See Pt. 1 here.
When Anya Kamenetz is not doing exclusive interviews with Bill Gates or his pals in the Billionaire Boys Club, she spends a lot
of her time picking the brains of people who have knowledge of subjects for which she knows
nothing, e. g., education, educational history, educational theory. Anya then portrays those knowledgeable experts and university teachers that make up a big chunk of her virtual rolodex as a kind of benign, though irrelevant, caste of Middle Ages knowledge
monks who stand now as stumbling blocks to the kind of capitalist disruption to higher education that she is paid to advocate for.
"Disruption" allows the kind of exploitative bloodsucking that turns institutions of learning--at least the ones that serve the poor and middling classes--into
corporate revenue streams that offer bogus degrees to those who are desperate enough to believe they are getting something of worth for their Pell Grants. Kamenetz loyally represents her high-rolling
patrons' corrosive strategy with a calcified arrogance and vapid boosterism that read like press
releases for any new dangerous product line hawked by a Madison Avenue ad firm, as in her most recent paean to college corporatism in the New York Times.
The most recent product rollout from HigherCorpEd comes in the form of distant
education taken to its logical conclusion.
In Anya’s advertisement for the brave new world of ultimate learning
alienation, students hooked to a web-based computer screen race through canned
and computer-generated assignments in order to take tests that measure their
“competence” in skills that the global economy might need if they existed and
if there not were not already an oversupply of privileged graduates like Anya (Yale Class of '02), whose real college educations put them in a different
league from students who have had their “competence” for a four year college
education measured out mainly by standardized tests taken over a matter of weeks.
For this new autodidactic and corporate-exploited underclass, which is made possible by high tech corporate marketeers, business efficiency zealots, and paid promoters like Anya,
gone will be disciplines, subjects, course time requirements, and especially those
expensive old school monkish professors (or their desperately underemployed sharecropping adjunct
counterparts). College for the lower caste will be devoid of the kind of well-educated professoriate that Anya depends upon regularly to compensate for
the vast knowledge gaps that her texting, Facebooking, and Twittering cannot fill for subjects that she is assigned to write about by her megarich patrons, who
fund corporate foundations (Gates, Pearson, and Lumina) to buy off higher
education policymakers with generous grants.
If the majority of college offerings for the unwashed herd can
be made dependent upon the hardwired accelerated obsolescence of computer
technology, the advantages to the Gates Empire and to Apple are obvious. Less obvious are the advantages for the
corporate student loan business, which created the Lumina Foundation to
increase the number of lower class students who are dependent upon student loans
to get worthless matchbook degrees. And
for Pearson and CBT/McGraw-Hill and the College Board, etc., there are the oceans of
cash to be made from canned curriculum and standardized testing/scoring at the college level.
If Anya Kamenetz had any clue about the devastation that
has been created in K-12 by the backwards-gazing zombies that comprise the corporate education reform movement, surely
she would think twice about selling her soul to these long term losers and predatory d-bags. Education is not a business, and anyone who
treats it as such is not an educator.
But then that is far below the calling of the pampered, positivized
pitchmen for the new age fascism that is brought to you by Capitalists Without Borders, or national socialism without loyalty to any government.
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