by Francis X. Hezel, SJ
1973 Education
The School in Micronesia's largest industry today. It is responsible for the manufacture of trained young people — the most valuable of all commodities. At present it is processing fully one-third of the human resources in Micronesia, although it is unclear whether these products are being turned out for domestic consumption or for export. The educational industry employs almost one out of every three of the 5,000 Micronesians on the government payroll. The school is the largest single source of revenue for the Micronesian people; the combined salaries of education 's 1,500 employees exceeds the income from all of the Trust Territory's exports together.
It is surprising that the school is ignored in the heated discussion of the pros and cons of foreign industry that are carried on endlessly today. Yet the controversy seems to always rage around Van Camp and Bumble Bee and Del Monte while the significance of that louvered cement-block classroom building that dominates every village is forgotten.
But the Micronesian in the village has not forgotten. How could he? After all, the school house is the economic focal point of his community. Take, for example, the elementary school building in Onei, Truk — once featured in the Micronesian Reporter for its imaginative design and low-cost construction from local materials. If it were suddenly closed Onei would find itself deprived of 60% of its total annual income. The school in nearby Patta brings in half of the yearly total revenue there. And much of the same could be said for just about any other school in an off-district-center community. Last year Onei earned $6,000 through the sale of fish and copra, as compared with $24,000 in teachers' salaries. In village after village the school represents the largest single source of income for the community.
It is naive, then, to think of the village school as just a cultural force — either a civilizing influence or an outpost of cultural imperialism, depending on one's ideology. As long as the argument remains at this level — and it usually does– we will fail to come to grips with the real meaning of the school to most Micronesians today. For those of us who fancy ourselves liberals to discuss educational alternatives to the white schoolhouse — to talk of 'dischooling Micronesian society' — is hardly realistic. Unlike most countries of which Illich and others write, the school is not a drain on the national economy; in Micronesia it is the chief source of income. And no sane people anywhere in the world is likely to quietly part with its principal source of revenue without a fight.
The fact that the school is a foreign industry hardly matters at all. Its social effects on the community are barely noticed by most people. Micronesian parents beam as they watch their children parade out of the village elementary school into still another school, and perhaps another after that. The smile fades a bit when the parent realizes that his son or daughter won't be coming home to stay at the end of it all. But after sitting in a classroom for 12 or 16 years learning to appreciate all the things that he could never possibly do in his village community, who can blame the young man for not returning home? There are no Friday evening dances in Onei or Patta> Nor are there automobiles, bars nor libraries. But there is a 9 PM curfew! And also a strong feeling that the young should comply with traditional methods of decision-making, no matter how much political science they learned at Mauna Ola College.
Up to the present, some graduates have in fact returned to their communities to work for the same industry that so recently processed them — the school. This is no cause of wonder, for the typical Micronesian school is admirably designed to cycle its produces into this or some similar kind of work, despite half-hearted attempts to inject vocational or trade courses into the curriculum.
But schools can absorb only so many teachers. One wonders how many of those 3,000 high school graduates that are projected for 1976 will be returning to their village. And if they are unable to find work in the district center, will they simply become hangers — on there or will they leave for greener valleys — Guam, Hawaii, San Francisco (as young American Samoans have already done in great numbers). If such a brain-drain should occur in Micronesia, after the high school enrollment has tripled, then the Trust Territory would have as much to show for its foreign school industry as it has for its foreign fishing industry — plenty of dollars in wages but very few fish for its own consumption.
The myth persists that the government bureaucracy is infinitely expansible and that somehow the hordes of young graduates who will be inundating these islands within two years will be able to find employment just as easily as the first waves of graduates. Hence, the average Micronesian parent continues to eagerly pack his child off to school in the expectation that he will be initiated into the mysteries of the cash economy and become a breadwinner abater a certain number of years. In the polar mind — in Micronesia as in other parts of the world — the school is a factory that converts plain human beings into potential wage-earners. (This conception of the school is only being strengthened by the bandying about of such terms as "career education".) Again, therefore, the school has a primarily economic function — enabling people to eventually secure wage employment.
There is no point in reminding people that the school also breeds frustrations when the rather high aspirations of the young go unrealized. That it teaches young people to demand more of their society — from rock bands for their entertainment to paddled chairs and type-writers for their employment. That school magical transforms a boy who might have been a good fisherman or farmer into one who is psychologically unfit for such "servile" employment. That it is unlikely that there will be enough typewriters and padded chairs to go around in the future, and there may be Amy disappointed young me ad women. And that , as Micronesia's fishing industry develops, the early drop-out rather than the high school graduate will be the fortunate one, for he at least will be employable.
There are, of course, signs of stress even today. Not only the worsening unemployment situation, but the growing cultural distance between the youth and their parents. "Why don't they respect authority anymore and follow our customs?" is a lament one hears again and again. The question comes from the very same parents and legislators who so strongly endorsed the school industry and even voted for its expansion. As a teacher in one of these schools, I can only shrug my shoulders and think, "Surely you must have known!" But this is unfair, for the adults in the village who send their children to school redly don't know. The more obvious material benefits of the school industry are well understood, but its culturally disruptive effects on the community — the unrealistic aspirations to which it gives a rise. its widening of the culture gap between young and old, and the likelihood of large displacement of the community population — are just beginning to be glimpsed. As with most foreign industries, the immediate visible gains brought by the school obscure the less apparent — and sometimes more far-reaching — difficulties.
There is the naive belief that we can have the schools and eliminate the problems if only we make a few substitutions in the curriculum or replace expatriate teachers with Micronesian teachers in all haste. To entertain the hope, for instance, that insertion of a course on local arts and crafts, traditional navigation, or folklore will change the nature of the school is sheer folly. It will remain basically a school designed to prepare students to enter another school. The basket-weaving and folklore may be of some interest and amusement to students, but it will always be an irrelevant side-dish in a school whose goal is to educate the child to leave his community. After all, the success of the village elementary school is commonly defined in terms of the percentage of its pupils who have been accepted in a secondary school (usually situated out of the community). Likewise, the success of secondary schools is measured by the number of its graduates who leave for still more remote parts to attend college.
No courses in Micronesian history or local culture will change this. . Nothing short of a radical alteration in the nature and purpose of the school can do so. Perhaps it is not in the interests of Micronesia to do this, and we will now have to deal with the problems as best we can. But at least we will have made a great stride forward when we have dispelled the illusion that the problems created by the foreign school industry can be solved by band-aid measures.
What is to be done then? Surely it is not my place, nor that of anyone who is sincerely a "friend of Micronesia" to decide one way or the other. My purpose is only to point out the futility of pretending that if schools are changed just a little bit that the problems will go away. They will not. To heal these problems a major educational overhaul would be required. Many schools might have to be closed; and the purpose of those that remain open thoroughly redefined. The local communities, such as Patta and Onei, might lose much of the income they now enjoy through the school industry. And after all of this, no one could be quite sure that the educational alternatives that might be tried — such as short term community-training programs mounted and supported by the village itself — would work.
The existing school industry continues to be highly profitable one when measured in dollars, but a very costly one in terms of its social consequences on the community. The decision that Micronesians must ultimately make with respect to schools will be far more difficult than any decision regarding Del Monte or Continental, for the school is far more important than any of these other industries. Micronesian leaders must no longer expect that present school system to do things which it is powerless to do. I doubt whether an American-sponsored school system, even with the best of intentions, can ever really 'Micronesianize' students, and it should not be expected to do so. Neither can the school in its present form train people to live contentedly in the village on a semi-subsistence economy. Nor can the school scholarships and the dreams of material prosperity it fosters in the heads of the young — promote self-reliance among the young. If these are the primary goals of Micronesian leaders, then the school will have to be readily changed. This will be a painful decision to make, for the nationalization of the foreign school industry will bring not more economic benefits to Micronesia, but fewer. And yet the decision will have a profound effect on the political future of the Trust Territory.