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Education Quote by B. F. Skinner

"Education is what survives when what has been learned has been forgotten"

About this Quote

Skinner’s line is a behavioralist mic drop: it demotes “learning” from a stash of facts to a set of durable dispositions. Coming from the architect of operant conditioning, the phrasing is almost mischievously anti-sentimental about schooling. If education is what survives after forgetting, then the point was never the trivia we cram and later shed. The point is the shaped behavior that remains when the content evaporates.

The intent is quietly confrontational. Skinner is poking at the romantic idea that education is synonymous with knowledge accumulation. In his framework, what matters is what you can still do: how you approach problems, how you persist, what cues you notice, what habits of attention and self-correction have been reinforced. “Survives” is the tell. It turns education into a kind of behavioral residue, a set of conditioned competencies that outlast the fragile recall of dates, formulas, and definitions.

The subtext is a critique of assessment culture before today’s testing wars even fully arrived. If forgetting is inevitable, then schooling that rewards short-term performance is mistaking temporary recall for real formation. Skinner also smuggles in his broader argument about environment: lasting “education” isn’t a private, inner possession; it’s a pattern produced by training conditions, feedback loops, and incentives.

Context matters: mid-century psychology was busy dethroning introspection with measurement. Skinner’s sentence is built like an experiment—strip away the variables that decay, see what behavior remains—and it still lands because it reframes a familiar anxiety (“I don’t remember anything from school”) as the wrong metric entirely.

Quote Details

TopicLearning
Source
Verified source: New methods and new aims in teaching (B. F. Skinner, 1964)
Text match: 100.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
Education is what survives when what has been learned has been forgotten. (pp. 483–484). Primary source is B. F. Skinner’s article in New Scientist (issue dated May 21, 1964). Multiple independent references give the same citation details: New Scientist, Vol. 22, No. 392 (21 May 1964), pp. 483–484, in the piece titled “New methods and new aims in teaching.” The B. F. Skinner Foundation’s Full Bibliography lists this publication entry (confirming title/year/venue/pages). The quote appears in-context in the paragraph beginning “Many of the subjects may be unrecognisable, however…”. A transcription/scan excerpt consistent with the original also circulates (e.g., reprints of the New Scientist article), but the bibliography entry is the cleanest primary bibliographic verification.
Other candidates (1)
The Child's Secret of Learning (Gerald Van Koeverden, 2005) compilation95.0%
... Education is what survives when what has been learned has been forgotten . B. F. Skinner 5 دو How do we function ...
Cite

Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Skinner, B. F. (2026, February 8). Education is what survives when what has been learned has been forgotten. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/education-is-what-survives-when-what-has-been-30002/

Chicago Style
Skinner, B. F. "Education is what survives when what has been learned has been forgotten." FixQuotes. February 8, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/education-is-what-survives-when-what-has-been-30002/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Education is what survives when what has been learned has been forgotten." FixQuotes, 8 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/education-is-what-survives-when-what-has-been-30002/. Accessed 14 Feb. 2026.

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About the Author

B. F. Skinner

B. F. Skinner (March 20, 1904 - August 18, 1990) was a Psychologist from USA.

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