Note: This essay also appears on Owl's Farm
This
is rather a momentous day, what with President Obama's second
inauguration coinciding as it does with Martin Luther King Day. It's
also still the new year's honeymoon period, when folks haven't yet given
up on resolutions made under the influence on New Year's Eve. And,
it's been a month since the world didn't end, and I turned 65. The days
are getting longer, and I saw my first robin (although I'm not sure he
ever went anywhere), but the weather's still in flux (50s today, up to
70s by Wednesday, back down to 50s at the weekend) so I don't imagine
spring is exactly around the corner. February is typically the coldest
month around here, and although Christmas was the worst weather day
we've had this winter so far, things could always get worse.
I
didn't really want my first post of 2013 to be a downer, and perhaps it
won't be. But what's on my mind these days tends to keep my spirits
lower than I'd like. I am by nature an optimistic person; I try not to
be, because pessimists are frequently happily surprised when things
don't go as badly as they expect. But when confronted by adversity, I
tend to accept it as a challenge and try to make things better--or at
lease accept what's not in my power to alter.
But I do worry
about the future, because I'm faced every day of my working life with
evidence that this country has no idea of how badly its educating its
children. Not a day goes by when the Daily Poop doesn't offer
some "solution" to a variety of perceived problems in the schools:
inefficiency, lack of career and/or college preparation, inability to
engage students in essential skills. In Texas, our legislators are
constantly trying to find ways not to fund educational efforts because
they think that both schools and the gummint need to be run like
bidnesses (sorry; government, businesses). Teachers should be able to
teach 35 kids as easily as 25; students don't need access to real books
when they can be reading them online on antiquated computers. Teacher
salaries are a joke (and not a very funny one), and Texas doesn't want
to raise them unless they can tie compensation to student performance.
And that leads us to the testing regime that assesses all the wrong
things and puts so much pressure on students and teachers that nobody
has the time or energy or desire to really learn anything. It's not any
better for college teachers, either (at least in proprietary schools and
community colleges), because we're under the assessment gun as well,
since rising student debt is giving administrators the willies. More
and more pressure is applied to colleges to run students through in the
minimum amount of time (whether it's four years, two years, or 12
quarters). However, students come to us with less and less preparation,
and they're finding it harder and harder to successfully navigate the
demands of a college-level curriculum.
Even if they do graduate
successfully, what do they have to look forward to? Wages are
stagnating (raise? what raise?) while we're being asked to more for what
we're already getting. So productivity is up in the U.S., while
paychecks don't change. I was wondering the other day why it is that in
2007 I could sit down at my computer a couple of mornings a week and
write a post for Owl's Farm--and being able to do that encouraged
me to start the others. These days, however, I have to have a four-day
holiday in order not to feel guilty about working on this post for a
couple of hours. What I realized while I pondered the situation is that
I am working longer every day to find ways to compensate for the fact
that my students are so unfamiliar with the past that putting art into
context is impossible without recounting the historical moment in which
works were created. Talking about Jacques Louis David to people who know
nothing about the French Revolution isn't quite like facing the
guillotine, but it certainly does recall Goya's contention that "the
sleep of reason produces monsters." In order to set the stage, I have
to consult high school teachers in Hawaii, who (being younger, more
energetic, and more with it) have created music videos on historical
topics to engage their students. Lady Gaga's music as a background to the events of 1789 is a lot more fun than listening to me try to summarize them in an art history lecture.
So I read advice in the Chronicle of Higher Education,
look online for what others are doing, search for engaging videos, and
try to find ways to make information more accessible without dumbing
down the course or lowering standards. Finding ways to connect fashion,
video, animation, and other programs to art history is now a full-time
job, added to my other one--teaching, with all it encompasses (research,
lectures, grading, learning new delivery technologies).
Have I mentioned that I just turned 65?
I
didn't really make any resolutions for the new year; but rather than
grouse about the state of education in the state of Texas, I really need
to have more fun looking for new material. I've already located a
couple of promising avenues--connections between paleolithic painting and animation--and as long as I can keep myself entertained, perhaps I
won't bore my students silly. The Cranky Old Bitch persona, which can
be amusing to some, wears thin after a bit, and I'll have to don
another Trickster costume if I'm to make it through to spring. I'm
looking to new sources (The Encyclopedia of Informal Education)
and old (Morris's essays on education), in hopes of becoming more
hopeful. What I really need to become is more cynical--though not in
the contemporary understanding of the term.
As Daniel Halpin points out in his article for Infed, "Hope, Utopianism and Educational Renewal,"
"A cynic today is not the same person the Ancient Greeks meant by the
term. For them the cynic was a critic of contemporary culture on the
basis of reason and natural law - a revolutionary rationalist, a
follower of Socrates." In fact, the word "cynic" comes from the Greek
word for "dog," so Cranky Old Bitch isn't inappropriate. We love dogs
because they know whom to trust (us, we hope), and they're naturally
suspicious. Cynics are naturally anarchists, so I've always been rather
sympathetic anyway.
Now, I'm not about to go live in the
marketplace in a barrel or piddle in the street, but I think we could
learn something by revisiting the teachings of the cynics, and by
recognizing, as Diogenes did, that there is a toxic aspect to
civilization itself. We've been trying to come to grips with this
realization since before the hippies started dropping out in the '60s,
and folks started camping out on Wall Street. I'll write more about
this in a future post, but for now, I think we could consider the
influence of money on everything we do. The utopian in me wants to try
to find ways to find ways to educate on the cheap: do what I can with
what little I have, and see where it leads. Since I've got a shelf full
of William Morris, I think I'll start there, and spend the rest of
Inauguration Day/MLK Day snuggled up with my two mongrel cynics and some
Morris essays, and try to figure out how to save the world.
How's that for optimism?
Image credit: Jean-Léon Gérôme, Diogenes, 1860. Walters Art Museum, Baltimore. Via Wikimedia Commons.
Monday, January 21, 2013
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)