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Education
for Life:
Preparing Children to Meet the Challenges
by J. Donald Walters
Chapter Two
Education Should Be Experiential, Not
Merely Technical
You’ve heard that
familiar, but time-dishonored, rationalization: “The end justifies the
means.” Everyone knows that this saying has been offered by “true
believers” in multitudes of causes as justification for their violent
deeds. A bad tree, however, as Jesus Christ pointed out, produces bad
fruit. Evil means lead to evil ends.
And yet—suppose we
restate that saying another way, thus: “The end tests the validity
of the means”? To this statement, no one could object. For only by the
actual outcome of a course of action can we verify whether the action
was valid or not.
Human deeds
justify, or condemn, themselves by their consequences. A man may
campaign for peace, yet parade about so angrily in his “peace
demonstrations” that all he accomplishes in the end is the disruption
of everybody’s peace, including his own. A nation may see no harm in
destroying its forests to get wood, but the consequences of the act
will demonstrate that great harm was done to the ecology. In this
case, the end—obtaining wood for fireplaces and for the construction
of houses—clearly did not justify the means used. On the other side,
if Fulton was ridiculed for building a ship made of metal, the fact
that it floated once it was launched was all the justification he
needed for his invention.
A course of action
is justified if its results are consistently good. It is in the
consequences of a theory, similarly, that the theory itself can be
justified.
We see here a basic
weakness of modern education: It is theoretical, primarily. It places
all too little emphasis on practicality. Far from trying to justify
any means in terms of their actual results, educators seem to view any
concern with the practical effects of a theory as a kind of
betrayal of the true, scholarly spirit.
I am reminded of
the case of a man of only grade school education, but of wide
experience in mining engineering, who, late in his life, decided to
get a formal education. After great effort he succeeded in persuading
the authorities of a university to accept him on the strength of his
years of practical experience in the field. A few months later,
however, he dropped his studies.
“What have you
done?” demanded the dean. “It was so important to you to get an
education, and we, too, went to great lengths to get you admitted.”
“An education!” the
man snorted. “There isn’t one of these pedagogues who isn’t teaching
what I myself learned better in the field. Many of them learned
everything they know from me! What can they teach me?”
It is no accident,
surely, that many of the world’s greatest men and women—scientists,
thinkers, teachers, molders of public opinion—either never finished
their formal education or did poorly in school. Einstein’s teachers
marked him for a failure in life. Edison could only manage three
months of formal schooling, at the end of which his teacher sent him
home with a note saying he was “unteachable”—in fact, “addled.” Goethe
found little worth assimilating during his formal schooling. In fact,
he later claimed not to have found a single university course that
could hold his interest.
What is the
difference between great human beings and the pedagogues who explain
their lives and discoveries to others? It is this, quite simply: True
greatness focuses on reality, but the explainers get their knowledge
and belief systems from books about reality. The way-showers of
humanity have specific ends in mind—the truth about something,
usually—and are committed to achieving those ends by the means most
practical for attaining them. They are impatient with attitudes that
seem to imply that the means are an end in themselves; that method is
more important than results, and that no conclusion is ever final and
should always, therefore, be considered tentative. For the pedagogue,
on the other hand, theories hold such a fascination that the very
intricacy of reasoning in their formulation often replaces the need
for arriving at any firm conclusion.
However full a
student’s head is crammed with book learning, his understanding of
things, and of life in general, after twelve or sixteen years of
education, is completely unrelated to actual experience. Still less is
it the product of self-understanding.
Were we, on the
other hand, to define education primarily in terms of what life
has to teach us, we would soon find reality directing our theories,
instead of theories molding our perceptions. But students are seduced
into championing hare-brained, and even dangerous, beliefs, all
because their teachers are too “objective” to mind if a theory offends
against normal human sensibilities and the most rudimentary common
sense, as long as it is presented in an attractive wrapping of
intellectual reasoning.
Take the teachings
of Jean Paul Sartre on the subject of meaninglessness. Sartre was a
nihilist. Because he developed his theories brilliantly, they are
offered at universities as standard intellectual fare. “The ego is
flattered,” Paramhansa Yogananda wrote, “that it can grasp such
complexity.”
A recent survey of
professors found that the majority preferred wordy, intellectually
intricate and abstruse articles on subjects in their own fields over
articles that made the same points, but in a style that was simple and
easy to read.
The people
conducting the survey then took articles that had been written simply
and clearly, and restated them in convoluted terms, replacing short
words with long ones wherever possible, and clear statements with
others that were muddy or contrived. They offered these altered
articles to the same professors, along with the original versions, and
asked for a comparative evaluation. Most of those learned pedagogues,
never guessing that they were in essence reading the same article to
which not a thought had been added, and from which none had been
deleted, declared they preferred the more complex version. When asked
why, they replied that the more intellectual sounding version showed
better research, deeper thought, and greater insight.
It can be
astonishing, the extent to which theories learned during the formative
years can direct a person’s later perceptions of reality. Any error
learned early distorts the very way one reasons. False premises lead
to false conclusions no matter how clever the line of reasoning.
Theories imposed on reality are allowed to pose as substitutes for the
reality itself.
We see this
tendency in psychologists who insist, in defiance of their own direct
experience, that the mind of a newborn baby is a blank slate on which
environment will write the impressions that will form his personality.
Nothing in objective reality supports this theory. Parents know how
very different, from birth, each child is from all the others. Never
mind. Theory says it should be so: Therefore, it is so.
We see the same
tendency in Freud, who adopted virtually as his mission the attempt to
explain all human motivation in terms of the sex drive. (I can imagine
physicists trying to fit Freud’s theory to their attempts to discover
the laws inherent in quantum mechanics!)
Educated people,
far more so than those who have been raised in the “school of hard
knocks”—that is to say, of common sense—are notoriously prone to
prefer theory over reality.
For education to
prepare children for meeting life realistically, it should encourage
them to learn from life itself, and to view with skepticism a body of
fixed knowledge that has been passed on unquestioned from one
generation to the next.
Education must
above all be experiential, and not merely theoretical. The student
should be taught, among other things, to observe the outcome of any
course of action, and not to depend blindly on the claims of others as
to what that outcome is supposed to be, and therefore will be.
In this simple
emphasis on direct experience, not only as regards the investigations
of science, but even more so as it applies to the humanities, lie the
seeds of a new and revolutionary system of education that I have named
here Education for Life.
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Reason Must Be Balanced by Feeling
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