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Slaves
to Higher Learning
By
Wendy Mogel, Ph.D.
Here’s
a thought for Passover. We are Pharaohs to our children. We have
made them our slaves. Their mud bricks are the books that fill
30-pound backpacks. Their mortar is
four hours of homework. The straw we deny is sleep. Ask child
therapists across the country about the headaches and
self-starvation, and the girls who make shallow cuts in their wrists
to “let the pressure out, to feel on the outside the pain I feel
on the inside”. Ask the school counselors about how teenagers use
drugs and sex to try to escape.
Ask the pediatricians and chiropractors about what those
30-pound loads have done to the children’s posture. Ask the
college admissions office about their nicknames for incoming
students: “crispies,”
the eighteen year-olds too fried from high school to function at
college, and “teacups,” freshmen
too fragile to manage on their own without their parents, tutors,
and housekeepers.
Olympian
Sara Hughes knows the score. Asked about her plans after winning the
gold medal she said, “I just want to keep up with my school work
and get in the high 1500’s on my SATs.” The best figure skater
in the world worries that if you want to get into the Ivy League
these days, having only one sport may not be enough. College
placement advisors complain that parents think there are only ten
good schools in the country and that if their child doesn’t get
into one of them, the whole family has failed.
This is mitzrayim, the
Hebrew word for Egypt that also means a narrow place.
Don’t
look outside to find the Pharaoh. It’s easy to blame the schools
and colleges but some of our terror is inflated myth. We read
pornography—U.S. News and
World Repor’st ranking of top colleges and universities-- and
we panic that our child “won’t get in” even as we look into
the crib.
Some
leaders are taking the first steps towards freedom. As I travel
around the country speaking at schools, I see them beginning to
acknowledge their hand in the oppression. They are recognizing that
having a fifth grade math curriculum in third grade creates math
phobias. They are cutting back on homework. They are giving students
time away from academics and sports – time for group reflection
and for service to others.
Colleges
are starting to change their policies. Some are accepting, without
prejudice, students from schools that have eliminated AP classes.
They are holding places for accepted students who choose to take a
year off after high school. Admissions officers are weighing teacher
recommendations on par with SAT scores and GPAs.
If a student looks spectacular on paper, but isn’t
enthusiastic and generous of spirit, the schools don’t want him
around.
The
Talmud teaches that every parent has an obligation to teach his
child how to swim. As parents, our most important job is to prepare
our children for life, not just for class. I’m not denying the
competition. For many of us, if we applied now to the colleges we
went to we wouldn’t get in. No
matter how fervently we wish it, the children are no smarter or
stronger than we were, but they are smart enough to get into a good
enough school and have a good enough life.
If
the Taliban reflect the Arab world’s panic over the advent of
Western modernity and marketplace culture, the sacrifice of our own
children on the altar of the SATs is of a piece with the same
fundamentalist anxiety; the fantasy that a life with no room for
play or rest will save us from chaos. We have lowered the plague of
darkness into our lives, and the darkness is so complete that no one
can move. It is time to let them go.
This
article first appeared in The Jewish Journal of Greater Los
Angeles on March 22, 2002.
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