24 September 2017

Dumbing-Down: How Low Can We Go Here In America.”

 
 


 
Published in 1988, this book created a heated discussion . . .
 being able to read [and understand] is one of the biggest "challenges" is as they say "one of the biggest challenges" for Pluralistic Ignorance - surprising to say that Illiteracy is now classified as a Functional Dis-Ability here in America.
But it goes deeper than that when "The Melting Pot" myth has disintegrated with everyone trying to find new identities or hanging-on to the old separate-and-equal false lines of discrimination . . . confirmation-biases where we retreat to tribal enclaves of where we choose to live and who we choose to associate with. We may like our own "comfort zones" but there is no comfort in the fact that we as a nation are more divided than ever before.
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The author argues that children in the United States are being deprived of the basic knowledge that would enable them to function in contemporary society. They lack cultural literacy--a grasp of background information that writers and speakers assume their audience already has.
At the end of the book Hirsch and two colleagues tacked on an appendix: an unannotated list of about 5,000 names, phrases, dates, and concepts that, in their view, “every American needs to know.” The appendix became a sensation and propelled the book to the top of the best-seller list.
The thing about the list, though, was that it was—by design—heavy on the deeds and words of the “dead white males” who had formed the foundations of American culture but who had by then begun to fall out of academic fashion. (From a page drawn at random: Cotton Mather, Andrew Mellon, Herman Melville).Conservatives thus embraced Hirsch eagerly and breathlessly. He was a stout defender of the patrimony. Liberals eagerly and breathlessly attacked him with equal vigor. He was retrograde, Eurocentric, racist, sexist. His list was a last gasp (or was it a fierce counterattack?) by a fading (or was it resurgent?) white establishment. 
Almost 30 years later: here we are
What Every American Should Know
Defining common cultural literacy for an increasingly diverse nation

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