Educating Patriots | City Journal How to Educate a Citizen: The Power of Shared Knowledge to Unify a Nation, by E. D. Hirsch, Jr. (HarperCollins, 224 pp., $19.99)
  Decades  before “equity” became a buzzword in education, E. D. Hirsch, Jr. had  his finger on what the word actually means: equal access for all  children to the knowledge and verbal proficiency that makes full  participation in American life possible. In a series of books and  journal articles stretching back decades, Hirsch has argued that we will  not have a just and prosperous society until our schools ensure that  every child has access to the knowledge that the children of well-off  families take for granted.
  Hirsch’s scholarship rests on the  hypothesis, validated by volumes of evidence from cognitive science,  that language comprehension—particularly the ability to read with  understanding—is not a discrete, transferable “skill,” like riding a  bike, that can be learned, practiced, and mastered. Rather, it rests on a  common base of knowledge, literary and cultural allusions, and idioms  common to a nation’s “speech community.”
  This mental furniture  allows its members to participate fully and fluently in civic and  economic life, but it’s unequally distributed among knowledge haves and  have-nots. Decisions by teachers or by schools about what children  should know are thus matters of unusual gravity. It might be decided  that teaching Greek mythology is passé, even Eurocentric, and that  schools should adopt a more “culturally relevant” curriculum to honor  diversity and engage children. But a future college admissions officer  or employer might hold it against a young person if they don’t  recognize, for example, a reference to “opening Pandora’s box.”
  Like  a fish that doesn’t know it’s in water, highly literate people are  swimming in “background knowledge” of history, science, literature, and  art. Sophisticated written and spoken language is a kind of shorthand.  Writers and speakers rely on assumptions about what their readers and  listeners know to fill in gaps, supply context, and resolve ambiguities  in speech and texts. Thus, Hirsch argues, fairness demands that schools  teach a rigorous core curriculum in elementary school (and ideally  middle school) that closes knowledge gaps. To do otherwise is to subvert  the school’s role as an engine of upward mobility.
  Hirsch’s  egalitarian vision is as empirically verifiable as it is out of step  with current education fashions. Not surprisingly, his work has been  mischaracterized as “banking” and canon-making, or even as an effort to  impose “whiteness” on nonwhite students. In fact, it’s an effort to  catalogue the taken-for-granted knowledge of the broad American speech  community so that it can be taught. This fundamental disconnect led  University of Virginia professor of psychology Daniel Willingham to  describe Hirsch’s landmark 1987 book Cultural Literacy, which spent six months on the New York Times best-seller list, as “the most misunderstood education book of the last fifty years.”
  The years since the firestorm over Cultural Literacy  have been kinder to Hirsch. The content-rich elementary education he  champions has not overthrown the progressive, “child-centered”  pedagogies he has criticized, but the education world that once reviled  him as a reactionary trying to impose an archaic canon on children has  increasingly accepted that he was right: there is no escaping the  connection between broad general knowledge and broad general literacy.  Hirsch launched the  Core Knowledge Foundation  over 30 years ago to promote his ideas and produce a curriculum built  on his insights. Today, many publishers promote and sell a  “content-rich” English Language Arts curriculum.
  Hirsch has  refined his message and mustered fresh evidence in each of his  subsequent books, but now, at 92, in what he says is his farewell book,  his project has taken on fresh urgency. The aim of How to Educate a Citizen  is not merely to save American education from demonstrably false ideas  about teaching and learning, but to save America itself. This sounds  grandiose, but it follows from Hirsch’s core thesis. Education and  nationhood are functionally the same idea. “Intellectual error has  become a threat to the well-being of the nation,” Hirsch warns. “A truly  massive tragedy is building.”
  Our earliest thinkers about  education “thought the school would be the institution that would  transform future citizens into loyal Americans,” Hirsch writes. More  than two centuries ago, Benjamin Rush, signer of the Declaration of  Independence, wrote an essay advocating a common elementary school  curriculum. “The paramount aim of the schools, he wrote, was to create  ‘republican machines.’ By that he meant active, loyal, purposeful  citizens of the republic.” The mechanism that builds strong readers and  drives genuine educational equity is the same one that builds strong  bonds of affection and loyalty among citizens. “The elementary school is  decisive for forming both our knowledge base and our gut allegiance,”  Hirsch writes.
  We are far more accustomed to thinking of schools  as a means to promote the private ends of college or career. Hirsch  reminds us that “nation-creating” was the explicit aim of American  public education at its founding, “reinforced in primers and spelling  books on a scale never before seen in human history.” New York in  particular, with its diversity of immigrants and religions, was  “especially alert to the need to build up a shared public sphere where  all these different groups could meet as equals on common ground,” he  writes. “How prescient the founders were in being worried about factions  and lack of public spirit and even disloyalty to the republic,” he  laments. “We have, to our distress, acquired some of the evils they  feared.”
  How to Educate a Citizen arrives at a moment  when the dominant ideas in education are once again working against his  unifying vision for common schools. On the right, advocates often put a  higher priority on school choice; on the left, a strident social justice  orthodoxy insists that all institutions, especially public schools,  must be “anti-racist” and “decolonize” their curriculum. Recall how  Colin Kaepernick last year pressured Nike to discontinue a sneaker  adorned with the 1776 flag, which he claimed was an offensive symbol  from the era of slavery. A nation that cannot agree whether its flag is a  symbol of pride or racial hatred is not ready to agree on what its  children should be taught.
  Hirsch is fond of invoking the words of  Thomas Jefferson, chiseled over a doorway on the campus of the  University of Virginia, where he taught for decades. “For here we are  not afraid to follow truth wherever it may lead, nor to tolerate any  error so long as reason is left free to combat it.” Guided by those  words over his long, admirable, and prolific career, E. D. Hirsch, Jr.  has worked patiently to correct the errors of the false prophets of  progressive pedagogy and to restore the public purpose of American  education and its founding ideals. It is up to the rest of us now to  follow his lead.
   Robert Pondiscio is a senior fellow with the Thomas B. Fordham Institute and the author of  How the Other Half Learns. |