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February 5, 2013

Abolish Social Studies: Born a century ago, the pseudo-discipline has outlived its uselessness.

Michael Knox Beran

Emerging as a force in American education a century ago, social studies was intended to remake the high school. But its greatest effect has been in the elementary grades, where it has replaced an older way of learning that initiated children into their culture with one that seeks instead to integrate them into the social group. The result was a revolution in the way America educates its young. The old learning used the resources of culture to develop the child's individual potential; social studies, by contrast, seeks to adjust him to the mediocrity of the social pack.

Why promote the socialization of children at the expense of their individual development? A product of the Progressive era, social studies ripened in the faith that regimes guided by collectivist social policies could dispense with the competitive striving of individuals and create, as educator George S. Counts wrote, "the most majestic civilization ever fashioned by any people." Social studies was to mold the properly socialized citizens of this grand future. The dream of a world regenerated through social planning faded long ago, but social studies persists, depriving children of a cultural rite of passage that awakened what Coleridge called "the principle and method of self-development" in the young.

Posted by Jim Zellmer at February 5, 2013 2:57 AM
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