Monday, January 12, 2009

What's That? Classical Education Isn't Dead Yet?

Victor Davis Hanson takes a fascinating (and ultimately hopeful) look at how classical education is making an inspirational comeback... but not at the places you might expect.

Hanson's article in City Journal describes just why classical learning has been fumbled away by the university system (to Western culture's peril) but how it has been recovered by some online colleges, a few conservative Christian schools and private enterprise efforts such as The Teaching Company, Rosetta Stone and Knowledge Products.

Very interesting stuff.

...As classical education declined and new approaches arose to replace it, the university core curriculum turned into a restaurant menu that gave 18-year-olds dozens of classes to choose from, the easiest and most therapeutic usually garnering the heaviest attendance. The result, as many critics have noted, is that most of today’s students have no shared notion of education, whether fact-based, requisite knowledge or universal theoretical methodologies...


While the public may not fully appreciate the role that classical education once played, it nonetheless understands that university graduates know ever less, even as the cost of their education rises ever more. Any common, shared notion of what it means to be either a Westerner or an American is increasingly rare.


The universities apparently believed that their traditional prestige, the financial resources of their alumni, and the fossilized cultural desideratum of “going to college” would allow them to postpone a reckoning. But by failing in their central mission to educate our youth, they have provoked the beginnings of an educational counterrevolution. Just as the arrogance and ideological biases of the mainstream media have made them slow to appreciate technological trends and the growing dissatisfaction of their audience, so, too, are universities beginning to fragment, their new multifaceted roles farmed out to others that can do them more cheaply and with less political sermonizing...