Concealed Aims of Education and How We Achieve Them

Authors

  • CHARLES E. PHILLIPS

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.11575/jet.v1i3.43503

Abstract

To reveal concealed aims is logically to destroy their characteristic and their hidden power. This result may not, however, apply in the field of public education. Our first concealed aim in society and its schools has been to obscure perception of stark reality, and we have been so successful that the exoteric majority will be unable to discern the truth of these disclosures. Educational historians will recall the Massachusetts Education Act of 1647, in which that "old deluder, Satan" is charged with having kept men in ignorance - first by preventing publication of the Scriptures in the vernacular, and later by discouraging efforts to teach the young to read. Whether Satanic in origin or not, the devices of today are much more sophisticated. The educational significance of Marshall McLuhan's dictum, "the medium is the message," is that there is no longer any message clear and definite enough to distinguish true or false. This makes it possible for people to live in a fog - or several contradictory fogs - and cling concurrently to traditional "truth" and modern denials. The coherent reasoning of hot print, the emotional response from cool T.V., and the church whatever its temperature cannot really be in opposition because in each case the medium not the content is the message. All the school has to do to keep the young in a daze is nothing in particular - and this it does. This is why there is enthusiastic advocacy of E.T.V. - that is, of its "use" as a medium - but relatively little support for critical study in school of the content of television programs to which pupils devote much of their time. Critical appreciation of the productions of other mass media, except books, is similarly neglected in school. This leaves
pupils able to focus their eyes but not their minds, so that the message, if any, is just the medium itself. A neo-Roman circus.

Published

2018-05-10

Issue

Section

Articles