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| Child "Experts" Backpedal on Socialization Dogma | | Print | |
| Written by Beverly K. Eakman | ||||||||||||
| Monday, 21 June 2010 11:15 | ||||||||||||
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Whoever would have imagined that all the effort by child psychologists and behaviorist educators over the past 40 years to replace the school’s former academic focus with the goal of socialization would now be headed for the ashbin of history — along with the dress codes, good manners and “Yes, Ma’ams” and “Yes, Sirs” they once loudly decried? Maybe all that socializing was too much of a good thing. The same field of incompetents who diagnose questionable brain diseases in every other child, correct learning and behavioral “disorders” with psychotropic drugs, and call for “teamwork” over individual excellence is anxious about “bullying” and “cliques.” Precisely what they thought they were going to get once children became the authority figures and adults were relegated to stepping, fetching, chauffeuring, and arranging “play dates” (which “usually have to be planned a week or more in advance,” according to the article) is unclear. What they got, of course, was a Lord of the Flies subculture along the lines described in William Golding’s famous, allegorical novel. But today’s subculture doesn’t affect just a small group of stranded British boys, as per the 1954 novel. Instead, this subculture morphed until, by the 1990s, it had permeated American society and much of the rest of the free world. In the United States, the Lord of the Flies mentality has spawned such toxic schools that little “educating” can any longer take place. Pseudo-educators-turned-social engineers, like John Dewey in the 1920s, were among the first in a long list to dismiss the three R’s as being vastly overrated and to favor child-socialization instead. But the anti-discipline, anti-authoritarian factions began launching a more aggressive campaign under the umbrella of “Mental Hygiene” immediately following World War II. Through speeches, women’s magazines, and teacher-preparation courses, psychologists and psychiatrists started pitching the idea that unless parents wanted to turn out a bunch of little Hitlers and Mussolinis, they had better ease up on the discipline and drop their obsession with right and wrong. Canadian psychologist, Dr. Brock Chisholm, argued in a 1946 speech to the World Federation of Mental Health that right-versus-wrong, and morality itself, were “perversions” that needed to be “redefined” and eventually “eradicated.” He insisted that childrearing methods were “turning out a thousand neurotics for every one that psychiatrist can hope to cure with psycho-therapy.” Chisholm had plenty of company in the so-called Progressive Movement of new educators. By 1970, one could hardly find a teaching curriculum in any university that wasn’t almost totally immersed in psychology. The left-wing took it all a step further with a political spin toward socialism. In a now-declassified book, Social Psychology and Propaganda, published by the Institute of Social Sciences, (Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1985), future educators learned that “socio-psychological knowledge plays a great role … in “tasks that include the perfection of the socialist way of life and combating such antipodes … as individualism.” Gradually, the suggestion that children learn to question, and even disobey, their parents gained a foothold in professional circles, and was picked up by a public which found the “package” suddenly attractive after the atrocities uncovered at Auschwitz, Belsen, Treblinka, and the Bataan Death March. Parents of that generation were ready to give their offspring a “real childhood” they themselves felt they had been denied during the war years. The notion that parents and teachers should be the child’s buddy and that youngsters could be “instrumental in their own decision-making” started taking a grotesque turn in the mid-1970s. Still, child “experts” didn’t back off. Instead, they pushed little children to invent their own values, and chastised parents for “pushing their values onto their children.” Today, trends like home schooling are derided as child abuse — because of a supposed lack of socialization opportunities. Now, to read the New York Times article, it appears that it is too much, not too little, socialization that is cause for angst, while parents busily micromanage their kids’ lives instead of allowing them to just go out and play. “The days when children roamed the neighborhood and played with whomever they wanted to until the streetlights came on disappeared long ago, replaced by the scheduled play date,” lamented the Times article. “While in the past a social slight in backyard games rarely came to teachers’ attention …, today an upsetting text message from one middle school student to another is often forwarded to school administrators, who frequently feel compelled to intervene.” Why? To head off bullying. So, what’s different about bullying? Weren’t there bullies in the 1940s? Yes, but the bullying of today is of a type that would have sent shock waves through families of the 1930s, 40s, and 50s. Today it’s vicious, Lord-of-the-Flies behavior. What, then, do we have to show for the diktats of child experts? First, an entire education system based in the abandonment of moral absolutes. Schools grounded in moral relativism are passing along the notion that there are no standards or principles of behavior that cannot be bent or broken, only petty “gotcha”-type rules of political correctness infamy are inviolable. From the moment a child steps on the school bus (parents taking their children to school is discouraged), the student is jockeying for popularity points with peers. Primping and grandstanding dominate the pupil’s entire school day, mushrooming into brutal popularity contests and school violence. Intransigent peer pressure trumps teacher authority, leading to a lack of respect for school and for learning. It is hard for schools to get, much less keep, good teachers in such a climate. This creates a vicious cycle of continuous parent-teacher-administrator confrontations. Parental interest, patience, and support for schools and their teachers eventually wears thin, sending mixed messages to kids. The result: School is now mostly a political football for leftist opportunists, and a black hole for taxpayers. Delinquency, cynicism, unemployability, alienation: These are the fruits of child experts’ “socialization” gambit, and it is leading us all unknowing to a different sort of national security crisis that, in the end, will “require” imposition of a police-state. That will suit the 21st Century breed of socialists in government just fine. Trackback(0)
Comments (6)
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AMADEUS
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... This is again why we need a wall of separation between school and state. The government is not fit to properly run garbage collection, let alone the education of our nation's future. Home schooling is probably the best option for now, but hopefully one day we can have a world where the state no longer interferes at all in schooling and education. That way, if a group of fanatical social engineers still manages to seize control and experiment with their deranged ideas, the damage will be much more limited. |
Richard Robinson
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Foundations Now that they have completely destroyed the foundations and replaced it with themselves, now they say the buddy-buddy system is bad. |
Eric Potter MD
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... Thank you for your comments on this article. I providentially noticed it the other day and was dumbfounded at their idiocy and arrogance. I thought, "they can't be serious", but then I remembered the insanity of humanistic egotistical control freaks who masqerade as government leaders. Must we continue to tolerate such hogwash, or will American parents ever smell the rotten stench of public education and dispose of its destructive influence on the next generations? We homeschool because Ephesians 6:4 places parents in the role of being responsible for discipling their children, not the government nor the so called experts. May God awaken American parents to the truth and reality of their calling to obey Him in this area of their life. Protecting Children by Empowering Parents, Eric Potter MD Parental Rights.Org |
Roni Bell Sylvester
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Volunteer Editor Beverly, A priest friend (and former director of Rummel High in Omaha) told me in about 1983, that he was seeing such a corruption of discipline that "we're heading right towards a generation of children who honest to God will NOT know the difference between right and wrong." I thought he was out of his mind. Yet - here we are. And remember "Hiam Ginott" who - in the early 60's -suggested we "give your child choices." After reading him, I remember thinking on how ludicrous it'd be to say apologetically to little Johnny while he's running on to the highway, "Oh excuse me honey. Uh, we need to discuss this. Uh, sorry to interrupt you, but, uh..." SPLAT! You're right. Parents today seem to live lives of anxst, worrying over how to "entertain" their children 24-7. Again Beverly...you're spot on! |
Flu-Bird
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Whats wrong? So whats wrong with kids having a best freind dose it bother the new age psyco-babble poppycock pansies who are cuaght up in this darwinsim poppycock? |
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