Ocnus.Net
Schools Down Under
By Kevin Donelly, City Journal 15/7/08
Jul 16, 2008 - 8:48:06 AM
Australia and the United States have much in common—language, political
institutions, the influence of British settlement, and, more recently,
fighting together on the battlefields of Iraq and Afghanistan. They
also have a lot in common in the field of education.
Books like Allan Bloom’s The Closing of the American Mind, Dinesh
D’Souza’s Illiberal Education, and Diane Ravitch’s The Language Police
make clear how effective America’s Left has been in its long march to
take control of education, especially the curriculum, in an attempt to
transform society. The Left has targeted education in Australia, too.
Over the last 30 years or so, professional associations, teachers’
unions, and academics in teacher-training institutions have
consistently attacked more traditional, competitive curricula as
elitist, socially unjust, and guilty of enforcing a Eurocentric,
patriarchal, and privileged view of the world. In 1983, Joan Kirner,
who eventually became the state of Victoria’s education minister and
then its premier, argued that education had to be reshaped as “part of
the socialist struggle for equality, participation and social change,
rather than an instrument for the capitalist system.” More recently,
the editor of the journal for the Australian Association for the
Teaching of English argued that the John Howard–led conservative
government’s victory in 2004 was a result of the nation’s English
teachers’ failure to teach young people the proper (i.e., left-wing)
way to vote.
Currently, eight Australian states and territories have the power to
manage what is taught in their schools, but the recently elected,
left-of-center national government of Prime Minister Kevin Rudd is
trying to develop a national curriculum. Such is the Left’s control of
education that the effort is cause for concern: any federally imposed
curriculum will likely be ideologically driven and politically correct.
During the early and mid-nineties, for example, the Commonwealth of
Australia’s left-leaning government developed a national curriculum so
politically correct and dumbed-down that, after public outcry led by
conservatives and the media, it was eventually rejected at a meeting of
state, territory, and commonwealth education ministers.
Like America, Australia has both public and private schools. (As the
German researcher Ludger Woessmann notes, one characteristic of
stronger-performing education systems, as measured by international
tests, is a muscular private-school sector.) On the whole, Australian
private schools are more academically minded than their public
counterparts, especially at the high school level. Private schools also
have a better chance of escaping destructive curriculum initiatives
like the “whole language” approach to reading instruction, as well as
feel-good assessment systems that refuse to tell students that they
have failed.
One striking difference between the United States and Australia,
however, is that the Land Down Under doesn’t need a formal
school-voucher system like those in some American localities. In
Australia, students attending private schools automatically receive
funding from state governments and the commonwealth, with the amount of
taxpayers’ money received per student varying according to each school
community’s socioeconomic profile. While the figure never fully covers
the cost of educating students (the average cost of educating a
state-school student is $10,000, while the average government subsidy
to private-school students is $5,000), private schools have become
increasingly popular. In 1997, approximately 30 percent of students
attended private schools; by 2007, the figure had grown to
approximately 34 percent. Surveys suggest that parents choose private
schools because they have a strong academic focus, better reflect
parental values, and promote excellence.
While private schools must register with the government and conform to
regulations in areas like health and safety, teacher certification, and
financial probity, they enjoy flexibility when it comes to curriculum
and staffing. They have been particularly effective in more affluent,
middle-class areas, where they have forced government schools to
promote a more disciplined and academic environment.
The curriculum debate now revolves around questions of increased
testing and accountability, teacher performance, and developing a
national curriculum in order to become more internationally
competitive. However, since we have left-of-center governments at all
levels—state, territory, and commonwealth—I fear that future education
policies will be premised on statism, instead of opening schools to the
type of accountability, choice, and competition represented by the
market. Further, the commonwealth’s minister for education, Julia
Gillard, defines the purpose of education in terms of its utilitarian
value, by linking it to increasing productivity. No one disputes the
importance of economic growth, of course. But it’s vital that we don’t
lose sight of the broader cultural, spiritual, and ethical value of
education as well.
Source: Ocnus.net 2008