Blog #3: “What Counts as Education Policy?” by Jean Anyon
Anyon's
thoughts are an invitation to rethink the current concept of "educational
policy," which is somewhat outdated and overly traditional. Rather than
confining it to standards, assessments, or school budgets, she argues that
broader economic measures, such as minimum wage laws or social welfare
policies, directly influence students' daily lives and, consequently, their
educational prospects. The economy is cross-cutting and impacts the average
citizen in all aspects of their life. Émile Durkheim believed that education
serves to transmit norms and skills for social cohesion (organic solidarity).
Anyon takes up the idea that school prepares students for society, but she
demonstrates that this education varies according to social class, thus
reproducing inequalities. This led me to question our educational system and
the overall system, and the tendency with which we dissociate schools from the
surrounding social and economic structures.
While
both agree that schools serve as a tool for economic preparation, Durkheim
views this as a necessary process of socialization, whereas Anyon sees it as a
structure that produces a differentiated workforce (working-class schools teach
obedience, while ruling-class schools teach critical thinking). One of the most
striking ideas lies in her insistence that it is impossible to truly improve
urban schools without addressing the poverty and unemployment within the
communities they serve. I found this idea both compelling and unsettling, as
many contemporary reforms continue to focus on "fixing" teachers,
curricula, or assessment systems, while sidestepping the issue of economic
inequality. Anyon’s perspective suggests that many school reforms are doomed to
fail if they ignore housing insecurity, low wages, and a lack of social
services. This led me to question how often we hold schools or teachers
accountable for problems that are, by their very nature, fundamentally economic
and political.
This
article also helped me redefine what constitutes "success" within the
context of debates on educational policy. Anyon suggests that improving
standardized test scores, in a context of endemic poverty, cannot be equated
with true justice; rather, authentic reform should be measured by the
improvement of prospects for students and their families, specifically: better
jobs, more stable housing, and accumulated social power. This expanded
conception of success reorients the debate, shifting it away from technical
solutions applied within the classroom and toward the structural transformation
of society. I thus became acutely aware of the technocratic nature of much
political discourse, as well as the scarcity of questions raised regarding the
redistribution of power and resources, through educational policies, to the
benefit of marginalized communities.
Anyon
aligns herself with the tradition of critical curriculum theories, which can be
viewed as an in-depth analysis of the social mechanisms that Durkheim had
identified on a more macroscopic scale. In short, Anyon applies and critiques
Durkheim’s theories of socialization to demonstrate how "school prepares
children for their future social and economic roles" through a
"hidden curriculum" differentiated by social class. Ultimately,
reading Anyon’s work has transformed my understanding of my own role within the
field of education. It has served to consolidate and reinforce my stance that
daily school practices are inextricably linked to the broader political
economy.
It seems it's always easier to apply fixes which only address symptoms, rather than causes. As you point out, no amount of holding teachers accountable will improve the issues caused by poverty and economic inequality. I'm not versed in Durkheim but I know that he is a one of the big three founders of sociology -- great analysis comparing his ideas to Anyon's and how her analysis challenges some of his basic assumptions and reinforces others. It seems his "organic solidarity" may have been an observation limited to the more privileged classes in which he moved, or perhaps the way that skills and codes are transmitted was understood to be different for different classes and that's actually how it creates the social cohesion he spoke of.
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