The RenewaNation Review 2017 Volume 9 Issue 2 | Page 15

H E IS KNOWN AS THE FATHER of progressive education, a renowned philosopher, a genius, an intellectual giant, the co-founder of the ACLU and the NAACP, an evolutionist, a humanist, a communist, an atheist, and a fierce enemy of Christ. Who is he? His name is John Dewey.   John Dewey (1859-1952) began a movement that trans- formed the American educational landscape. Dewey shared the theory behind this movement in an essay he wrote in 1898 titled The Primary Education Fetish. The foundation of his thinking was the theory of evolution, and he exalted this argument to a new loftier level by applying evolu- tion to education. For his movement to be successful, the traditional Christ-centered education of the time needed to be discarded. Using Schools to Reconstruct Society Dewey’s movement had a new vision for schools. He wanted to use schools as instruments for the reconstruction of society. Dewey didn’t want to educate children to think for themselves: “Children who know how to think for them- selves spoil the harmony of the collective society which is coming where everyone is interdependent.”  1 His vision veered dramatically from the traditional Christ-centered approach to education.   Teacher David Vaillancourt explains that Dewey’s plan “rejected the classics, any emphasis on rhetoric and logic, or rote memorization. Instead, the pragmatist Dewey valued experience over facts, logic, or debate.”  2 Dewey’s vision is also captured by historian and theologian Rousas Rush- doony in his book The Messianic Character of American Education. Rushdoony says, “Dewey believed you learned through your senses and you learned by doing. Thus, the past has no value. He couldn’t see a need for the study of history, Latin, Greek, or even English. By fostering the idea that all education should rest on experience, he minimized the significance of book learning.” A Dramatic Change in Direction Dewey recognized that “change must come gradually. To force it unduly would compromise its final success by favoring a violent reaction.”  3 Samuel Blumenfeld and Alex Newman discuss this quote in their book Crimes of the Educators: “In other words, deception would have to be used in order for this long-range, complex plan to be successfully implemented.”   Vaillancourt shares that Dewey believed “the key element that held the entire existing system together was high literacy. It gives the individual the means to seek knowledge inde- pendently, to question the status quo and to exercise one’s own judgment. Literacy allows us to think for ourselves.” Blumenfeld and Newman also share, “Dewey stated that the only way to undermine the capitalist system was to get rid of the emphasis primary schools placed on the development of high literacy and independent intelligence.” According to Dewey, “It is one of the great mistakes of education to make reading and writing constitute the bulk of the school work the first two years.”  4   Dewey also believed the role for teachers should change: rather than teach a body of knowledge, the teacher should help the child learn by experience and learn alongside the child. This was a great contrast to the previous approach where teachers were the experts.   Dewey’s direction was based on using government schools; minimizing the role of parents (because they might teach things like religion); changing the role of teachers to facilitators; de-emphasizing Latin, the classics, the three Rs (reading, writing, and arithmetic), western history, and history in general (including the study of the Constitution and capitalism); and providing a secular environment. The end product was designed to prepare students to be good citizens in a socialist society (students who don’t read very well or think very well for themselves). Dewey’s Success John Dewey began discarding traditional Christian curriculum on an extensive scale, and his vision has been successfully implemented throughout the country. Numer- ous reports and books document the success of the Dewey agenda and the ensuing downward trends. The 1983 govern- ment report, A Nation at Risk, and the previously mentioned book, Crimes of the Educators, are just two examples that do an excellent job of documenting plummeting literacy and SAT scores and the general statistical decline of education across the nation.   Additionally, a regular review of the news demonstrates the impact to our country of this slow but increasingly steady direction in education. Recent topics include the emergence of a credible socialist candidate for President, the Reason- Rupe poll showing that 58% of college-age Americans have a favorable view of socialism, 5 and the trend at universities to implement new civics courses that teach students that a 15