-Caveat Lector-

http://www.lewrockwell.com/north/north32.html

Stage Three in Education Has Arrived
by  Gary North

There is a fixed pattern in economic development that is not well
understood by the public. There are three main stages of
development. Using political terminology, I call these three stages
the oligarchic/autarchic,  the democratic, and the individualistic. I
realize that we lose some conceptual accuracy by transferring
concepts from one discipline  to another, but when no readily
recognized terms exist in one discipline, imports sometimes help.

Oligarchy

The oligarchic phase of an economy is where skilled craftsmen
produce mainly for the rich. The market is narrow. Competition
is based on quality rather than price. Meanwhile, poor families
produce for themselves (autarchy) and for barter with their
neighbors, with a few local producers of low-quality goods that are
priced in money, but at prices where the poor can just barely afford
them.

To maintain such a hierarchical, stratified economy, political
compulsion is mandatory. A common feature of the medieval
economy was the producers� guild. Members of a guild cooperated
politically with members of other guilds in cities to pass laws that
restricted access to local consumers. A system of hierarchical
apprenticeship and screening was established by each guild in
order to restrict competition. The goal was to keep price
competitive products away from consumers. This subsidized those
who competed in terms of high quality rather than price. It kept the
masses poor.

Democracy

At some point, those producers with the ability to produce a larger
quantity of goods by means of a new technology break through the
legal barriers. They beat their way into the market by offering
significantly lower prices. The market responds to a fundamental
economic law: "At a lower price, other things remaining the
same, a greater quantity will be demanded." I call this the
democratic phase of economic development. It is marked by a
decline of political compulsion in the market.

Price competition is initially associated with lower quality,
but only when compared to quality that had been available to the
rich elite. For the poor, these new mass-produced products
represent a quantum leap in quality. Buyers who could never have
afforded to buy similar goods at the older, higher prices now find
new products available and affordable. For them, the quality seems
very high: something rather than nothing. The goods� lower quality
in relation to the older array of prices and products is irrelevant
to the buyers.

Two groups oppose this development: those who produce for the
rich, who now find that some of their rich clients also like a
bargain; and those who produce for the poor, offering shoddy
merchandise at prices that the poor have barely been able to afford.
Both groups lose customers to the new producers.

Individualism

The new mass-market producers at first offer limited choices.
As was said of the Model T Ford, "You can get it in any color,
as long as you want black." The Model T opened the automobile
market to the growing American middle class. But in the 1920�s,
General Motors took this market away from Ford by offering five
brands of GM cars and many options within each brand line. This
price competitive market had begun to increase diversity. Ford
and Chrysler had to imitate this multi-brand automobile marketing
strategy in order to survive. Then came foreign imports in the
1950�s. Today, the level of diversity is beyond most car buyers�
ability to monitor.

Here is the pattern. Price competition initially creates a mass
market for some product line by offering minimal diversity. But
as these new mass production techniques are imitated by
competitors, diversity raises its lovely head. Buyers then are
offered more choices at far lower prices than existed before the
initial market-creating breakthrough took place. They get rising
quality and falling prices.

The microcomputer has been the best example of this process of
diversification in a physical product line during the last two
decades. As for services, the best example is the steady erosion
of network television�s audience to cable and satellite channels.
This process even has a clever phrase: from broadcasting to
narrowcasting. This is the individualism phase. Buyers can get
pretty much what  they want.

Dell Computer will sell you a computer with most of the features
you can imagine. They will even help you to imagine lots of new
ones. Your computer is put together for you personally in Taiwan
(or wherever) and flown to the United States, to be delivered
to your door. This is truly a personal computer. All this came
about because a teenage Michael Dell started producing
microcomputers to order in his college dorm room back in the early
1980�s. He still offers the same service, but he uses a much larger
room.

Stages of Education

The same stages of development have taken place in education.
Prior to the printing press, education was limited to a tiny minority:
sons of the very rich, sons who gained access to the literate
branches of the priesthood, and sons of Jews. Books in those days
were too expensive for most people to buy, so there was little
demand for literacy.

The model for family education was the tutor. A rich family hired
a tutor for its sons (and maybe daughters, though probably not).
Formal education was therefore oligarchic and familistic. Only
in monasteries and in universities, after its appearance around
1070, did anything like a classroom model exist, but only for
a tiny minority. Classroom education had existed for thousands of
years, but had been confined to political and priestly oligarchies.

The printing press changed everything. Demand rose for books and
also for the ability to read. Then the division of labor was
increasingly applied to education. Tutors who were willing to teach
larger groups than the sons of one family began offering their
services to groups of middle-class families. This was the
classroom model. "We don�t make house calls," the tutors
announced. Mass education began. This was the beginning of the
democratic phase of education.

The classroom model was far cheaper per student. The
student/teacher ratio rose. There was less student-teacher
interaction. But the quality of formal educational instruction was
vastly higher than what had been offered to most families before the
advent of the printing press. Something beats nothing almost every
time.

The tutorial has gone out of existence except in very rare cases.
The very rich have used their money to create and then fund prep
schools. Meanwhile, the middle class and the poor have been
thrown together by law in government-funded schools. Here, the
Model T model has ruled supreme since the 1830�s. The basic
educational model has not changed, although academic content
and student discipline have declined since the 1930�s. Taxes to
fund these schools have risen. This is what compulsion produces
every time: lower quality and higher prices.

Tax-funded, compulsory education initially adopted the educational
model of the democratic phase of market production � price
competition without great diversity � and locked it in by law,
beginning in Prussia after Prussia�s defeat by Napoleon in 1806.
The United States imported this model, beginning in the 1830�s in
Massachusetts.

This legally locked-in American model involves the following: (1)
compulsory tax funding, (2) compulsory student attendance, (2)
mass-produced, low-common-denominator textbooks, (3) state-
controlled teacher certification, (4) state-mandated trade union
compulsion, and (5) state-enforced, monopoly-granting
accreditation to educational institutions. Oh, yes, one more thing:
intervarsity athletics to keep the voters supportive of "their"
schools. Boola-boola = moolah-moolah.

This witches brew of statist compulsion has stifled educational
innovation for almost two centuries. It has also led to enormously
high costs per student, compared to the law-hampered private
schools that educate only a small fraction of students.

Today, a new technology is offering parents great diversity at lower
prices: the Internet. Take a look at the recent book, Homeschool
Your Child for Free by LauraMaery Gold and Joan M. Zielenski.
(As an advertising copy writer, I appreciate its benefits-laden
subtitle: More Than 1,200 Smart, Effective, and Practical
Resources for Home Education on the Internet and Beyond.) It is
amazing how much material is on-line for free, only five years after
Web browsers hit the market.

The Internet now threatens to smash the state�s monopoly of
education.The classroom model is now being undermined by new
technologies. What parents have at their disposal today is
technology that will enable them � mainly mothers � to become
effective tutors. Soon, there will also be teachers who sell their
services to hundreds of families at low prices, using electronic
grading to do their grunt work, and hiring teaching assistants to do
the grading on more personalized examinations and term papers.

The Internet is already offering the ultimate price competition:
approaching zero price as a limit. "Just add paper and toner!" It
is also offering stupendous diversity of educational choice.

This is where the free market always heads: from quality
competition to price competition to both price and quality
competition. What has undermined education over the last 170
years is the Prussian model: education by the State and for the
State. This model has always been tied to the classroom. The
Internet points to the future: individual instruction. The individualism
phase has begun to appear, having been held back by law.
Familism in education is being restored, as it was for the oligarchs
half a millennium ago.

May God bless the digital pipeline! Parents who care can and will
get back their children!

January 30, 2001

--
    Our schools have been scientifically designed to
    prevent over-education from happening. [...] The
    average American (should be) content with their humble
    role in life, because they're not tempted to think
    about any other role.
    --William Torrey Harris, U.S. Commissioner of
    Education, 1889

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