.
| Students
Study Economics -- Appreciate U.S. |
| An
Interview of John Monroe, Director of the Institute for Economic
Inquiry |
| [Reprinted from Free
Enterprise, March, 1963] |
Many Free Enterprisers will be interested to know what John Monroe of
Chicago (formerly director of the Henry George School there) has
recently done through his Institute for Economic Inquiry which high
school students attend voluntarily and without charge at the suggestion
of their instructors. For example, here are the comments made by three
Lane Tech students concerning the Institute for Economic Inquiry:
Brian Banner: "I've learned how America grows - how a man takes
something from nature and changes it. Like iron ore into steel. I'd
never thought about this, before."
George Daszko: "Now I understand what the word 'economy' means. It
isn't just money and how you spend it. It's all the things we use, how
we produce them, how we live better."
Rollie Merrick: "The first couple of sessions I was lost, but soon
all the pieces seemed to fit. I'm glad Mr. Childs told us about IEI.
Before I came down here, I used to skip over the business pages because
I didn't care what business was doing. Now I like to read the business
news."
Young Merrick was referring to his Lane Tech history teacher, Mr. Ralph
Childs, a patriotic conservative, who believes that our youth today do
not fully appreciate the American Way of Life because they do not
understand how our free enterprise system operates.
"To get the most out of history," Mr. Childs says, "a
student has to do more than read a textbook. He should question the
author; do his own thinking. If not, there is a tendency to accept what
authors say as gospel truth and this is one way false ideas are spread.
"I told my history students about IEI," Mr. Childs continued,
"because I figured it wouldn't hurt to get behind the ideas that
have evolved since ancient times and IEI's method of inquiry is one way
of doing it."
Mr. Childs says that since his students have been enrolled in IEI, they
have become more attentive and are more willing to question what is
given them to see if it follows logically.
How do the high school students compare with the 959 adult graduates of
IEI last term? Their conference leader, Jacques B. Schneider, a music
supervisor of Public School District Three in Elmhurst, says:
"They participate in the discussions on a much broader basis than
adults do. Their explanations of their own feelings about certain ideas
are extensive. They just don't say 'yes' or 'no.' They are quite
articulate.
"Their thinking seems clearer than most adults'. They don't have
as many pre-conceived ideas about economics and their prejudices are not
as deeply rooted as those of adults."
John Monroe's Institute for Economic Inquiry, at 236 North Clark Street
in Chicago, provides the seminar leader, conference room, and study
materials. The non-profit organization offers its courses as a public
service without tuition of any kind. Last year IEI recorded a 172%
increase in enrollment in its 10-session, round-table economic study
courses. Manufacturers, an airline, a steelmaker, electric and
electronics shops, publishers, parent and teacher associations are among
24 companies now sponsoring courses in Illinois. Indiana and Michigan.
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