Log in

View Full Version : Anarchism in The Classroom



PoliticalNightmare
23rd August 2010, 23:21
From the site, newhumanist.org.uk



Anarchy in the classroom

Too often associated with chaos and disorder, anarchism is actually an ideology rooted in a radical theory of education, says Judith Suissa
Judith Suissa (http://newhumanist.org.uk/1287/judith-suissa)
We've become used to the words 'anarchist' or 'anarchism' being casually tossed around whenever the press wish to describe some apparently inexplicable act of violence or to lampoon an idealistic theory of social change. But some intellectuals can be equally guilty of misrepresentation. Anarchism, they insist, has no claim to be condsidered as a coherent or serious political theory. It is branded as 'utopian' or 'naïve' for proposing that human beings are naturally good, and that this natural goodness is quite enough to sustain a stateless society. Here is Max Beloff , hard at work, ploughing this familiar furrow. Anarchism, he writes: "is based on a fundamental misunderstanding of human nature, on the unproven supposition that given total absence of constraints, or alternatively material abundance secured by communism, human societies could exist with no coercive element at all…" Or consider Jonathan Wolff's sweeping assertion in his account of anarchism in his Introduction to Political Philosophy: "to rely on the natural goodness of human beings to such an extent seems utopian in the extreme".

No wonder anarchism is so disregarded in contemporary society. It has become almost fatally tarnished by such thoroughly misleading and partial depictions of its central argument.
If this idea constitutes a gross misrepresentation, then what is the anarchist conception of human nature? Both Proudhon and Bakunin insisted that it was inherently two–fold, involving both an egotistical potential and a sociable, altruistic potential. As Bakunin picturesquely expresses it: "Man has two opposed instincts; egoism and sociability. He is both more ferocious in his egoism than the most ferocious beasts and more sociable than the bees and ants."

There is a very similar recognition of the complexity of human nature in Kropotkin, whose monumental treatise, Mutual Aid, written at the beginning of the 20th century, can be interpreted as an attempt to counter the extreme version of social Darwinism put forward by theorists such as Huxley. Kropotkin regarded the simplistic notion of 'survival of the fittest' as a misleading interpretation of evolutionary theory, and pointed out that Darwin himself had noted man's social qualities as an essential factor in his evolutionary survival. Origin of Species is full of references to man's 'social nature', without which, Darwin argues, it is highly probable that "the evolution of man, as we know it, would never have taken place."

Kropotkin's paradigm case of 'mutual aid' as a factor in the evolution of animal species is that of ants. While there may be aggressive fighting for survival between species, within the ant community, mutual aid and cooperation prevail: "The ants and termites have renounced the 'Hobbesian war', and they are the better for it." Although Kropotkin did not deny the principle of the struggle for existence as a law of nature, he ultimately regarded the principle of mutual aid as more important from an evolutionary point of view, as it is this principle which "favours the development of such habits and characters as ensure the maintenance and further development of the species, together with the greatest amount of welfare and enjoyment of life for the individual, with the least waste of energy."

The notion that anarchism should be interested in the development of 'habits and characters' is clearly incompatible with the notion of some original altruistic state of grace. But Kropotkin was often even more explicit. In a particularly powerful piece written for Freedom in 1888, entitled 'Are We Good Enough?' Kropotkin directly confronted the common argument that people are 'not good enough', or 'not yet ripe for free, Anarchistic Communism' by tersely asking: "But are they good enough for Capitalism?". If people were naturally and predominantly kind, altruistic and just, argues Kropotkin, there would be no danger of exploitation and oppression. It is precisely because they are not that the present system is intolerable and must be changed.

Kropotkin did believe ultimately in the power of the altruistic aspects of human nature to prevail. He contended, against Rousseau, that even a corrupt society cannot crush individual human goodness: even a capitalist state cannot "weed out the feeling of human solidarity, deeply lodged in men's understanding and heart". Nevertheless, he acknowledged that people "will not turn into anarchists by sudden transformation". Even after a successful social revolution which dismantles the state there will still be a vital need for an education which can nurture the social virtues on which an anarchist society might be built. This is a central theme.

And no wonder. It is precisely because anarchists - particularly social anarchists - did not assume human beings to be essentially good that they assigned such an important role to this subject.

But what exactly is anarchist education? Historians of education and educational theorists often lazily conflate it with 'libertarian education', an approach which rejects traditional models of teacher authority and hierarchical school structure, and which advocates maximum freedom for the individual child within the educational process - including, in its extreme version, the chance to opt out of this process altogether. Even writers who are sympathetic to anarchist notions of education include descriptions of anarchist schools (such as the Escuela Moderna, founded by Francisco Ferrer in Spain in 1907, and the Modern School Movement in the United States which followed it) alongside libertarian schools such as A S Neill's Summerhill.

This is another misconception. The sheer volume of anarchist literature devoted to educational issues, and the efforts invested by anarchist activists in educational projects, shows quite clearly that for the social anarchists, schools, and education in general, are a valuable aspect of the project for social change, rather than something to be dismantled along with the other machinery of state bureaucracy.

It's true that anarchist schools often share structural features with free schools, such as a non–coercive pedagogy, democratic management, student–led timetables and lesson plans, and informal student–teacher relationships. But there are crtical differences. Typical anarchist schools have substantive curricula with clear anti–statist, anti–militaristic and anti–religious messages. Great emphasis is placed on the communal aspects of life in the school, and involvement in broader political issues.

In contrast, the libertarian position associated with educational experiments such as Summerhill makes just the type of optimistic or naïve assumptions about human nature which are often wrongly attributed to anarchism. John Darling quotes A S Neill as asserting that children are "naturally good" and will turn out to be "good human beings if [they are] not crippled and thwarted in [their] natural development by interference".

Neill indeed had considerable sympathy for Homer Lane's idea of 'original virtue' - reflected in his insistence that all moral instruction perverts the innate goodness of the child. This pure libertarian view is in clear contrast with the anarchist view, which holds that there is nothing morally objectionable in the attempt by educators to pass on substantial beliefs or moral principles to children. Anarchist schools, unlike schools such as Summerhill, made no pretense at neutrality in their ethos and curriculum.

For anarchists, the ideal society is something that has to be created. And education is primarily a part of this creation; it involves a radical challenge to current practices and institutions, yet at the same time a faith in the idea that human beings already possess the attributes and virtues necessary to create and sustain such a different society. They do not need, therefore, to either undergo any radical transformation or to do away with a Marxist 'inauthentic' consciousness. Education is not a means of creating a different political order, but a space in which we experiment with visions of a new political order - a process which itself constitutes an educative and motivating experience both for educators and pupils.

In many standard works on anarchism, education gets barely a passing mention. A pity. For the anarchists' acknowledgement of the need for a substantive educational process, designed along clear moral principles, goes hand–in–hand with their contextualist account of human nature. It thus turns what what might otherwise be nothing more than naïve optimism into a complex and inspiring social hope.

Judith Suissa is a Post Doctoral Research Fellow at the Institute for Education, University of London


Now my main problem with this article are these following points;

"Typical anarchist schools have substantive curricula with clear anti–statist, anti–militaristic and anti–religious messages."

"This pure libertarian view is in clear contrast with the anarchist view, which holds that there is nothing morally objectionable in the attempt by educators to pass on substantial beliefs or moral principles to children. "

"Anarchist schools, unlike schools such as Summerhill, made no pretense at neutrality in their ethos and curriculum."

"the ideal society is something that has to be created"

I'm sorry but when certain ideologies are forced on other humans (particularly those of such a young age), then how can we possibly be successful in creating a truly anarchistic society and one that is free from those in positions of authority imposing their thoughts and beliefs upon others?

It strikes me as odd that certain (not all) anarchists would object to a system whereby a ruling class has created it's own curriculum to enslave the minds of each successive generation to merely propose that we need to do the same but with our own beliefs in order to create our own society. In particular we need to inspire virtues of critical thinking, intelligence and complete flexibility of mind and thought. Only then will people truly be able to appreciate and accept the freedoms that anarchist society entails. If this means teaching about a wide range of political ideologies such as that of capitalism and liberalism as well as many different religious beliefs (this despite considering myself an aethiest and for the time being, a non-doctrinaire communist). If AS Neill's was the libertarian view and the author's view truly that of an anarchist then I do not consider myself an anarchist.

Cheers

MarxSchmarx
24th August 2010, 06:46
Pedagogy does not occur in a vaccuum. When the prevailing social mores are ones anathema to freedom and "virtues of critical thinking, intelligence and complete flexibility of mind and thought", countervailing trends are imperative. People need to be trained to defend their rights and freedoms. A politically neutral education fails at this.

Moreover, the analogy resembles one of teaching "creationism" because it is supposedly important to "teach all points of view." Yet the thing is for, anarchism/statelessness to function free of coercion or heirarchy, cultural values that are prerequisites for responsible citizenry need to be inculcated and internalized from an early age. In this sense "teaching all points of view" has to take a definite second place to preparing functioning individuals in a free society.

PoliticalNightmare
24th August 2010, 18:33
Pedagogy does not occur in a vaccuum. When the prevailing social mores are ones anathema to freedom and "virtues of critical thinking, intelligence and complete flexibility of mind and thought", countervailing trends are imperative.

But how can people be educated that the best society is a free one without hierarchial constraints when we are imposing that they are to learn only about certain ideologies? How can a person know of the evils of capitalism if they have not learned about capitalism in a neutral manner?

Moreover, the analogy resembles one of teaching "creationism" because it is supposedly important to "teach all points of view." Yet the thing is for, anarchism/statelessness to function free of coercion or heirarchy, cultural values that are prerequisites for responsible citizenry need to be inculcated and internalized from an early age.

Which is why we teach them such values (even a conservative cannot argue in modern day society that it is not important for a person to be taught freedom) but in a neutral manner. Anyway who (anarchists included) would argue against the importance of the military or some basic embodiment that enforces law and order in society to prevent people from harming others?

It just strikes me as hypocritical that many people on the left argue against the political bias towards the right wing in modern day society just to argue (and even those on the supposedly stateless, libertarian left) that we need to enforce our own political engenders on the youth.

In this sense "teaching all points of view" has to take a definite second place to preparing functioning individuals in a free society.

Where is the anarchism in an education that controls the national curriculum and tells students what they can and cannot learn and teachers what they can and cannot teach?

Thank you for your time.

black magick hustla
24th August 2010, 19:06
id rather burn schools instead

MarxSchmarx
28th August 2010, 14:48
Pedagogy does not occur in a vaccuum. When the prevailing social mores are ones anathema to freedom and "virtues of critical thinking, intelligence and complete flexibility of mind and thought", countervailing trends are imperative. But how can people be educated that the best society is a free one without hierarchial constraints when we are imposing that they are to learn only about certain ideologies?

I do not see the contradiction here. First of all, people presumably will be free to engage in as much education as they see fit in the school of their choice. The article deals specifically with anarchistic schools, and the question is what should such schools teach. What they teach is not "imposed", as people can choose to go to a madrassa or a business school instead.

Second, freedom "without hierarchical constraints" generally applies to people past a certain stage of development. It is for this reason that even in a stateless classless society, parents can still justifiably physically constrain their young children from running into a busy street. Which (I guess?) pertains to this point you make:


Anyway who (anarchists included) would argue against the importance of the military or some basic embodiment that enforces law and order in society to prevent people from harming others?

Anyway.



How can a person know of the evils of capitalism if they have not learned about capitalism in a neutral manner?

The same way we can learn about, say, fascism after we have had considerable indoctrination about the evils thereof. I don't think we are much the worse off having not been exposed to fascism "in a neutral manner" from a very young age.




Moreover, the analogy resembles one of teaching "creationism" because it is supposedly important to "teach all points of view." Yet the thing is for, anarchism/statelessness to function free of coercion or heirarchy, cultural values that are prerequisites for responsible citizenry need to be inculcated and internalized from an early age.
It just strikes me as hypocritical that many people on the left argue against the political bias towards the right wing in modern day society just to argue (and even those on the supposedly stateless, libertarian left) that we need to enforce our own political engenders on the youth.

It's not hypocritical. This is what class conflict is about. Our problem is not that the right creates an unlevel playing field by imposing bias in the education of the youth. It's that they rig the system to serve the interests of the few. It is thus a criticism of their ends, rather than their means. The right sets up social institutions to serve the interests of the capitalist class. We are about setting up social institutions to serve the interests of the working class.


Where is the anarchism in an education that controls the national curriculum and tells students what they can and cannot learn and teachers what they can and cannot teach?


That doesn't seem to be what the article was addressing. The article dealt specifically with how an anarchistic school should function in this day and age - when teachers can choose not to teach at certain schools and parents can choose to send their children to different institutions, and when capitalist propaganda saturates the air we breathe.

As far as what schooling could look like in a stateless, classless society, what is so objectionable about some degree of standards being set by educators to which fellow educators are expected to adhere to? This is what we would expect in any other occupation, from loggers to chefs. Why would teachers be different?

As far as students go, schools exist in part to socialize - that is what a lot of kindergarten is about. The kind of self-directed learning you seem to envision works only when students have attained a certain developmental level, and prior to that they are so dependent on others (society and their parents) that it makes little sense to let them "learn what they want".




Thank you for your time.

Sure thing.

PoliticalNightmare
28th August 2010, 23:50
I do not see the contradiction here.

That folks should be free from the chains of total authority (in a sense) but it is ok for society (who would run the government of an anarchistic society) to warrant what may or may not be taught.

First of all, people presumably will be free to engage in as much education as they see fit in the school of their choice. The article deals specifically with anarchistic schools, and the question is what should such schools teach. What they teach is not "imposed", as people can choose to go to a madrassa or a business school instead.

But in the article it specifies that certain ideologies would be substantive in the curriculum.

Second, freedom "without hierarchical constraints" generally applies to people past a certain stage of development. It is for this reason that even in a stateless classless society, parents can still justifiably physically constrain their young children from running into a busy street.

True, but do they not have the right to a neutral, unbiased education?

Which (I guess?) pertains to this point you make:

(I posted; Anyway who (anarchists included) would argue against the importance of the military or some basic embodiment that enforces law and order in society to prevent people from harming others?)

Anyway.

As the article states; "Typical anarchist schools have substantive curricula with clear anti–statist, anti–militaristic and anti–religious messages."

The same way we can learn about, say, fascism after we have had considerable indoctrination about the evils thereof. I don't think we are much the worse off having not been exposed to fascism "in a neutral manner" from a very young age.

Well capitalism and fascism are not quite the same thing. Captialism also has strong ideological arguments that are not present in fascism. Perhaps one day (i.e. in the 23rd century), capitalism will seem so bizzare that it is associated with fascism. However the article specifically states at one point that 'we have to create anarchist society'. Well during such a stage, anarchists would receive criticism for their restriction of oppositon and free speech. Because if these things cannot be taught then they cannot be spoken about in public, correct?

It's not hypocritical. This is what class conflict is about. Our problem is not that the right creates an unlevel playing field by imposing bias in the education of the youth. It's that they rig the system to serve the interests of the few. It is thus a criticism of their ends, rather than their means. The right sets up social institutions to serve the interests of the capitalist class. We are about setting up social institutions to serve the interests of the working class.

'Tis true.

That doesn't seem to be what the article was addressing. The article dealt specifically with how an anarchistic school should function in this day and age - when teachers can choose not to teach at certain schools and parents can choose to send their children to different institutions, and when capitalist propaganda saturates the air we breathe.

Yes but I was dealing with specific points in the article. As a whole, I agree wholeheartedly with the author.

As far as students go, schools exist in part to socialize - that is what a lot of kindergarten is about. The kind of self-directed learning you seem to envision works only when students have attained a certain developmental level, and prior to that they are so dependent on others (society and their parents) that it makes little sense to let them "learn what they want".

Perhaps not, but at such a young age they would be too young to understand about subjects as complex as political philosophy. But when they do learn about anarchism, capitalism, etc., I would suggest that they do so in a neutral manner.

Cheers.

Edit; I would also disagree about anti-religious values, despite being athiest. A person has the right to decide upon their own religion, again in an objective environment.

Masta Chief
2nd September 2010, 01:54
Education dumbs kids down nowdays. They teach nothing but bullshit in school nowdays from when I was in school.

Pavlov's House Party
2nd September 2010, 02:11
Education dumbs kids down nowdays. They teach nothing but bullshit in school nowdays from when I was in school.

you sound like everyone's parents ever

Masta Chief
2nd September 2010, 02:19
Yeah from when I graduted in 2006 everything changed. And it's just stuipd what they taught my brother and sister in school. Which dosen't really help anyone in the world nowdays. Because I completed school but I mostly learned everything I know out of school. And it works better but to a fine point though.