RE: For those who still think State Schools are about education

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For those who still think State Schools are about education

in homeschooling •  8 years ago 

I tend to agree with you, the burden of proof should be on the person or persons wishing to do such and such. However claims must be substantiated, regardless of what they are. And to be practical, we find ourselves in the situation where not only is institutional schooling normal, it is law with very real consequences if broken. The claims should be seen as something to be backed up not because harmless much be proven and so on, but because there are great many people still in need of convincing.

For the record I am not intending to give you a hard time, but to test the rigour of this because it is useless to me otherwise. My children are before school age and I'm very much considering the coming years where I will be forced to make a choice.

I'll read your old posts, I'm sure they will be interesting.

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I just now started discussing homeschooling here. My years of homeschooling are over. You can probably find my old posts in various homeschooling forums. But you should really read the very open claims of the "Prussian Method" and Horace Mann.

The whole idea, of surrendering our children to the State to be educated as the State demands, is instinctively repulsive to me.

For me also. I will read your blog more thank you.

Simply a quick search for "reading comprehension decline" which unequivocally proves that regardless of education's efforts they cannot stop the steady decline of literacy in countries which have adapted the Purrsian model, so we have undisputed proof of the efficacy of the current education system. If schooling was so successful at making obedient adults how come we still have crime? Since when does docile mean not desperate, or docile the same as law abiding?
doc·ile
ˈdäsəl/Submit
adjective
ready to accept control or instruction; submissive.

The proof of peoples successful indoctrination has been studied thoroughly and there's nothing to argue with: Milgram studies.

Even with a clear disapproval of governance year after year go and cast their vote for delegates.

Societal collapse? The other side of "social contract" is "societal collapse".
The same coin, artificial/arbitrary and oxymoronic: contracts involve expressed consent, and informed consent while collapse is insinuating that society could somehow be an unstable system, where it takes some outside force to bring equilibrium to it, oxymoronic since there is absolutely nothing outside society.

How many people resist police authority and their unlawful orders, besides ? Evidence of successful indoctrination is that an overwhelming majority of people will not question authority, and hence police existing is not any basis to argue that why do we need police (authority) if there is 100% obedience. Docility requires authority, it's in the definition, we need authority because we have submission to that authority. Police are proof that indoctrination works, multifold.

A Google search in and of itself does not prove anything! I'm not sure where you are getting your information about literacy. I don't know much about it but searching gave me more questions than answers.

The main one is, how do you define literacy? If you define it as a college reading ability (full literacy), the percentage is about 15% of US citizens today. I don't have the figures, but I can't imagine the figure being higher 100 years ago.

If you define it as the ability to read and write (functionally literate), it's over 99%. Functional illiteracy has dropped from 20% to 0.6% between 1870 and 1970.

reference: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Literacy_in_the_United_States
reference: https://nces.ed.gov/NAAL/lit_history.asp


The Milgram studies are very powerful findings, extremely widely cited, I'm aware of it of course. I have never read a claim by Milgram or associates that schooling laid the foundation for acceptance of authority, if that is what you're implying. In fact I believe he thought it applicable to human psychology in general.

I think your point on the conflicted term "social contract" is true, but it is obviously euphemistic. It's just a way to get people to accept something on face value which they might otherwise, a manipulation technique and a bad one at that.

You might have a point about the police. But it's maybe more the knowledge that they wide license to use force. It's like me telling you "by the way, such and such's father will beat you up for very little, and there's no one to stop you, so watch out". That's how I feel about them anyway, I'm not sure if that's indoctrination but I've learned to avoid confronting the police. It's the threat of what they can do to you.

I understand what you are saying: burden of proof is on the one making claims :D