Out Go the Classics in English Classrooms | Eastern North Carolina Now

    Publisher's note: The author of this post is Kristen Blair, who is an associate editor for the Carolina Journal, John Hood Publisher.

    Classic literature has fallen from favor in English class. The movement away from the literary canon, begun decades ago, has accelerated rapidly following adoption of Common Core standards by most states eight years ago. Some states, including North Carolina, have revised these standards. But the devaluation of classic literature is widespread, shortchanging students' writing competencies, cultural knowledge, and analytical thinking. That's a lot to lose.

    A new report from the Fordham Institute sheds light on how much has changed. Featuring a nationally representative survey of 1,237 English and reading teachers in public elementary, middle, and high schools, the report reveals numerous instructional shifts - some good, some bad. Among the good: Teachers are increasingly emphasizing "close reading" of texts and teaching vocabulary in context.

    Among the bad: Fewer texts are classics. Seven in 10 teachers overall and five in 10 high school teachers limit classics "because there is no longer room for them in the curriculum." No room in the curriculum? That boggles the well-trained mind. Unpacking Puritan piety in The Scarlet Letter or making sense of Shakespearean prose and verse is hard, but important, work.

    A major casualty of the de-emphasis on literature is students' writing, says Dr. Sandra Stotsky, an English standards expert and Professor of Education Reform Emerita at the University of Arkansas. "If we know anything in the field of composition," she says, it's that "repeated, regular exposure to high-quality prose helps them to develop writing skills." Classic works have been studied "not because they're classical but because of the quality of the prose."

    Another casualty? "Cultural knowledge is obvious," says Stotsky. "How do you even understand what writers are referring to if you have no understanding of literary allusions?" The Sisyphean task, the Siren song, Orwellian doublespeak - these presuppose shared knowledge.

    It's easy and right to blame Common Core. The standards' over-emphasis on informational text, ostensibly to prepare students for college and career, is short-sighted and harmful. But literature was undervalued before Common Core. A national teacher survey and report by Stotsky and colleagues, published in 2010, already revealed a "sharp decrease" in instructional time devoted to literary study, compared to decades earlier.

    Can what's done be undone? Perhaps, but hurdles lie ahead. This year North Carolina implements revised English language arts standards, passed by the State Board of Education in 2017. Four State Board members voted against those standards, including Dr. Olivia Oxendine, who served on the state's Academic Standards Review Commission. Oxendine, a professor, says much hard work has been done in North Carolina "to improve the standards and make them more comprehensible," but the standards still aren't well-written; many are "convoluted." Another concern: revised standards stipulate that instructional time in English language arts classrooms should be divided evenly between literature and informational text. "I was an English teacher and taught the classics," Oxendine says. "The deepest kind of higher-order thinking comes from literature."

    In the end, when classic literature is left unread, some losses are intangible. English professor Anthony Esolen writes about the lovely children's classic "The Wind in the Willows:" "... The aim of reading the work is simply the joy and wonder of it; it is a good book, because it tells us good and true things in an artful way."

    Experiencing joy and wonder; learning good and true things: Those who limit literature in the name of workforce readiness miss this, the larger purpose. They also, ironically, deny students opportunities to develop some of the very competencies they'll need in college and career.

    Theirs is a Pyrrhic victory. Time will reveal it.
Go Back


Leave a Guest Comment

Your Name or Alias
Your Email Address ( your email address will not be published)
Enter Your Comment ( no code or urls allowed, text only please )




Federal Court Throws Out N.C. Congressional Maps, Now What? Carolina Journal, Editorials, Op-Ed & Politics Will Constitutional Amendments Affect Voter Turnout in N.C.?


HbAD0

Latest Op-Ed & Politics

New U.S. Border Patrol Chief Jason Owens said during an interview that aired on Sunday that the Mexican drug cartels are flooding the U.S. border with illegal immigrants in part as a distraction so they can smuggle drugs, criminals, and weapons into the U.S.
President Joe Biden faced a wave of backlash on social media after he claimed to have visited Ground Zero in New York City one day after the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001.
Former President Trump is facing yet another indictment, this time for mocking U.S. Women's soccer after their embarrassing loss to Sweden over the weekend.
The Biden administration has signed off on a deal to release five Iranian prisoners and $6 billion in frozen assets in exchange for five Americans held captive in Iran.
WORLD — A newly released report has revealed that people are following their hearts at record levels, with remarkably disastrous results.
WHO director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus insisted that any allegation that his organization was close to China was an “outright lie.”
For the second year in a row, North Carolina has earned the top spot in CNBC’s annual “America’s Top States for Business” ranking. Gov. Roy Cooper wasted no time taking credit in an interview with CNBC, but as usual there’s more to the story.

HbAD1

The White House appeared to blow off criticisms after President Joe Biden became the first sitting U.S. President to not make an appearance at any of the official memorial sites on September 11: Ground Zero
In an extraordinary display of efficiency and ruthlessness, the FBI's crack tactical team descended upon a sleepy suburban neighborhood after receiving reports of an active incandescent light bulb.
Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas complained on Monday of a “broken immigration system” when asked to respond to a warning from New York City Mayor Eric Adams about the migrant crisis.
HuffPost White House correspondent S. V. Date used the 22nd anniversary of the September 11th terrorist attacks to claim that former President Donald Trump was worse than “Osama bin Biden.”
After years of being totally obscured by Lizzo's shadow, her backup dancers have finally had enough.
Hundreds of gun owners took to the streets of Albuquerque over the weekend to openly carry their firearms in defiance of the state’s Democrat governor, Michelle Lujan Grisham, who unilaterally decided to suspend laws allowing open and concealed carry in the area.

HbAD2

 
Back to Top