The schoolyard gate: schooling and childhood in global perspective.
Anderson-Levitt, Kathryn M.
Deux et deux quatre
quatre et quatre huit
huit et huit font seize
Repetez! dit le maitre.
Deux et deux quatre
quatre et quatre huit
huit et huit font seize.
Mais voila l'oiseau-lyre
qui passe dans le ciel
l'enfant le voit
l'enfant l'entend
l' enfant l'appelle:
Sauve-moi
joue avec moi
oiseau! ...
Jacques Prevert (1)
Wanting Out, Wanting In
The ultimate task here is to ask how schooling as a global
phenomenon affects the experiences of children around the world and the
cultural construction of childhood. But before I can suggest directions
for research on those questions, I must ask whether or in what sense
schooling is in fact a global phenomenon. Just as it is inaccurate to
conceive of global cognitive effects of "literacy" because
literacy is not a single thing in lived experience, so it would be
inaccurate to think of schooling as having a single effect on children,
for it represents different lived experiences. Still, certain patterns
or "grammars of schooling" have persisted over the long term
across wide regions. (2) It is the first task of this essay to determine
whether we can now discern a particular grammar of schooling that
encompasses the whole world. Since I am an ethnographer, let me begin
with some concrete images.
In France, a low fence often surrounds urban elementary and
pre-elementary schools, and parents turn over their children to teachers
at the schoolyard gate. The fence, although not the high chain-link
affair that one sees at some urban U.S. schools, functions symbolically
to separate the children's lives in school from their lives at home
and in the neighborhood. I begin with a question about the schoolyard
gate as a way to launch a reflection on what schooling means for
children and for childhood. The question is, is the gate keeping
children in or keeping children out?
In a brilliant synthesis of anthropological theory on formal
schooling, John D'Amato begins from the premise that, all else
being equal, children do not want to be in school. He cites examples of
children challenging teachers' authority from North America,
Europe, and Japan to support his case. (3) Tom Sawyer eluding the
classroom to sneak off to an island in the Mississippi is one image that
comes to mind. Another metaphorical image to conjure up is one of
schoolchildren clinging to the schoolyard gate (or gazing out the
classroom window, as in Prevert's poem above), longing to be free.
Indeed, a primary reason for children's resistance, says
D'Amato, is that "school is compulsory and otherwise
constraining." (4)
Now, continues D'Amato, "if children nonetheless comply
with school, then the perceived benefits of school must in some way
outweigh the costs." (5) The perceived benefits may be extrinsic,
intrinsic, or both. On the extrinsic side, D'Amato notes that most
middle-class children as well as working-class children of immigrants
recognize that school brings "external rewards for compliance and
sanctions for resistance," specifically, that school achievement
will probably lead to a decent job and reasonably high social status for
them as adults. In contrast, "caste-like" or
"involuntary" minorities and lower-class children cannot count
on extrinsic rewards; the same applies to children in the low-achieving
classrooms in any school. Notably, African American and Native American
students tend to believe, with some justification, that school
achievement will not necessarily pay off for them because of job
ceilings. (6) Meanwhile, on the side of intrinsic rewards, children may
choose to comply with school when they find it "an intrinsically
enjoyable process" by virtue of a positive relationship with
teacher or peers, a sense of mastery and accomplishment, or (although
not mentioned by D'Amato) the joy of learning. (7) If schooling
neither promises extrinsic rewards nor offers immediate intrinsic
rewards, students will resist schooling and will flee it as soon as they
can.
With those thoughts in mind, I went to do fieldwork in the Republic
of Guinea. To my naive eye, schools there seemed even less inviting than
D'Amato portrayed them. Benches were hard and crowded, classrooms
were hot if not stifling, and almost all teachers indulged in corporal
punishment to greater or lesser degree. Indeed, whereas U.S. teachers
often talked about making learning "fun," in Guinea I was
told, "Il faut suffrir pour apprendre" (to learn one must
suffer).
Thus my fascination when, on making a first visit to a school in
downtown Conakry, I approached the school gate and witnessed a
schoolboy--a boy about the age of Tom Sawyer--clinging to the outside of
the gate, begging to be let in. The director had punished this student
for some offence by banishing him from school for the day. A burly man
with a "whip" made of a strip of rubber stood at the gate,
keeping the boy from entering. Then I recalled that my colleague Ntal
Alimasi had explained to me about his own childhood in Zaire that
students wanted to be in school and certainly preferred school to being
home, where they would have to do chores. That is why the big punishment
was to be "bani" (banished), turned away from school. (8)
One can also find a similar disjuncture in views of schooling
between the global North and South in the research literature. Since the
days when functionalism lost favor, much educational literature in
Europe and North America has cast schooling as a repressive arm of the
state. However, you will rarely find an African intellectual making such
an argument, and scholars in Latin America have pointed out that the
most repressive regimes there had dismembered, not embraced, state
schools, while local populations were appropriating rather than
resisting schools. In Mexico, for example, public schools can be seen,
at least for those children who manage to get in and stay in, as a
liberating force that offers a relatively equalizing experience to the
nation's children in the context of strong gender, class, and
ethnic distinctions outside of school. (9) In Guinea, where primary
schooling still reaches only about half the country's children,
parents mobilize to build schools in the hope of enticing the state to
send a teacher to their village. I saw parents petitioning a school
director to ignore the official limit of 50 children in a first grade
and let their child enroll.
Here are two contrasting images of schools, then: Children clinging
to the gate wanting out in the global North, children clinging to the
gate wanting in in the global South. The contrast implies that schooling
does not mean the same thing everywhere, nor do children experience it
in the same way around the world. Indeed, I will argue that Ministries
of Education, teachers, and parents appropriate schooling in ways that
make the lived experience different from country to country and, in
fact, from school to school. The biggest differences will be found when
contrasting schools in the most and the least affluent countries.
Nonetheless. Nonetheless. I will also argue that schooling, in
spite of the great variation in its embodiment in different places,
really can be said to be a global phenomenon. I will make this argument
first in a simple-minded way, by pointing out how schooling has spread
almost to every corner of the earth. A quick tour of world culture
theory (neo-institutionalism) will offer a nonfunctionalist explanation
of why that spread took place. Then I will return to D'Amato's
synthesis to suggest that his argument may after all apply to schools in
the South as well as the North. That argument will require us to
consider functions of schooling, particularly the infamous sorting
function.
Having better established what schooling is as a global phenomenon,
I will then turn to two questions about which I can offer speculation
more than a body of research. These are, first, how global schooling
affects children's lived experiences; here I will argue that
schooling has brought parallel kinds of sorting to all countries,
assigning life chances to children based on childhood achievement.
Second, I will ask how schooling affects the cultural construction of
childhood; here I will argue that the particular way in which we do
schooling at present leads us to categorize children by micro-age-grades
and by newly defined individual traits like "maturity" and
"intelligence."
Education and Schooling
From an anthropologist's perspective, "education"
means much more than schooling. In its broadest sense, education means
the entire learning experience of children or other novices, whether
provided deliberately or more haphazardly within the culture. (10) In a
narrower but still anthropological sense, education (or "formal
education") means deliberate intervention intended to affect the
learning experience of children or other novices through "formal,
predictable, stereotypic learning experiences." (11) Formal
education includes such practices as apprenticeship, initiation, and
lectures, sermons and scolding as well as schooling. (12) Schooling, in
frequent contrast to initiation and to apprenticeship, is formal
education usually carried out in a place separated from ordinary life
and conducted by an expert "stranger." (13)
This essay concerns schooling. In particular, it concerns schooling
of the current "Western" mode as opposed to older forms such
as Mandarin examination-based education or Brahmin apprenticeships, or
alternative contemporary forms such as Quranic schools. (14) More
specifically yet, this essay refers to primary schooling, the years of
basic education in literacy and other foundational skills and knowledge,
except where I make specific reference either to pre-elementary
education or to secondary or postsecondary education.
The focus on primary schooling means that this essay concerns
children whose chronological ages range from about 5 to about 13 years
of age. In most nations, basic schooling is now mandated by law, (15)
and begins officially at age 5, 6 or 7, depending on the country (the
average being 6 on most continents and 6.5 in Africa). Comparative data
sets usually assume a primary schooling cycle of 6 years in length
(although primary schooling in the United States commonly lasted 8 years
until the emergence of junior high schools and middle schools). (16)
However, in many countries children may enter earlier and often enter
later than the specified age; they may also drop out much sooner than
legally permitted, and sometimes linger in primary school far beyond the
standard age. Thus the children I observed in primary schools in Guinea,
which covered six years of instruction, ranged in age from 5 to about
15.
For reasons that will become clear below, I focus on the historical
period since primary schooling became a mass rather than an elite
phenomenon, beginning in the 19th century in Europe and North America,
and beginning in the mid-20th century in the rest of the world. (17)
Globalization and Global History
"Globalization as a concept refers both to the compression of
the world and the intensification of consciousness of the world as a
whole," says Roland Robertson. (18) "Compression" is a
label for the accelerating growth in the 20th century of connections
among people around the world. Human beings have migrated and traded
from the beginning of the species, (19) but there seems to have been a
sharp recent increase in the number of migrants, the volume of traded
goods and the distances of typical trades, the accessibility of instant
communication (accelerating since the invention of the telegraph), and
the speed of travel. (20) Among the most important connections are those
of economic inter-dependency, and thus globalization is often defined in
terms of the spread of a capitalist world system. (21) However, the
accelerating connections include the flow of ideas as well. Thus
globalization is a word for the fact that one of my 45-year-old
colleagues in Guinea liked to listen to Bob Dylan, Celine Dion, and
Michael Jackson, while I like to listen to Orchestra Baobab. It is a
word for the experience of hearing a child in an elementary school courtyard in a provincial town in Guinea singing the Macarena in 1998.
Robertson's reference to globalization as an intensification
of consciousness of the world as a whole defines globalization as a
mindset or ideology. This mindset has been attributed to the experience
of seeing photographs of the world taken from space, but the
consciousness actually developed much earlier. (22) The sense of
globalization as consciousness is related to the concept of
globalization that I find most useful: world culture theory or
neo-institutionalism. (23) World culture theorists argue that a single
global model of schooling has spread around the world as part of the
diffusion of a more general cultural model of the modern nation-state, a
model that also includes templates for organizing government, health
systems, the military, and other institutions. (24)
Importantly, Peter Stearns reminds us in the Conclusion to this
issue that globalization must mean more than simply modernization.
Globalization is not just about the diffusion of modern model of the
state and its schools, but about a point at which people came to believe
that the model must inevitably diffuse to every corner of the world.
World culture theorists imply that that moment came in the history of
schooling by the 1950s.
"Globalization" does not always mean Westernization.
Food, manufactured goods, high art and popular culture flow South to
North as well as North to South. (25) However, the world culture as
described by world culture theorists does have Western roots; (26)
indeed, these theorists see much of its foundation in "the
distinctive culture of Western Christendom." (27) Importantly,
"Western" is not synonymous with "North American."
Indeed, from the world culture perspective, international organizations
have played a major role in diffusing world culture since the 1950s.
Moreover, the West is hardly a monolith; it is rife with contradictions
and competing ideas. (28)
To say that there is a world culture--a set of learned norms and
vocabulary and half-formed know-how shared around the world--is not by
any means to say that the world is homogenized. It is not to say that
there is only one culture in the world. Rather, it is to say that in
addition to all the national and ethnic and occupational and religious
and other cultures in the world, humans have now invented a world
culture that provides models and norms for certain parts of life:
military systems, national governments, schooling, hospital systems. The
world culture rubs elbows with, influences and is influenced by a myriad
of other cultures.
The Diffusion of Modern Schooling
The idea of modern schooling has indeed spread to the entire globe,
and Western-style schools can be found everywhere now. They co-exist
with other systems of formal education such as Quranic schools and have
displaced alternative school systems such as those that used to exist in
China and Japan. (29) Virtually 100 percent of children of the
appropriate age range attend primary school in Canada, Sweden, the
United States, and other nations of the North. (30) By the late 1990s,
87.6 percent of the entire world's children of the relevant age
group were attending primary school, and between 40 and 100 percent
reached grade 5 in reporting countries. (31) Even secondary schools have
become systems of "mass" rather than elite instruction in the
world and of nearly "universal" instruction in the North. (32)
Postsecondary education is also becoming a "mass" system in
the North.
According to world culture theorists, the diffusion took place in
three phases. From early in the 18th century through the 1870s, the core
countries of the global North established national schooling and
achieved almost universal education. (33) In the second phase, from the
1870s through World War II, other countries and colonies gradually
"entered the system," beginning to keep track of their small
but growing population of schooled children. Then, starting in the
1950s, the spread of mass educational systems accelerated rapidly. By
that point, "there seems to have been much less resistance to, or
fewer alternatives to, mass education expansion." (34) The first
phase may be labeled "modernization" rather than
"globalization." However, a sense of "global
inevitability" had developed by the 1950s if not, incipiently,
during the second period. Hence, even though the world is significantly
more schooled since the 1970s (with rates per continent of 75 percent or
higher) than it was in the prior two decades (continental rates of 40
percent or higher), the critical change dates from the 1950s if not
earlier.
Not only has the idea of schooling spread across the globe but,
argue world culture theorists, schooling all over the world takes the
same general form. (35) Schools everywhere are mass, co-educational
institutions ostensibly designed to encourage economic growth,
development of the nation and, sometimes, development of the individual
student. School systems tend to be administered by national ministries
of education, although the United States is an exception. The outlines
of a common global elementary curriculum can be discerned. (36) Schools
tend to consist of age-graded "egg-carton" classrooms (one
teacher per group of 15-100 students), and whole-class lecture and
recitation paired with seatwork tends to dominate. (37) Some see even
more convergence--for example, on a 6-year elementary, 3-year middle
school, and 3-year secondary pattern, or on the ideal of child as active
learner. (38)
Differences in Schooling around the World
However, what has really spread around the world? Do countries have
in common anything more than a paper policy? Is schooling really
universal enough and uniform enough that it might be said to have
created a new "common circumstance" for children everywhere?
(39)
First, we realize that just because most countries demand 6 to 10
years of schooling does not mean that all children comply. The rate of
school attendance is only 60.4 percent in the least developed countries,
and as low as 24 percent in Niger, 19 percent in Haiti, and 13 percent
in Bhutan. (40) Among those who attend school, some spend 20 years or
more and some only a year or two or even a few months. Moreover, there
is great variation in enrollment between boys and girls and between
urban and rural residents in many countries, as there are differences in
years of schooling attained across social classes in every country.
Second, the material conditions of schools North and South vary
drastically. For example, every school in France and many individual
classrooms in the United States have computers, whereas schools in the
Republic of Guinea would be lucky to have as many as one book (of any
kind, whether reader, mathematics textbook, or storybook) per child.
Schooling in Japan takes place in sturdy and functional buildings; in
some parts of the world it takes place in a hot room under a leaking
roof, or in no building at all.
Moreover, as we saw, children in the South tend to want in whereas
children in the North, if D'Amato is right, tend to want out. This
difference derives from other differences in the experience of
childhood. Where would the children be when or if they were not in
school? In the North, they would be swimming, roaming the wilderness,
playing video games, or otherwise skylarking--or so Mark Twain implies.
In Guinea, as my colleague Alimasi hinted, unschooled girls would be
selling products in the marketplace in the city or cultivating a field
in a rural area; unschooled boys might be shining shoes in the city or
climbing palm trees to collect palm oil nuts in the countryside. In
other parts of the South, children work in manufacturing, care for their
siblings, or otherwise contribute in cash or non-cash labor to the
family economy. (41) Schooling in the South, then, can be seen as
liberating in both intellectual and physical terms. It
"liberates" children's minds from the "bonds"
of illiteracy--or, less cynically, it really does open up a global
network of ideas to students by training them in a world language and by
providing at least hints about how to learn more. But schooling also
liberates them, at least for the hours spent on its benches, from
physical labor.
Beyond these gross differences, which are rooted partly in the
difference between affluence and poverty, schools differ because of
national cultural differences. For example, student-teacher ratios differ between Japan and the United States not for financial reasons,
but because of underlying differences in pedagogical philosophy. (42)
The language of instruction may be a child's home language, another
language spoken in the community, a national language unfamiliar to some
or all of the children when they enter school, or a completely alien
world language like English or French. And as R.J. Alexander has
lovingly documented, national traditions influence teachers'
philosophies and thus the shape and flow of a "lesson." (43)
Moreover, at the local level teachers and parents and children
themselves may appropriate the forms and activities of schooling to suit
local meanings, as in Pulap, or in rural Mexico of the 1920s. (44)
Indeed, national and local cultures are so powerful that many
ethnographers argue that schools are not really alike at all around the
world, whatever superficial parallels one may find in their official
organization or official curricula. (45) There are also differences from
one school to another in the same country, from one classroom to another
within the same school, and even from one class to another when holding
the teacher constant. (46)
What has spread around the world, then, is nothing but a shell. The
lived experiences of teachers and students and the meanings of those
experiences are not the same.
How Might Global Schooling Shape Childhood Experiences?
Yet, however thin the shell of global schooling compared to its
rich local cultural content, I argue that global schooling nonetheless
must have an impact on childhood experiences and on notions of
childhood. In this section and the next, I propose what kind of impact
that may be. Although I draw on my own and others' research, my
ideas here are untested--they call for verification by other comparative
researchers. The rest of this article, then, is a program for further
research.
Learning
The ostensible purpose of schooling is to help children learn.
Schooling exposes children to literacy in a national or world language,
and as rates of schooling go up, official literacy rates follow. Some
scholars argue that "a minimum of six years of primary schooling is
necessary" in order "to ensure irreversible adult
literacy," (47) and we have noted that not all children stay for
six years. Nonetheless, shorter exposure to school must have other
impacts.
Certainly, even brief schooling makes new ideas available to
children as learners. Schooling usually exposes children to a national
or world language, even in countries where schooling begins in a local
language. In Guinea, for example, children learn two or three local
languages at home and on the street, but they learn French at school. In
many countries, a world language is an important passport to urban jobs
from the civil service to driving a taxi. Moreover, exposure to the idea
of books, even if books are not readily available in the classroom,
introduces children to new definitions of authoritative knowledge that
may differ from that learned in the extended family, in Quranic School,
or in other settings. For example, the ideology of school knowledge in
West Africa as free and available contrasts with local traditional ideas
that important knowledge is secret and reserved for the few. (48)
As world culture theorists argue, schooling also exposes children
to a certain conception of themselves as individual citizens of a
nation. (49) Thus in Guinea children learn that, whatever their
linguistic and religious ties to local groups and to groups that
transcend West Africa, they belong to the nation of Guinea with its
peculiar geography, political structure, and post-independence history.
The same children learn, too, about the wider world that they have not
seen (although they may well visit it some day). In the inland Forest
region of Guinea, children memorize that "an ocean is a vast
expanse of salt water," and they copy maps of U.S. geography into
their notebooks.
Meanwhile, time spent in school is time taken away from traditional
childhood tasks, which means loss of opportunity for other kinds of
learning. For example, as children in the Amazon basin in Ecuador
increasingly participate in Western-style schooling provided by North
American missionaries, they have less time and opportunity to learn to
chant, make tools, hunt, and gather. (50)
New Niches for Child Development
Schooling also shapes the contexts in which children develop and
learn. According to Beatrice and John Whiting's extensive research
on childhood across the globe, the age and the sex of the people with
whom a child interacts are among the most powerful influences on a
child's developing personality. (51) I cannot comment on the sex of
schoolteachers as child caretakers, for there is no fixed world pattern
for the sex of elementary schoolteachers, who are more likely to be
female in the North but may be male or female in the South. I can
comment on the sex of children's playmates and classmates. In some
societies, such as traditional Navajo society, children tend to cluster
or may even be pressed into same-sex playgroups. (52) Yet almost
universally, elementary schools are co-educational. Even in countries
where female seclusion is important, such as Pakistan, separate
girls' schools have apparently not been common, at least not until
very recently. (53) Schooling has thus shifted girls and boys in many
parts of the world from a gender-segregated to a gender-mixed world.
Granted, the effect must depend on local gender practices and gender
ideologies, but it is the global imposition of co-education that raises
the question in the first place.
Regarding the age of caretakers, there is great variation in world
socialization patterns, from child nurses to care by grandparents. The
Whitings found that children reared largely in child peer groups tended
to be more nurturing and less independent-minded, while children who
spent much of their time with adults tended to be more independent but
less nurturing. Schooling places children in a room with 15-100 children
and 1-2 adults for several hours a day, often for several years. For
children who would otherwise have been reared in the adult-centered
environment typical of industrial societies, schooling increases
exposure to child peers. For children from societies that encouraged
sibling care (as do many pastoral and horticultural people in rural
areas of the world), schooling may expand dependency on adult
supervisors.
The precise impact of the classroom age structure also must depend
on the actual child-to-adult ratio and the teachers' philosophy
about it. Thus Japanese preschool teachers reported that a ratio of 40
children per adult teacher was a good thing because it allowed children
to interact without adult intervention, whereas a ratio of about 8 to 1
is required by law in U.S. preschools. (54)
Schooling also affects age grading, overriding biological
definitions of childhood stages even more forcefully than other cultural
interventions. Schooling has expanded well into the reproductive years,
to the point that girls' school achievement depends in some
countries on their success in avoiding pregnancy. (55) Extended
schooling can delay the age of social adulthood by as much as a decade
for those who go to graduate school. (56) Schooling also reaches back
before what human growth scholars call the "juvenile" stage
(that is, before the age of about 7), incorporating children too young
to fend for themselves into an organization composed of
"strangers" rather than kin. (57)
Sorting Children into Adult Statuses
Another function of schooling everywhere is to sort children into
the statuses they will hold as adults. Western schooling came to
function as the key credentialing system in Germany beginning in the
18th century, then in the United States and Japan in the 19th and early
20th century, and in the rest of the world by the mid-20th century. (58)
Schools became the mechanism--or at least the officially recognized
mechanism--for social reproduction and social mobility
("success"). Granted, children still tend to inherit their
parents' social statuses, for academic achievement correlates with
race and social class of origin. However, the children of the elite now
have to inherit via the mechanism of academic selection, or at least
appear to do so. The child from a high status family will not
automatically succeed, and the child living in difficult circumstances
has at least a slim chance of succeeding.
Western schooling crowds out other forms of formal education like
initiation rituals that were designed to bring an entire age group to
the same level rather than to weed out students. (59) Western-style
schooling also has supplanted or is supplanting other systems for
reproducing social statuses, and not just the system of direct
inheritance of wealth. Some societies provided a mechanism for mobility
through competition in a realm such as entrepreneurship (as in the
United States even, to a limited extent, today) or through the military.
Some societies--notably Mandarin China--relied on their own non-Western
educational systems to train and even to identify the ruling classes.
(60) However, the establishment of Western-style schooling in all of
these societies has displaced other systems of credentialing. (61) Now
the child's future fate depends at least in part on effort made and
success achieved in school. (62) Thus, schooling dangles external
rewards, not just in the North but throughout the world.
It follows that D'Amato's synthesis, with which I began
this essay, may apply to the global South after all. In the North, there
are two different categories of students operating in a stratified society where status is controlled by access to university, especially
to high-status universities. Caste-like minorities and lower-class
students are required to attend school but question that they will gain
access to the university and its rewards; hence some of them resist from
within. On the other hand, for children in Guinea and in other countries
where schooling is not yet universal, future status is determined,
first, by who gets into school at all. Therefore, relatively speaking,
all the children in Guinean schools are in the position of the voluntary
immigrants' children in the United States. (63) Although they face
hardships and inequities, they can see a reward for those who manage to
enter and continue in school analogous to the reward in the North for
students who manage to complete university studies. Therefore, whatever
intrinsic joy in schooling they may find--and some do find it--children
in the global South have strong extrinsic motivation to stay in school
and to succeed. They are ready to put up with long walks to school with
long hours on hard benches in hot classrooms, sometimes without
breakfast, and with corporal punishment for the reward they hope school
will bring. (64) By D'Amato's logic, all students in the
South, like immigrant students in the North, bend to school's
tyranny for strong instrumental reasons.
How Might Global Schooling Shape Cultural Conceptions of the Child?
I suggest that schooling as we have currently organized it also
shapes everyday and scientific conceptions of childhood. (65) To begin,
schools encourage us to focus attention on traits of the individual
child to explain performance in school. This is not surprising given
that we depend on schools to evaluate children as individuals and to
sort them accordingly. The tendency to focus on the child's traits
rather than the teacher's performance is exacerbated to the extent
that egg-carton schooling makes it difficult to compare teachers and
hence lets the teacher slip into the background as the taken-for-granted
and seemingly constant element in a classroom of varied children. (66)
(Note however that certain systems of teacher mentoring, as in China and
Japan and some training experiences I witnessed in Guinea, encourage
teachers to compare themselves to their peers and hence to notice their
own effect as well as student traits as explanations of student
learning.)
Much of the talk about children's traits focuses around the
world on the child's effort and motivation. At least, it was
certainly the case the teachers punished children for failing to make an
effort in Guinea. Meanwhile, studies of teachers' beliefs in the
United States, Belgium, Germany, and France identified
"effort" as a salient category when teachers explained
students' performances. (67)
In Europe and North America, teachers also explain a child's
performance with the curious concept of "maturity." Maturity,
in the school context, can be thought of as a child's mental age.
For example, one teacher who took the notion of maturity particularly
seriously told me, "Sebastien [age 6] was tested by the
psychologist, who found that, as far as reading and math go, he has the
age--that is, the level--of 5 years 3 months to 5 years 6 months, so he
cannot learn to read." I suggest that this notion of
"maturity" developed in response to structural features of
schooling in the North. First, given the function of the school to sort,
we evaluate children as individuals. Second, we have organized the
curriculum in the form of a linear, graded set of stages. (68) A linear,
graded curriculum makes it easy to judge individual children against one
another according to their progress through the expected stages.
Schooling comes to resemble a race. Third, where there is a compulsory
starting age for school, we tend to associate progress through the
stages with the typical or average age at which children reach each
stage. Given those three conditions, what is more
"natural"--albeit culturally constructed--to speak of a child
as a "year behind" or "six months ahead" of his or
her peers?
Teachers in Europe, the United States, and elsewhere also talk
about the child's intelligence. Apparently every society has a
notion of intelligence or competence by which people, including
children, can be judged. (69) Cultural notions of intelligence
vary--being associated, for example, with quickness in some societies
but with slow deliberation in others. (70) However, I suggest that the
notion of academic intelligence as we now understand it in the United
States is another concept that derived from the advent of compulsory
schooling. (71) Alfred Binet designed early tests to measure
intelligence with reference to children's school performances.
Binet interpreted his measure of performance as "mental age,"
the rough equivalent of the concept of maturity discussed above. (72) It
follows that the concept of academic intelligence derived from the same
features of schooling--evaluation of individual children, linear graded
instruction, and a compulsory starting age--as the concept of maturity.
The concepts did not emerge from pure psychological research; rather,
psychologists who refined these concepts (Jean Piaget as well as Binet)
first developed the concept in response to problems posed by mass
compulsory schooling. (73)
Another trait that teachers often cite in first-grade classrooms in
France and the United States is the child's age, measured in
months. For instance, a teacher in France said of a child,
"She's old; she was born in January," just as teachers in
the United States have been heard to say, "He's a January
child" or "He's an August birthday." (74) All else
being equal, teachers expected older children to perform better. Taken
in global perspective, this focus on pinpoint chronological age is an
astounding new development. Kapsiki parents in Kenya measured childhood
not in months but in chunks of time that span years. They divided
childhood into only three stages, as did Ifaluk parents on the other
side of the world, while Marquesans did not differentiate among
"kids" at all until the sexually active stage. (75) Western
Europeans themselves only gradually broke childhood into stages during
the 16th and 17th centuries and, even when they did, age grades mattered
little in some rural areas until well into the 20th century. (76) Yet
teachers in France and the United States have created micro-age
stages--in societies where human beings live longer and are schooled
longer than ever before. (77)
I suggest that the focus on age is encouraged by the same features
of schooling that lead us to focus on maturity and intelligence, plus
one additional feature--a fixed start date for the school year. As a
result of the fixed day for school entry (in early September in France,
for example), new first graders do not begin the race at exactly the
same age. The legal school-entry age in France, for example, actually
ranges from 5 years 9 months to 6 years 9 months. (78) It is true that
12 months represents a large portion of a first grader's life. Yet
consider how, in the context of the 4-year range of school-starting ages
of the 17th century, a 12-month range would have appeared negligible.
My arguments about age and maturity do not apply for children in
those parts of the global South where starting age, even if set by
compulsory schooling legislation, remains fluid in practice. No one
would expect teachers to measure student ages in months when their first
graders still range in age, as they do in Guinea, from five to ten years
old. It should also follow that the concepts of maturity and of
intelligence in the sense of "mental age" would not offer
themselves as readily to teachers in those countries. Here is a testable
hypothesis: where schooling becomes completely universal and more
strictly linked to age, as in the North, expect more talk about age,
maturity and academic intelligence, not simply because these concepts
diffuse from North American and European academia, but because of the
real circumstances in which teachers find themselves evaluating children
and explaining their performances. Indeed, we should be able to test
this hypothesis already, for example, by comparing teacher talk in Latin
America, where participation rates are high, with teacher talk in
sub-Saharan Africa or the Indian subcontinent, where participation rates
are lower.
Conclusion
In summary, schooling as a common shell, albeit practiced very
differently on the ground, has spread around the globe. Almost
everywhere children participate in it for at least a few months if not a
few years.
The spread of Western-style schooling means that children growing
up around the globe have a more uniform experience of socialization than
in the past. That is because, varied as it is, schooling is a more
uniform experience than family socialization, which has taken several
different forms. In spite of local and national variability, classroom
experience has roughly a single structure. (79) It may also be more
uniform than children's work experiences, if you compare shoe
shining in the streets of Conakry to caring for siblings to making
carpets in Afghanistan. Perhaps it is more uniform than apprenticeships
(how many children learn through apprenticeships today?). It may or may
not be more uniform than exposure to pop music and television, but we
know that children learn more from face-to-face exposure than from
television, at least when it comes to learning language. If not more
uniform than early induction into the military, schooling is,
mercifully, the more common experience.
Schooling has partially displaced other socialization patterns,
including sibling care, gender segregation, and the learning of local
knowledge through formal or informal apprenticeship to elders. It has
brought new kinds of age grading, including micro-age-grading of the
early years, and new conceptions of intelligence and maturity. Because
of school's sorting function, the performance of young children
will determine their future (and perhaps that of their family)--in
contrast, for instance, to situations where success depends on events in
adolescence or young adulthood, such as making a good match or on
starting out one's farm or business well. By sorting, schooling
blocks the mobility of many in the North, contrary to its alleged
purpose. However, schooling probably sorts more fairly than many other
systems in stratified societies--caste, rank, or wealth. As scholars
from the South remind us, it promises mobility as well as intellectual
liberation, and it sometimes makes good on its promise.
ENDNOTES
Acknowledgments. Research in Guinea that influenced my thinking
about these questions was generously funded by the Spencer Foundation,
and made possible by the participation of Guinea's Ministry of
Education and its Institut National de Recherche et d'Action
Pedagogique. Earlier research in France was supported by the University
of Michigan, the University of Michigan-Dearborn, the National Science
Foundation, the National Institute for Mental Health, and the Council
for European Studies. I am grateful to Peter Stearns for the invitation
to participate in this conversation, and to the participants for their
insights and suggestions, particularly Wolf Schafer, Peter Stearns,
Elizabeth Kuznesof, Brian Platt, and Bruce Mazlish. Nils Kauffman and
other students in Lynn Paine's Winter 2004 Comparative Education
course at Michigan State University also helped shape the argument.
1. Two and two four/ four and four eight/ eight and eight are
sixteen/ Repeat! says the teacher/ Two and two four/ four and four
eight/ eight and eight are sixteen./ But there the lyre-bird/ passes by
in the sky/ the child sees it/the child hears it/ the child calls to
it:/ Take me away/ play with me/ bird! ... "Page
d'ecriture" in Paroles, Paris: Gallimard, 1972, 145, my
translation.
2. Elsie Rockwell, "Recovering History in the Study of
Schooling: From Longue Duree to Everyday Co-Construction," Human
Development 42 (1999): 113-128, p. 125.
3. John D'Amato, "Resistance and Compliance in Minority
Classrooms," in Minority Education: Anthropological Perspectives,
ed. Evelyn Jacob and Cathie Jordan (Norwood, NJ, 1993).
4. D'Amato, 188. He also cites as reasons for resistance the
"contentious" nature of instructional interaction, which
requires students to compete in publicly evaluated displays of
knowledge, and the fact that students are taught in groups, so that
resistance can become a group norm.
5. D'Amato, 189.
6. D'Amato, 191. The point about involuntary minorities builds
on John Ogbu's theory; see, for example, John U. Ogbu, Minority
Education and Caste: The American System in Cross-Cultural Perspective
(New York, 1978); John U. Ogbu and Herbert D. Simons, "Voluntary
and Involuntary Minorities: A Cultural-Ecological Theory of School
Performance with Some Implications for Education," Anthropology and
Education Quarterly 29 (1998): 155-188. Recent evidence of the
persistence of job ceilings comes from Marianne Bertrand and Senhil
Mullainathan, "Are Emily and Greg More Employable than Lakisha and
Jamal? A Field Experiment on Labor Market Discrimination," National
Bureau of Economic Research, available at
http://www.nber.org/papers/W9873.pdf2003. Ogbu's theory is very
influential, although it has been challenged in the case of gender
(Roslyn Arlin Mickelson, "Why Does Jane Read and Write So Well? The
Anomaly of Women's Achievement," Sociology of Education 62
[1989]: 47-63), and in the case of some European countries (Margaret A.
Gibson, "Complicating the Immigrant/Involuntary Minority
Typology," Anthropology and Education Quarterly 28 [1998]:
431-454).
7. D'Amato, 191. The value of culturally relevant pedagogy, in
this context, is that it increases intrinsic rewards by according more
respect to students and thus making the classroom more appealing.
8. Granted, there were exceptions; I encountered an urban schools
that held no recess for its afternoon session on the grounds that many
children would have gone home and not come back during that hottest part
of the day.
9. Elsie Rockwell, "Ethnography and the Commitment to Public
Schooling: A Review of Research at the DIE," in Educational
Qualitative Research in Latin America: The Struggle for a New Paradigm,
ed. Gary Anderson and Martha Montero-Sieburth (New York, 1998).
10. For example Margaret Mead, "The Education of the Samoan
Child," chapter 3 in Coming of Age in Samoa (New York, 1928).
11. Yehudi A. Cohen, "The Shaping of Men's Minds:
Adaptations to Imperatives of Culture," in Schooling the Symbolic
Animal: Social and Cultural Dimensions of Education, ed. Bradley A. U.
Levinson and others (Lanham, MD, 2000), 86.
12. Jules Henry, "A Cross-Cultural Outline of Education,"
in Educational Patterns and Cultural Configurations: The Anthropology of
Education, ed. Joan I. Roberts and Sherrie K. Akinsanya (New York,
1976).
13. Cohen.
14. See Randall Collins, "Comparative and Historical Patterns
of Education," in Handbook of the Sociology of Education, ed.
Maureen T. Hallinan (New York, 2000).
15. By 1990, even in sub-Saharan Africa, which has the lowest rate
of Western-style schooling, nearly 60 percent of countries had passed a
compulsory school law (John Boli and Francisco O. Ramirez,
"Compulsory Schooling in the Western Cultural Context," in
Emergent Issues in Education: Comparative Perspectives, ed. Robert F.
Arnove, Philip G. Altbach, and Gail P. Kelly [Albany, 1992]).
16. "Children" are released from school (whether primary
or secondary) at 16 in the United States and Canada, and at ages varying
from 15 to 18 in Europe, from 12 to 16 in Central America, and in Asia
at ages varying from 10 in Bangladesh to 17 in Japan. The length of
compulsory schooling, which may include secondary schooling, ranges from
5 years in some Asian countries to 13 years in the Netherlands. Table
394, Selected Statistics for Countries with Populations over 10 Million,
by Continent, "International Comparisons of Education,"
National Center for Educational Statistics, 2000, available at
http://nces.edu.gov/programs/digest/d02/tables/PDF/table 394.pdf,
downloaded 2/14/04.
17. Martin Trow defines "mass" participation, as opposed
to elite participation, as enrollment of more than 15 percent of an age
cohort. We are, however, especially interested in levels of enrollment
he labels somewhat misleadingly as "universal participation,"
that is, greater than 50 percent of an age cohort; Martin Trow,
"From Mass Higher Education to Universal Access: The American
Advantage," in In Defense of American Higher Education, ed. Philip
G. Altbach, Patricia J. Gumport, and Robert O. Berdahl (Baltimore,
2001).
18. Roland Robertson, Globalization: Social Theory and Global
Culture (Thousand Oaks, CA, 1992), 9.
19. Jerry H. Bentley, Old World Encounters: Cross-Cultural Contacts
and Exchanges in Pre-Modern Times (New York, 1993).
20. Arjun Appadurai, Modernity at Large: Cultural Dimensions of
Globalization (Minneapolis, 1997).
21. Immanuel Wallerstein, "The Rise and the Future Demise of
the Modern World System," in The Globalization Reader, ed. Frank
Lechner and John Boli (Malden, MA, 2000).
22. In response to the first Ptolemaic map in Europe in 1400,
according to David Harvey as cited by Bruce Mazlish, "An
Introduction to Global History," in Conceptualizing Global History,
ed. Bruce. Mazlish and Ralph Buultjens (Boulder, CO, 1993), 17. The
notion that the "sun never sets on the British empire" evokes
an image of the whole world at once, as does the account of the global
voyage of the Pequod with its international crew in Moby Dick.
23. The label "world culture" comes from Francisco O.
Ramirez, Yasemin Soysal, and Suzanne Shanahan, "The Changing Logic
of Political Citizenship: Cross-National Acquisition of Women's
Suffrage Rights, 1890 to 1990," American Sociological Review 62
(1997): 735-745), and from John Boli and George M. Thomas, eds.
Constructing World Culture: International Nongovernmental Organizations since 1875 (Stanford, CA, 1999). Other authors refer to the ideas of
John W. Meyer and his colleagues variously as "institutional
theory" (Nitza Berkovitch, From Motherhood To Citizenship:
Women's Rights and International Organizations [Baltimore, 1999],
7); as "institutionalism" (Martha Finnemore, "Norms,
Culture, and World Politics: Insights from Sociology's
Institutionalism," International Organization 50 ([1996]: 325-47);
"neo-institutionalism" (Benjamin Levin, Reforming Education:
From Origins to Outcomes [New York, 2001]); as "global
rationalization" (Scott Davies and Neil Guppy, "Globalization
and Educational Reforms in Anglo-American Democracies," Comparative
Education Review, 41 ([1997]: 435-459); and, somewhat misleadingly, as
"world systems theory" (W.K. Cummings, "The InstitutionS
[sic] of Education: Compare! Compare! Compare!" Comparative
Education Review 43 ([1999]: 413-37).
24. John W. Meyer, John Boli, George M. Thomas, and Francisco O.
Ramirez, "World-Society and the Nation-State," American
Journal of Sociology, 103 (1997): 144-181, 168.
25. Ulf Hannerz, "The World in Creolisation," Africa, 57
(1987): 546-559.
26. Francisco O. Ramirez and John Boli Ramirez, "The Political
Construction of Mass Schooling: European Origins and Worldwide
Institutionalization," Sociology of Education, 60 (1987), 12-17.
27. Meyer, Boli, Thomas, and Ramirez, 168.
28. Kathryn M. Anderson-Levitt and Ntal-I'Mbirwa Alimasi,
"Are Pedagogical Ideals Embraced or Imposed? The Case of Reading
Instruction in the Republic of Guinea," in Policy as Practice, eds.
Margaret Sutton and Bradley Levinson (Norwood, NJ, 2001).
29. John Boli, Francisco O. Ramirez, and John W. Meyer,
"Explaining the Origins and Expansion of Mass Education," in
New Approaches to Comparative Education, eds. Philip G. Altbach and Gail
Paradise Kelly (Chicago, 1986); Collins (note 13); Brian Platt, this
volume.
30. National Center for Educational Statistics (note 16).
31. UNDP (United Nations Development Programme), World Development
Report 2000 (Oxford, 2000), 194-197.
32. Again, using Trow's definitions of "mass" (more
than 15 percent) and "universal" (more than 50 percent.)
33. Ramirez and Boli (note 25).
34. John W. Meyer, Francisco O. Ramirez, and Yasemin N. Soysal,
"World Expansion of Mass Education, 1870-1980," Sociology of
Education, 65 (1992): 128-149, 142.
35. Kathryn M. Anderson-Levitt, "A World Culture of
Schooling?" in Local Meanings, Global Schooling: Anthropology and
World Culture Theory, ed. Kathryn M. Anderson-Levitt (New York, 2003).
36. Aaron Benavot, Uyn-Kyung Cha, David H. Kamens, John W. Meyer,
and Suk-Ying Wong, "Knowledge for the Masses: World Models and
National Curricula, 1920-1986," in School Knowledge for the Masses:
World Models and National Primary Curricular Categories in the Twentieth
Century, eds. John W. Meyer, David H. Kamens, and Aaron Benavot
(Washington, DC, 1992).
37. LeTendre, et al.
38. John W. Meyer and Francisco O. Ramirez, "The World
Institutionalization of Education," in Discourse Formation in
Comparative Education, ed. Jurgen Schriewer (Frankfurt/New York, 2000).
39. To use Raymond Grew's terms from his essay in this volume.
40. UNDP, 197. Note that where there is less than 100 percent
participation, gender patterns vary. Whereas girls have a better chance
than boys to attend school in certain countries of Latin American and
Africa, in the least developed countries as a whole they average only 80
percent a boy's chance of going to school (UNDP, 256-258). I have
not yet found data, if they exist, on how many years children actually
spend in school in various parts of the world.
41. See Elizabeth Kuznesof in this volume.
42. Joseph J. Tobin, David Y.H. Wu, and Dana H. Davidson, Preschool
in Three Cultures: Japan, China, and the United States (New Haven,
1989).
43. Alexander, Culture and Pedagogy: International Comparisons in
Primary Education (Malden, MA, 2001); see also Karen Bogard Givvin,
James Hiebert, Jennifer K. Jacobs, Hilary Hollingsworth, and Ronald
Gallimore, "Are There National Patterns of Teaching? Evidence from
the TIMSS 1999 Video Study," paper presented at the American
Educational Research Association, Chicago, April 21, 2003.
44. Juliana Flinn, "Transmitting Traditional Values in New
Schools: Elementary Education of Pulap Atoll," Anthropology and
Education Quarterly 23 (1992): 44-59; Elsie Rockwell, "Keys to
Appropriation: Rural Schooling in Mexico," in The Cultural
Production of the Educated Person: Critical Ethnographies of Schooling
and Local Practice, eds. Bradley Levinson, Douglas Foley, and Dorothy
Holland (Albany, NY), 1996.
45. See the chapters in Anderson-Levitt, Local Meanings.
46. Kathryn M. Anderson-Levitt, Teaching Cultures: Cultural
Knowledge for Teaching First Grade in France and the United State
(Cresskill, NJ, 2002), 32-33.
47. Mathieu Brossard and Aboubacar Sidik Yattara, "Close-Up of
an Educational System: Guinea under Scrutiny," ADEA Newsletter
(Association for Development of Education in Africa) 15 (2003), 21-24.
48. Caroline Bledsoe, "The Cultural Transformation of Western
Education in Sierra Leone," Africa, 62 (1992): 182-202.
49. And perhaps as citizens of the world; Deborah Reed-Danahay,
"Europeanization and French Primary Education, in Anderson-Levitt,
Local Meanings.
50. Laura Rival, "Formal Schooling and the Production of
Modern Citizens in the Ecuadorian Amazon," in Levinson, Foley, and
Holland.
51. Beatrice B. Whiting and Carolyn Pope Edwards, Children of
Different Worlds (Cambridge, MA, 1988); John M. Whiting,
"Adolescent Rituals and Identity Conflicts. In Cultural Psychology:
Essays On Comparative Human Development, James W. Stigler, Richard A.
Shweder, and Gil Herdt (Cambridge, 1990).
52. Suzanne G. Frayser, Varieties of Sexual Experience (New Haven,
CT, 1985).
53. B. Herz, K. Subbarao, M. Habib, and L Raney. "Letting
Girls Learn: Promising Approaches in Primary and Secondary
Education," World Bank Discussion Papers, no. 133. (Washington, DC,
1991), 29.
54. Tobin et al. (note 41).
55. Caroline Bledsoe, "School Girls and School Fees among the
Mende of Sierra Leone," In Beyond The Second Sex, ed. Peggy Sanday
and Ruth Goodenough (Philadelphia, 1990).
56. However, adulthood is highly variable across cultures. In rural
Ireland it did not come for a man until his aged parents finally
retired, at which point he might be in his 40s himself.
57. Biological anthropologists define childhood, a stage unique to
human beings, as the stage between eruption of the last baby teeth and
the appearance of the first permanent teeth (Barry Bogin, "The
Evolution of Human Growth," in Human Growth and Development, ed.
Noel Cameron [San Diego, 2002]).
58. Collins (note 13).
59. Describing the severe hazing of initiation in an aboriginal
Australian group circa 1900, George Spindler argued, "The whole
operation of the initiation school is managed to produce success....
There are no dropouts" ("There Are No Dropouts Among the
Arunta and the Hutterites," in Fifty Years of Anthropology And
Education 1950-2000, George D. Spindler and Louise Spindler [Mahwah, NJ,
2000], 185). Some of my colleagues in Guinea raise the objection that
children actually are permanently typed based on their stoicism during
initiation ceremony. However, it is still true that none of them gets
officially excluded in the way that opting for a vocational track
excludes a student in France from taking the math-oriented baccalaureate
exam or failing calculus excludes students from certain career paths in
the United States.
60. Collins (note 13), 214.
61. Collins (note 13), 236. The theocracies in Iran and Afghanistan
are two apparent recent exceptions. See Ruth Hayhoe, "Modernization
without Westernization: Assessing the Chinese Educational
Experience," in Emergent Issues in Education: Comparative
Perspectives, ed. Robert F. Arnove, Philip G. Altbach, and Gail Paradise
Kelly (Albany, 1992) for an overview of the transformation of the
Chinese system.
62. For families who can afford to invest in a child's
secondary and perhaps post-secondary schooling, the fate of the family
may depend not on the child's ability to bring in income, as
Kuznesof documents in this volume, but rather on the child's
ability to pay off on a family investment in his or her schooling.
63. Actually, the situation is more nuanced. Rural children's
schools are less likely to lead to adequate academic achievement, and
girls face more barriers than boys.
64. Boubacar Bayero Diallo, Parcours scolaires des filles en
Afrique: le cas de la Guinee, unpublished doctoral dissertation
(Montreal, 2004) illustrates the individual and familial strategies of
children, particularly girls, who succeed at getting into secondary
school in the Republic of Guinea. These case studies show the students
and their families focused on the extrinsic rewards of schooling.
65. Kathryn M. Anderson-Levitt, "Behind Schedule:
Batch-Produced Children in French and U.S. Classrooms," in
Levinson, Foley, and Holland; Anderson-Levitt, Teaching Cultures.
66. There is also a tendency built into the structure to attribute
problems to a child's parents or home. At least in the North, as
Willard Waller pointed out, parent and teacher are natural enemies (The
Sociology of Teaching [New York, 1965]). Schooling in the South may not
have the same structure built in, and hence the focus may be all the
more on the individual child's traits.
67. Anderson-Levitt, Teaching Cultures, 217-219.
68. For the most part. The curriculum in France and in some U.S.
schools does allow for a certain circling back to cover in more depth
the same content covered a year earlier.
69. Lewis R. Goldberg, "From Ace to Zombie: Some Explorations
in the Language of Personality," Advances in Personality
Assessment, ed. C. D. Spielberger and J. N. Butcher (Hillsdale, NJ,
1982).
70. For example, M. Wober, "Towards an Understanding of the
Kiganda Concept of Intelligence," in Culture and Cognition, John W.
Berry and Pierre R. Dasen (London, 1974).
71. Anderson-Levitt, "Behind Schedule."
72. William Stern later converted Binet's concept to the
concept of the intelligence quotient or I.Q., which so influences
thinking about intelligence in the United States. Like Binet, Stern
interpreted his measure of performance as "mental age."
However, Stern expressed mental age not as "years behind" or
"years ahead" of peers, as Binet had, but rather as a
quotient, mental age divided by chronological age. His mathematical
transformation of the concept meant that there was no making up a lag;
I.Q. was expected to be fixed.
73. Anderson-Levitt, "Behind Schedule." An important
point about concepts of intelligence: In the global North, schooling
tends to make boys look "stupid," at least in the primary
grades where girls outperform them in language arts. In secondary school
and higher education, a select subset of boys then begins to look
smarter than girls as they outperform girls in math. In contrast, in
parts of the global South such as Guinea, schooling constructs
"stupidity" in girls. Both teachers we interviewed and girls
themselves tended to believe that boys were smarter, as demonstrated by
their superior school achievement.
74. The French quote comes from Anderson-Levitt, Teaching Cultures,
201, the U.S. quotes are from M. Elizabeth Graue, Ready For What?
Constructing Meanings of Readiness for Kindergarten (Albany, 1993), 183
and 193. What counted as "old" or "young" was not
exactly the same between France and the United States: a child beginning
first grade at the age of 6 years 1 month would be considered
"young" in the United States but not particularly young in
France.
75. Sara Harkness and Charles M. Super, "The Cultural
Construction of Child Development: A Framework for the Socialization of
Affect," Ethos 11 (1983): 221-231; Catherine Lutz,
"Ethnopsychology Compared to What? Explaining Behavior and
Consciousness among the Ifaluk," in Person, Self, and Experience,
ed. Geoffrey White and James T. Kirkpatrick (Berkeley, 1985); James T.
Kirkpatrick, "Some Marquesan Understandings of Action and
Identity," in White and Kirkpatrick.
76. Philippe Aries, Centuries of Childhood (trans. by R. Baldick)
(New York, 1962); Antoine Prost, Histoire generale de
l'enseignement et de l'education en France (vol. 4,
L'ecole et la famille dans une societe en mutation) (Paris, 1981).
77. Is this analogous to the micro-stages of infancy presented in
manuals for new parents? Perhaps, since one month represents a about the
same proportion of a baby's first year of life as 5 months--the
difference between a "July birthday" and a "December
birthday" represents to a first grader. Even so, the question
remains--are we recognizing biologically determined stages or creating
culturally defined stages?
78. Schools were not always organized that way. The rural French
children that Laurence Wylie observed in the 1950s began school on the
day of their birthday, whatever the time of year. Some urban school
districts in the United States used to let children enter school in
either September or January (Village in the Vaucluse, 3d ed. [Cambridge,
MA, 1974]).
79. At most, there are two basic forms of primary school classroom
organization: the "traditional" face-front age-graded
classroom with one teacher and 20-100 students, which was once the
modern system that replaced the old one-room school recitation-based
classroom; and, secondly, the student-centered classroom with students
working on different projects in small groups or individually. I submit
that the latter model is not as common as we think, although it is
present as an alternative to the standard.
By Kathryn M. Anderson-Levitt
University of Michigan-Dearborn
Department of Behavioral Sciences
University of Michigan, Dearborn
Dearborn, MI 48128-1491