6A is due Wed. April 19th.
6A. On the institutional basis:
6A: Bowles and Gintis argue that educational reformers (and radicals) err in not taking into account the role of economics in having created the plight of the school. This is not a question of money, at least not in the sense of not having enough money to run the schools in some ideal manner. Rather, what Bowles and Gintis are getting at is that the STRUCTURE of our economic life demands that the schools have many of the things that many of us regard as shortcomings.
This entails that the economy is a more powerful driving force in our society than the schools, and thus the schools much knuckle down to the mandates of the economic structures since they are more powerful than that of the school.6A: Bowles and Gintis argue that educational reformers (and radicals) err in not taking into account the role of economics in having created the plight of the school. This is not a question of money, at least not in the sense of not having enough money to run the schools in some ideal manner. Rather, what Bowles and Gintis are getting at is that the STRUCTURE of our economic life demands that the schools have many of the things that many of us regard as shortcomings.
6B is due Fri. April 21st.
6B. Measure of success
6B. The measure of success. There are three people sitting around talking. Corbett, either Bowles or Gintis and YOU. Corbett says this:
"Mr. B or G, most of us have been shown arguments that show that the more schooling one gets (that is, the more credentials one amasses) then the more likely it is that one will earn more in one's later life. This argument makes an assumption: namely that there is a high correlation between years of schooling and credentials achieved and earnings over life. If further assumes that OTHER correlations are of a lesser power. So, for example, it may be shown that men out earn women, or that right handed people out earn lefties, or that people who seem to meet a higher degree of the Greek ideal of beauty out earn people who don't. But the defenders of school say two things:
B or G replies: "Yes, Corbett, that's what the establishment says. And they are right to a certain extent. There is and can be shown to be some correlation between years of schooling and piles of credentials and earnings. That is so. But, the data obscures two things:
Now, at this point you jump in and you do two things:
6B is due Wed. April 26th.
6C. What is it that schools really do?
6C. Bowles and Gintis are convinced that the FUNDAMENTAL STRUCTURE of the school is such that it is not aiming at any of the many glorious things educators have said over the years -- make people critical thinkers, teaching reading, writing and arithmetic, prepare them to earn more in their lives, making them intelligent citizens and so on.
6D and 6E are due by Mon, May 1st.
6D and 6D: For each write a critical response to something written by Corbett or another student which was posted to you on e-mail.
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Bob Corbett corbetre@webster.edu