality of rewards and results then will be via relentless
use of the redistributive power of government – steep tax rates
on the successful, and annual wealth transfers to the less successful.
It will be affirmative action, race preferences, ethnic quotas and
contract set-asides, ad infinitum – not a prescription for racial
peace or social tranquility.
June
21, 2011
Patrick
J. Buchanan [send
him mail] is co-founder and editor of The
American Conservative. He is also the author of seven books,
including Where
the Right Went Wrong, and A
Republic Not An Empire. His latest book is Churchill,
Hitler, and the Unnecessary War. See his
website.
Copyright
© 2011 Creators Syndicate
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