Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Education and Consumerism: Confessions of a Slacker
Education and Consumerism: Confessions of a Slacker
Nov 18, 2024 5:20 PM

The lowering of education quality has been noted in the recent past on the PowerBlog (here and here). Last Saturday, Casey Harper noted at educationviews.org that even students plaining about the declining rigor of American education.

Harper notes that, according to a recent survey,

More than half of eighth-grade history and civics students say their work is “often or always too easy,” according to the report. Twelfth-grade students sang the same tune, with 56 and 55 percent, respectively, saying their civics and history work is “often” or “always” too easy.

Almost a third of eighth-grade students report reading fewer than five pages a day either in school or for homework, below what many experts mend for students in middle school.

Thirty-nine percent of 12th-grade students say they rarely write about what they read in class.

According to the study, 37 percent of fourth-graders, 29 percent of eighth-graders and 21 percent of twelfth-graders say their math work is often or always too easy.

Regarding the decline of reading and writing, Harper quotes Sandra Stotsky, professor of Education Reform at the University of Arkansas, ments, “There’s been a gradual diminishing of outside reading and homework because teachers increasingly found that students ing to class without having done it.”

This reminds me of Jordan Ballor’s question: “What happens when the student (of whatever age) es the customer, and the customer is king?”

In every middle and high school, there will always be slackers (I was one of them) who either do not do their work or plete it to the minimum that is expected of them. The alarming thing about this trend is that, if Stotsky is correct, the slackers are now affecting educational policy. They demand less reading and writing, so less reading and writing is supplied.

The unfortunate reality, however, is that while students are not consumers—at least not in the sense that the quality of the product (education) ought to be determined by their demands—employers are. At one time in this country a high school diploma was enough to ensure a decent job. While this may partly be due to lower standards on the part of employers, it was equally due to the higher quality of education on the whole. Today many employers are not enticed by high school diplomas like they used to be. The supply has increased while the quality has diminished. And many of our youth who may not otherwise have attended college are paying for the diminishing quality of their diplomas in thousands of dollars of student loan debt, just to qualify for jobs that, in some cases, would have only required a high school diploma fifty years ago.

I know that in my own experience I was not always a slacker. I used to do every assignment to the best of my ability. However, after years of being under-challenged, around eighth grade I just gave up. Why put forth the effort for an A if I can get a B without trying? This outlook was further reinforced by the fact that the year I entered high school mine canceled all of its honors courses. While I do not deny that the primary responsibility for my study habits was upon me, by being under-challenged my poor study habits were incentivized. As a naive teenager with poor foresight, I adopted a slacker mentality, and it took a few years into college before I finally broke out of those poor habits.

Some small steps in the direction of higher standards would be a e change. Perhaps it is impossibly unpopular among students’ parents to fail poor students—I realize that the politics of education plex—but it is ultimately in those students’ best interest. Some of them may simply need the wake up call a poor or failing grade would bring.

If educators are going to treat students like consumers, I mend that they listen to students’ demands for more challenging coursework rather than less reading and writing. In some cases it may be that, like myself, the same students are actually demanding both: less boring and elementary reading and writing and more intellectually stimulating reading and writing. After all, sometimes the slacker is simply a disappointed, would-be honor student.

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
A Living Wage for a Living Tree?
The Ballors went with a live tree this year. We bought it at Flowerland and I do not know the name of the farm whence it came. Over at the American Conservative, Micah Mattix reflects on the Christmas tree market, which in his neck of the woods is “notoriously unstable.” In Ashe County, North Carolina, says Mattix, a dilemma faces the small tree farmer: “It is not sell or starve, but it is sell or go without a new septic...
Like Grocery Shopping Isn’t Bad Enough, Now You’ll Be Accosted By Obamacare Zealots
President Obama, in a move that highlights exactly how out-of-touch he is with most of America, is recruiting mothers to spread the good news of Obamacare…in the grocery store. In a meeting with “eight moms from around America,” according to a White House pool report, President Obama encouraged the mothers to sing the praises of Obamacare while they’re out shopping at grocery stores. Obama, speaking to the moms in the Oval Office, acknowledged that there have been problems with the...
Now Available: Kuyper’s ‘Guidance for Christian Engagement in Government’
Christian’s Library Press has just released the first-ever English translation of Abraham Kuyper’s Our Program (Ons Program), under the title Guidance for Christian Engagement in Government. First published in 1879 with the goal of preparing citizens for participation in the general elections, Kuyper’s stated purpose was twofold, as summarized by translator and editor Harry Van Dyke: “to serve antirevolutionaries as a guide for promotional activities and to prepare them for the formal establishment of an Anti-Revolutionary Party.” As for what...
The Bandwagon Of Our Own Uncertainty
Comedian Taylor Molly reminds us to, you know, like, be certain of our convictions? ...
How the KKK Got Its Way on Separation of Church and State
The phrase “Separation of Church and State” is not in the language of the First Amendment, and the concept was not favored by any influential framer at the time the Bill of Rights was drafted. So how did it e part of the jurisprudence surrounding the First Amendment? As Jim Lindgren, a law professor at Northwestern, explains, the Ku Klux Klan had something to do with it . . . 7. The first mainstream figures to favor separation after the...
‘60,000 Kids:’ Department of Homeland Security In The Human Trafficking Business?
Judge Andrew S. Hanen, a federal district judge in Brownsville, Texas, is accusing the Obama administration’s Department of Homeland Security of plicit in human trafficking from Mexico. Here is what appears to be happening: a parent pays a “coyote” or smuggler in Mexico to bring the parent’s child from Mexico to the United States, illegally. Typically, these coyotes are smuggling drugs as well. When DHS captures the coyotes, they will then often “deliver” the smuggled child to the parent, despite...
ICCR’s 2013 Proxy Follies
As 2013 draws to a close, it’s time to inventory the year’s proxy resolutions introduced by the Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility. ICCR, a group purportedly acting on religious principles and faith, is actually nothing more than a shareholder activist group engaged in the advancement of leftist causes at the expense of their fellow shareholders and the world’s poorest. ICCR recently released its 2013 Annual Report. Its “2013 Proxy Season Recap” (pp. 16, 17) presents a snapshot of initiatives ICCR...
The Fountainhead of Bedford Falls
[Note: A version of this article ran last year around Christmastime. I’m posting it again because I love talking about Frank Capra and everyone else seems to love talking about Ayn Rand.] Frank Capra and Ayn Rand are two names not often mentioned together. Yet the cheery director of Capra-corn and the dour novelist who created Objectivism have more mon than you might imagine. Both were immigrants who made their names in Hollywood. Both were screenwriters and employees of the...
O Tannenbaum and Fair Trade
A couple of further points in reply to Micah Mattix’s response on buying Christmas trees, based on his original post here. 1) I think Mattix’s characterization of the buyer as “selfish” goes a bit too far, and is not an accurate characterization of a good deal of market activity. “Self-interested” would be more accurate, and would allow for selfish actors, but would also allow more generally for benevolent actors. For instance, a nun who runs an orphanage has decided that...
5 Minute Explainer: Competitive Federalism
Concepts you should know about explained in five minutes (or less). Leo Linbeck III, President and CEO of Aquinas Companies, provides an explanation petitive federalism and petition and governance relate in society. See also: 5 Minute Explainer: Subsidiarity ...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2024 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved