The
right to education is unquestionably a fundamental, inalienable right
within the context of modern Western society. Humankind as a whole
strives to create educated, knowledgeable individuals capable of
fulfilling jobs and duties in society, and this desire results in
institutions being created that serve to educate the masses,
institutions that spend billions upon billions of dollars in an
effort to further the advancement of our educational system and of
the knowledge of society as a whole. Education stimulates our
economy, helps us understand our own being, and furthers the cutting
edge of science and knowledge. Every day we further our knowledge
even more; each day the apex of the knowledge we have amassed as a
race through history is pushed further and further. Now, this seems
all fine and dandy, and, indeed, these institutions do serve a great
purpose. Without these institutions, we would still be stuck in the
Stone Age. Yet, our education system as it stands today has an
unsettling number of fatal flaws. Perhaps the strongest example of
our failings in the educational system is our system of linguistic
education.
The
study of language is not done justice within the standard modern
Western middle and high school English curriculum. What the average
American or European youth is taught barely scratches the surface of
the fascinating world that is language, and of the measly amount of
language covered in a standard high school education, never are we
shown the depth or the beauty of the study of language. We learn
simple rules like subject-verb agreement, which homophones we should
use in their respective contexts, and the basic gist of how to use a
semicolon; this is what we, strictly speaking, need to know in order
to make our writing as adults not sound like it was written by the
kind of blundering idiot that would confuse their and there.
Understandably (and predictably), the aforementioned topics of
grammar explored in standard elementary, middle, and high school
curricula bore children and teenagers, and rightfully so; the manner
in which they are presented and the depth to which they are explored
is thoroughly, painfully shallow and uninteresting. Moreover,
learning rules and guides to one’s native language seems pointless
and a waste of time to the youth of today (though it really isn’t.)
The lack of depth of grammatical and linguistic study and the
presentation of the measly smattering of what we are taught is the
sad origin of the disinterest and loathing of English grammar and
linguistics that we find in today’s native-English speaking
middle-high school youth.
Ask
the average high-school or lower educated individual who Robert Lowth
is, and perhaps one out of a hundred will be able to answer you.
Robert Lowth was an important figure in the development of modern
English grammar, and yet the youth of today know nothing of him, a
man who created one of the most infamously annoying, illogical rules
of modern English: He proposed in his 1762 publication, A Short
Introduction to English Grammar, that a sentence should not end
in a preposition, referencing and applying his study of Latin
grammatical structure. I'm sure that many people have heard this rule
time and time again; it is, after all, one of the most common
grammatical errors that an English class will attempt to address.
Thus, we hear it very often. It's drilled into us over and over that
we may not end a sentence with a preposition.
This is a prime example of why the modern English education system
fails us: Never once are we taught the reasoning for this rule, or
its origin, only that we must follow it. Wander into any English
classroom where this rule is being taught, and it would be a rare
coincidence to find a student questioning the origin of
aforementioned rule, for in the study of language, we are taught not
to be curious, but to sit down, shut up, and blindly obey the rules
put in front of us. Of the perhaps one out of thirty students who
dare question a rule that we have been told is an unmoving,
set-in-stone law of English grammatical structure, I guarantee that
an even significantly smaller number will be given an answer that
isn't, “Because that's just the way it is.” No English teacher
dares to give any history of grammar, nor do they dare to involve any
sort of depth in their study. Perhaps this seems illogical; after
all, wouldn't someone who becomes an English teacher have a vast,
passionate knowledge of the linguistic melting pot known as English?
The
simple fact is that our system of education does not allow this. In
our system, teachers are tightly bound to a curriculum; they must
meet certain quotas every year, they must teach us watered-down
studies of classical literature. Today's English teacher is so
tightly bound to the rigid structure of the bureaucratic construct of
curriculum that they have no freedom to diverge and, say, discuss how
Lowth was criticized for stating that formal English structure should
follow the rules of Latin or discuss the irony of him denouncing the
use of prepositions at the end of a sentence by opening with, “This
is an Idiom which our language is strongly inclined to.” We are so
tightly bound by what the principles and expectations of what we now
call “education” that teachers can no longer truly educate, can
no longer pique the intrinsic curiosity for learning within every
human being on this planet. This is, truthfully, the worst failure of
the education system (and this transcends just English education):
that we, as students, are taught not to love and take joy in
learning, but rather to view it as dreadful, needless work that must
be done. The rigidity of the structure of curriculum and the approach
to education as a necessary burden that must be completed ruins the
very purpose of learning and turns what should be a jovial,
enthusiastic pursuit to further our knowledge both as individuals and
as mankind as a whole into an evil beast of burden that causes us
anxiety and stress and amounts to working at a lifeless, hateful job
and gigantic, insurmountable student debt.
It's distressing how
simple it is: our educational system is fatally flawed. It encourages
a hate of learning, discourages depth of discussion, and deters
students from otherwise fascinating subjects. Every student has
somewhere within them a curiosity for learning, and rather than
encourage this curiosity and enable further studies, our educational
system pushes that curiosity further and further down and force-feeds
us skin-deep knowledge, then forces us to regurgitate it a few times
every semester for upwards of 16 years. We must turn this around, and
we must turn it around quickly; our world will be in the hands of
those whose knowledge and humanity we are spoiling very, very soon.
Knowledge is the most important defining factor of humanity, and
without excellent education, we have neither knowledge nor true
humanity.
Fantastic writing that ventures deeper into a ocean that is writing. The education of late has been less than satisfactory, however, one of the most ingenius ways of extending ones understanding is taking college level classes in one's spare time. I believe you can greatly benefit form this and it can prepare you for college. Nice usage of the semicolon after speaking about the semicolon, quite humorous and clever.
ReplyDelete