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June Graduations Beg The Question: What Is Our Future?
It's happening everywhere, I know. But I learned last week not to take it for granted. In fact, it may well be our major problem and it is hiding in plain sight.With a measure of curiosity short of nostalgia but greater than personal interest, I found myself watching a series of local high school graduations on the public service channel last week. Why I paused -- and stayed -- on that particular channel, I'll never know. But I'm glad it happened.
It was, in fact, a veritable "taste of America" moment that I haven't seen too often since I left the scholastic world years ago. The graduates were combed, washed, heeled and proper. No goon show kids here. They wore their mortarboards flat and undecorated. Their gowns were pressed and glowing. Their smiles were broad, proud, satisfied.
One group of these graduates was from a collegiate prep school; the other from a local comprehensive high school that stresses technical proficiency and professional skills. Both groups were attentive, well mannered and, as teachers love to say, "a credit to their schools." If such a display of achievement and conduct has any meaning to it at all, it must indicate that our schools are putting out young adults who will fit into this society well, who will surely succeed in life as we have shaped it for them.
But that is exactly what made the whole scene so uncomfortable, even troubling.
According to researcher Christopher Swanson using data collected in 2003 and released June 6 by the national daily, USA Today, this country graduates only 69.6 percent of the four million students admitted to its high schools yearly.
What's worse, he points out, the largest school districts in the United States graduate even less than that of every potential graduation class every year. Three of them -- Detroit, Baltimore and New York City -- graduate fewer than 40 percent of the pupils they enroll in ninth grade. Eleven other urban school districts, the same research reports, have on-time graduation rates lower than 50 percent; they include Milwaukee, Cleveland, Los Angeles, Miami, Dallas, Denver and Houston.
There are those who dispute the figures, of course. Lawrence Mishel of the Economic Policy Institute argues that Swanson's numbers fail to take into account the number of students held back in order to complete state exit exams or to take advanced work. Whether they actually ever do that or not he does not report, but he does insist that U.S. high schools graduate at least 80 percent of a four year student body. On the other hand, the New York Post reported May 22 that Mayor Bloomberg was ecstatic to be able to announce that New York City graduation rates had reached 60 percent this year.
Whatever the precise national figures, the question this year's graduation videos raised in me remains: Where are the rest of the graduates? Where are the one million students we lose every year who do not get diplomas, who do not graduate, who are not prepared for any kind of higher education or professional advancement? What do they look like? What do they read? How do they vote? What issues concern them? What are they going to do in life? And what does that have to do with the rest of us?
There are lots of things to worry about in this world. If you have any kind of insight at all you know that the Middle East can blow sky high at any moment. "The first battle of World War III," some called the invasion of Iraq and who would deny that tag with any degree of confidence now.
And the war in Iraq gets worse by the day. Did we really "liberate" these people or did we simply unleash the factors within that country that had been held in check by Saddam Hussein for years and that are free now to destabilize the entire Middle East?
Is war the only way forward in this tinder-box world? And if not, who is there who will develop a better way?
The immigration situation is no small issue now, as well. Is the question of undocumented aliens only a new kind of indentured servitude? Are illegal workers simply one more population of people held hostage to an economic system that pays them little for their service and keeps them hidden in a system that uses them but refuses to recognize them.
The loss of the middle class, the increasing number of families falling below the poverty line, the lack of universal health insurance, the outsourcing of U.S. jobs to other countries are all domestic matters that signal a change in the quality of life in the United States. What will life look like in a few short years for those who are not the mega rich?
And most of all, in what way will the 7,000 students who drop out of school in the major cities of the United States every day of the school year influence any of those answers?
Maybe instead of spending more money on weapons, more money on walls designed to seal our borders, more money on high tech spying and technological Big Brother houses, we should spend more money on teachers, more money on schools, more money on day care and Head Start programs, more money on tutors, more money on organized inner city youth programs, more money on adult training centers, more money on subsidized higher education.
Then, maybe we wouldn't have to worry so much about our borders. Then maybe we wouldn't have to complain so much that we have to struggle to understand our computer technicians because they're all in India now. Then maybe U.S. culture would become as desirable to the rest of the world as U.S. money is. Then maybe we'd really have a culture worth sharing with the rest of the world instead of the daily reruns of "Dallas" and the menu of masochistic murder stories that are our hallmark around the world now.
It looks to me as if our enemies are not so much from outside of us as from within. What we have ignored for the sake of military superiority -- the education of a population capable of bettering the rest of the world as well as ourselves -- is costing us dearly now.
From where I stand it seems as if history may indeed repeat itself. Especially when we're not looking. Ask the Romans. A Benedictine Sister of Erie, Joan Chittister is a best-selling author and well-known international lecturer on topics of justice, peace, human rights, women's issues, and contemporary spirituality in the Church and in society. She presently serves as the co-chair of the Global Peace Initiative of Women, a partner organization of the United Nations, facilitating a worldwide network of women peace builders, especially in the Middle East.
© 2007 The National Catholic Reporter
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Show AllThe greatest threat to the future of the human race over the next hundred years is overpopulation, second is depletion of resources - include climate change here. Third is human greed, lust for power, and amorality among the ruling classes. Fourth is ignorance and irrationality among the lower classes. Fifth is the threat of other organisms evolving to prey on us, bird flu, AIDS, antibiotic resistant bacteria, etc, etc.
Since our leadership, expecially republicans, is only interested in obfuscation and self-aggradizement; I consider it likely that life in Afganistan today will compare favorably with life in the USA 100 years hence.
Zero Population Growth, The Population Bomb, one can not even utter these words today -- so obscene they have become.
Mother nature does not abide stupidity indeinitely, nor does she reward populations for over-reproduction. Only the survivors "win". If any?
The greatest "terrorists" today, are those in government and religion, who are and profit from "the problem(s)", and are not part any possible solution.
repubicans: 5% preditors 95% sheep
While our nation has dutifully kept its gaze fixed on approaching catastrophes, we have become blind to the catastrophes already upon us. In the most economically developed nation in the world, at least 9 million children are uninsured and receive little or no preventive medical or dental care. This is to say nothing of the millions more undocumented children in our midst.
Millions of our children live in substandard housing. Millions are suffering mental and physical malnutrition from chronic hunger, and chronic neglect and abuse. Our infant mortality rate ranks an abysmal 28th internationally. An astounding one-fourth of American 3-year-olds have not received their complete immunizations.
And while our nation obsesses over threats from abroad, every day here at home our children face a barrage of threats to good health. One-third of American children are overweight or obese. Under siege, they are confronted daily by powerful fast food and soft drink industries, endless junk food advertising, underfunded schools selling unhealthful food and reducing physical education, and a lack of safe and accessible places to play due to decades of poor community planning.
The child is the canary of our societal coal mine, and the canary is not looking too healthy. From the household level to the school and community levels, and finally to the governmental level, our society is failing to protect the health and welfare of our greatest resource.
Given that the truest measure of a nation's maturity is its ability to safeguard the hope of a better future for its youngest members, our nation is showing that it needs to grow up, and quickly.
Thanks for a great article, Sister Chittister. Keep up the good writing.
Where in the world can a corporation find the "best" students: (1) a workforce that has solid grounding in science and math; (2) is obsessed to climb the hierarchy; and (3) submits completely to the governing value system and hierarchy?
Oh yeah...and (4) CHEAP?!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
With regard to education, the 2 principal values determining success in the corporate world are (1) obsessiveness (to be "driven"); and (2) total complete submission to the governing value system and hierarchy.
The underlying purpose of the educational system is not so much to teach any particular body of knowledge, but rather to inculcate the foregoing value system, which is basically sado-masochist (i.e., fascist).
Obsessiveness is inherently evil in that the person "obsessed" is so driven by one narrow objective than he/she ignores all other competing values. For example, Bush/Cheney are obsessed with power, all other considerations are irrelevant to them.
Begging a question is the logical fallacy where you assume an answer as a premiss.
June graduations beg no question.
The CommonDreams headline editor needs to keep a good book of usage beside her keyboard.
There is a song from the sixties---the artists names I cannot remember--but the lyrics in part plead "teach your children well".
Abramoff, Rove, and many others who are or were in power presently were once "Young Republicans"---were they taught well?
The future belongs to the young more than to the elders. If these young people in the article above were "taught well" then the future will entail much sacrifice on their behalf to clean up the mess this generation has made of things. If not then perhaps they can learn from the mistakes of the previous generation, and "teach themselves well". If not they will perish at their own hands with the concerted assistance of the previous generation.
Then again one must consider that there are many among us who believe that this country is doing well, and has no worries for the future---"unless those damned liberals gain control and screw it all up for the rest of us. And by the way, Abramoff and Rove were taught very well thank you, it's just that those damned liberals will not admit it, and they keep screwing things up for us".
Actually the current comparisons between "conservative and liberal" is misleading. A true liberal would care little about government. The true label for those who oppose "conservatism" should be "progressive"
A "conservative mind set" is defined as "One who wishes to maintain the status quo". This is a self destructive concept since it prevents the practitioner from learning from their mistakes, or the mistakes of other "conservatives", therefore repeating those mistakes. Conservatism also insists upon teaching "revised history" in order to maintain a flawed doctrine. One example is that every war of "liberation" the US has sacrificed lives and billions of dollars for have been absolutely fruitless. The current "war of liberation" already a disaster, may prove to be the biggest mistake of all, and just a repetition of the previous wars.
A progressive thinker would find other solutions to problems than the one's that proved failures. A good example is the Wheel.
It was invented in prehistoric times but used as a decoration, or in a religious/spiritual context " the unbroken circle of life" etc. Then a progressive THINKER took the idea and made major changes TO IT, AND THEN with it, in a progressive manner. Conservative thinkers are rarely inventive, except perhaps in "spinning the twist" to explain their failures.
If the younger generation mentioned above have been "taught well", and if they think in a progressive manner, then the future may be bright--------if they continue with conservatism, then it will only be darker than now.
The conservatives have left a dark future for all but a few at the top of the
"dog pile"---and if you are going to be in a "dog pile", the best place is at the top.
Yellow Horse
Our future is here now. Just ask any corporate exec.
Yes Joan, our enemy is within. Our education system does nothing more than instruct on how to be a worker in this fixed economy of old money. Laws are made for and by the lawbreakers to grant further advantage to the already insanley wealthy. Education expenditures is no different. The less educated we are the more control they have over us. The falling graduation rate is a direct result of our children seeing this for themsleves. As for what they do without proper education, I suspect it's the same as those who do graduate. Waste 40-60% of their lives earning enough money to eat and live under a roof, while making huge profits for the greedy bastards that refuse to pay a fair wage. I agree with Frank1569 in that we should withhold our tax money. It is our money, not the elitist imbeciles who have hijacked Washington. But the only way to do that is to stop working for the corporations that have hired and trained these rapists. So, we either sacrifice our so called security and drive thru burgers for a while and learn to make a living on our own, or continue to prop up corporations with our labor and murdering rich frat boys with our taxes. The choice is ours. Do we want a bright future for our children or would we rather have the remote and some popcorn?
bostonbound2,
Why do you project 100 years? Global pollution, climate change, species extinction, treason in the White House, the end of the USA, are all happening NOW, not in 100 years. Most of the environmental scientists gave humanity no more than 10 years to begin to reverse the damage - that was a year ago, but instead the growing population demands more cheap electricity produced by coal-fired power plants, more cheap air travel by jet plane, and more of everything that destroys the environment. This monstrous ecocidal society will be lucky if it makes it to 2012, let alone 3007!
Yellow Horse:
Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young. (I think Neil Young was with them then).
RFK makes a good point below:
All of us might wish at times that we lived in a more tranquil world, but we don't. And if our times are difficult and perplexing, so are they challenging and filled with opportunity.
Robert Kennedy
There is only one way to stop "them" from spending "our money" (or credit, as is the case,) and that is to stop giving it to them like zombified sheep. No taxation without representation. The polls say a MAJORITY of all AMERICANS want more spending on social programs, less tax breaks for the super rich, more bucks for education, more protection of the environment. Is that agenda being addressed in any way whatsoever? NO.
So stop paying taxes until it is. They simply do not give a flying f**k what we say or want or need, yet we continue to hand them our hard earned dollars. Imagine, you hire me to paint your house red, and instead I tear it down and build an Exxon station. You scream, yell... then pay me more money to paint your sister's house red...
When the house fire is raging out of control, you do not grab a water pistol, or call a meeting to decide whether the fire department is the right way to go on this. If you truly believe America is being destroyed, then we should be willing to go above and beyond to save it.
Can I get a shout out to IMPEACH CHENEY!!!!
"Where in the world can a corporation find the "best" students: (1) a workforce that has solid grounding in science and math; (2) is obsessed to climb the hierarchy; and (3) submits completely to the governing value system and hierarchy? Oh yeah…and (4) CHEAP?!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"
Where in the world? Well, for starters, India and South Korea -- and any other place benefiting from outsourcing.
Indeed , the greatest betrayal of these young is the trust they put in we, their conscientious and nurturing parents, despicably co-opted by the sons of Bushs (and that includes the Billarys) of our generation. They are a cancer upon our body politic which must be removed to effect a cure of US all.
Our future is bright - if we want it to be. We have enormous opportunities to create, maintain, and live in the world of our dreams.
We need to stay positive about our future. Negativity leads to withdrawal and passivity - and that is exactly what the anti-democratic forces want.
The corporate rape of the Earth has poisoned the planet beyond reversal because it goes on every day here and in every nation on Earth. So, the graduates have a future of disease and early death to themselves and any children they are foolish enough to bring into this insane world. That is the reality. Face it or not, it will not change unless they change it themselves.
It looks like we're getting VERY close to the edge of the abyss, and the leading cause of global problems seems to be US foreign policy. Yesterday I read that the bastards in washington announced that they allocated 10 million for radio propaganda directed to the people of venezuela.
It's up to all people of goodwill to fight the hideously corrupt bastards in power. They must be every step of the way!
Now more than ever before - it seems to be a case of "Now or never." So, everyone should man their battle stations and do whatever they can.
---------------------------------
"...remember that all through history the ways of truth and love have always won. There have been tyrants, and murderers, and for a time they can seem invincible, but in the end they always fall...
"Almost anything you do will seem insignificant,
but it's very important that you do it."
Mahatma Gandi
===================================
"The time for war has past...
"Man must change or die.
There is no other course."
Maitreya, the World Teacher
http://www.share-international.org
MaxheMust,
I dread the circumstances required to impel people to move for major social change. I cannot wish for it because it is too terrible. Yet, like it or not, it will happen.
I'd just like to see a blog entry re: education use the phrase "beg the question" properly, and not erode it with further misuse, as if it meant "leads to the question"
Bong Hits 4 Jesus 4Ever.
Great post Yellow Horse.
You are all mistaken - no child left behind is working great. Thank God we decided to use a Houston Texas education program to fix our education system.
Graduation is a poor measure of education. The education problem is much worse than graduation figures indicate. Poverty is the real problem.
The CIA World Fact Book claims a 99% literacy rate in the United States. Apparently literacy is a relative term. Perhaps a better, more accurate measure is functional illiteracy, and conservative estimates are that 10% of the adult population cannot read, write or make computations on a level necessary to function in society. With half of the students in urban centers not graduating, this number is undoubtedly much higher.
There's no doubt that if the same amount of money had been spent on education instead of war the societal and global benefits could be enormous. Imagine a presidential decree to spend half a trillion dollars over a four year period on education as a national emergency.
well said bostonbound2: i couldn't agree more. people just put their heads in the sand. it will take an enormous effort from the whole of mankind starting NOW to get any where near reversing the damage we've done. i've said it before and i'll say it again: jacques cousteau said just before his death that the earth has 50, 100, max 150 years to go. i think it's less than 50.
shakker:
you said:
"You are all mistaken - no child left behind is working great. Thank God we decided to use a Houston Texas education program to fix our education system."
I don't think it requires that I say what is absolutely WRONG with this statement. Readers, I hope that the majority of you don't believe this blatant LIE.
shakker: you must a Bush spokesman or something. Either that or truely misinformed. (Perhaps you meant it sarcastically, if so then I apologize. Somehow though I feel you are serious.)
I agree with ArbeitMachtFrei that the purpose of the educational system is to instill the corporate/fascist value system, it seems rather foolish to throw more money at it. As long ago as the 1930s, Nock observed that the main purpose of the public school system is to instill "a servile reverence for a sacrosanct State."
I say close the damned things down. Families and communities would find ways to educate their children.
That 10% or more (I would guess it's a lot more) of the adult population who are functionally illiterate--who cannot read, write, and cipher--all attended school until they were 16. That is, they attended school for TEN YEARS without learning to read, write, and cipher well enough to function in society!
You have to wonder how anyone withstands ten years in an academic institution to emerge functionally illiterate. It almost seems like an accomplishment.
Meanwhile, the other 90% complete their education unable to write a complete sentence or locate anyplace on a map.
This is generally not the fault of teachers. Often kids can't learn because their lives and families--and communities--are in turmoil. The roots of this turmoil are largely economic. Stable finances mean stable homes and communities, and provide the basis for pride and aspiration--as opposed to hopelessness and a sense of worthlessness and nonentity.
The public school system itself is also an obstacle: As an institution, it's basically a Bad Idea grown to monstrous proportions. For starters, it's a Bad Idea to put hundreds of kids all in one place at one time. This kind of centralization leads inevitably to creating an "institutional setting", with its attendant evils: a rigidly hierarchical structure, and a high degree of regimentation. A competitive rather than a cooperative spirit is emphasized.
At this point, we can only solve our educational problems by dismantling the whole institution of education and starting over--and by solving the problem of poverty in our communities.