Academics are destroying our education system
This post is inspired by some of the responses to the thread I started on media studies.
What those responses highlight is the stranglehold that academics, academic language and indeed the academic mindset have on our society. The consequences of this are disastrous.
I am totally in favour of learning and indeed lifelong learning, but in my view these things are too important to be left to academics.
When you consider what a messed up society we live in and what challenges face our kids on entry to adult life, it seems crazy that so much of the school or university curriculum is taken up with useless academic subjects. Or useful subjects that are rendered useless because they are so horribly academicised.
Education should be preparing young people for life in the real world, not for some idealised ivory tower world that 98 per cent of them will never inhabit.
My biggest gripe of all is over the language used by academics. Their attachment to long or obscure words is just insane.
Most of the subjects our kids are being taught could be mastered more quickly if textbooks were written in plain everyday language, if teachers spoke in plain everyday language and if students were encouraged to write essays in plain everyday language.
Exclusion is supposed to be one of the hot topics of our time. How come no one has stopped to consider the fact that impenetrable academic language is excluding many people from learning. I find it especially funny that essays and papers written by academics on the subject of exclusion, are often by virtue of their language highly excluding.
Far too often academics use big words to intimidate or to throw a smokescreen over the subjects they are discussing. Mostly these words are not necessary. I think it's time the rest of the population stood up and insisted that education be made more accessible.
In one of his posts Mark said: "Sadly, critical thinking does require critical language to be able to fully capture nuance of ideas.
I'm sorry Mark but I just don't buy that.
Most of this so called 'critical language' is just inflated mumbo jumbo that could ' with a bit of effort ' be expressed in a much simpler form. There is no special virtue in long words. Indeed the long words are often there to obscure the fact that there is very little substance behind them.
If you take any academic text and boil it down to plain English more often than not you will find that the point being made is almost worthless or actually a heap of nonsense.
If it is of value, then it should be expressible in simple language. And if expressed in simple language kids will understand it more easily and learn it more quickly.
I dread to think how many tens of millions of student hours are wasted each year on trying to translate needlessly convoluted language.
Juliet
Juliet
Juliet
There's nothing more mind-teasing than the incomprehensible eagerly avowed -
Dennett
The All New Pepsoid the Second!
The All New Pepsoid the Second!
The All New Pepsoid the Second!
The All New Pepsoid the Second!