After years of compulsory schooling, many adults lack strong literacy, confidence in learning, and comfort with complex material. These outcomes appear consistently across institutions and generations. Evaluated as evidence, they point to structure rather than individual limitation.
In The Sentence That Failed Us, Jawanna Dean examines education through population-level results. She shows how instructional failure becomes personal identity, how ranking systems require perceived losers, and how authority displaces accountability. The analysis follows the consequences of these mechanisms into adulthood, where learning avoidance and compliance are mistaken for preference or capacity.
The book reframes learning as an interaction shaped by environment, method, and evaluation. When design is held accountable, learning resumes without shame and identity separates from outcome.
The Sentence That Failed Us offers a precise examination of education's results and the institutional power that shaped them.