(more on the inevitability of dehumanization under "liberal" social 
engineering)


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http://www.gseis.ucla.edu/courses/ed191/assignment1/1970illich.html


1970


Ivan Illich Publishes Deschooling Society 

Some critics of school call for a transformation. Others call for 
reformation. Still others call for a restoration. In his critique of 
schools, Ivan Illich stands in near isolation. His is a call for 
deschooling. As a historian and social critic, Ivan Illich has spent his 
lifetime questioning such modern industrial certainties as 
development, medicine, health, technology, and, in the case of 
Deschooling Society, education. Illich first began to consider the 
problematic nature of compulsory schooling while an administrator 
in both an adult education program and at the University of Puerto 
Rico. While professional educators discussed the the need to 
increase the compulsory school age within Puerto Rico, Illich began 
to question the apparent discrepancies between schooling's promise 
and its actual outcomes. Illich, recognizing that schooling in Puerto 
Rico was too costly to be provided for all children, identified 
schooling as a system for producing dropouts -- a system which 
gave more to those who had at the cost of those having little. 
Schooling, contrary to its promise of serving equality and providing 
education, instead promoted a class-based society as well as a 
society addicted to progressive consumption. Continuing his 
contemplations on the numerous ills afflicting modern society , Illich 
founded the Center for Intercultural Documentation (CIDOC) in 
Cuernavaca, Mexico in 1961. While CIDOC functioned primarily as 
a language school for American clergy who were involved in an 
ongoing project of the United States to "develop" Latin America, it 
also sought to problematize these clergy members' understanding of 
Western "development" so they could come to understand its 
negative implications and, hopefully, rethink their participation. At 
the same time, CIDOC soon came to be an important international 
"think tank" of scholars, historians, philosophers, and social critics. 
Such prominent thinkers as Paulo Freire, Everett Reimer, Jonathan 
Kozol, Paul Goodman, and John Holt shared their thoughts and 
writings during their stay at CIDOC, and it was here, over the span 
of numerous discussions, that the essay "The Futility of Schooling in 
Latin America" would later develop into the book Deschooling 
Society.  

In Deschooling Society, Illich demonstrates that schools function as 
tools which are in fact counter-productive to their best intentions and 
that their "successes" must be contemplated with human dignity and 
freedom in mind. Schools, Illich shows, are successful in preparing 
individuals to "fit" into a schooled society. Schools successfully 
prepare the student to need treatments which can only be satisfied 
by institutions. By this process, need and consumption, each of us 
finds our place in consumer society. The ill of underconsumption is 
curable through further participation in institutional life. The school 
successfully indoctrinates each student with the belief in unlimited 
production and consumption via planned obsolescence. The newest 
textbook, curriculum package, or teacher training program renders 
last season's tools insufficient. Schooling successfully dulls the 
student's imagination making it unlikely, even impossible, to imagine 
meaningful learning experiences occurring in any other context. 
Learning requires an expert, a program, a measurement, and a 
certificate. Learning happens via obligatory attendance to an 
impersonal relationship in which one has authority over another's 
interests. Schooling is the mechanism through which we learn to 
accept the society, its institutions, and their rankings as they exist, 
as they have always existed, and as they will continue to exist.  

In the midst of this criticism, Ivan Illich demands that society be 
deschooled. Falsely interpreted to mean the elimination of schools, 
Illich calls for the disestablishment of school or the end to 
compulsory attendance schooling. He states, "I've nothing against 
schools! I'm against compulsory schooling. I know that schools 
always compound native privilege with new privilege. But only when 
they become compulsory can they compound lack of native privilege 
with added self-inflicted discrimination" (Cayley, 1992, p.68). His 
critique is not focused on the school but rather institutionalized 
school which monopolizes learning, instruction, and credentialing 
and creates a demand for something which it can only provide to 
fewer and fewer people at greater and greater public expense. 
Schooling, among others, is an institution which must be 
delegitimized. The secular sovereignty exercised by schools must be 
exposed and the methods with which it divides people into social 
classes and squelches self-directed inquiry made obvious. In the 
institutional-school paradigm, knowledge is a commodity and 
schools teach pupils to need the instruction which can only be found 
in schools. According to Illich, "obligatory instruction assumes the 
belief that man can do what God cannot, namely, manipulate others 
for their own salvation" (1970, p.50). By deschooling society, 
schools would continue to exist but their workings would be very 
different from those operating at present. Deschooling could only 
occur given alternative social arrangements and legal protections as 
well as a reconceptualization of what constitutes learning in the heart 
of every deschooled person.  

According to Illich, schools are the "reproductive organ of a 
consumer society" (1970). Schools produce myths upon which an 
economic society depends. Schooling is a ritual performed by 
participants who are made blind to the discrepancy between the 
purpose for and the consequences of the ritual. Despite the 
advertised purpose of promoting social equality and democratic 
participation, schooling is "the ritual of a society committed to 
progress and development" (Cayley, 1992, p. 67). In his thesis 
titled, Deschooling Society, Ivan Illich promulgates four myths 
created by the school ritual; 1) the myth of unending consumption, 
2) the myth of measurement of values, 3) the myth of packaging 
values, and 4) the myth of self-perpetuating progress. In the first 
myth, schools teach us that learning is the result of an instructional 
process that produces something of value. What is learned is that 
only the curricularized instructional process in which knowledge is 
divided into discreet bundles of information dispensed by 
certificated experts under compulsory attendance can produce 
valued outcomes. The payoff for a greater investment of time and 
money is more knowledge and additional diplomas. "The existence 
of schools produces the demand for schooling" (Illich, 1970, pp.38-
39). The second myth inculcates consumers with the understanding 
that only that which is quantifiable is justifiable. Only measured 
experiences possess worth. Only distinct quanta of subject matter 
which are measurable constitute learning. With this myth, "people 
who submit to the standards of others for the measure of their own 
personal growth soon apply the same ruler to themselves. They no 
longer have to be put in their place, but put themselves into their 
assigned slots, squeeze themselves into the niche which they have 
been taught to seek, and, in the very process, put their fellows into 
their places, too, until everybody and everything fits" (Illich, 1970, 
p.40). Myth number three, packaging values, is the accepted belief 
in educational research conducted by experts to determine what and 
when another (or masses of others) should learn. "The result of the 
curriculum production process looks like any other modern staple. It 
is a bundle of planned meanings, of packaged values, a commodity 
whose 'balanced appeal' makes it marketable to a sufficiently large 
number to justify the cost of production. Consumer-pupils are taught 
to make their desires conform to marketable values. Thus they are 
made to feel guilty if they do not behave according to the predictions 
of consumer research by getting the grades and certificates that will 
place them in the job category they have been led to expect" (Illich, 
1970, p.41). Finally, the fourth myth, self-perpetuating progress, 
promotes the need for ever increasing quantities of schooling at 
ever increasing costs. With increased expenditures, the student 
improves his or her own value in his or her own view and in the view 
of the market, though not necessarily increasing his or her learning. 
The increasingly large expenditures on gymnasiums, state-of-the-art 
dining/entertainment/living facilities, and curriculum resources 
entice student-consumers to consume more while industry requires 
particular educational accouterments for a declining job market 
grown increasingly competitive. As the creator, propagator, and 
protector of these four educational myths, schools retain their 
sacred positions as the purveyor of "secular salvation" (Gabbard, 
1993). Despite the argument that schools have become 
counterproductive in their service to fewer and fewer clients and in 
the face of increasing public expenditures yielding insignificant 
increases in standardized measurements, the school institution 
stands as an immutable public shrine whose foundation holds firm 
amidst tremors, shifts, and quakes.  

In a deschooled society, individuals choose for themselves action-
oriented lives, rather than lives constrained by the parameters of 
consumption. Individuals participate in learning "webs" in which 
each is a teacher and also a learner. Relationships among people 
are convivial and promote self and community reliance rather than 
addictions to institutions and to their product, consumption 
addiction. The need is for relational structures, for goods which are 
engineered for durability rather than obsolescence, and for "access 
to institutions that increase the opportunity and desirability of human 
interaction" (Illich, 1970, p.63). In a deschooled society, the worlds 
of work, leisure, politics, family and community life are the 
classrooms and their secret and protected spaces made more 
accessible. Learning, therefore, occurs in and of the world and 
individuals define themselves by their own learning and the learning 
that they contribute to others. Illich writes, "I believe that a desirable 
future depends on our deliberately choosing a life of action over a 
life of consumption, on our engendering a life style which will enable 
us to be spontaneous, independent, yet related to each other, rather 
than maintaining a lifestyle which allows us to make and unmake, 
produce and consume ... a style of life which is merely a way 
station on the road to the depletion and pollution of the environment" 
(1970, p.52). By creating and defining lives free of the 
predetermination of institutions, individuals are opened to the 
surprises found within friendship, vocation, and critical and 
emancipatory participation in the world.  

Sources: 

 Cayley, David (1992). Ivan Illich in Conversation. Concord, Ontario: Anansi Press. 

 Illich, Ivan (1970). Deschooling Society. New York: Harper and Row. 

Dana Stuchul and Alison Kreider 



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