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z2004-03-30- Postman End Of Education
A strange game. The only winning move is .

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last edited by BillSeitz on Jun 16, 2008 6:49 am

Review of 's [End Of Education] (meaning the , not the elimination-of) (). For education to be , Postman contends, young people, their parents, and their teachers must have a common . Narratives are essential because they provide a sense of personal identity, a sense of community life, a basis for moral conduct, and explanations of that which cannot be known. The idea of public education requires not only shared narratives, but also the absence of narratives that lead to and divisiveness. "What makes -s public," writes Postman, "is not so much that the schools have common goals () but that the students have common gods."... He goes on to describe five narratives that may serve us better: "[Spaceship Earth]" (the notion of humans as stewards of the planet); "The [Fallen Angel]" (a view of history and the advancement of knowledge as a series of errors and corrections - [Iterat Ive0]); "The [American Experiment]" (the story of America as a great experiment and as a center of continuous argument - ); "The [Laws Of Diversity]" (the view that difference contributes to increased vitality and excellence, and, ultimately, to a sense of unity); and "The [Word Weavers]/The [World Makers]" (the understanding that the world is created through language - through definitions, questions, and metaphors)... Postman also offers a number of admittedly radical innovations toward making schools more effective. He argues that -s should be altogether eliminated because they have a deadening effect on students and promote a view of education as the acquisition of immutable facts. He proposes that teachers offer incentives to students who find errors in their teachers' lessons. And he feels that the subjects of archeology, geology and astronomy be given the highest priority since they imbue students with a sense of awe and global interdependence.


 




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