How schools are “factory-like” organisations
The current school system was mass-scaled in the 19th century to meet the needs of industrial economy. An instrument of the fast-expanding industrial society of the early 19th century, schools couldn't escape being built on the new-found principles of industrial organisation. We cannot really understand the schools of today if we don't start with the key features of industrial revolution. The two defining facets of industrialization are as under:
Developing machines that fed on mechanical power e.g. power of steam was used to operate machines, away from the dependence on the physical strength of men or animals. Use of mechanical power helped multiply the scale of operations. Mechanical power for machines was fairly fine-tuned by the early 19th century.
Inventing the assembly-line system (taken to eminence by Ford motor company) that took the quality in mass-production to the next level and implemented 'scientific management' on the shop floors to optimize production. Assembly-line system was fairly fine-tuned by the early 20th century.
In common parlance, “factory” is the assembly-line system. And what's one of the key characteristics of assembly-lines? They can only produce 'exact copies' of a small set of variants of a product and the highest productivity could be achieved with no variation in the product i.e. all products are of one type only.
It is very illustrative to recollect what 'assembly line' meant to Henry Ford:
"By 1918, half of all cars in America were Model T. However, it was a monolithic black. Ford famously wrote in his autobiography about his 'assembled cars' in the following terms – "Any customer can have a car painted any color that he wants so long as it is black". Until the development of the assembly line, which mandated black because of its quicker drying time, Model T was available in other colors, including red. The design was fervently promoted and defended by Ford, and production continued as late as 1928." – Wikipedia.
Why is industrialization held on a very high pedestal in human development if it killed diversity of choices? Industrialisation made scale and efficiency possible. Mass-production provided access to better quality of life to increasingly large proportion of communities across the world. We can debate the issue of quality of life and industrialization but the latter did democratize (cheaper) access to (quality) essentials and more. Industrialisation was a clear trade-off - cheaper, 'higher-quality', 'abundant', novel, accessible-next-door products versus on-order, personalized, made-in-units-of-one and costlier products. It greatly serviced a basic human instinct - universally appeal of cheaper and better products.
Picture: https://www.christianpost.com; CC license
And how do schools resemble factories?
Here are some of the pointers to the comparable features of factories and schools (by no means an exhaustive listing):
- Fixed-step assembly line– EVERY student has to go through the 14-step (14 years) grind to 'emerge finished'
- Fixed step-operations– Batches after batches (year after year) play out the same routine and syllabus at each class level
- Soap is a soap– Schools in Chennai and Srinagar, for instance, must follow the same steps of operations
- 4. All factories (almost) look alike- So are the schools (a building that is ∑Classrooms + empty playfields)
- Products come 'identically wrapped'– So are the students in uniforms, bags, buses, textbooks, copies, distinctive uniforms for PT
- Standard quality benchmarks and certification– Standard assessment content and reporting for all students and 'good, bad, ugly' certifications (but everyone gets it sooner or later)
- Clock-work operations for efficiency– Time-tabling is the most serious business in a school.
- Each step is also a unit of efficiency– each subject and its teaching are also ‘independently optimised' for classwork, homework, projects, assessments, delivery etc.
- Ceaseless production of faceless products–Students are mostly admission numbers who have to be 'pushed out' of every step to the last and not to be bothered about ever again.
- Competition defines quality- There is no hint of inherent excellence benchmarks in schools; a school has to just outdo the others in town (or just the neighbourhood) to be considered a good school.
More importantly, if all these seem hard on you (parents), take heart in the fact that 'industrial-era schools' will soon be passé. Partner with your child's school to prod the school to become a 'knowledge-era' school. Ironically, parental support is the most critical missing link in any school's quest for change.
The above discussion has been culled from "EDUCATION 3.0: ENABLING PROUD PARENTING " It is a book on new-age education, for parents! The book explores and settles the role of language, reading, concepts in mathematics and science, multiple intelligence development and subject-wise classroom strategies in a unique 'question and discussion' format to ensure an easy reading.
Cover picture: Wikipedia.com; CC license
Project Management | Engineering
4 个月Hi Gaurav, I googled "schools are like assembly lines" and landed up on this page. Your thoughts resonate with me. It is unbearable as a parent to see your child on the assembly line and go through the motions. Is there any alternative? If one decides to homeschool their children, what are the options for appearing in Competitive exams / attending college? I like the idea proposed by David Perell. It is something along these lines: "Together, communities of parents will hire teachers and pool resources for toys, books, and computers. As it stands, the logistics are easy compared to the societal challenges." So hire the best teachers to teach different subjects and build a wide spectrum of skills. If enough people get together, maybe this will be the norm in the future.
flawless articulation of the inability for schools to grow to meet the changing demands of the populace. and a great beginning for the conversation on what needs to be uprooted for instantaneous change.
Breaking with our heritage. Helping transform cities and regions into sustainable prosperity based on existential values (not just money) with sustainocracy, 4 x WIN, entrepreneurship in the 21st century.
9 年Parents are also positioned in the field of economic dependencies which are regulated and manipulated by government, banks and obligued economic security measures that destroyed family and society harmony in favor of fragmented individualised persuit of financial survival to avoid loss of housing and perceived wellness. Education of children is hence outsourced to the system that futher robotizes generations. To break through this impasse parents need to let go of the economic slavery and find personal leadership in new ways to sustain themselves and educate their offspring in a more holistic and self aware way. That is what f.i. #sustainocracy is all about.