Sam
Smith
2012
2012
I
awoke this morning wondering what a predicate was. It was at
first an
embarrassing thought and then, when I remembered that I had
lived my whole life
as a writer without knowing what a predicate was (except briefly
after I
occasionally looked it up), I felt better. Maybe it really
didn’t matter.
Certainly
my three high school English teachers didn’t seem to think so. I
can’t remember
any of them explaining it. They were too busy with other stuff,
like getting us
excited about interesting books or having us write about new
things in an
imaginative and readable way.
For
them it seemed to have worked. One became a publisher. Another
taught future
English teachers at Yale. And the third went on to coach other
teachers for
decades. Time Magazine once described the latter, David Mallery,
as having “become the
nation's most skilled
conveyor of one teacher's technique to another."
I
went on to be a journalist, and – despite not
knowing what a
predicate was – I written up to nine radio newscasts a day, four books, and edited print and online journals for over 50 years.
Many years ago, I was president of the parents’ association of the John
Eaton public
school in DC where the principal Pat Greer didn’t worry about
predicates
either. I wrote once:
“The
curriculum at the school was colored by two impressive biases.
One was a
prejudice towards writing. The kids were always writing
something: diaries,
plays, stories, speeches, advertisements. The school clearly
understood the
shortest route to good writing: do it.
“The
other emphasis was the arts, particularly drama and music. With
excellent
teachers and adequate time, the kids threw themselves into their
projects as
though Broadway rather than high school was the next step.”
I
became conscious of how serious the dramatic side of Eaton was
one day as I was
taking a group of 4th graders home from an event. One kid
stepped carelessly
into the street and a companion called her back, saying, "Be
careful, you
could ruin your whole life that way.' Another added, "yeah, or
even your
career." Once safely in the car, there commenced the sort of
surreal
debate that only the young can withstand. The topic (clearly
involving the
stage rather than the lesser trades) was: what is more important
- your life or
your career?
As
I read about the corporate takeover of public education – aka
Race to the Top
and Common Core – promoted by the likes of Arnie Duncan and Bill
Gates, I
become angry not just for political or intellectual reasons. I
become angry
because of all the children being denied the fun and usefulness
of learning
about writing and reading not as a test to pass but as a
wonderful part of a
life to experience. Reducing life to data, business school
cliches and rules is
not just stupid, it’s a cruel punishment.
1 comment:
I quit school when I figured out it was getting in the way of my education
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