Charlotte Iserbyt is the consummate whistleblower! Iserbyt served as Senior
Policy Advisor in the Office of Educational Research and Improvement (OERI),
U.S. Department of Education, during the first Reagan Administration, where she
first blew the whistle on a major technology initiative which would control
curriculum in America's classrooms. Iserbyt is a former school board director in
Camden, Maine and was co-founder and research analyst of Guardians of Education
for Maine (GEM) from 1978 to 2000. She has also served in the American Red Cross
on Guam and Japan during the Korean War, and in the United States Foreign
Service in Belgium and in the Republic of South Africa. Iserbyt is a speaker and
writer, best known for her 1985 booklet Back to Basics Reform or OBE: Skinnerian
International Curriculum and her 1989 pamphlet Soviets in the Classroom:
America's Latest Education Fad which covered the details of the U.S.-Soviet and
Carnegie-Soviet Education Agreements which remain in effect to this day. She is
a freelance writer and has had articles published in Human Events, The
Washington Times, The Bangor Daily News, and included in the record of
Congressional hearings.
Download the entire book "
The Deliberate Dumbing Down of America"
here
www.deliberatdumbingdown.com
www.americandeception.com
Charlotte Iserbyt Archives
Are children deliberately 'dumbed down' in school?
Geoff Metcalf interviews former U.S. education adviser Charlotte Iserbyt
Editor's Note: Most parents want their children to receive a quality
education. Yet, low test scores, drugs and violence on campus are increasingly
prevalent in public schools and the disconnect between parents, educators and
administrators is widening. Why is this situation occurring when so much time,
money and attention are being directed toward improving education in the United
States?
Today, WorldNetDaily staff writer and talk-show host Geoff Metcalf interviews
someone who has some shocking answers, Charlotte Thomson Iserbyt. During the
'80s, Iserbyt was a senior policy adviser in the U.S. Department of Education
and has also written "The Deliberate Dumbing Down of America," a chronological
history of the past 100 years of education reform. In this interview with
Metcalf, she discusses the impact of the federal government, the United Nations
and influential corporations on the American educational system and a
little-known program called "School-To-Work."
By Geoff Metcalf
© 2001 WorldNetDaily.com
Question: The first thing I have to ask you -- I'm still not sure if this is a
blessing or a curse -- but ever since I returned to talk radio ten years ago, I
promised myself I wouldn't interview any author until I read their book. I was
intimidated when yours arrived in the mail.
Answer: I don't blame you.
Q: It is a big puppy. 714 pages worth.
A: It is a big baby.
Q: What led you to this project? You were with the Department of Education in
the '80s -- why the book?
A: I actually started collecting research in the early '70s. I was on a local
school board after living outside the country for 18 years for the United States
Department of State. When I came back, I was very upset with the changes I had
seen in our school district -- which had happened to be a pilot-school district
for change. The kids were rolling around on the floor -- they didn't have to
learn grammar or anything -- and I was shocked. I started asking questions and,
as the only parent who ever complained, I would go to school board meetings and
ask very legitimate questions like, why don't they teach grammar?
Q: How dare you ask such a silly question?
A: And, finally, a retired teacher came to me and she said, "You are right on! I
want you to go for some training to become a 'change agent.' We're going to find
out what is going on." So, she paid for me to go to this training. The training
came out of the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, and was funded by what was to
become my office in the U.S. Department of Education. It was funded earlier in
the '70s -- and it was still funded under Ronald Reagan, by the way. This
particular project was called "Innovations in Education/Change Agents Guide."
Q: So what did you learn in the training?
A: I was taught how to identify the resisters in my community. Those people who
-- good people -- good Americans who have seen and know clearly these programs
in the schools were not there to help our children academically.
Q: Hold on. This sounds as if instead of any modification in curriculum, the
objective was to go after the people who were complaining about changes in
curriculum?
A: Complaining about "values clarification" and complaining about "sex ed" and
complaining about all of these subjects that have education hanging off the end
of them. You know, we didn't used to have "math education" and "reading
education" -- that's not really education. When you have "education" hanging off
of it, you know that they have another agenda (except for "Drivers Ed"). Anyway,
these were the people in our communities in the '70s who were saying, "I don't
like that sex education. I don't think it is up to schools to teach my children
there's no right or wrong." And saying, "I don't like that drug education and
what's that critical-thinking education?"
I was trained because they didn't know who I was.
Q: Who were you?
A: I was a resister. I was actually being trained to identify myself. And I
didn't like it. The other part of it was, I was trained to go to the
highly-respected people in our community ...
Q: Wait a minute. So, once you identified these so-called resisters, these
people who were critical of people who defend the indefensible, then what do you
do?
A: That's a very good question. No other talk-show host has ever asked me that.
It's a good question. What do you do? You identify them and then the
superintendent will try to get them onto a task force and make them have
"ownership" and ...
Q: Ahhh -- a re-education program?
A: Yeah -- you got it! That's a very good question -- really, truly -- I've
never had a talk-show guy ask me that question.
Q: It seems like an obvious question.
A: It is a very obvious one, and that's why it took me a while to come up with
an answer. But that's exactly what the reason was. And, then, the other thing I
was going to do was to identify the important people in the community -- good
people, good Americans who have really been used with the Rotary, Chamber of
Commerce, Garden Club -- go to them and convince them that these programs are
vital to the survival of this country, of the world: The world is changing we
have to have these programs.
I was really shocked. I was absolutely appalled. You have to remember: I had
been out of the country 18 years and I had left a country that was red, white
and blue, mom and apple pie, and all that.
Q: You were a dinosaur.
A: Well, yeah! I was a dinosaur. I had lived in socialist countries and I had
traveled in communist countries and I had seen a lot. And, I thought to myself:
"What the [blank] is going on in my own country?"
Q: Charlotte, what about teachers? There are some good teachers who are
genuinely dedicated ...
A: Many. Many, many more than most people think -- and they have to keep quiet.
Q: Yeah but what is their reaction when they are presented with these
controversial, non-academic methodologies that don't have anything to do with
teaching anyone anything?
A: They are very unhappy, and they try to continue to do something that does
have something to do with teaching and learning. I just recently heard the state
of Oregon has passed legislation to get rid of tenure. I was always opposed to
tenure. Now I'm in favor of tenure because what they are going to do now ...
Q: ... now, see, I'm opposed to tenure. Why do you support it now?
A: Because of the way they are going to use it. Now, they can get rid of the
good teachers without any problem. It used to be getting rid of the bad ones
right? Now, they are going to get rid of the academic teachers. The teachers who
do not agree with George Bush's education agenda -- you know the outcome-based,
direct education, teach-to-the-test. These poor teachers -- these poor children
-- and they do not agree in the changing of the definition of quality teaching.
Q: Charlotte, I'd like you to explain to our readers at what point did it become
more important to manufacture this concept of self esteem -- and the fact that
if you can "feel good" about the process, it doesn't matter what the results
are. When did that happen?
A: Well, you know, it all started in 1934 when the Carnegie Foundation set the
agenda for the next hundred years and that was to change our country from a
free, individualistic economy to a planned economy -- and to do it through the
schools. And the way they would do it, would be to change the social studies so
nobody would know what our form of government is -- and how precious it is --
and to not teach the Constitution. This is the Carnegie Corporation plan -- to
implement a planned economy through the schools. And it is going in right now.
Q: OK, that's the background and foundation. But at what point, recently, did
they effect the significant change in direction, content and product?
A: At what point did all the touchy-feeling stuff happen? Carnegie happened in
1934, the United Nations in 1945 ...
Q: The only touchy-feeling stuff I encountered in school was if you didn't do
what you were supposed to do -- when you were supposed to do it, the way you
were instructed to do it -- Brother Benilde would smack you up side the head
with a book.
A: Well, that's right, but they don't want people to be educated, and this is a
very important point. I know there are people out there who think: "Goodness, I
thought the whole purpose of the corporations forming partnerships with the
public sector (which actually is corporate fascism) was so that the schools
would give our children better academic skills?" That's not true. According to
David Hornbeck -- Mr. Carnegie and the big honcho for "School To Work," he said
in his book, "Human Capital," which he wrote with Lester Solomon, that the
corporations do not want educated people.
Q: Why?
A: Because educated people are very difficult -- they ask too many questions,
they quit their jobs, etc.
Q: Actually, the way it has developed now, (and I think the primary reason they
want to maintain the Department of Education) the corporations will identify
what vacancies and needs they have and "train" workers. Charlotte, I want you to
explain "School To Work" because I get so angry and seething when I think about
it -- and try to talk about it -- that I sometimes butcher it.
A: So do I. I think the best way -- and I really recommend Congress do this,
because it would be cheaper than going to Europe -- I would like all of them to
go down and spend six months in Cuba. Is that a good answer?
Q: If they don't come back, it would be great.
A: Well, go down to Cuba and you will see the same system implemented there that
they are implementing in Oregon, in California and in Maine and everywhere.
Where the children are identified at a very early age, psychologically profiled
-- fourth grade in some cases. In fact, the whole idea of work is started in
kindergarten.
Q: Hold on a moment, Charlotte, because we have to stress something here.
A: What?
Q: This is not fiction. This is not something out of a Stanley Kubrick movie.
This is something that is going on right now!
A: That's right. It is in. It is not vocational either -- which is something I
have always supported. I'd like to share with your readers the story I sent you
about the 12-year-old youngster in Minnesota. He understood what I was talking
about and he said to his mom, "I want to choose my own future!" And he went to a
big rally they held in Minneapolis at 12-years old. Isn't it interesting that
this 12-year-old understands what "School To Work" is.
Q: And, beyond that, what about the people who don't "find" themselves until
they are 40?
A: You're not kidding. I'm a bit older than that and sometimes I wonder if I've
found myself ... I'm still looking for myself.
Q: I often joke when people ask, "What are you going to do when you grow up?"
Duh? It presupposes I will grow up and that I will know. I'm still working at
it.
A: We all have a lot of talents we don't know about until later on when
something happens. You are absolutely correct. The thing is that is the German
dual-track system of education and work-force training. It is the Soviet system
-- people don't like to use that word. It is the Cuban system.
Q: What people need to recognize is they are trying to identify kids at an early
age for what their aptitudes are. Not based on what the kids talents and
abilities are, but what the corporation need is.
A: That's right. Actually everything is focused on the good of the state now. It
is the state that is important -- not the individual's upward mobility, the
individual's future life. That's the way education used to be. You asked me
earlier when the change took place.
Q: Are you going to answer it now?
A: Yes. It really took place in 1965 under Lyndon Johnson. And that followed the
agreements that Eisenhower signed with the Soviet Union in 1958. I feel they
very strongly influenced our agenda in education.
Q: I just dodged the bullet. I graduated in 1966.
A: You were lucky. In 1965, they couldn't get American educators to implement
this agenda that the Carnegie Corporation wanted. Also, an incredible
psychologist -- Brock Chisholm -- at the United Nations recommended getting rid
of the conscience to the World Health Organization. And he recommended doing
that through the schools by training the teachers to be little psychiatrists.
None of this was accepted by any American educator until 1965. I don't think
even at that time they really accepted it but it did pass. The Elementary and
Secondary Education Act was a major, major shift. It moved our marvelous system
of education -- which, up until 1960, was the best in the world -- from
academics, what you know in your head, to a performance-based system which we're
screaming about: outcome-based education, mastery learning and Skinner (who said
"I can make a pigeon a high achiever by reinforcing it on a proper schedule"). I
think your readers can understand the difference between knowledge based in your
head and performance based. Performance is how you perform on the job -- that is
not the role of the public school system or any education system that I can see.
Q: And it changed in 1965?
A: That changed in '65. From that time on, all these incredibly horrible
values-destroying programs were developed: values clarification, survival games,
critical thinking. Geoff, I have a manual published in 1967 that is three inches
thick of values-destroying programs. And people say, "Why Columbine?"
Q: Let me ask you this -- because I've spent a fair amount of time talking and
writing about it -- the connection between the epidemic prescribing of
psychotropic drugs to kids as a means of controlling them?
A: Absolutely. There's a very interesting appendix in my book about a Hawaii
Master Plan in 1968. A pilot project for the whole country that was carried out
in Hawaii and federally funded and it included just about everything that is
taking place right now. But there was a recommendation in there to use these
psychiatric drugs on our children. This has been planned for a long time. They
don't want independent little active monsters running around in the classroom.
Q: There is an interesting sidebar to this. There is a woman in the San
Francisco Bay area who has home schooled all her kids. Her daughter just went in
the Army. The recruiters were surprised and elated that she scored remarkably
high in just about every test. They gave her something like an $18,000 bonus for
enlisting. They couldn't understand why she was so far superior to all the other
recruits. Obviously the key reason is she was shielded and protected from public
education.
A: There is no question if a parent is able to do that (and not all are -- I'm
not sure I could have) they certainly should be home schooling. Or, if you can't
home school, try to find a private school.
Q: But that shouldn't be necessary if the public schools had not been so
corrupted.
A: It shouldn't be necessary, but we need to note that there are good public
schools. Although there won't be for long because of the redefinition of
academics -- and that good teaching is no longer what it used to be -- so we
won't have really much of a public school system. There'll be nothing left in a
few years because of the legislation that is going through Washington, D.C.,
right now and the way they have been crashing the public school system ever
since I left my office in the Department of Education. However, right now, you
have to look carefully at private schools. In many cases, they may well be worse
than the public schools at the moment.
Q: So what do you suggest to concerned parents?
A: Well my recommendation is different from anybody else's because I guess I'm
naive and have stars in my eyes and wear rose-colored glasses ...
Q: ... and you are sheltered in Maine.
A: Oh yeah ... sheltered in Maine ... well, I'll tell you when I moved here I
thought I had moved out of the country. People don't quite understand "School To
Work" here either and we are very important in "School To Work." But the only
solution to this problem -- and it is a big problem because it doesn't just deal
with education -- if we allow this so-called "education" system to continue,
this country hasn't got a chance to hold on to its freedom.
They are taking our form of government -- Congress did this in the '90s with
this legislation where they effectively changed our free system of government to
a planned economy. A planned economy is not a free system at all. And if
Americans think it is, they ought to go down to Cuba and take a look. In my
opinion nothing short of abolishing the U.S. Department of Education will take
care of this problem. And that means not back to the state level but back to the
local level.
Q: Weren't the Republicans going to do that?
A: Yes, Ronald Reagan promised to do that when I was there. And I think many of
us were really disappointed that this didn't happen. There is no way for us to
cure the problems in American education and for this country to stay free as
long as that building is allowed to exist there in partnership with the
Department of Labor. It gets all of its instructions ...
Q: Charlotte, I got a correspondence a couple of years back and the letterhead
had both departments at the top of it.
A: That's right. They are in partnership. But, another thing is, they do not put
the United Nations on top -- that is where the whole thing actually comes from.
What we're putting in now -- I don't think people realize and this -- includes
the school-choice proposals I'm talking about. What is going in now is
international. You have the same school-choice proposals, charter schools, et
cetera going into Russia. You have the Outcome-Based Education / Direct
Instruction in Hong Kong. And for people to feel this is even a national program
-- it is not. It is international.
I think that Benjamin Bloom is probably the behavioral psychologist who came up
with the outcome-based ed and mastery learning -- he was a big U.N. guy. He died
a couple of years ago. The purpose of education, as far as the United Nations is
concerned, is to change the thoughts, actions and feelings of students. Bloom
went on to define "good teaching" ...
Q: What ever became of the concept of seeking out knowledge and information?
A: No, no -- people have to understand and it took me long time too -- when we
see all these failures, we put all the money into the system and then the test
scores go down, and we keep saying, "Why? Why? Get with it folks!" I finally
realized about 10 years ago when I finally started putting all the stuff
together, when we think it's a disaster, to them, it's a success.
Q: They are accomplishing their objective.
A: Absolutely. Because they don't care whether our children can read, write,
count, et cetera -- they really don't. When they put these programs in like
Outcome-Based Ed -- and we have proof of that one -- because we have the
evaluation of the major outcome-based education program that went in under
Reagan ...
Q: What did it say?
A: The evaluation said that, no, it really didn't work, that success --
academically -- was not there. But it was successful because it turned the
system on its head from inputs that we used to have to outputs. Output is
performance, and it's necessary for workforce training.
Q: If the government took all the money that is whizzed down that rat hole of
the U.S. Department of Education -- and didn't give it to the states -- but
somehow distributed it through block grants or something to the local schools,
and put the local schools in competition ... I remember my wife used to brag
because she went to high school in Lexington, Massachusetts, and once upon a
time they had the best school system in the country ...
A: Yep ...
Q: Not any more ... but if you allowed the local schools to compete, the quality
of education would go up just through the benefits of competition.
A: I think it's true, but you are always going to have the strings attached as
long as you have the federal money coming in. That's why I would like to see us
just abolish the U.S. Department of Education -- in which case, all the state
departments of education are going to collapse because they get up to 80% of
their operating budget from my old office.
Q: Cool! That would be a good thing.
A: Wouldn't it be wonderful? And, then, we go back and restore the finest system
the world has ever known. Now that to me would be even more devastating to the
United Nations people -- the internationalists -- than getting out of the U.N.
Because if the biggest country, the most important economic power in the world,
the United States, all of a sudden decided to jump off board of the "School To
Work" agenda, which is an international one, they are going to be in such
trouble they will not know what to do.
Q: Therein is the problem -- selling it. What about George Bush continuing with
this?
A: He wanted it all along. Bill Clinton was certainly involved in "School To
Work" but it was George Bush the elder who initially put his big message into
the Congressional Record. The elder Bush was big on apprenticeships and "School
To Work." And, I hate to say it, but Ronald Reagan was the one who actually
contributed the most to "School To Work" by implementing the concept of
Public-Private Partnership. That's in the Communist Manifesto -- Industry and
Government.
Q: Don't be shy or reticent. I have been telling people as long as I have had a
forum, it is not a question of who is right or wrong but what is right or wrong.
A: You're right, but that is very sad. When Reagan went along with the
partnership concept -- which, like I said, is in the Communist Manifesto, merge
industry with the government -- then he signed the agreements with Gorbachev on
education, Then, the Carnegie Corporation got involved -- and what they are
giving us is the Soviet system.
Look, in my book, in 1932, you saw William Foster, chairman of the Communist
Party USA write a book "Toward a Soviet America" and what he called for was a
United States Department of Education, the Pavlovian method that is going in
under direct instruction. He called for the scientific method. He called for the
teaching of evolution. Get rid of patriotism. All of this has gone in.
Now you can't tell me that George Bush doesn't know this. He was the one who
recommended keeping the U.S. Department of Education last July. When the
Republicans wanted to keep in the platform to get rid of it -- to abolish the
Department of Ed -- he took that out. He purposefully took that out. He knows,
although he talks local. He says we're going to have local controls. How can you
have local control when you have the United States Department of Education
dictating every single thing to our schools right now? There is no way we have
any local control left.
Q: We have heard from some people about a Japanese concept of Kai Zin. It but
basically it deals with tearing down in order to build up something new.
A: That is absolutely correct. In order for them to implement the new system
they have to destroy the old one. David Hornbeck is the majordomo on that. He's
been in I don't know how many states. He's destroyed Kentucky, he's destroyed
Philadelphia. I don't know where he is now but you have to watch him. It is so
sad that parents do not see what we see because it has been so gradual and now,
when you have George Bush and Ted Kennedy agreeing on George Bush's education
agenda, that doesn't really leave any room for anybody to be concerned.
Q: When the allegedly rabid left and right start agreeing without compromise
that in and of itself is cause for concern.
A: That's right. But where do we go? George Bush is the controlled right and Ted
Kennedy is the controlled left. Control -- that is the point. And they have met
at the radical center. These are the people who are supporting the
communitarianism idea which if you look in the dictionary it says, "communistic
form of government." Who on earth would ever dream that the Republican Party
could end up with someone in the White House who is supporting a concept --
communitarianism -- that is defined in any dictionary you want, as a communistic
form of government?
Q: But the dumbed-down American populous either doesn't believe you or they
marginalize you as just a conspiracy theorist. Despite these people being in
your face with it.
A: You're right -- the most important documents with the proof, of course, are
the very old ones. Yeah, they are in your face but they are not in the faces of
the average good American who has really been manipulated. It has been a very
diabolical plan. They use the three-pronged fork. They use semantic deception,
which are words that sound so good like "basic skills." Then they use gradualism
like the frog in the cold water -- you heat it up over 50 years and the frog is
dead. And then you have the dialectic where you deliberately create a problem --
and you get people to scream and go out of business -- and then you impose the
solution and people are so upset at the problem that they accept anything.
That's the three-pronged fork, without which we never would have been taken.
Plus, the dumbing down -- because if the American people do not understand the
Constitution, the Bill of Rights and that we do have a special form of
government here, we are not going to know when those things are taken away from
us.
Q: And those in our Congress were either intentional or manipulated
co-conspirators.
A: That is exactly what has happened with the Congress when they voted for this
change in our economic system to make it like Cuba -- they obviously didn't know
that we had a wonderful free-enterprise system that had brought people to the
shores of America for the past 150 years.