I've been accused of being hateful on some things but nothing describes the amount of disdain I have for the way kids are NOT being taught history today.
Yes, I've joined the ranks of the likes of our grandparents who often said we weren't learning enough in school but what I'd like to throw out there is that I'm afraid it's not that kids aren't learning enough, they're learning a watered down, edited version of facts.
Recently I picked up a copy of a Hillsdale College newsletter called Imprimis. History, American Democracy, and the AP Test Controversy was written by Wilfred M. McClay from the University of Oklahoma. Being an Oklahoma State grad, I’ll just overlook this because this guy was spot on.
McClay
writes his understanding of high school education in American history is a way
to teach students how to be connected to their political and cultural
inheritance. He calls it a membership in
a common world. He then goes on to
remind us that Thomas Jefferson knew well that it took an educated group of
folks to make government work as it is intended.
McClay
points out that historian Donald Kagan said, “Democracy requires a patriotic
education.” And elaborates there are two
reasons for this. First, its success depends
on citizens being active in their own governance and secondly without this
education, there would be no way to persuade free individuals of the need to
make sacrifices.
This is all
really stimulating my inner nerd, specifically my inner history nerd. And well, because I am a nerd, I grabbed by
orange highlighter at this point (OSU grad highlighter color of choice, of
course).
Stay with me
because here is where it really gets interesting. McClay explains that changes are partly due
to the field of history itself and how it is viewed. It used to be viewed as a science. Social
sciences show what countries are doing and their interactions with others. That has changed. Now, McClay says it is viewed as a field
where all interpretations are equally valid. (McClay, Wilfred, History,
American Democracy, and the AP Test Controversy, Imprimis, vol. 44, number 7/9)
I’m going to
just paraphrase the rest of this very fine and stimulating read. History used to be something that we learned
to bond and move forward as a nation. We
learned facts about battles, peoples, wars, economies, struggles, strife,
challenges, heroic endeavors, etc. Now,
emphasis tends to be more on concerns of small groups. No more commonality with your fellow man for
he might be offended and might feel as though he needs to contact the
ACLU. Don’t get me started.
So
historians have lost their audience or their audience is dying or perhaps no
one cares as much as they once did.
Why? I have no idea and if I did,
I’d be wealthy. Or seriously, I could
come up with some possible reasons but darlings, that is another blog
altogether.
Staying with
the article, McClay points out that this country has lately had a very hard
time constructing memorials and monuments.
These are places where folks come together to learn and honor something
of importance to the culture and the people.
They are affirmations of past, present and maybe future. Notice that lately, someone is always “offended”
and the construction is nearly impossible.
Take anything honoring a Confederate soldier and you’ll find someone
mentioning slavery. So, we’re not even
teaching history at the level at which self-proclaimed educated adults are not
able to understand that the Civil War was not about slavery but about states'
rights and control.
While some
historians feel we are losing our connection with the past with the elimination
of memories (not allowing certain monuments and memorials) others are looking
at the past with disdain. This new way
of teaching is a push for an agenda.
McClay mentions the agenda is a drive to get rid of the nation-state and
bring about a radically new way of teaching history. Gone are the loyalties, heroes, important
events and sacrifices of former generations and so begins the construction of
new memories.
I’d hate to
offend anyone. (Please note sarcasm)
Finally we are
getting to that piece in the title of the article, the controversy surrounding
the new AP US History test. McClay says
the 134-page framework has an agenda. It
has more centralized control, downplays content knowledge, and downplays
American greatness and citizenship while focusing on a global perspective. Compare
that to the 2010 version in which American exceptionalism was the main
theme.
My, how quickly
it changes!
Take into
consideration the shift from national identity to subcultural identities. Now, folks, I’m not suggesting that your
Irish, English, Scottish, Norwegian, German, Cherokee culture isn’t important
as it is but the shift indicates that we are not as patriotic as we used to
be. Why would this matter? Well, if you come together in thought with
like-minded fellow countrymen, you are naturally a stronger country. You all have the same feelings of love of
country and pride and want to protect it the way our founding fathers
envisioned. When you connect with your
sub-group, you’re basically just an English, Irish, German, and Scottish
American living here. There’s no sense
of belonging and patriotism!
Back to
McClay’s thoughts, he mentions the phrase global citizenship as something you
hear a lot of these days. He says that
actual citizenship is a connection, a membership into a society. Education is failing to welcome students with
equipping them with membership.
I don’t want
to live in a country where students are not proud. I don’t want to hear apologies made for the “way
our country behaves,” It is insulting to the blood shed for the freedom of this
beautiful nation when students are not being taught what really happened. Little Christine has a right to know and
appreciate the fact that her fifth great grandpa fought the British in the
Revolutionary War. She needs to know
that it wasn’t pretty and it was gruesome.
These are called sacrifices and we had brave men willing to make them
for the sake of freedom. They fought for
the right for me to write these feelings down and openly share them with the World
Wide Web and beyond. They fought for the
right to raise their families with the religion of their choice. They fought so that they not be made to house
soldiers in their homes in times of war.
They fought to keep their Remingtons and Rugers. They fought to have a right to privacy and
against governmental searches and seizures.
They fought tyranny and knew that a free nation would need to be an
armed nation. They also should be educated
about the true and correct events in history.
“Freedom is
never more than a generation away from extinction…” Ronald Reagan.
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