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Dumbing Down Our Kids: Why America's Children Feel Good About Themselves but Can't Read, Write, or Add (Hardcover)

by Charles J. Sykes (Author) "In Littleton, Colorado, the school district's new "goals" required that students be able to speak and write..." (more)
Key Phrases: educationist establishment, educational mediocrity, outcome based education, United States, World War, Stereotype Card (more...)
4.0 out of 5 stars See all reviews (30 customer reviews)


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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review
Nowhere has the flight from quality plaguing American life these days been more obvious than in our primary and secondary schools -- on the whole, the graduates seem less well-read and less well-spoken, less knowledgeable and less able to compute. In this book, Charles Sykes asks why, and lays most of the blame at the feet of the trainers of teachers, the writers of textbooks and the educational policy wonks who influence them. He convincingly shows that in many different school systems, and in many different academic fields, with the help of goofy text-books, watered-down requirements and "recentered" test grade scales, American students have come to value feeling good about a subject over being good in it. Sykes's recommended reforms include abolishing the federal Department of Education and its state counterparts, abolishing undergraduate schools of education, establishing more alternative routes to teacher certification and merit raises for good teachers. Good ideas all -- now if we can only get politicians to put them into action!

From Publishers Weekly
Sykes, a journalist who specializes in education issues (A Nation of Victims), weighs into the current school wars with this polemic. A particular target is the school reform movement, epitomized by educators who, as Sykes characterizes them, emphasize students' feelings rather then their learning. In Sykes's view, the usual scapegoats for the decline of American education?parents, society, money?are not the cause of low scores in reading and mathematics; instead, he points the finger at "the schools themselves and the values that dominate American education in the 1990s." He compiles here a sobering catalogue of failed approaches, "self-esteem" programs, political correctness and other trends that militate against the learning of basic skills. He forcefully offers proposals that could work (open up teaching to non-educationists) and others that would initiate a sea change (eliminate tenure). Baltimore's famed private Calvert School is a suggested model. To an ongoing debate, Sykes brings viewpoints and evidence to which attention should be paid. Author tour.
Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc.

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Product Details

  • Hardcover: 341 pages
  • Publisher: St. Martin's Press; 1st edition (October 1995)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0312134746
  • ISBN-13: 978-0312134747
  • Product Dimensions: 8.9 x 6.3 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 4 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars See all reviews (30 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #988,338 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

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Customer Reviews

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158 of 170 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A book every aspiring teacher should read., August 14, 1999
By A Customer
As a 30-year-old returning to school for teacher certification, I was distressed by the "cooperative learning" techniques currently trumpeted at the university I attend. After several courses in which I was encouraged to "discuss with my group" the objectives being tested (in lieu of a formal review), given "group tests" for final exams (which were also open-book), and being assigned in yet another group to divide up chapters of text and "discuss what was learned" with each other (without any input or insight from the Professor), I began to feel abnormal for being less than enthusiastic about the methods my instructors were promoting. By showing me that I am not alone in my criticism of such shallow techniques, and my desire to teach in a manner that focuses on skills and knowledge, Sykes' book has somewhat eased my disillusionment. What passes for instruction in schools of education across the country is nothing more than theory, rhetoric, and a lot of coddling that insults the intelligence - a simulation of what teaching has become in K-12 schools across the country. Something needs to be done about the schools of education that shape our nation's fledgling teachers, many of whom gobble up this nonsense eagerly, content with easy A's in their education courses and final exams that require little preparation. This book should be required reading on all college campuses where students are prepared to teach in our public schools, in place of the fatuous textbooks we are forced to consume.
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53 of 56 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars numb with dumb, January 1, 2006
By Patrick Hubbell (Victoria, TX) - See all my reviews
There is that moment of sublime revelation experienced by Winston Smith in George Orwell's 1984 when he reads a book that explains everything he already intuited from his experiences with the bureacracy and Big Brother. I experienced the same epiphany as soon as I began reading Dumbing Down Our Kids.

As a teacher, I have already endured the idiocies chronicled in this book. Cooperative learning? That was a two-day seminar. Self-esteem? Another inservice. Hey, I attended one in which the presenter passed out a packet of information including - so help me God - a "hugging homework" assignment. Did someone say "mission statement?" As a member of the campus Site-Based Decision Management Committee, I put in my two cents' worth when I tried to insert the notion that education should develop individual knowledge and responsibility. It was okayed and seconded by fellow teachers. Somehow, the version now hanging in our school district boardroom omitted my input. Equity? Been there, done that with our equity specialist. Here's an updated version of Mother Goose rhymes from an inservice handout I saved:

Jack be nimble,
Jack be quick,
Jack jump over the candlestick.
Jill be nimble,
Do it, too.
If Jack can do it, so can you.

If Winston Smith were a teacher, he'd know the party line is preceded by the phrase "research is showing." Party committees are headed by hacks with self-important titles like "equity specialist" and "curriculum coordinator". The language is corrupted to the same extent as Oceania. Students engage in "cooperative learning" formerly known as cheating. "At-risk students" is preferred to "just plain lazy".

The aeries of districts are crowded with doctors of education. It should come as no surprise that universities dole out honorary doctorates in education to distinguished guests because they are less likely to perpetrate the least amount of damage, unless he or she attempts to put it to use as an administrator or, worse, a consultant.

"Dumbing Down Our Kids" is filled with samples of impermeable writings by people who are so besotted with their own self-importance that sarcasm would be wasted on them. A dissertation for a doctorate in physical ed stated "The purpose of this research was to create a connectionist model for simulating contextual interference effects in motor skills. The model was a multiple layer, heteroassociative, nonlinear, feedforward interpolative recall network trained by back-propogation of errors."

Oh.

Another pioneer in New Math curriculum frankly admits that "I do not do long division or long multiplication anymore." He helpfully and frankly admits he's lazy and found a better method of doing math which "involves pushing a few buttons on my calculator." Incredibly, this pioneer is the founder and director of a mathematics project at the University of Chicago. From the same people who brought us the A-bomb, yet another bomb. I leave it to you to decide which bomb is more deadly.

Textbooks are largely "books without authors. . . slaves to readability indexes, and mandated never to offend any conceivable special interest group."

It simply amazes me that so many dunderheaded fools, from federal to state to local level, actually get to make decisions that affect how I work in the classroom. I work in a business that is ostensibly set up to make people smarter. And yet the very same people who run the business are as dumb as a crate of anvils. It is as if NASA contracted a company that specializes in running fireworks stands to design heat shields for the spacecraft. I can't make people walk a mile in my moccosins, but if reading this book makes them boil with anger, then at least I'm not alone.
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34 of 35 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A compelling, informative read, January 14, 1997
By A Customer
With over two hundred studies conducted nationwide showing the tenuous relationship between school spending and quality education, you would think those who make school policy would look elsewhere for a reason why our schools are such failures. In this compelling and informative book about our educational decline Charles Sykes gives us a glimpse into the insanity of a system which rewards political correctness, student failure and poor teaching habits. Dogmatic iberals won't like it, but concerned parents and others should look at this study before pouring any more funding into a failed system. Paul J. Walkowski, Co-Author, "From Trial Court to the United States Supreme Court"
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

2.0 out of 5 stars repeat...repeat...repeat
I actually agree with the author's basic premise that the public education system is too worried about everything except the academic education of our children. Read more
Published 8 months ago by just.a.reader

5.0 out of 5 stars Explained: Educators Gone Wild
A must-read investigation. Although now 12 years old, this book doesn't seem dated. Educators are still recycling the same old gimmick, which is basically to devise hifalutin... Read more
Published 22 months ago by Bruce Deitrick Price

1.0 out of 5 stars Didn't you get the email? Then why buy the book?
There's nothing new in this book. It's all the same clueless right-wing blather that was in Sykes' other book. Read more
Published 23 months ago by K. Alexander

5.0 out of 5 stars Dumb kids....smart teachers
Millionaire in 365 Days: The Daily Plan to Get There

Unbelievable revelation as to how our kids are dumbed down....and it is getting worse each year.... Read more
Published 23 months ago by Rick Johnson

5.0 out of 5 stars Dumb on Purpose
Sykes is just one of scores of people who've been warning Americans that public schools are no longer failing; PUBLIC SCHOOLS ARE A FAILURE, period. Read more
Published on July 12, 2007 by R. C. Murray

1.0 out of 5 stars We Should Worry About Our Dumbed Down Journalists
Charles J. Sykes reinforces every paranoid conservative American fantasy about American education in Dumbing Down Our Kids. Read more
Published on July 28, 2006 by D. Weed

4.0 out of 5 stars An empassioned appeal for our children's education
Overview
Declining test scores, increasing employer dissatisfaction with the academic preparedness of graduates, and worsening ranking in international academic comparisons... Read more
Published on May 9, 2006 by K. L. Zimmerman

2.0 out of 5 stars How many times can you make the same point.
The book could have been reduced to the first few chapters. The remainder of the book is simply a rehashing of the same theme discussed at the beginning of the book. Read more
Published on September 9, 2003

4.0 out of 5 stars A New Teacher's View
As a teacher with a few years' experience, this was certainly an "interesting" book to read. I almost felt like I was reading a book by the "enemy," but instead of sacrificially... Read more
Published on July 24, 2003

2.0 out of 5 stars Shoddy critique, provocative satire
There are far more thoughtful critiques of American education available than this pompous, right-wing-thing-tank funded diatribe. Read more
Published on July 20, 2003 by M McVey

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