Townhall...
Don’t
Know Much About History
6/24/2011
By Suzanne Fields
First,
the good news: The nation’s
eighth-graders are doing better in history class. Now, the bad news:
They’re
not doing much better. Gains in test scores are small, made by the
lowest
performers, and only 17 percent of those tested are “proficient,” or
competent.
It
gets worse. Only 12 percent of
high-school seniors, who are getting ready to vote for the first time,
have a
proficient knowledge of history. If you’re looking for a tinsel lining,
you
could point to 20 percent of fourth-graders who are described as
proficient,
but that means eight of 10 haven’t learned very much during their
tender years
in the classroom
The
standardized test results known as
the “nation’s report card,” issued by the National Assessment of
Educational
Progress, are based on tests taken by thousands of schoolchildren in
both
private and public schools. Such dismal percentages once sounded alarms
for
parents and teachers, but now mostly get a bored yawn. What else is new?
“We’re
raising young people who are,
by and large, historically illiterate,” says historian David McCullough
in The
Wall Street Journal. “I know how much these young people -- even at the
most
esteemed institutions of higher learning -- don’t know. It’s shocking.”
McCullough, who has lectured on more than a hundred college campuses,
tells of
a young women who came up to him after a lecture at a renowned
university in
the Midwest. “Until I heard your talk this morning, I never realized
the
original 13 colonies were all on the East Coast.”
McCullough
has learned first-hand how
formidable the obstacles have become. Emotional appeals in politically
correct
courses -- women’s history, African history, environmental history --
take the
place of chronological and conceptual study across the educational arc
from
tiny tots to graduate students.
From
the early grades, our children
learn how horrible slavery was, but spend little time studying the how,
why and
when we righted that wrong and the wrongs that followed. Who we are
comes from
what we reject as much as from what we embrace.
The
problems with our schools run
deep, not only affecting how the next generation is learning to make
reasoned
choices in determining public policy, but how ignorance undercuts pride
and
patriotism, the sense of America’s core identity. It’s not merely
academic.
When seniors were asked about Brown v. Board of Education and what
social
problem it was supposed to correct, only 2 percent knew it was the
Supreme
Court decision that declared laws compelling segregation in the public
schools
as unconstitutional.
The
recent report card in history was
issued just as I attended a conference sponsored by the Hudson
Institute, a
conservative think tank, to discuss the American identity, to talk
about the
changing sense of “we the people.” We heard concern for the way we’re
losing
the moral tissue that connects the first principles established by the
Founding
Fathers. Intellectual trends like multiculturalism, globalism and a
sneering
skepticism of America have diminished the shared memories and common
values
that have held the nation together through war, Depression and social
upheaval.
Thomas
Jefferson owned slaves, for
example, but that shouldn’t blind us to his ideals. Yet impressionistic
young
people are taught to belittle the whole man. The author of the
Declaration of
Independence is trivialized with simplistic moral condescension. When
our
history is reduced to our flaws, celebrating fragmentation in
hyphenated
Americans, the young can’t understand the cohesive principles on which
our
liberty is based.
This
becomes especially dangerous as
younger generations fail to learn about the separation of powers,
checks and
balances of government and why Congress enacted the Bill of Rights.
There’s no
appreciation for democracy, which after all originated here.
Best-selling
books on atheism testify
to the strength of American pluralism, but when our schoolchildren lack
the
knowledge to make intellectual discrimination as taught by history,
they fail
to appreciate how American ideas are rooted in such self-evident
truths, that
“all men are endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights,”
and
become insecure in what it means to be an American
“In
God we trust, yes,” observes the
theological scholar Michael Novak. “But for all men there must be
checks and
balances.” American citizens need not profess a faith in the Creator to
be a
good citizen, any more than they must attend a church or synagogue, but
our
children should be taught where the roots of American identity come
from. The
“nation’s report card” sounds the alarm that the lessons of history are
threatened when those lessons are never learned.
Read
it at Townhall
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