Mark6
Philosopher
- Joined
- Mar 17, 2008
- Messages
- 6,261
I think all these are factors, but there is another nasty and rarely acknowledged fact -- teaching "blue collar" work skills to public school students is expensive. To teach English Literature all you need is a room with chairs and a teacher. Probably costs the school district $10,000 a year (I assume teacher teaches other classes, not just this one). Whereas teaching welding -- by which I mean real welding the way it is done in modern industry, -- can run into tens of millions of dollars between equipment, insurance, OSHA compliance, and experienced person to teach it.Vocational education in the US has all but disappeared from the public high schools. I agree that there has been an erosion of respect for the dignity of "blue collar" work over the past few decades. I have to wonder what would have precipitated that decline? Is it an innate class-sim? Some sort of built in bourgeois bias against the "working class?" Is it a natural prejudice among the people who make education their career?
In 2001 there was a big news when a US Navy submarine surfaced directly underneath a Japanese high school fishing boat, sinking it and killing 9 crewmembers, including 4 high school students. When I first heard about it, I was struck by the fact that a Japanese prefecture owns and operates a 500 ton fishing boat just to teach high school students how to fish professionally. What would be the equivalent in US? Is there an equivalent?
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