While pundits and analysts will argue for years about the 2016, 2020, and 2024 election results, left out of the conversation is an astounding fact: Non-voters vastly outnumber those who voted for Donald Trump, Hillary Clinton, Joe Biden, or Kamala Harris. Consider 2016, when about 130 million voters went to the polls. Clinton received 65,844,954 votes to Trump’s 62,979,8790, but more than 100,000,00 Americans of voting age did not cast ballots. In 2024, Trump got 77,301,000 votes, and Harris received 75,017,000 votes, but non-voters won again, because more than 90,000,000 eligible voters didn’t bother to go to the polls or mail in their ballots.
In fact, if “Not Voting” were looked upon as a choice (candidate), it would have won the popular vote in every Presidential election since at least 1916 because Americans have a bad habit of not voting.
Who are these non-voters? Should we scorn them for their indifference? Don’t they understand how many of their fellow Americans have died protecting their freedom and their right to vote? Surely we can agree that their not voting is deplorable behavior?
Not so fast. I have come to believe that most non-voters are behaving rationally. They do not feel that they have a stake in our government, so why should they vote? They were schooled to see themselves as insignificant, and so, as adults, they keep their heads down, stay uninvolved, and do their best to make ends meet.
Yes, I am holding public schools at least partly responsible for our consistently low voter turnout, because public education is an efficient sorting machine that is undemocratic to its core. Schools sort young children in two basic groups: A minority is designated as ‘winners’ who are placed on a track leading to elite colleges, prominence and financial success. While the rest aren’t labeled ‘losers’ per se, they are largely left to struggle on their own. That experience leaves many angry, frustrated and resentful, not to mention largely unprepared for life in a complex, rapidly changing society. Why would they become active participants in the political process, an effort led by the now grown up ‘winners’ from their school days? (It took a candidate who understood their resentment to arouse them….which happened in 2016 and again in 2024.)
Although formal tracking has fallen out of favor, schools have subtle ways of designating winners and losers, often based as much on parental education and income, race, and class as innate ability. By third or fourth grade most kids know, deep down, whether the system sees them as ‘winners’ bound for college or ‘losers’ headed somewhere else.
Ironically, A Nation at Risk, the 1983 report that warned of “a rising tide of mediocrity,” inadvertently made matters worse. In response, America put its eggs in the basket of student achievement–-as measured by student test scores. Believing we were raising academic standards by asking more of students, we were in fact narrowing our expectations—those test scores again. This practice went into high gear with the passage of the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001. What I call “regurgitation education” became the order of the day. This approach rewards parroting back answers, while devaluing intellectual curiosity, cooperative learning, projects, field trips, the arts, physical education, and citizenship.
This fundamentally anti-intellectual approach has failed to produce results. Scores on our National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) have largely remained flat and have recently gone down.
Reducing kids to test scores has produced generations of graduates whose teachers and curriculum did not help them develop the habit of asking questions, digging deep, or discovering and following their passion. Because of how they were treated in school, many Americans have not grown into curious, socially conscious adults. This is not the fault of their teachers, because decisions about how schools operate are not made in classrooms. It was school boards, politicians, policy makers, and the general public that created schools that value obedience over just about everything else.
But the end result is millions of graduates who were rewarded with diplomas but have never participated in the give-and-take of ordinary citizenship—like voting. Did they graduate from school prepared for life in a democracy, or are they likely to follow blindly the siren song of authoritarians? Can they weigh claims and counterclaims and make decisions based on facts and their family’s best interests, or will they give their support to those who play on their emotions?
During his campaigns, Donald Trump openly welcomed support from those he called ‘the poorly educated,’ but that’s the incorrect term. These men and women are not ‘poorly educated,’ ‘undereducated,’ or ‘uneducated.’ They have been miseducated, an important distinction. Schools have treated them as objects, as empty vessels to pour information into so it can be regurgitated back on tests.
The sorting process used in schools has another result: it produces elitists (in both political parties) who feel superior to the largely invisible ‘losers’ from their school days. Arguably, those chickens came home to roost when Candidate Clinton called her opponent’s supporters ‘A Bucket of Deplorables,’ a gaffe that may have cost her the election. But in all likelihood she was speaking her personal truth, because, after all, school had identified her as a ‘winner,‘ one of the elite. It’s perfectly understandable that she would not identify with the people who had been energized by Donald Trump. Most pundits, reporters, pollsters and politicians fell into the same trap.
Sorting is inevitable, because students try out for teams and plays, apply to colleges, and eventually seek employment, but let’s postpone sorting for as long as possible. A new approach to schooling must ask a different question about each young child. Let’s stop asking, “How intelligent are you?” Let’s ask instead, “How are you intelligent?” That may strike some as a steep hill to climb, but it’s essentially the question that caring parents, teachers, and other adults ask about individual children. They phrase it differently, asking, “What is Susan interested in?” “What gets George excited?” “What motivates Juan?” or “What does Sharese care about?” Every child has interests, and those can be tapped and nurtured in schools designed to provide opportunities for children to succeed as they pursue paths of their own choosing. Giving children agency over their education—with appropriate guidance and supervision—will produce graduates better equipped to cope with today’s changing world. And a larger supply of informed voters!
While the country survived four years of Donald Trump, it is again being severely tested. To survive and prosper, our democracy must have public schools that respect and nurture our children. If we don’t change our public schools, we will elect a succession of Donald Trumps, and that will be the end of the American experiment.
Very interesting and thought provoking John. Thank you.
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Excellent essay John. Meritocracy is so entrenched in our society and in our minds I wonder what it would take to turn this ship around.
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Tom and Larry,
Years ago the great Henry “Hank” Levin started an elementary school experiment which essentially treated every child as “gifted.” It was truly incredible! I think it was called “Accelerated Schools.”
But the untold story of American public education is one of impressive experimental programs that do not find permanent homes in the system. Why? It’s not cost. I fear that it’s because deep down we don’t care about “other people’s children.”
Dr James Comer of Yale created a chain of absolutely wonderful public schools, but these too are withering.
Ditto the schools of District Four in East Harlem started by Debbie Meier and Si Fliegel and others.
I also worry about the schools that have adopted E D Hirsch’s superb “Core Knowledge” curriculum. As he fades, will the schools go back to ‘normal’?
As school boards become more politicized, the problem gets worse. We desperately need strong but progressive and inspirational leadership.
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John,You are right
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Some very interesting and good points.
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Interesting essay. Indeed, public schools need help. But don’t worry about the Trump phenomenon no matter how distressing some find it, just remember we had a Joe Biden up there pretending to be “Leader of the Free World” and see how disastrous and incredibly embarrassing that turned out to be. As for not voting, I was up and down on the issue over the years and no longer vote on purpose. Democracy is writing and reading and thinking about your essay, not voting for another stooge to shake hands in Congress. If we taught students early and often until adulthood we might have a revolution and get rid of the two party system that has caused so much harm over 150 years. Good luck, and keep it up.
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Reading this after the election as a kid currently going through high school makes me reevaluate how I want to frame everything happening around me. Thank you so much for sharing your opinion!
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