When we were in junior high school,
my friend Rich and I made a map of the school lunch tables according
to popularity. This was easy to do, because kids only ate lunch
with others of about the same popularity. We graded them from A
to E. A tables were full of football players and cheerleaders and
so on. E tables contained the kids with mild cases of Down's
Syndrome, what in the language of the time we called "retards."
We sat at a D table, as low as you could get without looking
physically different. Our table was populated by complete nerds,
cases of delayed pubescence, and recent immigrants from China. We
were not being especially candid to grade ourselves as D. It would
have taken a deliberate lie to say otherwise. Everyone in the
school knew exactly how popular everyone else was, including us.
I know a lot of people who were nerds in school, and
they all tell the same story. There is a strong correlation between
being smart and being a nerd, and an even stronger inverse correlation
between being a nerd and being popular. Being smart seems to make
you unpopular.
Why? To someone in school now, that may seem an odd question to
ask. The mere fact is so overwhelming that it may seem strange to
imagine that it could be any other way. But it could. Being smart
doesn't make you an outcast in elementary school. Nor does it harm
you in the real world, as they call life after college.
Nor, as far as I can tell, is the problem so bad in most other
countries. But in a typical American secondary school,
being smart is likely to make your life unpleasant. Why?
I think the key to this mystery is to rephrase the question slightly.
Why don't smart kids make themselves popular? If they're so smart,
why don't they figure out how popularity works and beat the system,
just as they do for standardized tests?
One argument says that this would be impossible, that the smart
kids are unpopular because the other kids envy them for being smart,
and nothing they could do could make them popular. I wish. If
the other kids in junior high school envied me, they did a great
job of concealing it. And in any case, if being smart were really
an enviable quality, the girls would have broken ranks. The guys
that guys envy, girls like.
In the schools I went to, being smart just didn't matter much.
Kids didn't admire it or despise it. All other things being equal,
they would have preferred to be on smart side of average
rather than the dumb side, but intelligence counted far less than,
say, physical appearance, charisma, or athletic ability.
So if intelligence in itself is not a factor in popularity, why
are smart kids so consistently unpopular? The answer, I think, is
that they don't really want to be popular.
If someone had told me that at the time,
I would have laughed at them. Being unpopular in school
makes kids miserable, some of them so miserable that they commit
suicide. Telling me that I didn't want to be popular would have
seemed like telling someone dying of thirst in a desert that he
didn't want a glass of water. Of course I wanted to be popular.
But in fact I didn't, not enough. There was something else I wanted
more: to be smart. Not simply to do well in school, though that counted
for something, but to design marvellous
rockets, or to write well, or to understand how to program
computers. In general, to make great things, which seems
a more accurate definition of smart than the passive one
implicit in IQ tests.
At the time I never tried to separate out my wants and weigh them
against one another. If I had, I would have seen that being smart
was the more important. If someone had offered me the chance to
be the most popular kid in school, but only at the price of being
of average intelligence (humor me here), I wouldn't have taken it.
Much as they suffer from their unpopularity, I don't think many
nerds would. To them the thought of average intelligence is
unbearable. But most kids would take that deal.
For half of them, it would be a step up. Even for someone
in the eightieth percentile (assuming, as everyone seemed to then,
that intelligence is a scalar), who wouldn't drop
thirty points in exchange for being loved and admired by everyone?
And that, I think, is the root of the problem. Nerds serve two
masters. They want to be popular, certainly, but they want even
more to be smart. And popularity is not something you can do in
your spare time, not in the fiercely competitive environment of an
American secondary school.
Alberti, arguably the archetype of the Renaissance Man, writes that
"no art, however minor, demands less than total dedication if
you want to excel in it."
I wonder if there is anyone in the world who works harder
at anything than American school kids work at popularity. Navy
SEALs and neurosurgery residents seem slackers by comparison. They
occasionally take vacations; some even have hobbies. An
American teenager may work at being popular every waking hour,
365 days a year.
I don't mean to suggest they do this consciously.
Some of them truly are little Machiavellis, but what I really
mean here is that teenagers are always on duty as conformists.
For example, teenage kids
pay a great deal of attention to clothes. They
don't consciously dress to be popular. They dress to look good.
But to who? To the other kids. Other kids' opinions
become their definition of right, not just for clothes, but
for almost everything they do, right down to the way they
walk. And so every effort they make
to do things ``right'' is also, consciously or not, an
effort to be more popular.
Nerds don't realize this. They don't realize that it takes work
to be popular. In general, people outside some very demanding
field don't realize the extent to which success depends on constant
(though often unconscious) effort. For
example, most people seem to consider the ability to draw as
some kind of innate quality, like being tall. In fact, most
people who "can draw" like drawing, and have spent many hours
doing it; that's why they're good at it. Likewise, popular isn't just
something you are or you aren't, but something you make yourself.
The main reason nerds are unpopular is that they have other things to
think about. Their attention is drawn to books, or the natural world,
not fashions and parties. They're like someone trying to play
soccer while balancing a glass of water on his head. Other players
who can focus their whole
attention on the game beat them effortlessly, and wonder why
they seem so incapable.
Even if nerds cared as much as other kids about popularity, being
popular would be more work for them.
The popular kids learned to be
popular, and to want to be popular, the same way the nerds learned
to be smart, and to want to be smart: from their parents. While
the nerds were being trained to get the right answers, the popular
kids were being trained to please.
So far I've been finessing the relationship between
smart and nerd, using them as if they were interchangeable. In
fact it's only the context that makes them so.
A nerd is someone who isn't socially adept enough. But "enough"
depends on where you are. In a typical American school, standards
for coolness are so high (or at least, so specific) that you don't have to be especially
awkward to look awkward by comparison.
Few smart kids can spare the attention that popularity
requires. Unless they happen to be very good looking, or
great natural athletes, or have older siblings who are popular,
they'll tend to become nerds. And that's why smart people's
lives tend to be worst between, say, the ages of eleven and seventeen.
Life at that age revolves far more around popularity than before or after.
Before that, kids' lives are dominated by their parents, not by other
kids. Kids do care what their peers think in elementary school,
but this isn't their whole life, as it later becomes.
Around the age of eleven, though, kids seem to start treating their
family as a day job. They create a new world among themselves,
and standing in this world is what matters, not standing in their
family. Indeed, being in trouble in their family can win them
points in the world they care about.
The problem is, the world these kids create for themselves is at
first a very crude one.
If you leave a bunch of eleven year olds to their own devices,
they'll usually create a Lord of the Flies world. Like a lot of
American kids, I read this book in school. Presumably
it was not a coincidence. Presumably someone
wanted to point out to us that we were savages, and that
we had made ourselves a cruel and stupid world. This was too subtle
for me. While the book seemed entirely believable, I didn't get
the additional message. I wish they had just told us outright that
we were savages and our world was stupid.
Nerds would find their unpopularity more bearable if it merely
caused them to be ignored. Unfortunately, to be unpopular in school
is to be actively persecuted.
Why? Once again, anyone currently in school might think this a
strange question to ask. How could things be any other way? But
they could be. Adults
don't normally persecute nerds. Why do teenage kids do it?
Partly it's because teenagers are still half children, and
many children are just intrinsically cruel. Some torture nerds for
the same reason they pull the legs off spiders. Before you develop
a conscience, torture is amusing.
Another reason kids persecute nerds is to make themselves feel
better. When you tread water, you lift yourself up by pushing
water down. Likewise, in any social hierarchy, people unsure of
their own position will try to emphasize it by maltreating those
they think rank below. I've read that this is why poor whites in the
United States are the group most hostile to blacks.
But I think the main reason other kids persecute nerds is that it's
part of the mechanism of popularity. Popularity is only partially
about individual attractiveness. It's much more about alliances.
To become more popular, you need to be constantly doing things that
bring you close to other popular people, and nothing brings people
closer than a common enemy.
Like a politician who wants to distract voters from bad times at
home, you can create an enemy if there isn't a real one. Anyone
lower on the social scale is a safe target. By singling out and
persecuting a nerd, a group of kids from higher in the hierarchy
create bonds between themselves: attacking an outsider makes them
all insiders. This is why the worst cases of bullying happen with
groups. Ask any nerd: you get much worse treatment from a group
of kids
than from any individual bully, however sadistic.
If it's any consolation to the nerds,
it's nothing personal. The group of kids who band together to pick
on you are doing the same thing, and for the same reason, as a
bunch of guys who get together to go hunting. They don't actually
hate you. They just need something to chase.
Because they're at the bottom of the scale, nerds are a safe target
for the entire school. If I remember correctly, the most
popular kids don't persecute nerds;
they don't need to stoop to such things. Most of
the persecution comes from kids lower down, the nervous middle
classes.
The trouble is, there are a lot of them. I suspect the distribution
of popularity is not a pyramid, but tapers at the bottom like a
pear. The least popular group is
quite small. (I believe we were the only D table in our
cafeteria map.) So there are more people who
want to pick on nerds than there are nerds.
And the active persecution is, if anything, the less painful half of
the popularity equation. As well as gaining points by distancing
oneself from unpopular kids, one loses points by being close
to them. A woman I know says that in high school she liked nerds,
but was afraid to be seen talking to them because the other
girls would make fun of her. Unpopularity is a communicable
disease; kids too nice to pick on nerds will still
ostracize them in self-defense.
It's no wonder, then, that smart kids tend to
be unhappy in middle school and high school. Their other interests
leave them little attention to spare for popularity, and since
popularity resembles a zero-sum game, this in turn makes them
targets for the whole school. And the strange thing
is, this nightmare scenario happens without any conscious malice,
merely because of the shape of the situation.
I don't know if this is still true, but when I was in school, suicide
was a constant topic among the smarter kids. No one I knew actually
did it, but there were several who planned to, and maybe some who
tried. Mostly this was just a pose. Like other teenagers, we
loved the dramatic, and suicide seemed very dramatic. But partly
it was because our lives were at times genuinely miserable,
far more miserable than the adults who created the situation ever imagined.
Bullying was only part of the problem.
Another problem, and possibly
an even worse one, was that we never had anything real to work on.
Humans like to work; in most of the world, your work is your
identity. And all the work we did was pointless, or seemed so to
us at the time. At best it was practice for real work we might do
far in the future, so far that we didn't even know at the time what
we were practicing for. More often it was just an arbitrary series
of hoops to jump through, words without content designed mainly
for testability. (The three main causes of the French and Indian
War were... Test: List the three main causes of the French and
Indian War.)
And there was no way to opt out. The adults had agreed among
themselves that this was to be the route to college. The only way
to escape this empty life was to submit to it.
It seems to me there is something wrong when it's routine for
smart kids to dwell on suicide. It wasn't just our school. I've
met many people since who were vaguely suicidal in high school.
When kids think such things, the adults in charge of them like to
attribute it to "hormones." This may be partly true, but I think
most of the problem is the way kids are made to live.
The worst stretch was junior high school, when
kid culture was new and harsh,
and the specialization
that would later gradually separate the smarter kids
had barely begun.
Nearly everyone I've
talked to agrees: the nadir is somewhere between eleven and fourteen.
In our school it was eighth grade, which was ages twelve and thirteen for
me. There was a brief sensation that year when one of our teachers
overheard a group of girls waiting for the school bus, and was so
shocked that the next day she devoted the whole class to an eloquent
plea not to be so cruel to one another.
It didn't have any noticeable effect.
What struck me at the time was that
she was surprised. You mean she doesn't know the kind of things
they say to one another? You mean this isn't normal?
It's important to realize that, no, the adults don't know what the
kids are doing to one another. They know, in the abstract, that
kids are monstrously cruel to one another, just as we know in the
abstract that people get tortured in poorer countries. But,
like us, they don't like to dwell on this
depressing fact, and they don't see evidence of specific abuses
unless they go looking for it.
Public school teachers are in much the same position as prison
wardens. Wardens' main concern is to keep the prisoners on the
premises. They also need to keep them fed, and as far as possible
prevent them from killing one another. Beyond that, they want to
have as little to do with the prisoners as possible, so they leave
them to create whatever social organization they want. From what
I've read, the society that the prisoners create is warped, savage,
and pervasive, and it is no fun to be at the bottom of it.
In outline, it was the same at the schools I went to. The most important
thing was to stay on the premises. While there,
the authorities fed you, prevented overt violence, and made some
effort to teach you something. But beyond that they didn't want
to have too much to do with the kids.
That's perfectly understandable. American teenagers are a pain in
the ass. It's bad enough to have to deal with one or two, let
alone a whole school full. So, like prison wardens, the teachers
mostly left us to ourselves. And, like prisoners, the culture we
created was barbaric.
Why is the real world more hospitable to nerds? It might seem that
the answer is simply that it's populated by adults, who are too
mature to pick on one another. But I don't think this is true.
Adults in prison certainly pick on one another. And so, apparently,
do society wives; in some parts of Manhattan, life
for women sounds like a continuation of high school, with all the
same petty intrigues.
I think the important thing about the real world is not that it's
populated by adults, but that it's very large, and the things you
do have real effects. That's what school, prison, and
ladies-who-lunch all lack. The inhabitants of all those worlds are trapped
in little bubbles where nothing they
do can have more than a local effect. Naturally these
societies degenerate into savagery. They have no function for
their form to follow.
When the things you do have real effects, it's no longer enough
just to be pleasing. It starts to be important to get the right
answers, and that's where nerds show to advantage. Bill
Gates will of course come to
mind. Though notoriously lacking in social skills, he gets the
right answers, at least as measured in revenue.
The other thing that's different about the real world is that it's
much larger. In a large enough pool, even the smallest minorities
can achieve a critical mass if they clump together. Out in the
real world, nerds collect in certain places and form their own
societies where intelligence is the most important thing. Sometimes
the current even starts to flow in the other direction: sometimes,
particularly in university math and science departments, nerds
deliberately exaggerate their awkwardness in order to seem smarter.
John Nash so admired Norbert Wiener that he adopted his habit of
touching the wall as he walked down a corridor.
As a thirteen year old kid, I didn't have much
more experience of the world than what I saw immediately around
me. The warped little world we lived in was, I thought, the world.
The world seemed cruel and boring, and I'm not sure which was worse.
Because I didn't fit into this world, I thought that something must
be wrong with me. I didn't realize that the reason we nerds didn't
fit in was that we were a step ahead. We were already thinking
about the kind of things that matter in the real world, instead of
spending all our time playing an exacting but mostly pointless game
like the others.
We were a bit like an adult would be if he were thrust back into
middle school. He wouldn't know the right clothes to wear,
the right music to like, the right slang to use. He'd seem to the
kids a complete alien. The thing is, he'd know enough not to care
what they thought. We had no such confidence.
A lot of people seem to think it's good for smart
kids to be thrown together with "normal" kids at this stage of
their lives. Perhaps. But in at least some cases the reason the
nerds don't fit in actually is that everyone else is crazy. I
remember sitting in the audience at a "pep rally" at my high
school, watching as the cheerleaders threw an effigy of an
opposing player into the audience to be torn to pieces. I felt
like an explorer witnessing some bizarre tribal ritual.
If I could go back and give my thirteen year old self some advice,
the main thing I'd tell him would be to stick his head up and look
around. I didn't really grasp it at the time, but the whole world
we lived in was as fake as a twinkie. Not just school, but
the entire town.
Why do people move to suburbia? To have kids! So no wonder it
seemed boring and sterile. The whole place was a giant nursery,
an artificial town created explicitly for the purpose of breeding
children.
Where I grew up, it felt as if there was nowhere to go, and nothing
to do. This was no accident. Suburbs are deliberately designed
to exclude the outside world, because it contains
things that could endanger children.
And as for the schools, they were just holding pens within this fake
world. Officially the purpose of schools is to teach kids. In
fact their primary purpose is to keep kids all locked up in one place
for a big chunk of the day so adults can get things done.
And I have no problem with this: in a specialized industrial society,
it would be a disaster to have kids running around loose.
What bothers me is not that the kids are kept in prisons, but that
(a) they aren't told about it, and (b) the prisons are run mostly
by the inmates. Kids are sent off to spend six years memorizing
meaningless facts in a world ruled by a caste of giants
who run after an oblong brown ball, as if this
were the most natural thing in the world. And if they balk at this
surreal cocktail, they're called misfits.
Life in this twisted world is stressful for the kids. And not just
for the nerds. Like any war, it's damaging even to the winners.
Adults can't avoid seeing that teenage kids are tormented.
So why don't they do something about it? Because they blame
it on puberty. The reason kids are so
unhappy, adults tell themselves, is that monstrous new chemicals,
hormones, are now coursing
through their bloodstream and messing up everything. There's
nothing wrong with the system; it's just inevitable that kids will
be miserable at that age.
This idea is so pervasive that even the kids believe it, which
probably doesn't help. Someone who thinks his feet naturally hurt
is not going to stop to consider the possibility that he is wearing
the wrong size shoes.
I'm suspicious of this theory that thirteen year old kids are
intrinsically messed up. If it's physiological, it should be
universal. Are Mongol nomads all nihilists at thirteen? I've read
a lot of history, and I don't think I've seen a single reference
to this supposedly universal fact before the twentieth century.
Teenage apprentices in the Renaissance seem to have been cheerful
and eager. They got in fights and played tricks on one another of
course (Michelangelo had his nose broken by a bully), but they
weren't crazy.
As far as I can tell, the concept of the hormone-crazed teenager is coeval
with suburbia. I don't think this is a coincidence. I think
teenagers are driven crazy by the life they're made to
lead. Teenage apprentices in the Renaissance were working dogs.
Teenagers now are neurotic lapdogs. Their craziness is the craziness
of the idle everywhere.
Teenage kids used to have much more of a role in society.
In preindustrial times, teenagers were all apprentices of one sort or
another, whether in shops or on farms or even on warships. They
weren't left to create their own societies. They were junior members
of adult societies.
Teenagers seem to have respected adults more in the past, because
the adults were the visible experts in the skills they
were trying to learn. Now most kids have little idea what their
parents do in their distant offices, and see no connection (indeed,
there is precious little) between schoolwork and the work they'll
do as adults.
And if teenagers respected adults more, adults also had more use
for teenagers. After a couple years' training, an apprentice could
be a real help. Even the newest apprentice could be made
to carry messages or sweep the workshop.
Now adults have no immediate use for teenagers. They would be in
the way in an office. So they drop them off at school on their
way to work, much as they might drop the dog off at a kennel if
they were going away for the weekend.
What happened? We're up against a hard one here. The cause
of this problem is the same as the cause of so many present ills:
specialization. As jobs become more specialized, we have to train
longer for them. Kids in preindustrial times started working at
about fourteen at the latest; kids on farms, where most
people lived, began far earlier. Now kids who go to
college don't start working full-time till 21 or 22.
With some degrees, like MDs and PhDs, you may not finish your training
till 30, which is close the average life expectancy in medieval
times.
Teenagers now are useless, except as cheap labor in industries
like fast food, which
evolved to exploit precisely this fact. In almost any other kind of work,
they'd be a net loss. But they're also too young to be left
unsupervised. Someone has to watch over them, and the most efficient
way to do this is to collect them together in one place. Then
a few adults can watch all of them.
If you stop there, what you're describing is literally a prison,
albeit a part-time one. The problem is, many schools practically
do stop there. The stated purpose of schools is to educate the
kids. But there is no external pressure to do this well. And so
most schools do such a bad job of teaching that the kids don't
really take it seriously-- not even the smart kids. Much of the
time we were all, students and teachers both, just going through
the motions.
In my high school French class we were supposed to read Hugo's
Les Miserables. I don't think any of us knew French well
enough to make our way through this enormous book.
Like the rest of the class, I just skimmed the Cliff's Notes. When
we were given a test on the book, I noticed that the questions
sounded odd. They were full of long words that our
teacher wouldn't have used. Where had these questions come from? From the
Cliff's Notes, it turned out. The teacher was using them too.
We were all just pretending.
Some of our teachers really tried to teach us,
which was all the more impressive considering the conditions they
had to work under.
(I'd like to apologize here, Mr. Drum, for not learning more
in your excellent calculus class.) But they were individuals
swimming upstream. They couldn't fix the system.
In almost any group of people you'll find hierarchy.
Whatever the group's purpose, the top dogs will be
those who are best at it. On a professional football team,
the most skillful players are the most respected. In university
math departments, the leaders will be those who prove the most
significant results. This is, on the whole, healthy. Hierarchy
is not the problem. The problem is what hierarchies in schools
are based on.
When groups of adults form in the real world, it's generally
for some common purpose. The leaders end up being those who are
best at it. The problem with most schools is, they have no purpose.
Their ostensible purpose, scholarship, is a joke, not taken
seriously even by those who are best at it. But
hierarchy there must be. And so the kids make one out of nothing.
We have a phrase to describe what
happens when rankings have to be created without any meaningful
criteria. We say that the situation degenerates into a popularity
contest.
And that's exactly what happens in most American schools.
Since the group has no real purpose, there is no natural measure
of performance for status to depend on. Instead of depending
on some real test, one's rank ends up depending
mostly on one's ability to increase one's rank.
It's like the court of Louis XIV.
There is no external opponent, so the kids
become one another's opponents in an inexorable zero-sum competition.
Those who suffer most by this are the
kids who would be the happiest if the school's purpose were really
what it's claimed to be. The zero-sum game is painful for almost
all the players, but it's most painful for the nerds, because
they're only playing it part-time.
When there is some
real external test of skill, it isn't painful to be at the
bottom of the hierarchy. A rookie on a football team doesn't
resent the skill of the veteran; he hopes to be like him one
day and is happy to have the chance to learn from him. And
the veteran in turn will be kindly disposed to the rookie.
His success gives him a feeling of noblesse oblige: he is
probably as much inclined to share his experience as the rookie
is to learn from it. And most importantly, both their status depends on
how well they do against opponents, not on whether they can
push the other down.
Court hierarchies are another thing entirely.
This type of society debases anyone who enters it.
There is neither admiration at the bottom, nor noblesse oblige
at the top. It's kill or be killed.
This is the sort of society that gets
created by default in American secondary schools.
And it happens because these schools have no real purpose
beyond keeping the kids all in one place for a certain
number of hours each day.
What I didn't realize at the time, and in fact didn't realize till
very recently, is that the twin horrors of school life, the
cruelty and the boredom, both have the same cause.
The mediocrity of American public schools has worse consequences
than just making kids unhappy for six years. It breeds a
rebelliousness that actively drives kids away from the things
they're supposed to be learning.
Like many nerds, probably, it was years after high school before I
could bring myself to read anything we'd been assigned then.
I couldn't face "Macbeth" again till 24, and it still has
a bad odor. Even now I can't tell if I dislike Hemingway,
Faulkner, and Steinbeck because they're bombastic American
novelists, or because we had to read them in school.
I lost more than books. I mistrusted words like "character" and
"integrity" because they had been so debased by adults.
As they were used then, these words all seemed to mean
the same thing: obedience. The kids who got praised for these
qualities tended to be at best dull-witted prize bulls, and at
worse facile schmoozers. If that was what character and integrity
were, I wanted no part of them.
The word I most misunderstood was "tact." As used by adults, it
seemed to mean keeping your mouth shut. Based on this I made
up an etymology for it. I assumed it was derived from the same
root as "tacit" and "taciturn," and that it literally meant being quiet.
I vowed that I would never be tactful; they were never going to
shut me up. In fact, it's derived from the same root as "tactile,"
and what it means is to have a deft touch. Tactful is the
opposite of clumsy. I don't think I learned this until college.
That wasn't the worst trick high school played on me, though.
Since everyone in my school
seemed to view college as a form of job training, I decided to
major in the most impractical subject I could imagine:
philosophy. Alas, I actually did.
Nerds aren't the only losers in the popularity rat race. Nerds
are unpopular because they're distracted. There are other kids
who deliberately opt out because they're so disgusted with the
whole process.
Teenage kids, even rebels, don't like
to be alone, so when kids opt out of the system, they tend
to do it as a group.
At the schools I went to, the focus of rebellion was drug use,
specifically marijuana. The kids in this tribe wore black
concert t-shirts and were called "freaks,"
though I think now everyone uses the west coast term "stoner."
Freaks and nerds were allies, and there
was a good deal of overlap between them.
Freaks were on the whole smarter than other kids, though
never studying, or at least never appearing to, was an important
tribal value.
I was more in the nerd camp, but I was friends with a lot of freaks.
They used drugs, at least at first, for the social bonds
they created. It was something to do together, and because
the drugs were illegal, it was a shared badge of rebellion.
I'm not claiming that bad schools are the whole reason kids get
into trouble with drugs. After a while, drugs have their own
momentum. No doubt some of the freaks ultimately used drugs
to escape from other problems-- trouble at home, for example.
But, in my school at least, the reason most kids started
using drugs was rebellion. Fourteen year olds didn't start
smoking pot because they'd heard it would help them forget their
problems. They started because they wanted to join a
different tribe.
Misrule breeds rebellion; this is not a new idea.
And yet the authorities still for the most part act
as if drugs were themselves the cause of the problem.
Assuming the will to fix the real problem, the emptiness
of school life, what could we do? What won't work is to
attack the symptoms.
It won't work, for example, simply to forbid (or in the language
of the bureaucrats, "institute a zero-tolerance policy for")
bullying. For one thing, you have to catch bullying before you
can punish it. Teachers can't watch all the kids all the time.
Bullying already happens mostly when teachers aren't
watching: on the bus to and from school, in the halls between
classes, at lunch.
And how are you going to define bullying? Even if you could
prevent physical violence, that wouldn't stop bullying. Girls
don't hit one another (at least, at my school they didn't),
and yet by all accounts they are much more cruel to one another
than boys.
As long as kids need to compete for popularity, they'll find a
way to do it. Eliminating one form of persecution will just make them
use others. God forbid that outlawing boys' present
crude persecutions should drive them to become as ingenious as
the girls.
We'll never fix the problem until we face the fact that bullying
has a deep underlying causes. Unfortunately, the underlying causes
are of a type that will be hard for the educational establishment to face:
that secondary school is just a pantomime
of learning acted out until the students are old enough to be trusted
on their own at college, and that because
the students' need to create hierarchies has no external measure of
performance to fasten on,
they create
a hierarchy that is its own raison d'etre.
Bullying is just the other half of conformism, and this is
what drives both. Teenage kids
don't have anything better to think about. They're locked
in a waiting room.
When I lived in Italy,
teenagers there seemed little affected by the problems that
afflict kids here. They didn't seem sullen or mean. They
didn't even have acne. They
were fashion-conscious, certainly-- the entire country is-- but
it didn't feel like war.
Perhaps Italian schools are better, but I think the main reason for the
difference must be that families are so much stronger in Italy.
In America, many kids treat their homes as little more than a
place to sleep. School then becomes the center of their world.
In Italy, family is the important thing.
If school is pointless, so what? It's only school. If
the other students don't think much of you, so what? What
matters is what your family thinks of you.
If we had stronger families, it would at least mitigate the problem
of bad schools. It would extend the
comparative happiness kids have in elementary school, when family,
not school, is the center of life.
Unfortunately, the weakness of American families seems to be deeply
rooted in the northern European tradition. If we hope to fix
the emptiness of teenagers' lives through stronger families,
we may just be exchanging a hard problem for a harder one.
We can certainly learn from the Italian example in individual
cases though. That is, a stronger family should at least make
life in a broken system easier to bear for individual kids.
How would you fix the broken system? That's easy enough
to answer in the abstract.
The problem is that teenage kids have no purpose.
So give them a purpose. But how?
I don't think it would work to turn them back into
apprentices. Adults in past times didn't have teenagers as
apprentices because it made the kids' lives meaningful. They did it
because it made economic sense. And it just doesn't anymore.
Like mothers, teenagers have been left high and dry by
the receding waters of specialization.
The way to deal with problems created by
specialization is probably not to resist it, but to use it. Specialization
is as pervasive and irresistible as wind. If you want to go in
the other direction, tack.
The solution, whatever it turns out to be, may involve
substantial changes. We take the current form of school for granted,
but it is a fairly recent invention by historical standards. It's
not something we should be afraid to tinker with.
Perhaps the answer already exists.
There are a lot of schools in the world. Perhaps one has solved
this problem. Certainly there are some where the problem is
less acute than others.
Within America, one of the most obvious differences between the better and
worse schools will be money. But I don't think money is
the reason the better schools are better; I think it's that the richer
communities respect learning more. If you had given my high
school twice as much money, it wouldn't have changed a thing.
It was not because books were too expensive that they worshipped
football.
Whatever the solution is, nothing is likely to happen till adults
realize there is a problem.
The adults who may realize this first are the ones
who were themselves nerds in school. Do you want your kids to
be as unhappy in eighth grade as you were? I wouldn't. Well, then,
is there anything we can do to fix things? Almost certainly.
There is nothing inevitable about the current system. It has
come about mostly by default.
Adults, though, are busy. Showing up for school plays is one
thing. Taking on the educational bureaucracy is another. Perhaps
a few will have the energy to try to change things. I
suspect the hardest part is realizing that you can.
Nerds still in school should not hold their breaths. Maybe
one day a heavily armed force of adults will show up in helicopters to
rescue you, but they probably won't be coming this month.
Any immediate improvement in nerds' lives is probably going to
have to come from the nerds themselves.
Merely understanding the situation they're in should make
it less painful. Nerds aren't losers. They're just playing a
different game, and a game much closer to the one played in the
real world. Adults know this. It's hard to find successful
adults now who don't claim to have been nerds in high school.
It's important for nerds to realize, too, that school is not life.
School is a strange, artificial thing, half sterile and half feral.
It's all-encompassing, like life, but it isn't the real thing.
It's only temporary, and if you look you can see beyond it even
while you're still in it.
If life seems awful to kids, it's neither because hormones
are turning you all into monsters (as your parents believe),
nor because life actually is awful (as you believe).
It's because the adults, who no longer have
any economic use for you, have abandoned you to spend years
cooped up together with nothing real to do. Any society
of that type is awful to live in. Occam's razor says you don't
have to look any further to explain why teenage kids are
unhappy.
I've said some harsh things in this essay, but really the thesis
is an optimistic one-- that several problems we take for granted
are in fact not insoluble after all. Teenage kids are not
inherently unhappy monsters.
That should be encouraging news to kids and adults both.
Thanks to Sarah Harlin, Trevor Blackwell, Robert Morris,
Eric Raymond, and Jackie Weicker for reading drafts of this essay,
and Maria Daniels for scanning photos.