Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Against technocracy: Greg Forster on reviving the fight for educational freedom
Against technocracy: Greg Forster on reviving the fight for educational freedom
Jan 8, 2026 8:40 PM

“Our problem [with education] today is not to enforce conformity; it is rather that we are threatened with an excess of conformity. Our problem is to foster diversity.” –Milton Friedman, Capitalism & Freedom

The education reform movement has set forth a range of strategies bat the leviathan of publiceducation. Yet more often than not, thosesolutions arecouched only with boilerplate about the glories of markets petition.

There is plenty oftruth behind such rhetoric, butas Greg Forster outlines in an extensive series of articles at EdChoice, a revival in education policy and educational institutionsis going to require much more than free-market talking points and surface-level solutions.

“It’s not that the things we’re saying are wrong,” he writes. “We just aren’t getting to the heart of the matter because we are not challenging our nation to re-ask itself the big questions about education: What is the purpose of education? Who has final responsibility for it and why?”

Indeed, while our aversion to technocratic solutions has prodded us to focus on things like improving accountability, petition, and removing barriers toinformation, many of the subsequentreforms have fallen prey to the same technocratic temptations. As Forster reminds us, in education, “technocracy fails more importantly because it is based on a wrong understanding of what education is for.”

Once we ask that question — what is a good education? — we’re forced to confront the idols of conformity that truly dominate the system. It is here, Forster argues, that we findthe real root of our problems in educational policy, and it is here where we ought to begin:

The majority of education reformers have gravitated toward an approach that carefully avoids the challenge of pluralism. That is technocracy—rigid and centralized systems of control, using narrow and reductive quantitative metrics that give enormous power to a special class of education experts, on the theory that we can trust them to be all-knowing, benevolent and apolitical. A technocratic spirit lies behind Common Core, obviously, but it also lay behind some earlier reform efforts such as graduation exams, merit pay for test score increases, and the 100 percent proficiency requirement in No Child Left Behind. This is clearer to me now than it was 10 years ago…

The logic of technocracy is simple: Let’s forget about the things that we strongly disagree about, and focus on the things that everyone ought to be able to reach agreement about pretty easily. As a result, technocracy effectively narrows down the agenda for the head to reading and math scores, keeps the agenda for the hands hopelessly vague (“critical thinking”) and keeps silent about the heart. What makes this so tempting is the illusion that we can avoid fortable, potentially divisive questions about what is good and right.

To unearth this root, Forster continues, “the challenge of pluralistic education must be met head-on, not avoided. Educational leaders must not abdicate our responsibility to articulate a vision of the good to guide education.”

Embracing the challenge of pluralism is not going to be easy, but it’s sure to refocus our attention on the actual tensions and where exactly they begin. Instead of arguing over test scores, accessibility, parental control, achievement gaps, accountability structures, and teacher’s salaries, we can focus our attention what good education actually is.

Prior to es the question, “What does it mean for people to grow into their human potential?” If we ask es before that, we get to the really fundamental questions: “What is good? What is true? What is beautiful?”

…[H]istorically, great educational changes have e from people with a vision about schools. They e from people with a vision of the good, the true and the beautiful—and of human potential to achieve and appreciate those things—that hadimplicationsfor schools.

Plato and Aristotle founded the classical academy not because they wanted good schools, but because they wanted to devote their lives to contemplating truth. The medieval scholastics founded the university not because they wanted schools, but because they wanted God. The progressive and pragmatist movements, which shaped today’s educational models, were also not about schools, but about a new understanding of what it means to be human.

The reasons for this are rich and varied, and the path to application and implementation is no clean street, so I encourage you to read Forster’s more detailed essays on the principles and practicals (intro, parts1, 2, and3).

It’sa needed shift in our cultural imaginations, and it’s sure to influence our debates on policy and institutionalformationas we pursue educational reforms, whether in our munities or at a national level.There’s sure to be plenty of disagreement, and the solutions of a pluralistic society are sure to include even more, but we needn’t allow the inevitable tensions to undermine our efforts.

“It is in education where our public policy must have the strongest mitment to freedom and diversity if we want to sustain a society characterized by freedom and diversity,” writes Forster. “The challenge of pluralism is also an opportunity for us to discover a fresh vision of human potential that embraces the freedom to disagree about the highest things.”

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Child Sex Trafficking: Rescue Is Possible And Here Is Proof
I don’t believe there is anything worse than the trafficking of children for sex. Children are often sold by parents because of poverty, are “traded” by adults in their life for drugs or cash, or are lured by traffickers who promise money, affection and support from an adult or children can simply be kidnapped. Is there any hope for recovering a child lost in this hell? There is. A unique, successful organization called Operation Underground Railroad is showing the world...
Ancient Israel had 613 Regulations; Modern America has Millions
In the Old Testament there are mandments. Of those 248 are mandments,” to perform an act, and 365 are mandments,” to abstain from certain acts. Some of those mandments that are deemed to be self-evident (“laws”), such as not to murder and not to steal. memorate important events in Jewish history (“testimonies”) while the rest are simply decrees of God (“decrees”). God deemed those mandments to be enough to regulate almost every aspect of the lives of his people for...
Has College Become A Scam?
Is it time to write off the college experience? John Stossel thinks so. Half today’s recent grads work in jobs that don’t require degrees. Eighty thousand of America’s bartenders have bachelor’s degrees. Politicians such as Hillary Clinton promote college by claiming that over a lifetime, college graduates “earn $1 million more.” That statistic is true but utterly misleading. People who go to college are different. They’re more likely to have been raised by two parents. They did better in high...
Sirico: Care for The Poor is in Christianity’s DNA
President Obama remarked that he would like faith organizations and churches to speak to poverty solutions “in a more forceful fashion” at a Georgetown University summit in mid-May. The meeting included faith leaders from Catholic and evangelical denominations, and included political thinkers Robert Putnam of Harvard, and the American Enterprise Institute’s Arthur Brooks. Putnam said the voice of the faithful in the U.S. is critical to alleviating poverty. Without the voice of faith, it’s going to be very hard to...
Pentecost Reimagined: How the Spirit Reveals New Economies
Pentecost Sunday:The Holy es with tongues of fire and an munity” is empowered for mission. Pentecost is not the birth of the church.The church is conceived in the words and works of Jesus as he gathers followers and promises, “If any one is thirsty, let e to me and drink. Whoever believers in me, as the Scripture has said, streams of living water will flow from within him.” (John 7:37-39) The church is born when our Resurrected Lord appears to...
There are 200 Million Fewer Hungry People Today Than in 1990
Today there are216 million fewer undernourished people than there was in 1990-92. To put that number in perspective, consider that across the globe there are currently 247 countries and dependent territories. If you ranked them by the number of people in each, the last 144 countries—Serbia to Pitcairn Islands—would have bined population of 216 million. According to the United Nations’ annual hunger report, since 1990-92 the number of undernourished people has decreased from nearly a billion to about 795 million....
How Reagan Attempted to Use Religious Freedom to Reshape Russia
Earlier this month I argued that the moral center and chief objective of American diplomacy should be the promotion of religious freedom. When a country protects religious liberty it must also, whether it intended to or not, recognize a host of other freedoms, such as the freedom of assembly, freedom of conscience, and freedom of speech. Once these liberties are in place, it es more difficult for a country’s government to maintain a single, totalizing ideology. President Reagan seemed to...
Nature, Markets, and Human Creativity
Patriarch Bartholomew “Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew in his statement for the 2015 World Water Day makes a number of assertions that, while inspired by morally good ideals, are morally and practically problematic,” says Rev. Gregory Jensen in this week’s Acton Commentary. “Chief among them is his assertion ‘that environmental resources are God’s gift to the world’ and so ‘cannot be either considered or exploited as private property.’” While certainly not absolute, the Orthodox Christian moral tradition doesn’t reject the notion of...
Video: Ten Things To Know About Pope Francis with George Weigel
We’ve had an amazing collection of speakers participating in the 2015 Acton Lecture Series, and today we’re pleased to be able to share the video of one of the highlights of the series: George Weigel’s discussion of ten essential things to know about Pope Francis, which he delivered on May 6th. Weigel isDistinguished Senior Fellow and William E. Simon Chair in Catholic Studies at the Ethics and Public Policy Center in Washington, D. C. An eminent Catholic theologian, he’s the...
The Thread of Work and the Fabric of Civilization
In Leonard Reed’s famous essay, “I, Pencil,” he highlights the extensive cooperation and collaboration involved in the assemblyof a simple pencil plex coordination that is quite miraculously uncoordinated. Reed’s main takeaway is that, rather than try to stifle or control these creative energies, we ought to “organize society to act in harmony with this lesson,” permitting “these creative know-hows to freely flow.” In doing so, heconcludes, we will continue to see such testimonies manifest — evidence fora faith “as practical...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved