01
Nov
Our system of compulsory (forced) schooling is almost perfectly designed to promote cheating. That is even truer today than in times past. Students are required to spend way more time than they wish doing work that they did not choose, that bores them, that seems purposeless to them. They are constantly told about the value of high grades. Grades are used as essentially the sole motivator. Everything is done for grades. Advancement through the system, and eventual freedom from it, depends upon grades.
Students become convinced that high grades and advancement to the next level are the be-all and end-all of their school work. By the time they are 11 or 12 years old, most are realistically cynical about the idea that school is fundamentally a place for learning. They realize that much of what they are required to do is senseless and that they will forget most of what they are tested on shortly after the test. They see little direct connection—because there usually is none—between their school assignments and the real world in which they live. They learn that their own questions and interests don’t count. What counts are their abilities to provide the “correct” answers to questions that they did not ask and that do not interest them. And “correct” means the answers that the teachers or the test-producers are looking for, not answers that the students really understand to be correct.