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Education
See other Education Articles

Title: Debunking Ben Carson
Source: The Progressive
URL Source: http://progressive.org/news/2015/10 ... e-werent-better-educated-1830s
Published: Oct 17, 2015
Author: Jud Lounsbury
Post Date: 2015-10-17 09:34:45 by Willie Green
Keywords: None
Views: 2481
Comments: 14

We weren't better educated in the 1830s

Just how much have America's schools gone down the tubes?

According to Dr. Ben Carson, a lot -- and he can prove it!  

The good doctor is quick to refer you to his book, America the Beautiful: Rediscovering What Made This Nation Great where, he says, he has "an example of questions in a sixth grade exit exam from the 1830s. I doubt most college graduates could even come close to passing it today."

In fact, this was one of the zingers Carson shot at President Obama during his now-famous 2013 National Prayer Breakfast speech that made him an overnight sensation on Fox News.  

Intrigued, I looked up Carson's book and found the section (Valuing Education, Then and Now) containing the "example questions" he likes to reference.

In the same passage of his book, Carson buttresses his claim of early American superiority with the assertion, "In fact, when Frenchman Alexis de Tocqueville arrived in America in 1831 to decipher the secrets of our enormous economic success, he was so taken with our school system that he wrote extensively about what he saw as a unique and powerful tool to fuel a productive new nation,” and "He was particularly impressed by the fact that anyone finishing the second grade could read and write quite well. Even when he explored the frontiers, he was astonished to find common men engaging in intelligent conversation, reading the newspaper, and understanding the various branches of government."  

Carson continued, "To gain a real appreciation of what children were expected to know in early America, one has only to look up an exit exam from middle school grades during the nineteenth century. I suspect many, if not most, college graduates today would fail that test."

Carson then identified the following questions from the test:

·        Describe three of the most prominent battles of the Rebellion.

·        Name events connected with the following dates: 1607, 1620, 1800, 1849, and 1865.

·        Show the territorial growth of the US.

·        Name and locate the principal trade centers of the US.

·        Name all the republics of Europe and give the capital of each.

·        Describe why the Atlantic Coast is colder than the Pacific at the same latitude.

Impressive questions! Kids really knew all that?!? Dang, they really were smart!  And we are really dumb!

Carson is not the only one to use this test example as proof of America's declining schools.  It has been bandied about by Rush Limbaugh and is a popular talking point of many conservative politicians, including U.S. Senator Ron Johnson (R-WI)Carson found these questions not as part of his research, in some old library, but from a chain email on the internet, that got Snoped in 1999.  The questions actually are from a real graduation test given in Salina County Kansas, in 1895, not the 1830s, and was given to eighth graders, not sixth graders. What Carson and others leave out is that while these were indeed six of about a 50 question test, most kids that took the test, failed. In fact, according to a Salina Journal report that reviewed the test results, only 25% passed the test. And considering that in this area of Kansas, only about half of the kids stayed in school all the way until eighth grade completion, it makes these six example test questions even more meaningless.

It gets better:  The Tocqueville quote that Carson uses is in his book to further back-up his claim, was thoroughly debunked by John J. Pitney Jr. in a 1995 Weekly Standard article, aptly entitled, "The Tocqueville Fraud."  Pitney writes that, "These lines are uplifting and poetic.  They are also spurious. Nowhere do they appear in Democracy in America or anywhere in Tocqueville."  Pitney then tracks it to 1941 book on religion and the American dream.

Putting aside the right-wing mythology surrounding this test or the phony Tocqueville quotes for a moment, the larger point that Carson and others are trying to make is that the Americans were much more educated and knowledgeable in the 1830s, and we’d all be a lot better off, if we’d return to the old timey America from whence we came.

Ah-ha... yeah, let's consider American life in the 1830s.

This was a time when the U.S. illiteracy rates was in the 30% range, (compared to about 1% today) and only about half of kids went to grade school (compared to 90 to 99%, depending on the grade). A time before the Fair Labor Standards Act would put an end to child labor of poor white children and the 14th Amendment would put an end to slavery of African American children.  Child mortality was high and the average life expectancy was only 42.  Women wouldn't be able to vote for years to come, and only a tiny fraction attended colleges and universities.  To suggest that Americans today are somehow less educated and dumber than they were in the early 1800s is absurd from any angle that you look at it.  It also is yet another baffling example of how Ben Carson, a man whose central qualification for the presidency is his scientific background, can take such a decidedly unscientific approach to investigating and proving his silly hypothesis.

It's as if Dr. Carson lives in two worlds.  By day, he's a gifted neurosurgeon who relies on evidence-based science before performing delicate operations on a children’s brains; by night, he's a howling mad, anti-intellectual, Tea Party doofus. Maybe instead of Dr. Carson, we should call him Dr. Jekyll.  

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#1. To: Willie Green (#0)

Anything that comes from a source containing the word PROGRESSIVE, it goes in the round file.

jeremiad  posted on  2015-10-17   9:48:31 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: jeremiad (#1)

The Progressive Party was founded by Teddy Roosevelt

Willie Green  posted on  2015-10-17   10:01:52 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#3. To: Willie Green (#0)

Give a teen behind the register $1 for a 72 cent purchase, and 9 out of 10 can't make change without a calculator.

misterwhite  posted on  2015-10-17   10:03:10 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#4. To: misterwhite (#3)

Give them a dollar and two cents and watch their eyes glaze over.

Fred Mertz  posted on  2015-10-17   10:14:46 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#5. To: jeremiad (#1)

progressive

Another word or phrase that's been bastardized by The Left.

Along with liberal.

Whoever Controls the Language Controls the Debate

"Blessed is the nation whose God is the LORD . . . "

~Psalm 33:12a

Rufus T Firefly  posted on  2015-10-17   10:16:54 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#6. To: Fred Mertz (#4)

"Give them a dollar and two cents and watch their eyes glaze over."

I've done that and they look at you like, "Why did you do that?"

Then when they punch in the amount on the register to calculate the change their expression changes to "Ohhhh" like you just pulled some magic trick.

Every time.

misterwhite  posted on  2015-10-17   10:34:10 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#7. To: misterwhite (#3)

Give a teen behind the register $1 for a 72 cent purchase, and 9 out of 10 can't make change without a calculator.

Just about everything is scanned for price now (even at convenience stores).

All they really have to know how to do is enter the amount given them into the register system, and the change will be automatically calculated for them.

Obama has played at being a president while enjoying the perks … golf, insanely expensive vacations at tax-payer expense. He has ignored the responsibilities of the job; no plans, no budgets, no alternatives … just finger pointing; making him a complete failure as a president

no gnu taxes  posted on  2015-10-17   10:35:49 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#8. To: no gnu taxes (#7)

I got ripped off a nickel yesterday becdause the cashier couldn't count.

It confuses some of them if your order comes to a $1.07 and you give them a buck two pennies and a dime.

A K A Stone  posted on  2015-10-17   10:42:54 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#9. To: no gnu taxes (#7)

"All they really have to know how to do is enter the amount given them into the register system, and the change will be automatically calculated for them."

Uh-huh. And that's why.

misterwhite  posted on  2015-10-17   10:47:57 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#10. To: misterwhite (#9)

I can see it getting worse. It infuriates me when i help my daughter with her "Common Core" math homework. They're learning multiplication by drawing rows and columns of blocks and counting them.

Obama has played at being a president while enjoying the perks … golf, insanely expensive vacations at tax-payer expense. He has ignored the responsibilities of the job; no plans, no budgets, no alternatives … just finger pointing; making him a complete failure as a president

no gnu taxes  posted on  2015-10-17   10:53:37 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#11. To: no gnu taxes (#10)

"It infuriates me when i help my daughter with her "Common Core" math homework."

"Common Core" math has to be the worst system ever devised. Is your daughter going to carry around a pencil and paper to solve basic math problems with blocks the rest of her life?

I taught my kids basic math with flash cards, every day after school. Add, subtract, multiply, divide. Day after day. Pure grunt work.

That's how I was taught and that's what works.

misterwhite  posted on  2015-10-17   11:19:24 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#12. To: misterwhite (#11)

I have been unteaching my grandkids Common Core math. Amazon has plenty of good math books for different age levels.

Roscoe  posted on  2015-10-17   12:49:56 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#13. To: misterwhite (#11)

"Common Core" math has to be the worst system ever devised.

I just wonder how the "Einsteins" who came up with this will carry this over to algebra and calculus.

Obama has played at being a president while enjoying the perks … golf, insanely expensive vacations at tax-payer expense. He has ignored the responsibilities of the job; no plans, no budgets, no alternatives … just finger pointing; making him a complete failure as a president

no gnu taxes  posted on  2015-10-17   12:58:58 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#14. To: no gnu taxes (#13)

"I just wonder how the "Einsteins" who came up with this will carry this over to algebra and calculus."

They're counting on the kids either flunking or dropping out before they ever get to that level.

misterwhite  posted on  2015-10-17   13:49:25 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


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