By Perry L. Glanzer on 9.21.07 @ 12:07AM
When dictators play school superintendent.
This week Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez threatened to take
away a cherished right of parents in his country -- the right to
direct their child's education. Of course, Chavez did not directly
threaten this right. Like most state authorities, he attacks
through regulation.
Chavez threatened to close or take over private schools that did
not submit to his government's oversight and its new curriculum and
textbooks. After all, Chavez reasoned, "Society cannot allow the
private sector to do whatever it wants."
Of course, most everyone believes that neither public nor
private schools should do whatever they want. What Chavez likely
means is that his government does not want private schools teaching
content that threatens his regime's outlook.
Not surprisingly, Chavez's recent pronouncement merely follows
the Soviet tradition articulated in the 1919 book, ABC's of
Communism:
When parents say, "My daughter," "My son," the words do
not simply imply the existence of a parental relationship, they
also give expression to the parents' view that they have a right to
educate their own children. From the socialist outlook, no such
right exists....The parents' claim to bring up their own children
and thereby to impress upon the children's psychology their own
limitations, must not merely be rejected, but must be absolutely
laughed out of court.
As usual, such views are justified by appealing to the need to
promote the common good or some other positive goal. For example,
Venezuela's education minister (who also happens to be Chavez's
brother) says Chavez merely wants to promote "critical thinking"
through his regulation.
Unfortunately, the Chavez-like desire to reduce parental freedom
and to regulate private schools for "society's interest" appears to
be growing in America. One finds academics at places such as
Stanford calling for increased state regulation to make sure home
and private schools do not "aim solely to replicate and reinforce
the worldview of the parents or cultural groups of the children who
attend the school." Similar to the case in Venezuela, such appeals
are justified as ways to protect freedom and critical thinking.
Those truly interested in freedom and critical thinking should
actually recognize two opposite points. First, parents primarily
need to protect "critical thinking" in their children by ensuring
that public schools (even more than private schools), through their
curriculum and pedagogy, do not aim solely to replicate and
reinforce the worldview of those in power.
Government bureaucrats who relish control, like Chavez, delight
in public schools. After all, public schools can more easily be
used to promote nationalist sentiment in children.
Even the Texas public school my first grade son attends requires
him to memorize the American and Texas pledges of allegiance as
part of his citizenship grade. Whatever one thinks of the activity,
it must clearly be recognized as state-enforced and mandated
indoctrination.
The recent opening scenes of the movie Joyeux Noel
provide us with a sobering reminder of ways such indoctrinating
nationalism can spin out of control. The movie begins by showing
German, French and English school children quoting each country's
pre-World War I textbooks about the evil flaws of enemy
nationalities. Examples of how countries use public schools to
indoctrinate children into political ideologies could easily be
multiplied.
The second point citizens who value "critical thinking" and
"freedom" must remember is that these ideals are best protected
when parents enjoy well-protected rights to choose private or home
schools. The open competition of worldviews promoted by allowing
private and home schooling helps foster freedom and diversity of
thought.
Not surprisingly, the emergence of young forms of democracy in
countries such as Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Poland, Romania and
Ukraine went hand-in hand with the legalization of home and private
schooling. In other words, countries and educational systems that
give wide freedoms to private and home schooling and support
parental choice also tend to exhibit more respect for a range of
human rights such as freedom of speech, conscience and
religion.
In contrast, highly centralized and repressive political states,
often communist or totalitarian (e.g., China, Vietnam, Cuba, Saudi
Arabia, and Iran), outlaw home and private schooling and mandate
public school attendance for all.
In light of these realities, we need to protect parental freedom
and the freedom of private and home schools. They can play a
crucial role in helping us raise up children with enough courage to
think critically about and challenge the "truth" told by the
controlling Hugo Chavez's of the world.
Perry L. Glanzer teaches in the Department of Church
and State and the School of Education at Baylor
University.
topics:
Education, Religion, Books, Law, Iran, Communism