
“Credentialing, not education, has become the primary business of North American universities.”
Source: Dark Age Ahead (2004), Chapter Three, Credentialing Versus Educating, p. 44
The Magic of Images: Word and Picture in a Media Age (2004)
Context: As a classroom teacher for over thirty years, I have become increasingly concerned about evidence of, if not cultural decline, then cultural dissipation since the 1960s, a decade that seemed to hold such heady promise of artistic and intellectual innovation. Young people today are flooded with disconnected images but lack a sympathetic instrument to analyze them as well as a historical frame of reference in which to situate them. I am reminded of an unnerving scene in Stanley Kubrick's epic film, 2001: A Space Odyssey, where an astronaut, his air hose cut by the master computer gone amok, spins helplessly off into space. The new generation, raised on TV and the personal computer but deprived of a solid primary education, has become unmoored from the mother ship of culture. Technology, like Kubrick's rogue computer, Hal, is the companionable servant turned ruthless master. The ironically self-referential or overtly politicized and jargon-ridden paradigms of higher education, far from helping the young to cope or develop, have worsened their vertigo and free fall. Today's students require not subversion of rationalist assumptions -- the childhood legacy of intellectuals born in Europe between the two World Wars -- but the most basic introduction to structure and chronology. With out that, they are riding the tail of a comet in a media starscape of explosive but evanescent images.
“Credentialing, not education, has become the primary business of North American universities.”
Source: Dark Age Ahead (2004), Chapter Three, Credentialing Versus Educating, p. 44
Source: Computer-Aided Design: A Statement of Objectives (1960), p. iii; Abstract.
Source: Dictionary of Burning Words of Brilliant Writers (1895), P. 139.
“It is not easy to become an educated person.”
Methods of Mathematics Applied to Calculus, Probability, and Statistics (1985)
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Essays, Can Poetry Matter? (1991), The Catholic Writer Today (2013)
“Deprivation is the mother of poetry.”
Source: The Favorite Game
Source: Reforming Education: The Schooling of a People and Their Education Beyond Schooling (1977), p. 255
Man and Socialism in Cuba (1965)
Context: Our task is to prevent the present generation, torn asunder by its conflicts, from becoming perverted and from perverting new generations. We must not bring into being either docile servants of official thought or scholarship students who live at the expense of the state — practising "freedom." Already there are revolutionaries coming who will sing the song of the new man in the true voice of the people. This is a process, which takes time.