After I posted the link to Mike Rowe’s Testimony Before the U.S. Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation May 11, 2011 @ The Discovery Channel as well as two of my favorite quotes from The Core, I received this reply in the comments and felt the need to share a little more about why I value classical education for my boys.
Thank you for sharing this article. I am contemplating making the switch to classical education and–I’ve got to tell you–after reading WTM and others, I have struggled most with the question of whether or not classical ed elevates intellectual pursuits over all else. I firmly believe that our society has promoted higher ed to the point where it’s losing it’s value (but I still believe in it) and, like the article mentioned, vocational training is frowned upon (it’s a necessity!). Thanks for reminding me that classical ed is not just about academia.
I think the key here is that skilled, educated labor is hard to come by. We, as a society, have put thinking and labor in two separate categories. That is what is so damaging.
I want my boys to have a strong grasp of language and communication skills, an insatiable curiosity, a love of reading, strong understanding in math and science, and a view of history from beginning to the present NO MATTER WHAT profession they choose.
I want them to be able to think for themselves, participate in their community and government, be able to handle their own finances (possibly their own business finances even if they become plumbers), enjoy well-rounded conversations and friendships, have communication skills to be exercised in any profession they find themselves in, be prepared for learning anything–including a trade, be able to handle unexpected changes that life might throw at them, and in short–think life is interesting!
Each of my boys (and daughter, of course) will choose their own life, but I certainly will do whatever it takes to make sure they have the brain skills to meet it head-on.
With 8-10 years of solid classical education under their belts, I would have no problem with my boys spending a few years even before high school graduation learning a trade or pursuing a focused interest if they are so inclined. The problem with our modern educational system is that students often *are not* getting that strong foundation in the early years, so by high school it ends up having to be a choice. Either they learn a trade, or they take academic classes. And we’ve delegated physical work and trades to the ‘uneducated.’ We have also raised a whole generation of kids who haven’t had to work, and don’t know how. They don’t have to contribute to the family farm or to the family finances, often not even to household chores. Many kids don’t even know how to get dirty.
Okay, rant over. I’m going to send my boys out to dig ditches after Latin today. {grin}