Top positive review
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5.0 out of 5 starsA book that makes you question your teachers, your parents, and your whole childhood.
ByEvan Leon February 1, 2016
I really enjoyed reading this book. Ivan Illich offers these amazingly insightful ideas that would be considered radical by most of my peers who have grown up in the public school system.
Here are my main takeaways:
1. Why We Must Disestablish School
Most learning is not the result of teaching. For example, people who learn second languages mostly do so through speaking and reaction to the present moment. Learning isn't something that has to be provided for you. Nor should it be planned and manipulated in one mold for every child.
2. Phenomenology of School
The idea of childhood is a social construct. The way we maintain this "period of childhood" is mainly through schooling (along with age-specific laws). One of my favorite lines about how school distorts our worldview: "The distinctions between morality, legality, and moral worth are blurred and eventually eliminated" under the "authoritative eye of the teacher".
3. Ritualization of Progress
Schools have this unbreakable image that they're ultimately good for the children - that's what allows them to spend so frivolously. As costs rise up, the system takes away our children's responsibility for their own growth, a sort of "spiritual suicide" if you will. They don't advance until they complete the tasks they were told to do.
4. Irrational Consistencies
Curriculum is used to assign social rank. This rank structure is rigid and keeps people in their place. Many degree or certification programs, serve as barriers to protect the presiding class from uncertified people who would want to compete for those jobs.
5. Learning Webs
Schools are designed with the idea that there is this special secret to succeeding in life. And only teachers know this secret. This perpetuates the idea that success through the school system is the only way or the best way to reaching this enlightened stage.
We've all been through mandatory schooling, so it's hard to imagine a life without it. But what if we could imagine a brighter future to education rather than the dismal attempts at nationalized curriculum and "higher standards"?
This is an amazing book that covers a lot of ground in terms of the deschooling movement. I've already seen successful implementations of Illich's ideas in post-highschool educational programs. All students should read this book; it really makes you think more deeply about your relationships towards institutions, learning, and authority.
"It must not start with the question, 'What should someone learn?' but with the question, 'What kinds of things and people might learners want to be in contact with in order to learn?" - Illich