A measure of free will
We have all experienced the seemingly infinite nuances that
vary and change across learning individuals and experiences over time. It seems
reasonable to conclude that no single lesson brings about exactly the same
results in any two students or even the same results in a single student who
experiences it more than once. In light of this reality, John Gatto [1]
calls it “defective pedagogy” to
expect “from 20 to 60 young people in a group
- to learn the same thing
- at the same time
- in the same manner
- and to show enthusiasm for this rejection of personal uniqueness.”
Gatto goes on to make some important historical observations
about how schools in the past dealt with this dilemma.
“Infinite
variety was a law of nature and no command of bureaucrats could change that.
Nevertheless school-driven cultures like those of Prussia or Imperial Japan insisted
upon forcing conformity upon their young … putting square pegs in round holes …
until rebellious behavior forced gradual abandonment of the obsession that
human beings are as alike as a carpenter's nails. The breakthrough came from
schools for the sons and daughters of the elite … in Germany
the “realschulen” not the “volksschulen” …
and in America
the elite private boarding schools not the public schools. The reason was that,
like their privileged parents, privileged children retained a measure of free
will during the learning years. In time,
the performance of the graduates of Groton and St. Paul's (for example)
was so obviously superior that it gave rise to demands for similar methodologies
to spread into the public sector.”
However, Gatto concludes, a fundamental inconsistency exists
between the needs of individual students for “a measure of free will” and the
goal of public schools to produce conforming outcomes.
“Children have highly
individualized ways to learn. But bureaucratic systems, by their very nature,
can only pay feeble lip-service to this truism, because, face it, when
‘systems’ allow variation they cease being ‘systematic’ … which is the ultimate
sin for a bureaucrat or a socialist. And so universal institutional schooling
by force is a self-imposed road to inferior education … an inescapable dead end
… until a pill is invented to render protoplasm uniform like machinery. Nor can
socialism succeed as long as politicians allow free will to exist.”
Whether or not you agree with Gatto’s conclusion about the
vital importance of free will in education, very few can argue with the
proposition that a pedagogy founded on faulty premises about how learning takes
place will inevitably produce a lot of frustration to deliver an inferior
result. Can we do better? If so, how?
A White Owl cigar and a Danish prince
An iconic cigar brand used to make the following claim in its radio and TV advertisements.
“Sooner or later you're going to try
a White Owl … and once you do, we're gonna get'cha!"
Perhaps, educators can learn something [once again] from
those who have to sell their products to people who are not forced to buy them.
And the lesson is simple, but, as Hamlet reminds us, also profound:
“There’s a special providence in
the fall of a sparrow. If it be now, ’tis not to come; if it be not to come, it
will be now; if it be not now, yet it will come: the readiness is all.” Hamlet.
Act v. Sc. 2
“But”, most
educators would object, “we cannot afford to wait on each individual student to
come to his or her own moment of enlightenment. We must either gear up and hope that everyone gets
something from the lesson [the approach of most private schools] … or dumb down and accept that some are
going to be frustrated no matter what we do [the resignation of most public
schools].” In either case, we comfort ourselves by concluding that our
pedagogical problem has been resolved … while we all know that is not true.
Saturate them with the Trivium
But what if we
think of “readiness” as also being the continual obligation of the teacher and
the curriculum rather than merely the momentary state of the individual student?
And what if “the lesson” we are trying to teach is not sequentially dependent
on specific subjects or grades but is instead common to all subjects in all
grades?
One of the
distinguishing characteristics of a liberal arts school should be that its
teachers and curriculum consciously and continuously expose every student of
every subject in every grade to the use and interdependence of the same common
tools of learning embodied in the Trivium … grammar, logic and rhetoric. Why? Because
one of the fundamental purposes of a liberal education is to enable the
student, sooner or later
depending on his or her own individual readiness, to become aware of and
even master the use of these learning tools which, in “the time remaining”,
will enable the student to master and even contribute to any specific subject
regardless of that student’s age or grade. This kind of education is not only
“liberal” … it is liberating … respecting free will while assuring a good
education.
You can imagine
many consequences of such a pedagogy, but here is a list of a few important
ones that come to mind:
- Tests become exciting opportunities to glimpse success rather than dismal sentences that condemn failure.
- Age diversity replaces grade segregation removing artificial social barriers and the frustrations that arise from attempts to force identical maturation rates on unique individuals.
- Confidence replaces fear as faith and patience grow into proven virtues.
- Helping hands reaching out remind everyone of our shared responsibility to encourage and enable each unique and awesome individual to reach their own potential in their own time.
Community not conformity
We are born and die as unique individuals. But all our lives
there are social forces which press us into molds … of all sorts … familial,
religious, economic, political … and the list goes on. The liberal arts is one
of the best pedagogies we have when it comes to enabling our individuality
while building our community rather than extinguishing our personality by
enforcing conformity. And what could be better than that?
tandem,
Bob Love
[1] New York City Teacher of the Year in 1989, 1990, and 1991,
and New York State Teacher of the Year in 1991.
"Some do, some don't." How many times have you heard that about almost every issue we could mention? It is a folk adage that prefaced the scientific research we now have that tell us that we are all sublimely unique.
ReplyDeleteIn our school of only 80 students (grades 6-12) it is imperative, and possible, that we recognize each person as unique and act on it. Small classes allow many individual paths as we are taught one lesson all together. Our classrooms tell "stories" in "languages" to all the students assembled and they are asked to "learn", which becomes practice in using the tools of the Trivium, translating and integrating the lesson in ways that fit them uniquely.
Individuality, John Gatto's point, the scientific reality, the experienced truth, would be the strongest arguments for throwing wide the gates of school choice. Many forms, suitable to this reality, could emerge from the homogenizing fog of the prevalent practice of state-mandated "compulsory school". However, all those forms, will only be successful if they use the Liberal Arts pedagogy. It is how people are designed to learn.,Northfield School is a trade school teaching students to use the Trivium tools to craft a way to learn about anything in life. They must take the tools in their own hands and fashion their own "learning", according to their God-given idiosyncracies towards the common goal Wisdom and Truth, in humility for service in the world at large.