A Commentary on Mark Holmes' The Reformation of Canada's Schools

Similar documents
For a Universal Declaration of Democracy. A. Rationale

Ethics of Global Citizenship in Education for Creating a Better World

The Importance of Section 15 of the Charter

Public Schools and Sexual Orientation

Cohesion in diversity

Ndopnoikpong, J. Afia

It Does Take a Village

I feel at home here in this Pontifical Council and with this major event.

For a Universal Declaration of Democracy

Joel Westheimer Teachers College Press pp. 121 ISBN:

In his theory of justice, Rawls argues that treating the members of a society as. free and equal achieving fair cooperation among persons thus

PONARS Eurasia Policy Conference

Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe

INTEGRATION & BELONGING

Lynn Ilon Seoul National University

Reconciling Educational Adequacy and Equity Arguments Through a Rawlsian Lens

NETWORKING EUROPEAN CITIZENSHIP EDUCATION

INTERNATIONAL LEGAL GUARANTEES FOR THE PROTECTION OF NATIONAL MINORITIES AND PROBLEMS IN THEIR IMPLEMENTATION WITH SPECIAL FOCUS ON MINORITY EDUCATION

Ephraim Nimni, Alexander Osipov and David J. Smith (eds), The Challenge of Non-Territorial Autonomy. Theory and Practice

B.A. Joint Honours, Sociology and Canadian Studies, McGill University

A Commentary on David Hammack s Policy for Nonprofit Organizations: The Values Dilemma

SOCIAL STUDIES EDUCATION AS A TOOL FOR SUSTAINABLE POLITICAL SOCIALIZATION IN NIGERIA

Cambridge International General Certificate of Secondary Education 0495 Sociology November 2009 Principal Examiner Report for Teachers

DEMOCRATIC PRINCIPLES

War, Education and Peace By Fernando Reimers

Education, Conflict and Peacebuilding

Mongolia has a legacy of respecting human rights, freedom, justice, and national

SSHRC Postdoctoral Fellow, Western University Academic Visitor, Nuffield College, University of Oxford.

In his account of justice as fairness, Rawls argues that treating the members of a

This new policy contains a number of positive aspects.

In The Law of Peoples, John Rawls contrasts his own view of global distributive

Educational Adequacy, Educational Equality, and Ideal Theory. Jaime Ahlberg. University of Wisconsin Madison

TEACHING INTEGRITY AND THE CENTER FOR EXCELLENCE IN INTEGRITY AT NUSP

Populism vs. Elitism. Michael P. Federici Mercyhurst College

Universities as actors of intercultural dialogue in wider society

CIVIC EDUCATION AND POLITICS IN DEMOCRACIES: COMPARING INTERNATIONAL APPROACHES TO EDUCATING NEW CITIZENS

REPORT IN THE MATTER OF AN INDUSTRIAL INQUIRY COMMISSION PURSUANT TO SECTION 37 OF THE LABOUR RELATIONS ACT, and

Why Did India Choose Pluralism?

Resolution adopted by the General Assembly. [on the report of the Third Committee (A/66/457)]

BOOK REVIEW: WHY LA W MA TTERS BY ALON HAREL

Citizenship Education: Definition, Introduction and Concept

Focus on Pre-AP for History and Social Sciences

4 Activism and the Academy

Lifelong Learning in Professionalism: a Role for the Academy Professor Michael Code

Myanmar Customary Law as a Standard of Morality

Qualities of Effective Leadership and Its impact on Good Governance

June 8, 2016 ISSN Race, R. (2015). Multiculturalism and education. London: Bloomsbury. Pp. 168 ISBN:

Nel Noddings. Chapter 9: Social and Political Philosophy. Two Competing Emphases in Social & Political Philosophy: Assumptions of liberalism:

Education for Peace, Human Rights and Democracy

Elgin Street Public School Council Constitution and Bylaws

Citizenship Education for the 21st Century

Religions, ethics and attitudes towards corruption in India

CULTURE - CULTURAL PARTICIPATION

On Democratic Reason Ira Katznelson [Hertie School, June 12, 2018]

LAW AND POVERTY. The role of final speaker at a two and one half day. The truth is, as could be anticipated, that your

Report on community resilience to radicalisation and violent extremism

American Identity Development and Citizenship Education: A Summary of. Perspectives and Call for New Research. Heather Malin. Stanford University

The Second Pew Whale Symposium, Tokyo, January, 2008 Chairman s Summary Judge Tuiloma Neroni Slade, Symposium Chairman

3rd Nine Weeks. Student s Name: School: Core Teacher: Block: Gifted Resource Teacher:

Office of the Commissioner of Lobbying Ottawa, Ontario September 24, The Lobbyists Code of Conduct A Consultation Paper

Interview With Neoklis Sylikiotis, Minister of the Interior of the Republic of Cyprus

Rosa, R.D. and Rosa, J. J. (2015). Capitalism s education catastrophe: And the advancing endgame revolt! New York, NY: Peter Lang.

ECONOMICS AND INEQUALITY: BLINDNESS AND INSIGHT. Sanjay Reddy. I am extremely grateful to Bina Agarwal, IAFFE S President, and to IAFFE for its

Sarah W. Dickerson PhD Student, School of Public Policy University of Maryland February 2016

The Politicisation of the Criminal Justice System

Prof. Ljupco Kevereski, PhD. Faculty of Education, Bitola UDK: ISBN , 16 (2011), p Original scientific paper

Brief presented by. the Quebec English School Boards Association. to the Culture and Education Commission on. Bill 86

THE BAN ON THE WEARING OF RELIGIOUS SYMBOLS:

Book Review: Silent Surrender, by Kari Levitt

Part III Immigration Policy: Introduction

Aristotle and the Voucher System. Jake Shanley, Baylor University

Preventing Extremism and Radicalisation Policy

Northampton Primary Academy Trust

Promoting fundamental British values as part of SMSC in schools

JOURNALISM AND MASS COMMUNICATION Vol. II - Communicating A Politics of Sustainable Development - John Barry

APPENDIX A Citizenship Continuum of Study from K gr. 3 Page 47

Community Voices on Causes and Solutions of the Human Rights Crisis in the United States

THE EDUCATION VILLAGE ACADEMY TRUST PROTECTING CHILDREN FROM EXTREMISM AND RADICALISATION POLICY

RIGHTS AND RESPONSIBILITIES IN A DEMOCRACY

Secretariat Distr. LIMITED

RIGHT TO EDUCATION WITHOUT DICRIMINATION

Book Review: Lessons of Everyday Law/Le Droit du Quotidien, by Roderick A. Macdonald

American Government and Politics: Deliberation, Democracy and Citizenship. Joseph M. Bessette John J. Pitney, Jr. PREFACE

Europe China Research and Advice Network (ECRAN)

Scope of Audit Committee s Responsibilities. Specific Committee Responsibilities: Leadership & Stewardship

The Hardware and Software of Pluralism

Analytical communities and Think Tanks as Boosters of Democratic Development

Code of Conduct for Police Officers

POLI 111: INTRODUCTION TO THE STUDY OF POLITICAL SCIENCE Session 8-Political Culture

OPINION. European Parliament 2015/2063(INI) of the Committee on Culture and Education

Bill C-24 - Citizenship bill Submission of the Canadian Council for Refugees. 26 March 2014

We the Stakeholders: The Power of Representation beyond Borders? Clara Brandi

The Ethics of Social Cohesion

POLITICAL SCIENCE (POLI)

Equality Policy. Aims:

C o m m u n i c a t i o n f o r A l l :

ENTRENCHMENT. Wealth, Power, and the Constitution of Democratic Societies PAUL STARR. New Haven and London

CHAPTER ONE: INTRODUCING GOVERNMENT IN AMERICA

Terrorism in Africa: Challenges and perspectives

Essentials of Peace Education. Working Paper of InWEnt and IFT. Essentials of Peace Education

Transcription:

A Commentary on Mark Holmes' The Reformation of Canada's Schools David MacKinnon, School of Education, Acadia University In everything I do and say, I meet myself. Some activities, however, force me to confront my values and beliefs in a more vivid and unsettling way than others. Reading Mark Holmes' book, The Reformation of Canada's Schools, was one such activity. I do not agree with all that he offers, nor do I feel that all of his argument are necessarily well grounded, but I do believe that this is a book worth reading by anyone interested in school change. The brief analysis that follows focuses on the central concept of the work: choice. In so doing, other aspects of the book remain silent. There is too much between the covers - page after page of assertions, challenges, and criticism - to address in a brief commentary. But in my reading of the text, everything that Holmes offers hinges on the legitimacy of school choice and the rejection of the common public school. Holmes argues that it is imperative in a pluralist society for parents to have the option of selecting a school or school system that best mirrors their own personal values. The road to this argument resides in his assertion that no one system can satisfy the needs of all. In so saying, he takes Canada's school systems, and especially Ontario's, to task for a plethora of inadequacies, including weak academic performance, inequitable and inefficient funding schemes, an increasing inability of public schools to offer a common curriculum that speaks to burgeoning diversity of Canada's population, the existence of teaching ideologies which fly in the face of research on effective instruction, and the complicity of teacher unions in maintaining the status quo. What remains unclear to me is whether Holmes' argument is shackled to the legitimacy of the principle of choice in a democratic society, or whether it emanates from his belief that Canada's school systems are, to a greater or lesser extent depending on the province, substandard. This is hardly a moot point, for if his position rests on an emergent disgust with the existing systems, it leaves open the legitimacy of the common school principle, or at least a common curriculum and standards in different schools, despite his claims that it is impossible to satisfy the value positions of a diverse population. That is, if substandard schools systems are the problem, we need only correct them. If, however, the argument is constructed on the principle of differentiated school systems as a fundamental tenet of a democratic Paioousis 13: I, 2000 55

and pluralist society, the excellence or lack thereof, of the common system is irrelevant. Despite his arguments for the legitimacy of choice, his stinging condemnation of Canada's educational systems leaves an element of doubt in my mind. Following five chapters of stage setting, Holmes proposes seven schooling models that he feels would provide parents with a range of options and thus move away from the monolithic common school: ( l) a strengthened area public school with clear goals established through public input; (2) the option for parents to select any school for their children within a province's boundaries, on the condition that, in most cases, parents provide transportation; (3) the provision of alternative schools or programs, including French-immersion, arts and vocational schools, and religious schools; (4) charter schools; (5) the continued existence of religious and official-language schools; (6) partially funded independent schools; and (7) direct grant schools, where parents vote to receive funding directly from the province, rather than through school boards. Whether or not I agree with the scheme outlined by Holmes is unimportant. In a democratic tradition, each of his proposals is worthy of public debate. In the time that I have taken to read and reflect on Holmes' book, I have reached the conclusion that my objection lies not with the concept of choice per se but rather with a nagging fear that in realizing these choices within a pluralist society we may violate fundamental democratic principles and create a society more fragmented and encamped than the one we currently have. It seems almost undemocratic to say this, for surely reasonable choice around lifestyles, education, religion, and the like, is a cornerstone of democracy. Yet, choices beget consequences, and if the consequences create situations that run counter to basic democratic principles, the legitimacy of the original choices is called into question. In essence, democracy can be used as an argument for and against choice. My position is clearly a consequentialist one (Strike and Soltis, 1992, pp. 11-17); that is, I am more concerned in this instance with the consequences of action, rather than the principles that inform it. My starting point regarding the concept of school choice is equality of citizenship (Prycz, personal communication 1 ). Equality of citizenship argues that democracy requires reason, debate, and quality of discourse, and that the provision of equal education is a cornerstone in its realization. Consequently, if we can demonstrate that different school systems by their very nature equip citizens differently, we can argue that such systems are undemocratic in their outcomes. While this is a theoretical construct, one never fully realized in practice, it nonetheless speaks to the importance of creating circumstances that provide for its possible realization. If we juxtapose equality of citizenship with the realities of a pluralist soci- 56 Paioousis 13: l, 2000

ety, we create an argument for, not against, a common education. One of the most important requirements of a democratic society is the need for citizens to live together in relative peace, regardless of their differences, with a willingness and abil.i!y to engage in open and honest dialogue about issues of common importance. Further, one of the pre-eminent needs of citizens in a pluralist democratic society, if it is to adhere to the principle of equality of citizenship, is an understanding of others' life circumstances. How can we reasonably engage in open and honest dialogue about social, political, economic, and other issues - a fundamental tenet of democracy - if we are ignorant of our fellow citizens' lived realities? On the first point - the necessity of living together and engaging in open dialogue - we can see the potential for a differentiated school system to be counterproductive. Initially, it segregates us, thus exacerbating our differences and making the task of living and debating together more problematic, though not necessarily impossible. Furthermore, by definition, different systems provide different emphases for their students, thus raising the question of whether the principle of citizenship equality is violated. What is it that is discussed in these different academic institutions? What is emphasized? What is not? Open dialogue implies being equally equipped to do so. This is one of the central purposes of a common system. Perhaps, as Holmes suggests, it has failed us in this regard. But I remain unconvinced that a significantly differentiated system can accomplish this better than a well designed and effectively operated common system. On the second point - the importance of understanding the lived circumstances of others - we can readily see that a differentiated system has the potential to remove the other from our view. Anthropologists have long demonstrated that the best way to understand others is to live among them. A likely consequence of a differentiated school system is that like-valued and like-circumstanced people will cluster together and the other becomes just that: the other. While Holmes does not argue for an intentional social segregation, it nonetheless may be a consequence of the principle of democratic choice. Of course, our communities do reflect social clustering. We witness selfsegregation based on such things as wealth, religion, ethnicity, and education level. But the fact that we live different lives and hold different values is, in my opinion, insufficient reason to argue for a differentiated school system. Pursuing the consequences of a differentiated educational system, we can highlight the ways in which it leads to unfortunate social and personal consequences. I suspect that anyone who has taught in a streamed school (as I have) - a type of differentiated system - can readily point to the ways in which streamed stu- Pai~eusis 13: I, 2000 57

dents learn to see themselves differently. This has significant consequences for behaviour, self-esteem, academic achievement, and social group membership. Differentiated schooling further exacerbates these phenomena. It allows for a form of isolation - isolation from those who are different from us. If my argument is valid - that equality of citizenship in a pluralist democracy necessitates an understanding of those who differ from us - differentiated schooling becomes yet another barrier to its realization. Holmes' argument for parental choice, despite its surface legitimacy, is an argument for a type of segregation, a practice that is fundamentally rooted in advantage for some and disadvantage for others. Again, this is not the way in which he frames his argument, nor do I have any sense that he sees segregation as a social good. But I do see it as a consequence of his position, and I am concerned that it would fundamentally work against equality of citizenship. I am reminded of the words of R. W. Connell (1993, p. 15): I would like to shout this from the rooftops every time I hear another argument for 'gifted and talented' programs, for tougher 'standards' and stricter selection, for streaming or tracking, for merit awards and opportunity schools and honours programs - in short, for any of the hundred and one afffonts to equal provision of education. An education that privileges one child over another is giving the privileged child a corrupted education, even as it gives him or her a social or economic advantage. Holmes recognizes that social division is one objection to school choice, but argues that we are already divided on the basis of language, geography, and class. As stated previously, I do not consider an existing reality to be a sufficient basis for its further entrenchment. Democracy may be about choice, but it is also about living and debating together, and policy choices that overtly segregate are likely counterproductive to equality of citizenship. Living together and engaging is spirited public debate is messy. As a lived practice, democracy has been under assault in recent decades, a situation that Lasch ( 1995) attributes in part to a decline in public debates brought on by a citizenry who know far less about civic affairs than in previous times (pp. 162-163). It is easy to blame the public school system for this unfortunate situation, but the schools are only one small part of a larger picture. As Lasch (p. 162) notes: Since the public no longer participates in debates on national issues, it has no reason to inform itself about civic affairs. It is the decay of public debate, not the school system (bad as it is), that makes the public ill-informed, not withstanding the wonders of the age of information. When debate becomes a lost art, information, even though it may be readily available, makes no impression. I am sympathetic to Holmes' concerns about a bureaucratized public school 58 Paioousis 13: l, 2000

system. Yet, unlike him, I feel it still provides the best opportunity for the survival of democratic ways of living. I agree with him that common systems are prone to the imposition of elite value positions. However, I believe that as we become increasingly enlightened to the ways in which hegemony operates, we have the opportunity to counter its impact. I do not agree that the best way to do this is to dilute elite power by increasing system differentiation. While the differentiation argument appears good in principle, I fear the consequences will be increased conceptual and physical segregation, and diminished opportunities for equal participation in civic affairs. In short, I believe that if we give up on a common public educational system, we conceptually surrender the idea of working together for a common good - not because we intend to, but because we have lost sight of, or tolerance for, others. Notes 1 Greg Pyrcz is a political philosopher in the Department of Political Science at Acadia University. I am grateful to him for helping me clarify my thinking on the concept of choice in a democratic society and the importance of equality of citizenship. References Connell, R. W. (1993). Schools and social justice. Philadelphia, PA: Temple University Press. Holmes, M. (1998). The reformation of Canada's schools: Breaking the barriers to parental choice. Montreal, QC, & Kingston, ON: McGill-Queen's University Press. Lasch, C. ( 1995). The revolt of the elites and the betrayal of democracy. New York, NY: W.W. Norton & Company. Strike, K. A., & Soltis, J. F. (1992). The ethics of teaching (2 d ed.). New York, NY: Teachers College Press. Paireusis 13: 1, 2000 59