: Returning the responsibility of education to families.
: Gatto asserts that 19th-century American social engineers adopted the Prussian system to ensure a manageable citizenry that would not question authority.
: He argues the system was funded by powerful industrialists like Andrew Carnegie and John D. Rockefeller to create "human resources" for a planned industrial economy. John Taylor Gatto - The Underground History of ...
Gatto concludes that while humans can learn the basics of literacy and math in about 100 hours of focused study, the 25,000 hours required by the public system serve primarily as a means of and psychological management.
: Encouraging children to engage with the "real world" through apprenticeships and self-directed study. Core Thesis Restated : Returning the responsibility of education to families
John Taylor Gatto’s (2001) argues that modern compulsory schooling is not a failure of education, but a successful implementation of a system designed to produce a compliant, standardized workforce. Drawing on his 30-year career as an award-winning New York City teacher, Gatto traces the roots of the American system to the Prussian Model , which prioritized obedience and state-service over individual critical thinking. Key Arguments and Themes
: Customizing education to the child’s interests and local community needs rather than a national curriculum. Rockefeller to create "human resources" for a planned
: By occupying the majority of a child’s time with school and homework, Gatto claims the system deliberately weakens the influence of parents and local communities.