The Education Issue
- Posted by: GOOD
- on August 13, 2008 at 5:15 pm

It’s easy to shake your head at the oft-repeated statistics about how many kids don’t know what a verb is, or can’t find the United States on a map. But in our fear about what will happen if every child doesn’t know the quadratic formula by heart, we’ve created a far more damning problem: We’ve taken all the fun out of learning. And when learning isn’t fun, it’s easy for kids to find things to do that are more appealing than sitting in school.
There are countless educators across the country doing hero’s work. But if they’re going to change the prevailing slide in American education, they need more support. We’d all agree that fear is a lousy guiding principle. Yet we have been so afraid of failure, we’ve stopped trying to succeed. That isn’t working. It’s time to go back to school.
Education features from this issue:
School Wars
Public education is nearing a breaking point. GARY STAGER assesses the players struggling to revitalize the system, and explains why all of them are failing.
The Fixer
Why is one black man trying to end affirmative action? ADAM MATTHEWS chronicles Ward Connerly’s education crusade.
Affirmative Action: A History
From Kennedy’s executive order 10925 to 2006’s Michigan Civil Rights Initiative: GOOD chronicles the struggle for fairness in education.
Fall Down, Go Boom
MORGAN CLENDANIEL rummages through the wasteland of contemporary playgrounds and finds some promising—and dangerous—innovations.







DISCUSSION: 1 Comment
One of the problems in education is that it is not of interest to the students. I remember a Buddhist Bhikku said to make education come alive. [paraphrased] In Orthodox Christianity, there is the tradition of the Fool for Christ. This tradition was for advanced ascetics to play practical jokes which were foolishness for men but wisdom n for God. There is the New Testament precept that if you are wise in your own eyes, to be a fool to be truly wise. Perhaps true wisdom is to be wise in your thoughts. If so, then practical jokes can help to teach wisdom. Since it is so funny, there are no grudges perhaps to learn.