NEWS - THE BIGGEST PROBLEMS
Intellectual Espionage
At the start of WWII millions of men showed up at registration offices to take low-level academic tests before being inducted.1
The years of maximum mobilization were 1942 to1944; the fighting force
had been mostly schooled in the 1930s, both those inducted and those
turned away. Of the 18 million men were tested, 17,280,000 of them were
judged to have the minimum competence in reading required to be a
soldier, a 96 percent literacy rate. Although this was a 2 percent
fall-off from the 98 percent rate among voluntary military applicants ten years earlier, the dip was so small it didn’t worry anybody.
WWII
was over in 1945. Six years later another war began in Korea. Several
million men were tested for military service but this time 600,000 were
rejected. Literacy in the draft pool had dropped to 81 percent, even
though all that was needed to classify a soldier as literate was
fourth- grade reading proficiency. In the few short years from the
beginning of WWII to Korea, a terrifying problem of adult illiteracy
had appeared. The Korean War group received most of its schooling in
the 1940s, and it had more years in school with more professionally
trained personnel and more scientifically selected textbooks than the
WWII men, yet it could not read, write, count, speak, or think as well
as the earlier, less-schooled contingent.
A
third American war began in the mid-1960s. By its end in 1973 the
number of men found noninductible by reason of inability to read safety
instructions, interpret road signs, decipher orders, and so on—in other
words, the number found illiterate—had reached 27 percent of the total
pool. Vietnam-era young men had been schooled in the 1950s and the
1960s—much better schooled than either of the two earlier groups—but
the 4 percent illiteracy of 1941 which had transmuted into the 19
percent illiteracy of 1952 had now had grown into the 27 percent
illiteracy of 1970. Not only had the fraction of competent readers
dropped to 73 percent but a substantial chunk of even those were only
barely adequate; they could not keep abreast of developments by reading
a newspaper, they could not read for pleasure, they could not sustain a
thought or an argument, they could not write well enough to manage
their own affairs without assistance.
Consider
how much more compelling this steady progression of intellectual
blindness is when we track it through army admissions tests rather than
college admissions scores and standardized reading tests, which inflate
apparent proficiency by frequently changing the way the tests are
scored.
Looking back, abundant
data exist from states like Connecticut and Massachusetts to show that
by 1840 the incidence of complex literacy in the United States was
between 93 and 100 percent wherever such a thing mattered. According to
the Connecticut census of 1840, only one citizen out of every 579 was
illiterate and you probably don’t want to know, not really, what people
in those days considered literate; it’s too embarrassing. Popular
novels of the period give a clue: Last of the Mohicans,
published in 1826, sold so well that a contemporary equivalent would
have to move 10 million copies to match it. If you pick up an uncut
version you find yourself in a dense thicket of philosophy, history,
culture, manners, politics, geography, analysis of human motives and
actions, all conveyed in data-rich periodic sentences so formidable
only a determined and well-educated reader can handle it nowadays. Yet
in 1818 we were a small-farm nation without colleges or universities to
speak of. Could those simple folk have had more complex minds than our
own?
By 1940, the literacy
figure for all states stood at 96 percent for whites, 80 percent for
blacks. Notice that for all the disadvantages blacks labored under,
four of five were nevertheless literate. Six decades later, at the end
of the twentieth century, the National Adult Literacy Survey and the
National Assessment of Educational Progress say 40 percent of blacks
and 17 percent of whites can’t read at all. Put another way, black
illiteracy doubled, white illiteracy quadrupled. Before you think of
anything else in regard to these numbers, think of this: we spend three
to four times as much real money on schooling as we did sixty years
ago, but sixty years ago virtually everyone, black or white, could read.
In their famous bestseller, The Bell Curve,
prominent social analysts Charles Murray and Richard Herrnstein say
that what we’re seeing are the results of selective breeding in
society. Smart people naturally get together with smart people, dumb
people with dumb people. As they have children generation after
generation, the differences between the groups gets larger and larger.
That sounds plausible and the authors produce impressive mathematics to
prove their case, but their documentation shows they are entirely
ignorant of the military data available to challenge their contention.
The terrifying drop in literacy between World War II and Korea happened
in a decade, and even the brashest survival-of-the-fittest theorist
wouldn’t argue evolution unfolds that way. The Bell Curve
writers say black illiteracy (and violence) is genetically programmed,
but like many academics they ignore contradictory evidence.
For
example, on the matter of violence inscribed in black genes, the
inconvenient parallel is to South Africa where 31 million blacks live,
the same count living in the United States. Compare numbers of blacks
who died by violence in South Africa in civil war conditions during
1989, 1990, and 1991 with our own peacetime mortality statistics and
you find that far from exceeding the violent death toll in the United
States or even matching it, South Africa had proportionately less than
one-quarter the violent death rate of American blacks. If more
contemporary comparisons are sought, we need only compare the current
black literacy rate in the United States (56 percent) with the rate in
Jamaica (98.5 percent)—a figure considerably higher than the American
white literacy rate (83 percent).
If
not heredity, what then? Well, one change is indisputable,
well-documented and easy to track. During WWII, American public schools
massively converted to non-phonetic ways of teaching reading. On the
matter of violence alone this would seem to have impact: according to
the Justice Department, 80 percent of the incarcerated violent
criminal population is illiterate or nearly so (and 67 percent of all
criminals locked up). There seems to be a direct connection between the
humiliation poor readers experience and the life of angry criminals.2
As
reading ability plummeted in America after WWII, crime soared, so did
out-of-wedlock births, which doubled in the 1950s and doubled again in
the ’60s, when bizarre violence for the first time became commonplace
in daily life.
When literacy was
first abandoned as a primary goal by schools, white people were in a
better position than black people because they inherited a
three-hundred-year-old American tradition of learning to read at home
by matching spoken sound with letters, thus home assistance was able to
correct the deficiencies of dumbed-down schools for whites. But black
people had been forbidden to learn to read under slavery, and as late
as 1930 only averaged three to four years of schooling, so they were
helpless when teachers suddenly stopped teaching children to read,
since they had no fall-back position. Not helpless because of genetic
inferiority but because they had to trust school authorities to a much
greater extent than white people.
Back
in 1952 the Army quietly began hiring hundreds of psychologists to find
out how 600,000 high school graduates had successfully faked
illiteracy. Regna Wood sums up the episode this way:
After
the psychologists told the officers that the graduates weren’t faking,
Defense Department administrators knew that something terrible had
happened in grade school reading instruction. And they knew it had
started in the thirties. Why they remained silent, no one knows. The
switch back to reading instruction that worked for everyone should have
been made then. But it wasn’t.
In 1882, fifth graders read these authors in their Appleton School Reader:
William Shakespeare, Henry Thoreau, George Washington, Sir Walter
Scott, Mark Twain, Benjamin Franklin, Oliver Wendell Holmes, John
Bunyan, Daniel Webster, Samuel Johnson, Lewis Carroll, Thomas
Jefferson, Ralph Waldo Emerson, and others like them. In 1995, a
student teacher of fifth graders in Minneapolis wrote to the local
newspaper, "I was told children are not to be expected to spell the
following words correctly: back, big, call, came, can, day, did, dog,
down, get, good, have, he, home, if, in, is, it, like, little, man,
morning, mother, my, night, off, out, over, people, play, ran, said,
saw, she, some, soon, their, them, there, time, two, too, up, us, very,
water, we, went, where, when, will, would, etc. Is this nuts?"
John Taylor Gatto was voted the New York City
Teacher of the Year three times and the New York State Teacher of the
Year in 1991. John Taylor Gatto's free online ebook, The Underground
History of American Education: An Intimate Investigation into the
Problem of Modern Schooling (New York: Oxford Village Press, 2001), is
the source for the following historical quotes. Most of the sources are
out of print and hard to obtain.