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The
Fast Food Model of Education – July 12,
2010
A curriculum is a diet of other people’s ideas that is fed to
children in schools. It is designed by a group of people assumed to be much
better qualified than mere parents – let alone children – to decide exactly the
type of information that should be fed, and when, and how its digestion should
be measured. However, that very process results, more often than not, in what I
call “fast food education.” It is no wonder that many students have to be forced
to eat this diet…and in many cases fail to digest it. Its standardized content
is often bland, bulked up with fillers, and short on flavor. Its delivery is
regimented and, many times, uninspired. School children are seldom consulted as
to their tastes, or even level of hunger, let alone trusted to understand their
own nutritional requirements or dietary quirks! The force-feeding process is so
relentless that many students gag on it, in some cases becoming permanently
soured on learning.
In spite of catch phrases like “child-directed learning” and many good
intentions, fast food education is the norm because a curriculum diet is an
easy, efficient way to feed facts simultaneously to large groups of people. For
purely management reasons, school systems feel they must chop up knowledge,
parcel it out, and feed it to children in small portions. Whether or not the
parcels make sense to a particular learner, or the portions are of the correct
size, are secondary to the need to get everyone fed at least something. And to
make things worse, each meal-sized portion of each subject area is desiccated,
premixed and fed by teachers who have minimal knowledge of, or connection to,
what other teachers are feeding, and who are not able to provide context tor the
disconnected facts they’re shoveling into their students’ mouths. As John Taylor
Gatto puts it, students never receive a complete experience at school, except on
the installment plan! The information provided often has no relation to the
lives of the learners, especially those who aren’t part of the dominant culture.
And few tools are provided for decoding the information, or for thinking
critically about it.
Unfortunately, home educators aren’t immune to feeding educational fast food.
Their motivation is usually to comfort themselves (and those “authorities” who
are mandated to oversee their children’s learning) by attempting to control what
is a very mysterious process. Learning is open-ended and often invisible. It is
difficult to observe and manage. Papers and plans can be something to hold onto
when a child’s intellectual growth process seems chaotic or obscure (or doesn’t
measure up to Jimmy’s next door). Yes, there is a great deal of comfort involved
for everyone in the use of curriculum…except, of course, for learners, who often
end up frustrated, confused, bloated, and yet still hungry.
Languid acceptance, half-hearted digestion, and mindless
regurgitation are not a good recipe for developing minds that will be able to
think us out of the social, economic, and environmental messes we have put
ourselves in!
The meals created by hungry individuals weaving together their own education
using their own timetables and the resources found in their communities are so
much more delicious, nourishing and useful! Call it “slow learning!”
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