The one reluctantly and slowly,
and fairly pried loose by a thousand arguments, will perhaps in the end give
sign of assent—I mean of course the dullard. The other quickly and readily will
accept the argument as cogent and relevant to himself, and will not require
many proofs nor a fuller treatment.
Was not just such a lad that
Spartan boy who asked Cleanthes the philosopher if toil was not a good? He made
it plain that he was so well endowed by nature and by training for the practice
of virtue as to consider toil closer to the nature of good than of evil, in
that he asked whether toil was not perchance a good, as if it were conceded
that it was not an evil. Thereupon Cleanthes in surprise and admiration of the
boy replied,
"You are of noble blood,
dear child, so noble the words you speak."
Can you doubt that such a lad
would have been readily persuaded not to fear poverty nor death nor any of the
things which seem terrible, and again, not to seek after wealth nor life nor
pleasure?
A rather
long and gruesome stretch in the world of education has shown me how much
people like to argue about which subjects should be taught, or in what order
they should be presented, or whether this or that new fashionable curriculum is
best.
Yes
indeed, let us ask what should be learned; yet what we sadly neglect is also
asking what needs to precede any learning at all, the right conditions for the
seeds to take root. There is no point to planting in untilled soil. There will
be very little learning if we have not already helped form better learners.
We are
also, I suspect, interested in producing obedient followers of this or that
ideology, efficient producers and consumers, and young folks who will gladly do
what they are told. I’m no longer sure if it is education or indoctrination, on
all sides of the spectrum.
There is
a great interest in the results, what the education industry likes to call
measurable outcomes, and very little interest in the cause of genuine
understanding, in asking students to freely think for themselves. Only they can
be the measure of that.
Throw a
textbook at someone, and then give him a multiple choice test, and you have
taught him nothing. Ask him to merely repeat what you have told him, and he has
learned nothing. You have groomed him only for conformity, not for being human.
Without a foundation for building his own insight and character, you have made
him an object, not a subject.
Everyone
has very different degrees of disposition for learning, and I would claim that
so much of being a teacher is trying to work with what is already given. You
will find some brilliantly prepared, and others grossly unprepared. With some,
you may begin right away on the straight and narrow, while with others you will
need to try undoing years of broadly bad habits.
Some
athletes show up for training in a state of ideal fitness, while others appear
in a state of terrible neglect. Some recruits enter boot camp as sharp as a
knife and full of commitment, while others can’t even manage to get out of bed
or do a dozen push-ups.
Building
up a physical strength and stamina is quite important, but building up an
intellectual and moral strength and stamina is ultimately so much more
important. The greater part, the mind and will, should gracefully rule over the
lesser part, the body and the passions.
I can
only nod when I read the story of Cleanthes and the young Spartan. The lazy,
the entitled, and the spoiled will come to you with the assumption that they
deserve the most profit with the least effort. I know full well that sense of
joy and wonder when I have come across a student who actually wants to learn,
who is willing to face difficulty, and who is eagerly in search of something
better.
He is
ready. He has been well prepared. He will most likely advance in wisdom and
character quickly.
Should
one then heartlessly cast aside those who are not ready or prepared? Not at
all. One should rather help them to first become ready and prepared. Otherwise,
no later rigorous and directed study will be of any use to them at all, a fault
that will not be theirs, but our own.
I need
to remember, of course, that the young Spartan was, from a Stoic perspective, technically
mistaken. Hardship is not in and of itself a good, but only when it is employed
rightly. Yet his inclinations, whether from nature or from nurture, allowed him
to see the very possibility that it could
well be a good, and to see that gratification could well be an evil.
He was
half way there. He was on his way to focusing in on the truth, instead of
hunting and pecking over the whole field.
Written in 2/1999
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