Education

Pharmer's Market: The Cost of Producing "Successful" Students

Published June 26, 2009 @ 07:05AM PT

[A big welcome to William Farren with this first guest-post. Bill has long struck me as one of the most original and piercing critics of education around. You can see his "Did You Ever Wonder?" video in the left sidebar, below, for a taste. Bill writes at the radically sane Education for Well-Being. - Clay]

Mass Production

Not long ago, I finished reading Michael Pollan's Omnivore's Dilemma, a book about the high price of cheap food and the disconnected thinking that produces it. It made me think that the way we produce food today--that is, ignoring nature's logic in the quest for efficiency--is very similar to the way we produce "educated" citizens. Ignoring millions of years of evolutionary design has resulted in some interesting (if not disconcerting) similarities between the two camps. Both industrial schooling and industrial agriculture seem to have developed pathological ways of looking at pathology.

Whether in the field, the feed lot, or the classroom, issues of low productivity and dysfunction are commonly attributed to the individual, rarely the larger system that controls it. When a farmer curses a corn plant's inability to repel a particular pest, he does so without reflecting on the fact that the plant has been taken out of its natural environment and placed into a man-made monoculture--a hotbed of disease. Plants grown in isolation lose the defenses and nutrients that neighboring species once freely provided.  In homogeneous rows designed for the convenience of machinery, a plant's exquisite defense systems become ineffective. "Corrective measures" in the form of herbicides and pesticides end up coating the plants and sterilizing the soil.

Pigs are faulted for biting other pigs' tails as a result of being weaned prematurely and packed together tightly. Animals living in stressful conditions, denied the expression of their once useful behaviors, lose the will to protect themselves in the face of danger. As a consequence, when infection sets in on a chewed tail, pigs are put down. (It's not profitable to nurse them back to health.)   Forward thinking hog farmers, in an attempt to stamp out this "vice", noticed that by docking the pigs' tails they could produce a sensitive nub that would force even the most demoralized pig to fight back.

Cows, ruminants which have evolved to eat grasses and fibrous vegetable matter, are today mostly fed a diet of government-subsidized corn. Here again, we ignore nature's design. Not having evolved for such a diet, cattle end up living in a state of permanent illness, propped up and kept in the system by a permanent cocktail of pharmaceuticals. Big Pharma is only too happy to fill in when nature is ignored.

Our education systems, seeking efficiency through standardization and conformity end up creating students who, just like their agricultural counterparts, are no longer well-adapted to their environment. Michael Pollan reminds us that, "Most of the efficiencies in an industrial system are achieved through simplification: doing lots of the same thing over and over." Like corn planted in a monoculture, removed from the diversity that protects it, or cattle fed an unnatural diet of corn, students today are fed a standardized diet of procedures and reproducible facts. This educational monoculture does nothing to nourish minds that have evolved to seek diversity, novelty and stimulation.

Those numbed by disconnected ideas unrelated to their needs are soon labeled attention-deficient, unmotivated, substandard. Stimulants, antidepressants and impulse inhibitors are used to conform the human mind to a deformed system the same way herbicides, pesticides and antibiotics are used in agriculture's great disconnect. Like the corn-fed cow raised on an unnatural diet of corn, constantly anemic and never well but kept alive through the use of drugs, students raised on disconnected facts, numbing routines, and endless testing often find themselves on the receiving end of a medical prescription. Those who don't have the stomach for such unsatisfying fare, who prefer not to be chemically altered, who'd rather have a more free-range existence, are eventually "counseled out". Simply put: they have not met the required production quotas of a system designed for scalable throughput.

In standardized environments, students with a high tolerance for monotony and the ability to repress their curious gene are deemed the fittest of the bunch.  Strangely, curiosity, a trait nature has selected for and which has served us well, seems to be selected against in schools.  Blue ribbon students grow their grade point averages en route to graduation and a chance to compete in the "real world". Their farm analogues, purposed for industry, have been selected to tolerate crowding, pesticides, sameness--but most importantly--to be high yielding. The corn farmer with the most bushels per acre is acclaimed for his skill at converting petrochemicals into grain. The feedlot operator's profits depend on how efficiently he can turn grain into meat. The highest ranked schools floss in the knowledge that they can efficiently convert standards and routines into high test scores.  Along the way, little thought is given to the soil that is depleted in the field, to the groundwater being spoiled by the feedlot, or to the creativity and innovation being extinguished in the classroom.  How productive is all this productivity?

It seems that despite (or maybe because of) our fetish with productivity, many of humanity's most pressing issues seem to be getting worse. The unnatural selection playing out in schools creates what every educational institution's mission statement pledges against: the creation of uncritical, passive, challenge-averse individuals, unwilling and unable to tackle the challenges of the 21st-century. It's simple to blame the students for being unproductive or unmotivated, for lacking curiosity. Indeed, they often are seen as the problem, especially by those who've designed the system. Grameen Bank founder Muhammad Yunus, however, reminds us that "the seed of poverty is in the institutions we have made, not in the person." With more effort and an inward gaze we'd see the deeper connections. We'd see students acting rationally in environments that ignore their evolutionary history. We'd understand that avoiding challenges and dropping out are simply logical responses to a system that discourages risk-taking and too often treats curiosity as a challenge to authority.

In their quest for efficiency and value, consumers have failed to notice the creation of false economies.  We are now using more energy (in the form of oil and gas) to produce a calorie of food than we ever have in our history. What nature used to do for free through biodiversity and solar power, now requires pesticides, herbicides, fertilizers and pharmaceuticals. In the bargain, our industrial agriculture is destroying our two most important environments: our bodies and our planet. Cheap food has led to obesity, type II diabetes and heart disease. Meat marinated in medicine and the effects it has on people (never mind the animals) never seems to make it into the cost-benefit analysis. Polluted air, toxic water and soil depletion are not billed at the supermarket register. Taxpayers, subsidizing the food that malnourishes them, complain little. Taxpayers, supporting educational systems that miseducate them, complain little. What's the true cost of an educational system which "through simplification: doing lots of the same thing over and over", causes mind and spirit to atrophy, suffocating students' natural desire to know? Maybe the biggest loss comes from the creation of generation after generation who cannot tell the difference between a bargain and a heist.

Michael Pollan writes, "Our food system depends on consumers' not knowing much about it beyond the price disclosed by the checkout scanner. Cheapness and ignorance are mutually reinforcing." Education today requires the same relationship. Educational policies seem to display a meager understanding about the importance of curiosity, awareness, or how we fit into larger systems. Education's checkout scanner--tuition and taxes--provide only a partial accounting of its true costs. Similar to industrial farming, industrial education produces no bargains while diminishing itself in the process. The price of producing a "successful" student may be higher than we think.

-
William Farren: Interested in making education an instrument of well-being. Believes that schools, as the most important shapers of mental models, need to seriously retool in an effort to address the problems caused by dysfunctional economic models, biophobia, “nature-deficit disorder” and an immense lack of planetary situational awareness.

Keeps asking himself, "How is preparing students to enter a system that is at war with itself, preparing them for the future?"

Image by Plearn

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Comments (16)

  1. Oceania OZ

    This is such a good article, I'm keeping this and reading it again.   I'm not even in America and I can relate, this is systemic.  We're still using the same old answers when we should be asking a whole new set of questions.

    Thank you for this post.

    Posted by Oceania OZ on 06/26/2009 @ 07:37AM PT

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  3. Kimberly Jean

    this article has phenomenal insights and is superbly written.

    Posted by Kimberly Jean on 06/26/2009 @ 08:57AM PT

  4. Barbara McNamara

    I have worked in education for years, and I could write a book testifying and supporting many of the things you have just addressed. When students are actively engaged and given the opportunity to think for themselves, problem solve, discuss historical data, evaluate cause and effect, critically discern the relationship of what they are learning in regards to their own lives, think creatively, actively participate in their education, and given the opportunity to have their voices heard as to their specific concerns about their environment, both in and out of the classroom, (believe me, I have had many discussions with students about this one), I truly believe most students will find their learning experiences very positive and they will not be as apathetic about their educations, and they will learn a great deal, and not just for the sole purpose of passing a test.

    Thank you, Mr. Farren, for this important and well written article.

    Posted by Barbara McNamara on 06/26/2009 @ 09:47AM PT

  5. Luella -

    Wow. Awesome article!! I'm vegan, rather than omnivore, so my dilemma is how the heck we're going to un-industrialize farming while sentient beings - who deserve rights to protect their interests of happiness and freedom from unnecessary suffering - are treated as commodities in the first place, flesh for our plates and our taste buds. Is it possible? If we had to be omnivores, I'd say, maybe it's the best we can do - but we don't, and it's not.

    Are students being devoured just like nonhuman flesh in this quest for mass production? You talk about nature, a "curiosity gene," our nature need to mold our own lives. Brilliant. Now how about the nonhuman animals, the "genes" they have that make them want to raise a family and stay alive and grow and share milk with their babies rather than a human hand and bucket (or machine), etc? Do these count as well?

    My questions aside, the concept of the industrial school system is fantastically accurate.

    Posted by Luella - on 06/26/2009 @ 10:22AM PT

  6. William Farren

    Thanks for the questions. They are important ones.

    The question of raising animals for food is one that a lot of people struggle with. Michael Pollan devotes a fair share of his book to the issue. The truth is, we are omnivores. However, I don't believe this makes it ethically right to treat animals in ways that defy their natural way of being. Having tapped into oil and learned how to use its energy for growing animal feed, humans can now eat way more meat than is naturally sustainable. We're also raising them, as you mention, with no regard to their animal happiness.

    You might want to take a look at Polyfacefarms.com Pollan writes extensively about this farm's philosophy when it comes to animal well-being. He also describes how this farm increases its profits by listening to nature. In polycultures, different species are allowed to cooperate with each other, letting nature do the work of harsh chemicals and avoiding the need for inhumane practices.  Over time--unlike industrial farming--the land is replenished and sustained for the next crop.

    Posted by William Farren on 06/27/2009 @ 12:48PM PT

  7. Luella -

    I appreciate your thoughtful response.

    "The truth is, we are omnivores."

    This is a matter of semantics. "Omnivore" can refer to different things: what you can get away with eating, what you in fact do eat, or even, perhaps, what you should eat. For example, calves are fed with cow blood on factory farms, instead of milk. I would argue that cows are herbivores and should not be drinking blood. "Truth" has no inherent reality... "truth" is just a way of perceiving the world, and it should be a useful one which promotes happiness. In this case, I believe that promoting the consumption of animals is both unnecessary and extremely dangerous, as it almost (?) invariably requires devaluing their lives in favor of their usefulnes to humans. See my letter to the editor for more on my view of the matter:

    http://morningsentinel.mainetoday.com/view/letters/6435268.html

    The most important thing should be promoting the well-being of all sentient beings, and why that includes eating animals I do not understand. Producing and consuming them seems to me only an uncalled for barrier to caring for them.

    Posted by Luella - on 06/29/2009 @ 08:39AM PT

  8. William Farren

    Okay. Let me put the "truth" part another way: Throughout our (human) natural history, nature has selected for omnivory. Those humans and proto-humans that ate animals (and animal protein) had a better chance of surviving. The genes for this behavior were thus passed on. This is true for many animals (and some plants) as well.

    Do I promote eating animals? No. Many of us can get all our nutrients from other sources, and I think it's good that we do. Some people however, clearly rely on animal protein for their survival.

    As far as eating, from a well-being standpoint, (both for animals, plants and humans) to me, it's a complicated issue.  Some questions come to mind:

    Where do we draw the line from sentient to non-sentient being? Are plants sentient? Are trees? Is a jellyfish? A worm? Are we so sure that sentience requires a nervous system? Who's got it figured out, the animal or plant (or its genes!) that gets itself raised or farmed in exchange for its nutrients, or the organism (cow let's say) that figures out how to be left alone by man, and thus becomes extinct? Are we to assume that chimps don't have a conscience, because if they did, we could fault them for eating the occasional animal even though they might have plenty of sustenance at hand? Is it arrogant to think that we humans are the only beings with a conscience? How far is conscience from sentience?

    My questions might seem provocative. They are not meant to tick anyone off. Just "food" for thought.

     

     

     

     

    Posted by William Farren on 07/02/2009 @ 06:34PM PT

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  10. Jake Poysti

    Beautifully written post.

    Posted by Jake Poysti on 06/26/2009 @ 10:41AM PT

  11. Marty Rodriguez

    Awesome article. I believe that students find their learning positively. Their success depend on their interest in study and also to their instructor. Given the opportunity to have their voices heard of their specific concerns. It is important to address the needs and expectations of student.

    Posted by Marty Rodriguez on 06/26/2009 @ 07:54PM PT

  12. Xa Lynn

    Beautiful article!

    As a student currently attending a public high school, I find your arguments completely accurate. I would say that I am one entirely dedicated to learning. However, this factor does not blind me to seeing most of the classes that are required are outdated and designed for a student that will graduated void of the knowledge he needs in life.

    I often ask myself why 4 years of American History is required yet Economics or Current Issues are not even offered. I've wondered why seemingly none of our "top students" can identify one major global event that does not relate to the US. 

    The slogans "Individuality and Personal Expression!" are ubiquitous in every classroom in the States. But the question is, who really cares about individuality? Our school system is created to manufacture the same mindless, uninterested, unquestioning student time and time again.

    God praise the student who comes out man rather than machine.

    Posted by Xa Lynn on 06/27/2009 @ 07:29AM PT

  13. Nicholas Abel

    Very well written!

    what are your thoughts to society's reasons for generating within the masses a sense of cultural segregation in a world that more then ever now has discovered how small and connected we are as appose to a once 'vast and unknown world'. Without a doubt I believe that education plays a significant role in discouraging a worldly perspective (at least state side), however is there more then a flawed education system that is contributing to the ever increasing segregation among humanity?

    Posted by Nicholas Abel on 06/27/2009 @ 08:40AM PT

  14. William Farren

    When you look at the rhetoric about American education today, it's often framed as a competitive issue--one country against the other. I believe this stance has had a role in the segregation you describe. I believe schools, (and all of our institutions) need to start looking for mutually beneficial relationships, for cooperative approaches. We need to seek out and study these relationships with the same effort we study war and competition. (We send our smartest (at taxpayer expense!) to military academies, not peace academies.)

    If interested, I write about this topic here: http://www.ed4wb.org/?p=150

    Cheers.

    Posted by William Farren on 06/27/2009 @ 02:00PM PT

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  16. Charlie  Roy

    @ Bill

    Phenomenal post!  After following ed4wb.org I'd expect nothing less.  Perhaps the primary causal problem is the economic system that we in the West accept without question.  Where will capitalism or super capitalism take us?  Our economy is certainly not sustainable.  I've been reading much lately about the theory of Distributivism.  It's interesting when you study the history of capitalism that the founders of the system were concerned about individuals being able to opt out of the system by producing their own supply of food and reasonable shelter.  These people were feared to undermine the system because they had no need of participating in the market economy.  

     

    Posted by Charlie Roy on 06/27/2009 @ 03:08PM PT

  17. William Farren

    Hi Charlie: Thx. I totally agree that we need to question our economic assumptions. I too, think that they are at the heart of a lot of our problems. (Maybe most!) I'd like to learn more about distributism. I know you've mentioned it to me before but I still haven't gotten around to educating myself about it. (It's on the to do list!) What books, articles, people...do you recommend for learning more about it?

    Cheers,  Bill

    Posted by William Farren on 06/28/2009 @ 09:21PM PT

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  19. Michele McCowan

    Thanks for the post! Very thoughtfully written and kind. I love the connection between agriculture and education and your take on how the two are so similar. Very nicely written.

    I also liked your comment about sending our smartest to military academies instead of peace academies. One of my favorite authors (and speaker/educator) on the subject is Colman McCarthy (founder and director of the Center for Teaching Peace, Washington DC) His book "I'd Rather Teach Peace" was very enlightening to me and listening to him speak was one of the highlights of my learning experience.

    I think classes such as his should not be an extracurricular study in college, but a requirement in every high school. I like to imagine that it will be in the future, wishful thinking or not.

    Thanks for the brilliant post. I look forward to reading more!

    Posted by Michele McCowan on 06/30/2009 @ 05:32PM PT

  20. William Farren

    Thanks for your comment, Michele.

    Yeah, I think there's a lot of untapped value on the peace side of things. Imagine what we could do if we studied peace and cooperation with the same intensity we study war and aggression. It would be nice to see this taught in schools. It's crazy though, if you look at schools, they are highly competitive environments. Everything from the spelling bee to the class rank becomes a battle, each student framed as an opponent.  Peace and cooperation needs to be approached with rigor, as a science, not pie-in-the-sky hand holding. Luckily, some people are starting to do that.

    I find this site pretty amazing:http://www.visionofhumanity.org/

    Cheers.

    Posted by William Farren on 07/02/2009 @ 06:49PM PT

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Author
William Farren

William is interested in making education an instrument of well-being. He believes that schools, as the most important shapers of mental models, need to seriously retool in an effort to address the problems caused by dysfunctional economic models, biophobia, “nature-deficit disorder” and an immense lack of planetary situational awareness.

William is currently working on a new effort, ParticipatoryLearning.net, where students will get to tell him, their teacher, which countries he should visit. In this effort, he'll be trying to combine his love for world living, teaching, and active networked learning.

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