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On Industrial Education
JOHN DEWEY
Reprinted here are two articles from New Republic: the first, "A Policy of Industrial
Education," appeared in volume 1 (December 19, 1914), pp. 11-12; the second, "Indus-
trial Education-A Wrong Kind," followed in volume 2 (February 20, 1915), pp. 71-73.
The cooperation of the New Republic is gratefully acknowledged.
Representatives and five laymen, reflects both the traditional system and
the feeling of need for its change. Not one of the five lay members is a
professional educator. While the Commission recommends the giving of
aid, and drafts a bill which would involve an initial annual grant to the
states of a million and a half dollars, rising to the sum of seven millions
through a period of years, there is no thought of provision for a minister
of education. The Federal Board in control is to consist of the Post-
master-General, with the Secretaries of the Interior, of Agriculture, of
Commerce and Labor. The Commissioner of Education is to remain an
executive clerk, although with somewhat enlarged clerical duties. The
proposal is characteristic of our tradition. We are far from the day when
direction and supervision of publicly supported education will be a
public function.
Meantime the existence of an official Federal Commission is evidence
of the changing situation. Congress is hardly likely to pass the bill which
is recommended. Legislative action is of doubtful value till the subject
of industrial education has been more thoroughly discussed. It is more
important that it be treated as part of a general statesmanlike policy
toward education than that immediate isolated steps be taken for fur-
thering the agricultural and trade instruction of youth over fourteen.
There is as yet no public opinion as to the standpoint from which edu-
cation for industry should be approached, or the aims which should con-
trol the undertaking. The reasons thus far advanced for making indus-
trial training an organic part of public school education are an un-
digested medley. The need of a substitute for the disappearing appren-
ticeship system, the demand of employers for more skilled workers, the
importance of special training if the United States is to hold its own in
international competitive commerce, figure side by side with the educa-
tional need of making instruction more "vital" to pupils.
The oft-cited experience of Germany as to the importance of indus-
trial education must be weighed in connection with the purpose which
has dominated her efforts. This has been frankly nationalistic. The avail-
able statistics indicate that the effect of industrial education upon wages
has been almost negligible, skilled workers receiving but little more than
unskilled. But the effect of industrial education upon the worker's indi-
vidual wage or happiness was not the animating motive. Germans claim
with justice that their systematized and persistent applications of intelli-
gence to military affairs, public education, civil administration, and trade
and commerce, have a common root and a converging aim. The well-
being of the state as a moral entity is supreme. The promotion of com-
merce against international competitors is one of the chief means of
fostering the state. Industrial training is a means to this means, and one
made peculiarly necessary by Germany's natural disadvantages.
One does not need to grudge admiration for the skill and success with
which this policy has been pursued. But as a policy it is extraordinarily
irrelevant to American conditions. We have neither the historic back-
ground nor the practical outlook which make it significant. There is
grave danger that holding up as a model the educational methods by
ON INDUSTRIAL EDUCATION 55
which Germany has made its policy effective will serve as a cloak, con-
scious or unconscious, for measures calculated to promote the interests
of the employing class. It is the privilege of large employers of labor to
supplement public schooling by classes which they themselves support in
order to give the special knowledge and skill required in their oper-
ations. There are many interesting and successful attempts of this kind.
It is natural that employers should be desirous of shifting the burden of
this preparation to the public tax-levy. There is every reason why the
community should not permit them to do so. Class against class, there is
no reason why the community should be more interested in the laboring
class than in the employing class, save the important reason that the
former constitutes a larger part of itself. But every ground of public
policy protests against any use of the public school system which takes
for granted the perpetuity of the existing industrial regime, and whose
inevitable effect is to perpetuate it, with all its antagonisms of employer
and employed, producer and consumer.
In the lack of enlightened public opinion as to the place of industrial
training in the public schools in a would-be democracy, even the enumer-
ation of commonplaces may be of some help; unfortunately they are not
as yet current commonplaces. In the first place, its aim must be first of
all to keep youth under educative influences for a longer time. Were it
not for historic causes which explain the fact, it would be a disgrace that
the larger portion of the school population leaves school at the end of
the fifth or sixth grade. Irrespective of its causes, the continuance of this
situation is a menace. Meagre as are the efforts already put forth in
adapting industry to educational ends, it is demonstrated in Chicago,
Gary and Cincinnati, that such adaptation is the first need for holding
pupils in school and making their instruction significant to them. In
these places the aim has not been to turn schools into preliminary fac-
tories supported at public expense, but to borrow from shops the re-
sources and motives which make teaching more effective and wider in
reach.
In the second place, the aim must be efficiency of industrial intelli-
gence, rather than technical trade efficiency. Schemes for industrial edu-
cation thus far propounded ignore with astonishing unanimity many of
the chief features of the present situation. The main problem is not that
of providing skilled workers in the superior crafts. Taken by itself, this
is a comparatively simple problem. But it cannot be taken by itself, for
the reason that these crafts are the ones already best organized and most
jealous of efforts to recruit their numbers beyond the market demand,
and for the reason also that automatic machinery is constantly invading
the province of specially trained skill of hand and eye. Wherever auto-
matic machines develop, high specialization of work follows. In the
larger cities even the building trades now represent a grouping of a very
large number of separate occupations, demanding for the most part sim-
ply skill in managing machines. The automobile is a complicated
machine, nevertheless ninety-five per cent of the labor of manufacture in
the cheaper cars is unskilled. Such facts are typical. The rapid change by
56 JOHN DEWEY/CI
order to make quite sure that existing high schools do not receive state
aid by adding courses for future wage-earners to the courses they already
have, it rules that if an existing school adds a vocational department, it
must have a separate head or director, a separate course of study, group
of teachers and pupils. This effort at complete segregation is partially
mitigated by provision that a portion of the "related academic work"
may be taught by regular teachers in case they "have the vocational point
of view."
Now all this appears to be theory run mad. I call it theory because it
is so obviously due to fear that "general" education will make use of a
plea of vocational education in order to grab state funds, while practical
considerations would lead to a plan that positively meets the most press-
ing needs, and would then develop administrative control to prevent
abuse of funds. I call it bad theory because in a state like Indiana-in
almost any state except those having a large number of great industrial
centers-the plan automatically works against much of anything being
accomplished, while it makes the little which can be done work in the
wrong direction. One of the chief evils of the present state of affairs is
the accidental and unintelligent way in which workers, especially of the
youthful age, find their jobs. What then shall we say of a law which says
that state-aided instruction is forbidden except in these accidentally
selected jobs? What shall we say of a measure which is expressly con-
strued to forbid aid to "schools giving general industrial or prevoca-
tional courses designed to enable students to test or determine their voca-
tional aims, or to lay a necessary or helpful basis for future vocational
work"? (I insert the quotation marks to assure the reader that the re-
ductio ad absurdum is not of my own making.) Add the fact that the
youth for whom the law is mainly intended cannot, for the most part,
possibly be engaged in very skilled callings; that they are mostly engaged
in running odd jobs or "operating" machines that require little but
automatic feeding, and the law which requires their instruction to be
confined to what they are already doing certainly has little to do with
the practical needs of the case. The attention given to eliminating "gen-
eral education" might, in the case of those engaged in monotonous, rou-
tine occupation, well be changed to an insistence that such workers, in
the interest of their own industrial efficiency and the economic well-
being of the state, have a more considerable general education.
Yet these features are of comparatively slight import compared with
the inherent impracticability of the law. Four or five states in the Union
have a sufficiently large number of big industrial centers so that they
could make some use of a system like that provided by the Indiana law.
It seems to have been drawn on the basis of conditions found in New
York, Chicago, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, and so forth. In cities like these
there are large groups of workers from which a constituency could be
drawn for trade schools of the type to which the Indiana system is re-
stricted-though it should be noted that even in Philadelphia the regular
trade schools are not especially popular, since pupils who can afford the
ON INDUSTRIAL EDUCATION 59
time prefer a less limited sort of training. In states where such cities
abound, provision should be made for increasing the skill of wage-
earners in the occupations in which they are already engaged, such pro-
vision being only one factor in a more comprehensive scheme. In Indiana
it may be doubted whether there is more than one city in the state where
much use can possibly be made of the law. Outside of perhaps Indian-
apolis, the industrial population in a given city is not large enough, nor
sufficiently distributed in permanently marked-off occupations, to create
a demand for either regular or continuation schools of a narrow trade
type in which the pupils shall be instructed only in the trade upon which
they have already entered. Gary, for instance, is one of the largest indus-
trial centers in Indiana. It happens also to be a town which is already
famous throughout the country for the breadth and excellence of its
school work in prevocational and vocational training. It would be in-
teresting to know what use, if any, this city has been able to make of the
Indiana law. My guess would be, none, or next to none. If the guess is
anywhere near correct, it would be impossible to put in stronger relief
the essentially theoretical character of the law.
These remarks are negative in kind, but they point a positive moral.
They indicate that a state should adopt a law only after a careful survey
of its own actual local conditions and needs. Previous to framing the law,
both the industrial and the educational situation in each of the larger
towns should be studied. It is "dollars to doughnuts" that if the leading
school men of Indiana had been systematically consulted before the exist-
ing law was framed, and if what they were actually doing and what they
would like to do and could do with greater facilities had been investi-
gated, the result would have been a law which would almost immediately
have been taken advantage of by ten or a dozen of the larger cities. The
money and two or three years' time spent by an expert commission in
making such a survey would save itself a score of times over.
The other chief lesson is that the statute should contain only broad
and flexible provisions, and that the State Board of Education should be
entrusted with large discretionary powers in its execution. Our American
law already recognizes the existence of these powers in the authorities in
charge of public health and public education. We have just seen in New
York State an educational commissioner overrule in effect, if not in name,
a court decision as well as the action of a local board, while from his
decision there is no appeal. When the tendency of the day is to commit
wider and wider activities to administrative commissions in all modes of
public utility, it is no time to attempt to limit, by means of minute pro-
visions of statute law, the duties of such bodies in educational matters.
By all accounts, the thing in the Indiana law which has worked best is
its provision for agricultural education. With respect to this, there was
no organization of theorists to influence the law, and more freedom was
allowed. Its provision for county agents in agriculture is one which might
well be imitated by other states in providing for industrial education. At
the present time nothing would be more useful than a body of experts
60 JOHN DEWEY/CI