Sunday, April 8, 2012

Nature, nurture and survival

Upon arrival in my first Human Development class, I had no specific expectations beyond learning something new, as I had not given much thought to development. Absent a formal, everyday learning environment, though questions and issues regarding development surround us at work and in our personal lives, we pay them scarcely little attention, consumed as we are in the hectic workaday world. It quickly became clear, however, that observation of, reflection on, and nurturing development are key to virtually every human activity. A small percentage of the population are genetically predisposed to excel in the evolution of their fellows; those rare teachers, managers and other leaders spring to mind when one reflects on their own development. However, the majority of us must “develop” our ability to nurture.
Speaking of nurture, the age-old debate “nature vs. nurture” entered the classroom parlance almost immediately, and though we did not have to take sides, I leaned heavily toward the notion of nurture as the primary driving force in development. However, once one begins to delve into research, one can find any number of theories that challenge his/her beliefs and inclinations, which is eminently useful in one's development. My first revelatory moment came in the discovery of the theories of Jean-Jacques Rousseau.
“Everything is good as it comes from the hands of the Maker of the world but degenerates once it gets into the hands of man.” Jean-Jacques Rousseau
Returning to a term used earlier, inclinations, reveals the thrust behind Rousseau's work. He advanced the theory that children are best developed through a “naturalistic education” where a child would have “no other guide than his own reason by the time he is educated”(Gianoutsis, 2008) and that this education is derived from “inclinations, not from habits” (Gianoutsis, 2008) Where I stand in accord with Rousseau is in the notion that inclinations, much like the biology of a plant, for example, are what guide a child in early development, and as they acquire reason they are then able to merge with adult society while maintaining the tools to “ignore society's ills” (Gianoutsis, 2008). Where I differ with Rousseau is his insistence on isolating the child in nature. Of course, communing with nature is clearly desirable, and today's youth do not spend enough time in natural pursuits. However, what Rousseau proposed would be labeled “home schooling” today, and despite the benefits of pedagogy and curriculum specifically designed for the individual child, the pitfalls of social isolation are too great to dismiss. I shudder to think of a world where everyone, or even a majority of the population, is home-schooled. In the early years of the twenty-first century, we already observe the implications of the insulating nature of technology; adding to these difficulties a sequestered educational environment seems a recipe for further societal breakdown. So, on the whole what we are discussing here is Rousseau's belief in the strengths of a child's natural inclinations against the limitations of her/his early development, or the inability to reason. In a sense, Rousseau believed that only when a child could match the experience of the reinforcement of rewarding responses with the association of ideas could they be prepared to face the big, scary outside world. Within his theories I tend to focus primarily on the natural inclinations, which include play. Rousseau states, “I felt before I thought, which is the common lot of man” (Gianoutsis, 2008). He posited that children learn best “through their senses, through investigating and exploring the natural world” (Gianoutsis, 2008). After reading Rousseau and the theorist I will discuss next, I came to realize that I was in fact more firmly in the “nature” camp in the nature/nurture debate.
It is my belief that Rousseau's naturalistic theory of development aligns with at least one aspect in the design of contemporary pedagogical theory; that of the approach employed in the educational system in Finland. The Finns believe that children should not begin their formal education until the age of seven, because before that age they learn best through play. Though Rousseau believed that his subject “Emile” should begin his traditional schooling at age twelve, when presumably he would be at that cherished “age of reason,” I am certain he would be a strong proponent for the methods and biological time line adhered to by the Finns, who are universally regarded as having one of the best educational systems in the world.
My second revelatory experience came while researching for a paper in early childhood development, attempting to find contemporary developmental theorists who were ensconced in the natural or genetic end of the eternal debate. Though Noam Chomsky is hailed as the country's preeminent linguist, he is rarely viewed as an expert in child development. He is also seen by some to be a philosopher, though others would argue, quite sincerely, that he is not a philosopher at all, that linguistics is an entirely different discipline, albeit a neighboring one. I am not going to argue that point; it is little more than a question of definition (Though I hasten to add that Rousseau was viewed first as a philosopher). Nonetheless, I believe that to dismiss his masterful work as having no significant implications for child development is a grievous oversight.
The central focus for my argument for Chomsky as a vitally important developmental theorist comes in the form of his theory of a “Language Acquisition Device.” Chomsky first put his ideas forward in the late 1950s, as part of a critique of behavioral psychology. He argued that the way we actually acquire the use of language, its relationship to experience, and therefore its relationship to the world, is quite different from what traditional contemporary philosophy has always maintained. Behavioral psychologists have tended to characterize the human individual entering the world as an undifferentiated lump of malleable stuff, to be molded and shaped by its environment; through processes of stimulus and response, penalty and reward, the individual developed and learned, including the learning of language. I would dare say that the acquisition and use of language is the most important aspect of our development; this I believe to be self-evident.
Chomsky further argued that the accepted wisdom surrounding development and its characterization as almost entirely environmental could not possibly explain how virtually all human beings, regardless of their intelligence, do something as amazingly difficult as master the use of a language, even when they are not deliberately taught it, as most people surely are not. Also, that they do this at such an extraordinarily young age and in such an extraordinarily short period of time. He explains that for this to happen we must be genetically pre-programmed to do it, and that all human languages must have a basic structure that corresponds to this pre-programming. This is what he calls our “Language Acquisition Device.” Perhaps neuroscientist Terrence Deacon explains it best; “Infants are predisposed to learn human languages, acquiring within a few years an immensely complex rule system and a rich vocabulary at a time when they cannot even learn elementary arithmetic” (Chomsky, 2002). My personal discovery of the ideas of Chomsky has proved a life-changer; not only is his work in philosophy and linguistics so vital to our understanding of human development, but also his scholarly research and writings on backdoor political machinations in the Western world, all part of the public record but largely neglected by mainstream media and suppressed as inconvenient to the powers that be, as well as the use of propaganda as an advertising and public relations tool, add to our understanding of development in ways both enlightening and disturbing. I will address these issues later, as an entirely different form of human development (or, perhaps more accurately, practices that might be an impediment to development). Needless to say, Professor Chomsky has become the singularly influential developmental theorist of my experience.
After studying the work of Rousseau and Chomsky, I felt that I was firmly planted in the natural, biological ways of development. It would be easy for one to argue that both biology and environment contribute to our understanding of the world, how we behave, and how we learn. However, this is a cop-out; we can all agree that we learn naturally AND are nurtured, but we must lean one way or the other, or so I thought. Then, in our Mid-Child/Adolescent development course, we read “A Tribe Apart” by Patricia Hersch. I was completely blown away. These were kids from middle class families who were having sex, taking and dealing drugs, and committing crimes, the types of acts that I have always assumed were committed by children from poor or broken homes; and all came from families that claimed to be Christian. What we discover when reading a book like “A Tribe Apart” is even children from Christian homes can have their growth severely stunted if their parents are neglectful. I thought about what it must be like to be brought into a hyper-competitive world like ours when generations of your family have struggled with poverty, addiction, mental illness, or just poor parenting. Imagine you are one of the millions of people in this country who are unable to find a job commensurate with your education and abilities, and all that is left for you is work that pays just above minimum wage, or at best $8-$9 dollars an hour. In order to pay the bills, you must work two, or perhaps even three jobs. None of these part-time, and in some cases even full-time jobs have health insurance. Because your hours vary with each job, this leaves no time for you to improve your situation by going back to college, or even vocational/trade school. Even if you made all the right choices in terms of cutting expenses, you still might not have any money left to enjoy even the least expensive leisure activities, and even if you did, you would not have the time. There are no funds left after living expenses to save for retirement, and now your elected officials are talking about cutting what little retirement you have been paying into, social security. Owning a home is out of the question, and if you already own one, you would be in danger of losing it if you lost even a little of your meager income, if you were able to hold onto a home with what you make. Even keeping up adequate transportation puts you in a precarious situation month to month, but you are willing to sacrifice and use public transit, if it is available in your area to get you where you need to go. If you have other mouths to feed, well, you are hanging by a thread. And I'm speaking of people who have some education beyond high school; millions more have no choice but menial labor at minimum wage. This is called “living for work” - would you want to live like that? Are you a paycheck or a layoff away from being there? Millions of us are on the precipice.
Now imagine you are a child born to parents who must live for work and, worse yet, they are indifferent in their parenting. The sort of parents who do not read to their children; parents who do not take the time to nurture and truly care for the needs of their kids. Or your parents were abusive, emotionally or physically or both. Perhaps your parents are also not able to maintain their own relationship, and their struggles are magnified through conflict, abuse and eventual break-up of the marriage. Add to this the economic difficulties that so many folks experience in this country and you have a recipe for disaster. These are the teens and young adults that we see on the streets of Portland every day. These are not children born of privilege; they are neglected and abused.
When I decided I wanted to become a teacher, I had no illusions that it would be an easy vocation, or that I would be paid handsomely to do it. However, when I contemplate what people like the ones I have just described go through every day just to live, with little hope for the future in the face of the greed and avarice that surrounds their existence, I not only knew for whom I was devoting my life's work, but also that perhaps I would be asked to serve in a capacity with more responsibility to society at large. Regardless of what path I choose in my quest to serve others as humbly and faithfully as I can, Patricia Hersch's book has crystallized for me the importance of parental nurturing in the development of children: it is not unfair or an overstatement to say that parental nurturing can be the difference between a life of relative comfort and a life of struggle; one of an abundance of health or an early death. But what of those who are left to teach and counsel the neglected and abused children in our society? How are we best to support them?
We as a nation are, to put it kindly, enigmatic when it comes to the education of other people's children. Hilary Clinton was reviled in many circles for suggesting that it might “take a village” to raise a child. For some, particularly in political opposition to Mrs. Clinton, this was akin to socialism. Yet year after year we expect our public school teachers to essentially “babysit” troubled children, while giving them fewer and fewer resources to do it, let alone support. Then, when punishment becomes necessary, these neglectful parents are up in arms about outsiders interfering with the raising of their child. Rick Weissbourd, a Harvard University Graduate School of Education lecturer, in an article in Educational Leadership, seems to resign himself and his fellow educators to the notion that “the public believes that schools are largely responsible for remedying the problems associated with the steady increase in delinquency, disrespect and greed among today's students” (Weissbourd, 2003). He goes on to say that “the moral development of students does not depend primarily on explicit character education efforts, but on the maturity and ethical capacities of the adults with whom they interact” (Weissbourd, 2003). So the question remains, does it take a village to raise a child? And if it does, how can we expect educators to bear the brunt of the moral education (and by extension, the educational development) of our children, while simultaneously slapping their hands and tying them behind their backs through lack of funding and support? We know that classroom discipline is essential in order to develop the minds of students, yet we send teachers to the schools with the most severe discipline problems ill-prepared to keep order, thus ensuring that these schools and their students remain trapped in a vicious cycle of falling educational standards and the concomitant dearth of funding. Because many other countries, with nowhere near the financial wherewithal of the United States, can achieve success in education that surpasses us in virtually every meaningful measure, one can only conclude that it is a matter of priorities and the development of our children is not a priority. The study of human development has solidified my belief that the American way of life will wither and die if we do not find the will to provide every child with a well-rounded education.
Previously I stated my intention to address impediments to human development. I believe these are issues that need to be addressed in order for us to continue to evolve as a species. In my discovery of the work of Noam Chomsky, I found in his book “On Nature and Language’ a chapter discussing the “project of keeping the public uninformed, passive and obedient” (Chomsky, 2002) or another way to view it is the use of propaganda to train the public to become mindless consumers. It started in this country during the presidency of Woodrow Wilson, who established the Committee on Public Information, for which the aim was to win support among a passive public for joining the First World War. As Chomsky discovered, the effort “had enormous success, including scandalous fabrications that were exposed long after they had done their work, and often persist even after exposure” (Chomsky, 2002). This form of propaganda caught the attention of Adolf Hitler, who employed similar practices leading up to and during the Second World War. However, it was the American business community's discovery of the potential for propaganda to “shape attitudes and beliefs” (Chomsky, 2002) that had grave implications for the course of the American century, and perhaps the whole of humanity. Chomsky quotes one of the founders of the PR industry, Edward Bernays (who belonged to Wilson's propaganda agency): “It was the outstanding success of propaganda during the war that opened the eyes of the intelligent few in all departments of life to the possibilities of regimenting the public mind” (Chomsky, 2002). What the business community and political leaders feared more than anything was a true democracy. They viewed the general public as “meddlesome outsiders” who are to keep to the sidelines when it comes to democracy; “spectators, not participants” (Chomsky, 2002). Walter Lippman, arguably the preeminent journalist of the twentieth century, was brought into the fold by industry and government to help in “the conscious and intelligent manipulation of the organized habits and opinions of the masses” (Chomsky, 2002). The task of the media, government and the public relations and advertising industries, as manuals of the time period explain, is to “impose a philosophy of futility” and “lack of purpose in life” (Chomsky, 2002). They further explained that they must find ways to “concentrate human attention on the more superficial things that comprise much of fashionable consumption” (Chomsky, 2002). In other words, for the better part of the last century, Americans have been brainwashed to be mindless consumers; first through the print media and radio, then through television. In a real sense, one could argue that our development as a species was short-circuited. Can we evolve beyond this?
Former President Jimmy Carter thought we should try. In 1979 Carter, his presidency in turmoil and his conscience heavy, spoke to the American people from the Oval Office, in a speech that many analysts, then and now, judged as political suicide. Ironically, the immediate positive reaction gave him a tremendous boost in the polls; however, it was a very short-lived moment in the sun. Carter spoke of “a fundamental threat to American democracy” and “the growing doubt about the meaning of our own lives” (Carter, 1979). He called this a “crisis of confidence.” Carter was not just speaking of energy consumption when he said “too many of us tend to worship self-indulgence, and consumption” (Carter, 1979). He added, “Human identity is no longer defined by what one does, but by what one owns” and “we have discovered that owning things, and consuming things, does not satisfy our longing for meaning” and “piling up material goods cannot fill the emptiness of lives which have no purpose” (Carter, 1979). More powerful words have rarely been spoken by an American politician. And I think it is no small irony that these words reflect precisely what our government officials, along with the PR and advertising industries, hoped to engender in us generations ago so that we would be nothing more than passive “spectators” in the democratic process. This process has continued unabated for decades.
The introduction of television, with its insidious emphasis on advertising, has profound implications for human development, and is a technology that aligns perfectly with what the powerful government and business interests hoped to achieve all those years ago to stifle participatory democracy. In his groundbreaking but now largely forgotten 1977 book, “Four Arguments for the Elimination of Television,” Jerry Mander posits that television “places in our minds images of realities that are outside our experience, causing changes in feeling and utter confusion as to what is real and what is not’ (Mander, 1977). He goes on to make the case that technology does not always support human development; in fact, particularly with television, it may cause devolution of the species. Mander reminds us that “pre-technological peoples were surrounded by nature, and they developed an automatic intimacy with the natural world” (Mander, 1977). This connection with nature forms the core of our development as a species (and this correlates with Chomsky's theory of a Language Acquisition Device and Rousseau's naturalistic education). Twentieth and twenty-first century Americans were “the first in human history to live predominantly inside projections of our own minds” (Mander, 1977), mostly because of television. When we rely on technology to lend form to our experience, we short-circuit our development; thus, when we encounter nature, we must refer to technology to confirm that what we have experienced is real, a negative feedback loop that is perpetuated by still more technology. More recent studies have shown how images and voices from television enter directly into our unconscious minds, unfiltered. Mander showed us that not only is television sensory deprivation, which causes, among other things, hyperactivity, but also that the very nature of the technology, “with the light constantly flickering upon our retinas” (Mander, 1977), causes a state of hypnosis; not in the usual sense of a catatonic feeling, but much like a passive mental attitude; or as Mander says “Since there is no way to stop the images, one merely gives over to them. Thinking only gets in the way” (Mander, 1977).
Aside from the obvious implications for subliminal manipulation in advertising (such as creating “needs” that were not there before), the best example I can find for television's (and technology's) interruption of human development is in propaganda. When a political pundit tells us, despite all evidence to the contrary, that France's health care system is “a disaster” (and provides no facts to support this statement), the viewer is taking that statement into their unconscious mind, unfiltered, and ultimately are much more likely to cast their ballot for a candidate who espouses the same beliefs. I challenge anyone to explain to me how that sort of manipulation, through a medium which has proven to be so effective in shaping the attitudes and opinions of the masses, does not stand in the way of human development and societal progress. “Thinking only gets in the way.”
One can easily make the case that technology, which employs imagery that far too often promotes oversexualization, with particularly important implications for women, stands in opposition to human sexual development. It is alarming how devoid of understanding boys and even men are regarding female sexuality. Given that we are naturally sexual beings, one would think that we could have evolved beyond our patriarchal history and embraced the mysteries of the sexual female, for the benefit of both sexes. Though I believe that religious dogma plays an enormous part in our inability to evolve and develop as sexual beings, it is the objectifying images that we create, through all forms of media but especially effective through the hypnotizing effects of television, which cause the most harm. This is where the quote from Rousseau regarding “everything degenerating once in the hands of man” comes into focus. In “The Second Sex,” Simone de Beauvoir probably put it best as to the lot of women in an oversexualized, male fantasy-dominated culture: ‘One is not born, but rather becomes, a woman. No biological, psychological, or economic destiny explains the figure that the human female assumes in society; it is the whole of civilization that creates this product that we call feminine” (de Beauvoir, 1948). In other words, just as we have created unreal environments that cause confusion when we are finally confronted with reality, we have also created images of ourselves as sexual creatures that do not match our natural inclinations. To say that our pre-technological ancestors would not recognize anything that we call humanity today, sexual or otherwise, would be an understatement. And de Beauvoir made these observations before the advent of television!
The controversial psychiatrist R.D. Laing once said that “the growing incidence of mental illness these days may be explained in part by the fact that the world we call real and which we ask people to live within and understand is itself open to question” (Horwitz, 2003). Personally, I believe that increases in mental illness can be attributed to the hyper-competitive nature of our society, which attaches status and meaning to financial success; when you are one of the losers in that competition, and invariably there are many and can only be more as the reality of economic stagnation plays out, you may find it a struggle to find a purpose for your existence. Allan Horwitz, commenting on misconceptions of mental illness in “Creating Mental Illness,” believes that “much of what we regard as mental illnesses today are simply cultural constructs” (Horwitz, 2003); this parallels Jerry Mander's theory that television has caused people to create realities in their minds that are actually another person's imaginings, real yet not real. Perhaps we are all correct, on some level. Regardless, facing reality seems to be a problem for many in our culture; the reasons are numerous and varied, but it would be difficult to argue that the instances and theories I have presented play a great part in this problem. The inability to face reality can be found in our numerous forms of escapism (television and movies, even sports) and in our mainstream media, which report distortions as fact. When determining what method of therapy aligns closest to my beliefs, as well as what I have learned about human development and counseling theory, and what I believe will be of most benefit in today's mental health environment, I found myself gravitating to Gestalt therapy.
The films of John Cassavetes, my favorite film director, are, in my view, an excellent example of Gestalt filmmaking. Cassavetes' work was often misinterpreted as improvisation, so real were the characters and situations. Cassavetes viewed every frame in his films as a journey of discovery. Gestalt therapy's emphasis is “on what is being done, thought and felt at the moment rather than on what was, might be, could be, or should be” (Yontef, Simkin, 1981). The comparison of Cassavetes' work to Gestalt therapy is an instructive and worthwhile endeavor, which I will continue as a theme for my integrated therapy.
Gestalt therapy is a phenomenological-existential therapy introduced by Frederick and Laura Perls in the 1940s. It teaches therapists and patients “the phenomenological method of awareness, in which perceiving, feeling, and acting are distinguished from interpreting and reshuffling preexisting attitudes” (Yontef, Simkin, 1981). As with existentialism, Cassavetes felt that people are continuously remaking and discovering themselves. Possibly the best example of how Cassavetes' work parallels Gestalt therapy is this observation from biographer Ray Carney in “The Films of Cassavetes”: “His films can only teach us new understandings by forcibly denying us old ones” (Carney, 1994). This is precisely what the Perls were bringing to the world with their theories; understanding the difference between what is “residue from the past and what is actually being perceived and felt in the current situation” (Yontef, Simkin, 1981). Cassavetes never worked in the “what was” or “what should be”: Characters in a Cassavetes film were never static; we never knew their motivations or character fully coming into a scene, as they were always evolving. Whether we want to face it or not, this is who we are as humans, perpetually reinventing ourselves, consciously or unconsciously. One of my favorite quotes, of unknown origin is: “When we seek permanence, this is when our troubles begin.”
It is not at all inaccurate to describe Gestalt therapy as reality-based. This is why I appreciate making the connection to the notion of permanence; we may be able to find some sense of permanence in material things (such as a house or car), but there is nothing permanent about who we are. That is our reality. Gestalt therapy aims to separate us from our longing for permanence, unless of course we are talking about a permanent state of thoughtful self-knowledge. Only in this way can we come to grips with our ever-changing moods and work within that reality to become the people we want to be.
As Gary Yontef illustrates,“the Gestalt therapist works by engaging in dialogue rather than by manipulating the patient toward some therapeutic goal” (Yontef). Unlike Cassavetes, who wanted to shake people out of their vegetable torpor with real-life dialogue and situations, most conventional Hollywood movies are constantly out to manipulate our emotions and present us with characters whose motivations are clear from the start to the finish, and whom have goals that are set and achieved. The manipulation of our emotions often comes in the form of music; particularly so with technology that allows someone to take two often wildly divergent forms of music and create a third. In contrast, the music in a Cassavetes film (if there is any) is purposely disorienting, which is how we encounter music in our daily lives and, more to the point, how we interact with others in the real world. We never know how an encounter with another human being is going to play out, until it happens. As Yontef stresses, “The Gestalt therapist allows contact to happen, rather than manipulating, making contact, and controlling the outcome” (Yontef). Similarly, as Carney shows us, “Cassavetes' characters don't have identities, until they discover themselves and their possibilities in this process of exploring their differences, through dialogue interaction” (Carney, 1994).
Am I suggesting that viewing the films of Cassavetes could be therapeutic? Perhaps, and there is absolutely no doubt that his work makes for an uncomfortable experience for most; I have seen people actually squirm in their seats trying to comprehend all that they see in his films. However, this is precisely what Gestalt therapy purports to do for us; it forces us to extricate ourselves from our past and work within the here and now. But how are we to do that when most of us spend so much our lives trapped within the unreal environments of constructs created by others? It would seem that, first and foremost, all of us need to spend more time in the experiential world and less in the passive, one- dimensional world.
It is indeed a paradox; we possess natural inclinations which are nurtured, or, far too often, not nurtured, in our environment. In concluding this paper, I submit that because we have natural inclinations for development, which can then be nurtured only through the proper environmental circumstances, yet we are operating within environments that are constructed primarily by others and their imaginations and through a medium that distorts what is real, that technology, which has been presented as an important part of our evolutionary process and subsequently our development, is instead an impediment to our development. While I would not necessarily go as far as to say that we should return to a full communion with nature, and reject the whole of technology, I do believe that most of us could benefit from a dose of therapy that wakes us to the reality of who we are, helps us to find meaning and purpose beyond the trappings of consumption, and, for those of us fortunate enough to have abilities in the spheres of helping and leading people, to show others that throughout our lives, at every age, it truly does take a village to develop a human being.
References
Carney, R. (1994). The films of john cassavetes. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
Carter, J. (Artist). (1979). President carter's address to the nation. [Web Video]. Retrieved from http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KCOd-qWZB
Chomsky, N. (2002). On nature and language. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
de Beauvoir, S. (1948). The second sex. Paris: Vintage.
Gianoutsis, J. (2008). Locke and rousseau: early childhood education. The Pulse, 4(1), 1-19. Retrieved from http://www.baylor.edu/content/services/document.php?id=37670
Horwitz, A. (2003). Creating mental illness. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Mander, J. (1977). Four arguments for the elimination of television. New York: William Morrow.
Weissbourd, R. (2003, March 31). Moral teachers, moral students. Educational Leadership, 60(6),
Yontef, G., & Simkin, J. (1993). Awareness, dialogue and process: essays on gestalt therapy. Gouldsboro, ME: Gestalt Journal Press.

Thursday, July 29, 2010

Clash of Worldviews - Rich Politicians Withhold the Benefit Carrot

Every country on earth has within its borders citizens who hold opposing worldviews. Whether divided by class, religion, social or political ideology, the vast majority of the people of the world carry their own opinions on how the world around them should look. In healthy, functioning democracies the people are able to put a voice to those opinions at the polling place; they then look to leaders to shape policy toward those worldviews.

Among democratic societies, the United States stands alone with its large percentage of people who prefer to see an extremely limited federal government, or none at all. But the story doesn’t end with citizen disapproval of government; there a large number of policymakers, whether elected or appointed or of the lobbying variety, who share these views. This outlook is best exemplified in the rhetoric of right-wing strategist Grover Norquist, who commented early in the George W. Bush administration that he would like to see government shrunk to the size “where we can drown it in the bathtub” (2001, The Nation). Of course, when natural disasters come along the leaders that espouse said views are all too happy to take the forthcoming federal government assistance.

Which brings us to the recent battle in Congress over the extension of unemployment benefits. Republican lawmakers, in lock-step fashion (along with one Democrat) oppose the extension of benefits, despite several economists indicating that unemployment insurance acts as a form of economic stimulus; folks receiving UI benefits have no choice but to spend this money, as it often barely covers basic expenses. The only argument put forth by conservatives in opposition, besides fiscal responsibility, is that UI benefits are a disincentive to work; that the unemployed are somehow lazy and actually enjoy living off the relative pittance this assistance provides. The fiscal argument is ludicrous and hypocritical; where was the fiscal responsibility crowd when they bailed out the banks, or voted to fund wars off the books? The argument that the unemployed don’t want to work when they can collect UI is at best disingenuous and mean-spirited, at worst avarice. Most of the politicians who view the world this way either do not remember what it is like to work hard for a paycheck, or have never worked an honest day in their lives. I find it hard to believe that their constituents are not out in the streets protesting this disdain for the average worker.

Another hypocritical aspect of the conservative opposition to extending UI benefits is that most of the policymakers who have taken this stance proclaim that they are Christians and tout their “family values” credentials at every opportunity. When you consider that the amount of UI benefit a person receives is based on their earning potential when they have a job, unemployment benefits are even more disproportionately necessary for the poor – and likely inadequate. We all know what Jesus had to say about the poor. For those who don’t, see Matthew 25:31-46 (…whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers of mine, you did for me…).

So the opposing worldviews of smaller (and smaller) government versus government that addresses the needs of its people in times of crisis and doesn’t ask the poorest among us to sacrifice more has created social conflict for time immemorial. It will only continue to grow and fester as the economic hard times continue. In Cultural Anthropology, Haviland, Prins, et al posit that “the culture of a people who experience high rates of malnutrition, violence, crime, delinquency, suicide, emotional disorders and despair, and environmental degradation may be said to be operating less well than that of another people who exhibit few such problems.” Among these issues, one that has already seen a spike since the recession began is suicide (Huffington Post, 7/26/10). When a society has a flimsy social safety net, and the “losers” in that society, those that lose in the competition that is capitalism, fall through the net, what happens to them? Do we just cast them aside? They were promised a shot at the American Dream, but what they are finding is that not everyone can have it, no matter how hard they work. Someone has to clean up after the rest of us. Most of the developed world (or at least the richest countries) provide for the basic needs of its people through some form of social welfare system. Does the leadership who want to do the people’s business and make sure the least of us are not cast aside, have the courage to stand up to the hypocrites and bullies in their midst? Perhaps the more important question is, will the American people demand it?

References

Dreyfuss, R. (2001). Grover Norquist: Field marshal of the Bush plan. Accessed at http://www.thenation.com/article/grover-norquist-field-marshal-bush-plan

Harris, J.D. (2010). Suicide rates up since recession began, debt a way of life for 99ers. Accessed at http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/07/26/suicide-rates-up-since-re_n_658668.html

Haviland, W. (2008). Cultural anthropology. Belmont, CA. Wadsworth Cengage Learning.

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

A Scattered Start for Learning: Can Boys Keep Pace with Girls in the Classroom

Girls mature faster than boys. You do not have to do research on education or biology to have heard or read that phrase sometime in the past fifty years. This biological “fact” reads like a slogan with many in the various disciplines associated with human behavior. However, making the leap to the notion that girls start school with an inherent advantage over boys in learning is quite another matter. Yet, in the past fifteen years a mountain of research points to that idea with an emphatic and troublesome regularity.

My recollection of learning experiences and those of the boys and girls around me at school age is markedly different from that which this research bears out. Admittedly, it has been thirty-three years since I was last in elementary school, and the educational climate was quite different; gender roles, despite a burgeoning women’s movement in the early to mid nineteen seventies, had not evolved much since the time that our parents attended school in the fifties and before. Boys had a built-in advantage in the classroom which dates to the section of our history when girls either weren’t allowed or rarely attended school. Even in the nineteen-seventies, boys were more likely to be chosen by the teacher to answer questions put to the class; that fact alone manifested itself in demoralizing a good portion of a generation of girls, pigeon-holing them into conventional, gender-specific, “female” careers, if they desired a career at all after these early learning experiences.
While it is true that during my generation’s time in school, girls tended to be, in general, better and more eager readers than boys, boys did well enough to zoom past girls in math and science and mostly keep pace in other areas. When you factor in the advantage most boys had in enjoyment and success in areas such as physical education, any advantage girls may have had in reading and English was largely negated. Of course, some girls were able to overcome the gender-bias obstacles to chart a course to academic achievement; the valedictorian and salutatorian of my senior class were girls, and one of them eventually became a commercial airline pilot. Exceptions to conventional understandings aside, boys continued to benefit from gender-bias in the classroom throughout the seventies and eighties.

Fast-forward thirty-plus years. A generation of focus on helping girls to achieve on a level with boys has turned the tables; boys have now fallen behind girls in virtually every discipline, and girls are now even with the boys in math and science. The advent of hyperkinetic video games and other forms of entertainment and media stimuli, coupled with mass consumption of junk food, among other factors, have apparently changed the playing field when it comes to raising children, learning and education. A friend told me about a book titled “Raising Cain” (now a documentary with the same name) and in this revelatory volume author Michael Thompson provides insights on the emotional development of boys from pre-school to college and how school environments can put boys at a learning disadvantage. Thompson posits that most boys have difficulty expressing themselves in ways beyond violent or aggressive behavior; that they have many of the same feelings and emotional needs as girls but their peers and society in general make them feel as if they must stifle these emotions and “be a man.” Thompson views the struggles of boys in school and at home as a two-pronged problem; boys, unlike girls, do not develop an emotional vocabulary to express their feelings in ways that will help them succeed in school when issues arise; and due to biological differences, boys are often eighteen months to two years behind girls in developing the cognitive proficiency necessary to meet expectations in reading, writing and verbal skills. For the average boy in the first grade, school could feel like a running race starting on the curve of a track’s oval, with the girls on the inner edge and the boys on the outer edge. But how do we create a situation where there is a staggered start for the children, so all have a chance to keep pace? And would the solutions be pedagogically ethical?

Recent scientific research and studies in educational performance point to the turning tide of gender role reversal in the classroom environment. In a recent column in the New York Times, Nicholas Kristof shares data that is stark in its contrast to just fifteen years before. He cites a report from the Center on Education Policy that shows boys lag behind in reading in every single state; the average high school grade point average is 3.09 for girls, 2.86 for boys; and in federal writing tests, “32 percent of girls are considered proficient or better, for boys the figure is 16 percent” (NY Times, 2010, Mar 27). In her book “The War Against Boys”, Christina Hoff Sommers states that “girls now outnumber boys in student government, in honor societies, in school newspapers, even in debating clubs” (2000, pp. 24-25). In Britain, studies found not only parental indifference and family break-ups as reasons for boys slipping behind, but more importantly they are often “held back by a peer culture which encourages low aspirations and holds intellectual endeavor in contempt” (Mail online, 2008, 31 Jan). These findings echo much of what Thompson discusses in “Raising Cain” in that both parents and educators often dismiss troublesome boy behavior with the “boys will be boys” mantra. Interestingly, as long ago as nineteen-sixty, researchers referenced “differences in patterns of motivation, perceptions, and cognitive structuring so striking that the data for boys and girls were interpreted separately (Perkins, Univ. of Maryland, 1965). However, the most revealing findings come from the scientific community, in biological differences not previously discussed in the purview of educational development. In a 2006 article in Newsweek titled “The Trouble with Boys”, Peg Tyre reports that male brain chemistry may be at the core of developmental gender differences. Tyre states: “Sometime in the first trimester, a boy fetus begins producing male sex hormones that bathe his brain in testosterone for the rest of his gestation” (2006, Jan 30). This is a complete game-changer in terms of both emotional and cognitive development. Tyre goes on to cite new studies showing that prenatal exposure to male sex hormones directly affects the way children of both sexes play; and that hormones can influence learning throughout life, with a Dutch study finding that when males were given female hormones, their spatial skills dropped but their verbal skills improved.

In “Raising Cain”, Thompson illuminates three scenarios that best illustrate the emotional development divide that lies at the heart of boys underachieving in school, and hint at both pedagogical and parental solutions. The documentary contains a scene where all the children are given a writing assignment that, it could be argued, is a tad female-centric. When some of the boys in class attempt to craft stories with violent or aggressive imagery, the teacher prevents them from doing so on the basis that the themes are disturbing to many of their classmates. This leads to a failure on the part of some of the boys to express themselves and secure a passing grade; they simply shut down and tune out. A scene from the book describes an informal group therapy session involving Mr. Thompson’s co-author Dr. Dan Kindlon and several average seventh-grade boys gathered to discuss teasing. The boys, all of whom attain decent grades and are generally well-liked by classmates, are rendered speechless when Dr. Kindlon delicately attempts to engender responses to the question, “when has teasing gone too far?” A third scenario, also from the book, depicts Mrs. Alvarez’s kindergarten class, representing nine girls and six boys and their varying states of readiness as Mrs. Alvarez prepares for story time. In contrast to the girls and one of the boys, five of the six boys cannot master the seemingly simple task of sitting still long enough for Mrs. Alvarez to begin reading. These examples best demonstrate the crux of the problem of boys’ developmental and emotional needs and how societal constructs can do severe damage to boys’ progress in school – and life.

Solutions are almost as varied as the individuals involved. Thompson theorizes that solutions are essentially meaningless until the larger issue of the emotional needs of boys is addressed. Thompson believes that the development of “emotional literacy”, a concrete method for boys to recognize their emotions and develop the oral, aural and spatial skills necessary to effectively communicate their feelings and express themselves in meaningful and productive ways, is paramount in tackling this predicament. Thompson sees the first step in this process as “convincing skeptical parents and educators that boys suffer deeply as a result of the destructive emotional training our culture imposes upon them, that many of them are in crisis, and that all of them need help.” If we accept that a paradigm shift in how we view the emotional development of boys is necessary before we undertake solutions to leveling the educational playing field, what of the pedagogical perspective? What are the practical steps to helping boys achieve equality with girls in educational development? Since reading skills seem to be the primary driver for measuring success, perhaps Kristof’s idea of introducing more “lowbrow, adventure or even gross-out books that disproportionately appeal to boys” (NY Times, 2010, Mar 27) is a strong candidate for implementation. This approach might be helpful in the aforementioned classroom from the Raising Cain documentary, where it was ultimately decided that the boys could write stories involving death and destruction only if the “bad guys” were the only ones to die. An approach to classroom dynamics that is gaining steam in the educational community is gender-specific classrooms. The 2006 Newsweek article highlights a middle school in Pueblo, Colorado that has randomly grouped fifty sixth graders into single-sex classrooms, with what, on the surface, should be considered encouraging results. The boys are less organized than the girls in chemistry, for example, but the boys are often “willing to go beyond what the lab asks them to do” (2006, Jan 30). Still another pedagogical model worthy of attention is “classrooms with movement.” The same Newsweek article shows how Kelley King, principal at Douglas Elementary in Boulder, Colorado, incorporated fast-moving lessons into the curriculum; examples included breaking the children up into small groups to act out characters in the books they read, thus addressing, among other things, the inability of the boys to sit still for lessons. This segues nicely into one more solution worth mentioning, that of spontaneous, unstructured play. Far too many children in our society have no idea how to play without rules and formal structures dictating their every activity. Many is the day one can visit their Facebook page to find parents lamenting the long weekend days filled with soccer and softball games from morning to night. Scientific research points to unstructured play representing a key developmental component for boys and girls; this could be addressed both in schools, through more recess time, and with parents by encouraging them to relent from their obsession with mapping out each moment of their children’s lives.

Many puzzling questions spring from the research. If boys have always had a biologically developmental disadvantage, why haven’t they always been behind girls in educational measurements, and not just the last fifteen years? Is it pedagogically ethical to provide distinct learning models for boys and girls? When has teasing gone too far? Our horrific experience with school shootings and hazing point to the dire need to address the emotional makeup of boys as a vital first step in the inventory of solutions. Single-sex classrooms seem an efficacious answer to the achievement gap; the results from the Colorado school show that the girls-only class had the highest test results, followed by boys-only and the co-ed classes last. However, this country’s experience with separate but equal shows us that it is rarely, if ever, equal. And that pesky question of why the gap between boys and girls was practically the reverse twenty-five to thirty years ago, brings to mind many factors that could be considered, such as the disproportionate amount of time that today’s boys spend playing video games. Perhaps it is instructive to look beyond our borders for answers, to an educational system that routinely finishes at the top of world rankings, that of Finland. The Finnish schools have one outstanding feature that would seem counterintuitive to success; students spend less time in the classroom than any country in the developed world. In addition, a BBC News report found that Finnish children start school only at the age of seven. This delay alone would virtually eliminate the biological head-start that scientific research has found girls have over boys starting at the age of five. The report states “the idea is that before that age they learn best when they are playing and by the time they finally get to school they are keen to start learning” (BBC, 2010, 7 Apr). Wow, more time moving and less time sitting. Now that is something that boys could really get used to!

References
Bernard, S. (2006). Are boys falling behind girls in academic achievement? Edutopia – The George Lucas Educational Foundation. Accessed at: http://www.edutopia.org/are-boys-falling-behind-girls-academic-achievement
Bleuer, J. (2002). Are boys falling behind in academics? ERIC Digest. Accessed at: http://www.ericdigests.org/2003-4/boys1.html
Burridge, T. (2010, 7 Apr). Why do Finland’s schools get the best results? BBC News online. Accessed at: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/programmes/world_news_america/8601207.stm
Clark, L. (2008). Working-class white British boys falling behind everyone else at school. Mail online. Accessed at: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-511615/Working-class-white-British-boys-falling-school.html
Holly, J. (2010). Classroom strategies to get boys reading. Getting boys to read.com. Accessed at: http://www.gettingboystoread.com/content/classroom-strategies-get-boys-reading
Kindlon, D. and Thompson, M. (2000). Raising Cain: Protecting the emotional life of boys. New York. Random House.
Kristof, N. (2010). The boys have fallen behind. New York Times online. Accessed at: http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/28/opinion/28kristof.html?src=me&ref=homepage
Perkins, H. (1965). Classroom behavior and underachievement. American educational research association. Accessed at: http://www.jstor.org/pss/1162063
Steffen, A. (2004). Finland. The world’s best school system? World changing. Accessed at: http://www.worldchanging.com/archives/001779.html
Tyre, P. (2006). The trouble with boys. Newsweek online. Accessed at: http://www.newsweek.com/id/47522

Thursday, February 25, 2010

Death of a Salesman: Willy Loman and the Mythological American Dream

For nearly half a century Willy Loman, the central character in Arthur Miller’s Death of a Salesman, has enjoyed the status of cultural icon. This is quite remarkable considering that most cultural icons are heroes, or at least viewed in a more positive light than Willy Loman. He is a caricature; a cautionary tale for those who would have blind faith in the so-called American Dream. Some of us, like Willy’s son Biff, view the Dream as myth. The sense of entitlement on display in “Salesman” is something that many people have discovered to be folly, particularly in the face of the country’s deep economic woes. I would go as far as to say that the collective national obsession with the American Dream is not just mythological, but also pathological.

To understand why the character of Willy Loman and his fictional family have attained cultural icon status, it is instructive to look at the dramatic and literary elements at work in “Salesman.” From the beginning, Miller establishes thematic motifs; the opening flute music evokes the father Willy barely knew (he manufactured and sold flutes). This represents not only the father who abandoned Willy at a young age but also the career that Willy chose, ostensibly to emulate his father, who he felt was successful and lived the American Dream but also betrayed him. Willy is constantly in conflict with holding on to the dream and feeling glimpses of where it all went wrong for him personally. Another recurring theme is the continuous and seamless daydream sequences, where Willy imagines and often attempts to re-write history to suit his delusions. There are so many signs that should tell him that he is holding on too tight to the dream; he even has to be told repeatedly that he is fired before it sinks in. And Linda’s unconditional love at times seems to buffer his ego, though she does attempt to convince him to take a non-traveling position, hoping against hope that this will bring him back to reality.

Perhaps one of the most interesting examples of symbolism that I found was Biff’s penchant for thievery, and how Willy’s condoning his actions represents his bitterness at not being able to achieve The Dream; if you can’t earn it, take it. At one point, Willy orders Charley’s son Bernard to give Biff the answers to a test. Another more subtle symbolism involves The Woman. One could make the case that she represents the emptiness, indeed the shallowness of Willy’s aspirations. She has no name and we are given no background for her. She is a pawn in his game, yet he doesn’t even know how to use her in a way that would be advantageous. The vegetable garden represents Willy’s need to find some measure of success that he can pass on to his progeny and the type of work that could have brought him success had he followed his interests and inclinations.

If there is no other figurative language in this entire piece, this is all that is necessary: “I've got to get some seeds. I've got to get some seeds, right away. Nothing's planted. I don't have a thing in the ground.” The last sentence, in particular, represents so much; all the hopes and dreams he has for Biff and Happy; all that he hasn’t accomplished in his life and career, which are one and the same; and the faint hope that he holds that he is still a great salesman, from which his family and friends, by reaching out with love, are trying their mightiest to steer him away. Of course, thoughts of purchasing a house in the country and gardening are his glimpses into the life that could have been, if he had let go of The Dream and followed his heart.

The tone of the play is one of hopelessness, with occasional, ever so slight glimpses at the possibility of happier outcomes. Alas, these glimpses are not long for the world. There is a constantly building feeling of dread, until the inevitable is revealed in the suicide accoutrement and attempts, culminating with the long-anticipated outcome.

Many of the thoughts and emotions are “hammered home” in “Salesman.” There is a consistency to the diction; we feel and hear the frustration from Willy as well as his family, over and over, and all characters are the same in this way. The one exception could be Linda, who at times seems to try and fight through the malaise, admonishing her sons for abandoning their father and almost always attempting to buoy his spirits. There is most certainly a colloquial quality to the diction; however, it is more a product of the era in which the film is set than the place. For example, both men and women referred to as “pal” or the neighbor Charley called “Uncle” when he is actually a friend of the family.

Willy Loman is in conflict primarily with society. He has been sold a bill of goods called The American Dream and he doesn’t even realize how destructive it can be, particularly for those who can’t measure up, who can’t “keep up with the Jones’.” This is his quest from the outset, to make the material gains that will prove his worthiness as a man, a husband, a father. But it will always be just out of this reach. His internal conflict is one between the salesman he is convinced he is destined to be, the mercurial plodder his wife and sons cannot fathom; and the more serene, perhaps even creative Willy that longs to live in the country and plant vegetables.

The setting in a rough and tumble sales environment is uniquely North American. Sure, there are salesman all over the world, but none quite like the ones that operate on this continent. Type-A personalities are often involved in sales, and in this story they are exemplified in Howard (Willy’s boss) and to a lesser extent Happy. Despite his passive-aggressive behavior, Willy is not a Type-A personality and is not built for the cut-throat world of sales.

The primary form of criticism that should be applied here is Archetypal and Mythological Criticism. Willy and his family surround themselves with the creature comforts expected of them in our culture. Willy and Linda’s generation made it through the depression, and they are the first to enjoy the fruits of the consumerist society that emerged following World War Two. Even their choices in activities and leisure are borne from the lifestyle that so many at the time wanted because it was ubiquitously marketed to them; Biff and Happy playing football; the boys eating at the chop house; Happy’s conquests of women. All of this feeds into the myth of the American Dream. You are heroic if you achieve and come out on top; you are John Wayne. Those who cannot keep pace, like Willy and Biff, are consumed by thoughts of where it all went wrong, and can spiral into madness if they cannot accept and be at peace with an alternative.

Deconstructionist Criticism is a secondary form of criticism that should be considered. Many view “Salesman” as an examination of the destructive nature of capitalism. When you consider that Miller wrote this play at the cusp of the era of McCarthyism, it is no wonder he came under great scrutiny from “red-baiters.” With the McCarthyites, or today’s tea-baggers, if you were against unfettered capitalism you were automatically a commie or socialist. I believe that Biff represents the gray area; an alternative to the dog-eat-dog of the American Dream. Biff simply wanted to find a peaceful place within the zeitgeist. He was not choosing a different ideology, but rather a way to fit his own talents and abilities, his heart and soul, into the framework of society. He was choosing the path of the rugged individualist; something that should be lauded in this culture but was rare at the time and if you really think about it, is still rare. Our society has a follower mentality, and this is manifest in our continuing acceptance of the crushing specter of unregulated capitalism to hold sway, despite all the empirical evidence to the contrary.

The phenomenon of “The Secret” is an example of why belief in the American Dream is pathological. Self-help programs like “The Secret” trumpet the notion that if you want material success bad enough, all you need to do is have a positive attitude; wish for it and it will come to you. The folly in this line of thinking should be self-evident. However, it is only very recently that sociologists have addressed the idea that perhaps over-optimism and positive thinking is troubling, even dangerous. From cancer treatment to investing in the stock market, the belief that if you have a positive countenance all will be well is endemic in our culture. Perhaps the name William – Willy, or Will is symbolic. Willy was practically “willing” himself and his sons to success. His optimism turned to grim determination in the face of reality, yet he could not get a grip on that reality, and it cost him his sanity and ultimately his life. Today, in tough economic times, many people are taking stock in their lives and choosing a path for themselves that better fits their personalities and capabilities; to put the brakes on this runaway freight train that is American life. It is too bad that the non-fictitious Biffs of that era could not live long enough to see that their lifestyle choices were healthy. And for the rest of us, the lesson is that a little dose of reality along with your optimism goes a long way.