by Alfie Perry-Ward
It is an induced myth that the purpose of
education is to conjure up free thinking individuals capable of challenging
power and having the confidence to question what they have been told to be
truth. In fact, Historically, institutional education has been
manipulated to serve the interests of those who rely on political and cultural
conservatism
in order to retain and consolidate their power.
It
is easy to draw countless examples of educational manipulation from periods of
history where totalitarian regimes arise. Among these, the Stalinist and Nazi
regimes seem to be the most appropriate examples. However, it would be wrong to
omit the current the European education systems of this crime that is so
prevalent if we make the effort to no longer conceal the relationship between
education and power.
Education
systems, more importantly higher education systems, in mainland Europe,
America and the United Kingdom were designed, developed and implemented by
those who simultaneously designed, developed and implemented the political,
cultural and economic reality of western civilisation. In other words, the
higher educational systems of western society have the purpose of sustaining
structural normality regardless of whether or not the structural normality is
grossly unequal. For example, if we care to investigate the British political
elite we will notice that not only do they stem from the same class, background
and financial positions, but also the same schools, and universities; notably
Oxbridge. Of the 55 prime ministers to date, 41 attended Oxbridge, 14 of which
went to the same college, Christ Church. Surely, anyone with a belief in the
principles of democracy can see that those who supposedly represent the
interests of the whole country are in fact representatives of only a minuscule
portion of the population.
In
fact, the majority of higher educational systems dedicate huge efforts to
finding more effective and efficient ways of exploiting those whom the systems
of America and Europe so desperately rely on and for these people to remain
exploited. This continually enforces the systems that are in place to eliminate
the possibility of political or cultural change as the interests of the
powerful are projected on to the powerless. Thus, there is an undoubtedly a visible
correlation between the manipulation of education and the preserving of the
power systems put in place to serve the elite.
Therefore,
when we come to define the purpose of education, it would be insanity to think
that this corruptive misuse of educational structures is the only legitimate
way of utilising knowledge. To think of
another, we must first understand that education is a human pursuit, not an
endeavour specific to one group, culture, race, religion or gender. The notion
that education is unique to white westerners in elite academic universities is
one manifested in pseudo-scientific lies. If we study the history of education
globally then we would understand that Ancient Aztec groups constructed a
mandatory education system for children of all classes in order to sustain
intellectualism among young people. We would also recognise the Hindu and
Buddhist systems of Ancient India that offered free education in advance
mathematics and yielded the decimal system that we so trivially use today (it's
worth noting that even though this system is around 2500 years old it included
the teachings of female scholars).
Perhaps we would also know that there are
700 000 manuscripts surviving from the Timbuktu, the capital city of the 16th
century West African empire. This is more than any other educational
institution from this period of history. The manuscripts have intricate detail
of everything from Art and Music to Mathematics and Philosophy as well as
detailed studies of Astronomy and the moon. In turn we can disregard the idea
that there is an essence of exclusivity in education, which is a false doctrine
perpetuated through Anglo-centric ignorance. Only now, with the mentality that
education is a universal necessity, can we begin to define education. We should
focus on the kind of people we want to be rather than advocate the career
orientated manifesto that has been drilled into us since we entered the
educational system. It is perfectly logical to enhance our technological
capabilities while still remaining attached to the spiritual essence of
ourselves and using our knowledge to bring about the kind of world we want to
live, a world with more empathy, compassion and internationalism and cease to
be taught to only serve one type of system with one type of perspective.
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