We Should Learn Through Art Whenever Possible (... It Always Is)
Art is the first way we learn—through drawing, music, movement, and storytelling. But as education becomes more “serious,” art is often sidelined as a luxury rather than a powerful tool for understanding the world. What if we never let it go? What if art was integrated into math, science, history, and more, making learning deeper, richer, and more human?
A Brief History of Education: Where it Led Us, and Now What?!
Education wasn’t always about standardized tests and factory-model schooling. From Egypt’s elite scribes to Confucius’s belief in lifelong learning, the purpose of education has shifted dramatically over centuries. The Aztecs pioneered universal schooling, the Greeks tied education to philosophy, and John Amos Comenius championed equal access. But by the 19th century, the industrial model took over—shaping obedient citizens rather than independent thinkers.
How did we get here? And more importantly, where do we go from here? From the Prussian roots of mass schooling to Horace Mann’s reforms and Frederick Taylor’s efficiency-obsessed standardization, this post uncovers how education became a system of control rather than liberation.
But change is always possible. Thinkers like Paulo Freire, Ken Robinson, and John Taylor Gatto challenge us to break free from outdated structures and rethink learning as an act of creativity, curiosity, and defiance. What if education wasn’t about compliance but about expanding minds?
Read on to discover the history they never taught you in school—and why reimagining education is the most radical act of all.
We Should Learn Through Art Whenever Possible (... It Always Is)
Art is the first way we learn—through drawing, music, movement, and storytelling. But as education becomes more “serious,” art is often sidelined as a luxury rather than a powerful tool for understanding the world. What if we never let it go? What if art was integrated into math, science, history, and more, making learning deeper, richer, and more human?
A Brief History of Education: Where it Led Us, and Now What?!
Education wasn’t always about standardized tests and factory-model schooling. From Egypt’s elite scribes to Confucius’s belief in lifelong learning, the purpose of education has shifted dramatically over centuries. The Aztecs pioneered universal schooling, the Greeks tied education to philosophy, and John Amos Comenius championed equal access. But by the 19th century, the industrial model took over—shaping obedient citizens rather than independent thinkers.
How did we get here? And more importantly, where do we go from here? From the Prussian roots of mass schooling to Horace Mann’s reforms and Frederick Taylor’s efficiency-obsessed standardization, this post uncovers how education became a system of control rather than liberation.
But change is always possible. Thinkers like Paulo Freire, Ken Robinson, and John Taylor Gatto challenge us to break free from outdated structures and rethink learning as an act of creativity, curiosity, and defiance. What if education wasn’t about compliance but about expanding minds?
Read on to discover the history they never taught you in school—and why reimagining education is the most radical act of all.
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