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T**L
Big picture take on education
Finally! A book asking "What is education for?" not just "How can we do education better?" Postman gives a balanced treatment full of great insights. Just take a look at the beginning:Pg. ix - "I began my career as an elementary school teacher and have not for a single moment abandoned the idea that many of our most vexing and painful social problems could be ameliorated if we knew how to school our young. You may conclude from this that I am a romantic, but not, I think, a fool. I know that education is not the same thing as schooling, and that, in fact, not much of education takes place in school... To the young, schooling seems relentless, but we know it is not. What is relentless is our education, which, for good or ill, gives us no rest. That is why poverty is a great educator. Having no boundaries and refusing to be ignored, it mostly teaches hopelessness. But not always. Politics is also a great educator. Mostly, it teaches, I am afraid, cynicism. But not always. Television is a great educator as well. Mostly it teaches consumerism. But not always."There's a big misconception today about what schools are. Most people believe that school = education, and that good grades/academic success = being well educated. But high schools today don't focus education; rather they mostly focus on allocating economic opportunities to those who are capable and eager to obey. And this is an important and remarkable function of schools; otherwise economic opportunities would be determined by inheritance and family connections, as in past generations. But I agree with Postman that this aspect of schooling has become dangerously overemphasized in our society; to the point where learning about society, the original "end" of education, has become nearly driven out of our classrooms. That's the danger of the whole No Child Left Behind and emphasis on standardized test scores. Education has to do with understanding how society works. This can hardly be said of too many schools today.
J**E
Great Book Store.
Recd the book, as described. Very happy.
J**R
Schooling needs an overarching narrative about its purpose
Postman chose this title to purposely have a double meaning: that we'll have an end to successful public education if it doesn't have a meaningful end, or purpose, to it. In the first part of the book, he suggests some purposes that don't work: consumership, economic utility, technology, multiculturalism. He then suggests some overriding narratives that could work:• "The spaceship earth"—viewing the earth as a planet we all share and thus need to take care of, beginning in our own communities.• "The fallen angel"—an admittedly religious metaphor that recognizes that fallibility of humankind and our thinking; Postman notes that scientists, most of all, understand this: today's science is just today's understanding and can change tomorrow.• "The American experiment"—"Can a nation be formed, maintained, and preserved on the principle of continuous argumentation?"• "The law of diversity"—to recognize the "significant artistic, intellectual, and social contributions from diverse ethnic groups," not to raise one group above another but to enrich us all by gathering the best of ideas from all cultures.•"The world weavers/the world makers"—"how we use language, how language uses us, and what measures are available to clarify our knowledge of the world we make."
R**S
Must Read
This is a very insightful read to the problems in Education today. This should be a required read for all new teachers and a good round table read for struggling school sytems. Do not be offended by Mr. Postman's use of the word god or think he is trying to inject religon, just read with an open mind about the concepts he is writing about.
M**S
Prophetic Book
Postman has seen what can happen to schooling and society when there is no transcendent narrative to guide us. As the Book of Proverbs warns: " Where there is no vision, the people perish". He offers possible narratives that may serve to unify us as a nation.
D**E
Neil Postman is one amazing author
Read the first few chapters and had to take a break - to contemplate on my own personal experiences through school both in Europe and in the US.These are the authors and books that are worth reading - the once that make you think, the once that provoke you to question the status quo.
K**P
Not for me
For me it was just too dry and rambly. I am not a deep philosophical this ker though so it is not my cup of tea. Those more educated and those who love to read might enjoy it.
T**T
the beginning of education
This book is unmistakably a work by Neil Postman! He gives a very interesting view on how our culture and education are structured with the basis in what he calls a "narrative" stemming from the need to believe in some gods, so you can see a lot of allusions to the idea of the mono myth here. Postman also gives clear suggestions for how the system of education and the approach to teaching can be modified in order to turn around the imminent end of education and make it into a positive constructive force for the future. There are a lot of crossovers with "Teaching as a Subversive Activity" which Postman co-authored.
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