<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001"></SPAN></p>
<h2> Chapter One: Education as a Necessity of Life </h2>
<p>1. Renewal of Life by Transmission. The most notable distinction between
living and inanimate things is that the former maintain themselves by
renewal. A stone when struck resists. If its resistance is greater than
the force of the blow struck, it remains outwardly unchanged. Otherwise,
it is shattered into smaller bits. Never does the stone attempt to react
in such a way that it may maintain itself against the blow, much less so
as to render the blow a contributing factor to its own continued action.
While the living thing may easily be crushed by superior force, it none
the less tries to turn the energies which act upon it into means of its
own further existence. If it cannot do so, it does not just split into
smaller pieces (at least in the higher forms of life), but loses its
identity as a living thing.</p>
<p>As long as it endures, it struggles to use surrounding energies in its own
behalf. It uses light, air, moisture, and the material of soil. To say
that it uses them is to say that it turns them into means of its own
conservation. As long as it is growing, the energy it expends in thus
turning the environment to account is more than compensated for by the
return it gets: it grows. Understanding the word "control" in this sense,
it may be said that a living being is one that subjugates and controls for
its own continued activity the energies that would otherwise use it up.
Life is a self-renewing process through action upon the environment.</p>
<p>In all the higher forms this process cannot be kept up indefinitely. After
a while they succumb; they die. The creature is not equal to the task of
indefinite self-renewal. But continuity of the life process is not
dependent upon the prolongation of the existence of any one individual.
Reproduction of other forms of life goes on in continuous sequence. And
though, as the geological record shows, not merely individuals but also
species die out, the life process continues in increasingly complex forms.
As some species die out, forms better adapted to utilize the obstacles
against which they struggled in vain come into being. Continuity of life
means continual readaptation of the environment to the needs of living
organisms.</p>
<p>We have been speaking of life in its lowest terms—as a physical
thing. But we use the word "Life" to denote the whole range of experience,
individual and racial. When we see a book called the Life of Lincoln we do
not expect to find within its covers a treatise on physiology. We look for
an account of social antecedents; a description of early surroundings, of
the conditions and occupation of the family; of the chief episodes in the
development of character; of signal struggles and achievements; of the
individual's hopes, tastes, joys and sufferings. In precisely similar
fashion we speak of the life of a savage tribe, of the Athenian people, of
the American nation. "Life" covers customs, institutions, beliefs,
victories and defeats, recreations and occupations.</p>
<p>We employ the word "experience" in the same pregnant sense. And to it, as
well as to life in the bare physiological sense, the principle of
continuity through renewal applies. With the renewal of physical existence
goes, in the case of human beings, the recreation of beliefs, ideals,
hopes, happiness, misery, and practices. The continuity of any experience,
through renewing of the social group, is a literal fact. Education, in its
broadest sense, is the means of this social continuity of life. Every one
of the constituent elements of a social group, in a modern city as in a
savage tribe, is born immature, helpless, without language, beliefs,
ideas, or social standards. Each individual, each unit who is the carrier
of the life-experience of his group, in time passes away. Yet the life of
the group goes on.</p>
<p>The primary ineluctable facts of the birth and death of each one of the
constituent members in a social group determine the necessity of
education. On one hand, there is the contrast between the immaturity of
the new-born members of the group—its future sole representatives—and
the maturity of the adult members who possess the knowledge and customs of
the group. On the other hand, there is the necessity that these immature
members be not merely physically preserved in adequate numbers, but that
they be initiated into the interests, purposes, information, skill, and
practices of the mature members: otherwise the group will cease its
characteristic life. Even in a savage tribe, the achievements of adults
are far beyond what the immature members would be capable of if left to
themselves. With the growth of civilization, the gap between the original
capacities of the immature and the standards and customs of the elders
increases. Mere physical growing up, mere mastery of the bare necessities
of subsistence will not suffice to reproduce the life of the group.
Deliberate effort and the taking of thoughtful pains are required. Beings
who are born not only unaware of, but quite indifferent to, the aims and
habits of the social group have to be rendered cognizant of them and
actively interested. Education, and education alone, spans the gap.</p>
<p>Society exists through a process of transmission quite as much as
biological life. This transmission occurs by means of communication of
habits of doing, thinking, and feeling from the older to the younger.
Without this communication of ideals, hopes, expectations, standards,
opinions, from those members of society who are passing out of the group
life to those who are coming into it, social life could not survive. If
the members who compose a society lived on continuously, they might
educate the new-born members, but it would be a task directed by personal
interest rather than social need. Now it is a work of necessity.</p>
<p>If a plague carried off the members of a society all at once, it is
obvious that the group would be permanently done for. Yet the death of
each of its constituent members is as certain as if an epidemic took them
all at once. But the graded difference in age, the fact that some are born
as some die, makes possible through transmission of ideas and practices
the constant reweaving of the social fabric. Yet this renewal is not
automatic. Unless pains are taken to see that genuine and thorough
transmission takes place, the most civilized group will relapse into
barbarism and then into savagery. In fact, the human young are so immature
that if they were left to themselves without the guidance and succor of
others, they could not acquire the rudimentary abilities necessary for
physical existence. The young of human beings compare so poorly in
original efficiency with the young of many of the lower animals, that even
the powers needed for physical sustentation have to be acquired under
tuition. How much more, then, is this the case with respect to all the
technological, artistic, scientific, and moral achievements of humanity!</p>
<p>2. Education and Communication. So obvious, indeed, is the necessity of
teaching and learning for the continued existence of a society that we may
seem to be dwelling unduly on a truism. But justification is found in the
fact that such emphasis is a means of getting us away from an unduly
scholastic and formal notion of education. Schools are, indeed, one
important method of the transmission which forms the dispositions of the
immature; but it is only one means, and, compared with other agencies, a
relatively superficial means. Only as we have grasped the necessity of
more fundamental and persistent modes of tuition can we make sure of
placing the scholastic methods in their true context.</p>
<p>Society not only continues to exist by transmission, by communication, but
it may fairly be said to exist in transmission, in communication. There is
more than a verbal tie between the words common, community, and
communication. Men live in a community in virtue of the things which they
have in common; and communication is the way in which they come to possess
things in common. What they must have in common in order to form a
community or society are aims, beliefs, aspirations, knowledge—a
common understanding—like-mindedness as the sociologists say. Such
things cannot be passed physically from one to another, like bricks; they
cannot be shared as persons would share a pie by dividing it into physical
pieces. The communication which insures participation in a common
understanding is one which secures similar emotional and intellectual
dispositions—like ways of responding to expectations and
requirements.</p>
<p>Persons do not become a society by living in physical proximity, any more
than a man ceases to be socially influenced by being so many feet or miles
removed from others. A book or a letter may institute a more intimate
association between human beings separated thousands of miles from each
other than exists between dwellers under the same roof. Individuals do not
even compose a social group because they all work for a common end. The
parts of a machine work with a maximum of cooperativeness for a common
result, but they do not form a community. If, however, they were all
cognizant of the common end and all interested in it so that they
regulated their specific activity in view of it, then they would form a
community. But this would involve communication. Each would have to know
what the other was about and would have to have some way of keeping the
other informed as to his own purpose and progress. Consensus demands
communication.</p>
<p>We are thus compelled to recognize that within even the most social group
there are many relations which are not as yet social. A large number of
human relationships in any social group are still upon the machine-like
plane. Individuals use one another so as to get desired results, without
reference to the emotional and intellectual disposition and consent of
those used. Such uses express physical superiority, or superiority of
position, skill, technical ability, and command of tools, mechanical or
fiscal. So far as the relations of parent and child, teacher and pupil,
employer and employee, governor and governed, remain upon this level, they
form no true social group, no matter how closely their respective
activities touch one another. Giving and taking of orders modifies action
and results, but does not of itself effect a sharing of purposes, a
communication of interests.</p>
<p>Not only is social life identical with communication, but all
communication (and hence all genuine social life) is educative. To be a
recipient of a communication is to have an enlarged and changed
experience. One shares in what another has thought and felt and in so far,
meagerly or amply, has his own attitude modified. Nor is the one who
communicates left unaffected. Try the experiment of communicating, with
fullness and accuracy, some experience to another, especially if it be
somewhat complicated, and you will find your own attitude toward your
experience changing; otherwise you resort to expletives and ejaculations.
The experience has to be formulated in order to be communicated. To
formulate requires getting outside of it, seeing it as another would see
it, considering what points of contact it has with the life of another so
that it may be got into such form that he can appreciate its meaning.
Except in dealing with commonplaces and catch phrases one has to
assimilate, imaginatively, something of another's experience in order to
tell him intelligently of one's own experience. All communication is like
art. It may fairly be said, therefore, that any social arrangement that
remains vitally social, or vitally shared, is educative to those who
participate in it. Only when it becomes cast in a mold and runs in a
routine way does it lose its educative power.</p>
<p>In final account, then, not only does social life demand teaching and
learning for its own permanence, but the very process of living together
educates. It enlarges and enlightens experience; it stimulates and
enriches imagination; it creates responsibility for accuracy and vividness
of statement and thought. A man really living alone (alone mentally as
well as physically) would have little or no occasion to reflect upon his
past experience to extract its net meaning. The inequality of achievement
between the mature and the immature not only necessitates teaching the
young, but the necessity of this teaching gives an immense stimulus to
reducing experience to that order and form which will render it most
easily communicable and hence most usable.</p>
<p>3. The Place of Formal Education. There is, accordingly, a marked
difference between the education which every one gets from living with
others, as long as he really lives instead of just continuing to subsist,
and the deliberate educating of the young. In the former case the
education is incidental; it is natural and important, but it is not the
express reason of the association. While it may be said, without
exaggeration, that the measure of the worth of any social institution,
economic, domestic, political, legal, religious, is its effect in
enlarging and improving experience; yet this effect is not a part of its
original motive, which is limited and more immediately practical.
Religious associations began, for example, in the desire to secure the
favor of overruling powers and to ward off evil influences; family life in
the desire to gratify appetites and secure family perpetuity; systematic
labor, for the most part, because of enslavement to others, etc. Only
gradually was the by-product of the institution, its effect upon the
quality and extent of conscious life, noted, and only more gradually still
was this effect considered as a directive factor in the conduct of the
institution. Even today, in our industrial life, apart from certain values
of industriousness and thrift, the intellectual and emotional reaction of
the forms of human association under which the world's work is carried on
receives little attention as compared with physical output.</p>
<p>But in dealing with the young, the fact of association itself as an
immediate human fact, gains in importance. While it is easy to ignore in
our contact with them the effect of our acts upon their disposition, or to
subordinate that educative effect to some external and tangible result, it
is not so easy as in dealing with adults. The need of training is too
evident; the pressure to accomplish a change in their attitude and habits
is too urgent to leave these consequences wholly out of account. Since our
chief business with them is to enable them to share in a common life we
cannot help considering whether or no we are forming the powers which will
secure this ability. If humanity has made some headway in realizing that
the ultimate value of every institution is its distinctively human effect—its
effect upon conscious experience—we may well believe that this
lesson has been learned largely through dealings with the young.</p>
<p>We are thus led to distinguish, within the broad educational process which
we have been so far considering, a more formal kind of education—that
of direct tuition or schooling. In undeveloped social groups, we find very
little formal teaching and training. Savage groups mainly rely for
instilling needed dispositions into the young upon the same sort of
association which keeps adults loyal to their group. They have no special
devices, material, or institutions for teaching save in connection with
initiation ceremonies by which the youth are inducted into full social
membership. For the most part, they depend upon children learning the
customs of the adults, acquiring their emotional set and stock of ideas,
by sharing in what the elders are doing. In part, this sharing is direct,
taking part in the occupations of adults and thus serving an
apprenticeship; in part, it is indirect, through the dramatic plays in
which children reproduce the actions of grown-ups and thus learn to know
what they are like. To savages it would seem preposterous to seek out a
place where nothing but learning was going on in order that one might
learn.</p>
<p>But as civilization advances, the gap between the capacities of the young
and the concerns of adults widens. Learning by direct sharing in the
pursuits of grown-ups becomes increasingly difficult except in the case of
the less advanced occupations. Much of what adults do is so remote in
space and in meaning that playful imitation is less and less adequate to
reproduce its spirit. Ability to share effectively in adult activities
thus depends upon a prior training given with this end in view.
Intentional agencies—schools—and explicit material—studies—are
devised. The task of teaching certain things is delegated to a special
group of persons.</p>
<p>Without such formal education, it is not possible to transmit all the
resources and achievements of a complex society. It also opens a way to a
kind of experience which would not be accessible to the young, if they
were left to pick up their training in informal association with others,
since books and the symbols of knowledge are mastered.</p>
<p>But there are conspicuous dangers attendant upon the transition from
indirect to formal education. Sharing in actual pursuit, whether directly
or vicariously in play, is at least personal and vital. These qualities
compensate, in some measure, for the narrowness of available
opportunities. Formal instruction, on the contrary, easily becomes remote
and dead—abstract and bookish, to use the ordinary words of
depreciation. What accumulated knowledge exists in low grade societies is
at least put into practice; it is transmuted into character; it exists
with the depth of meaning that attaches to its coming within urgent daily
interests.</p>
<p>But in an advanced culture much which has to be learned is stored in
symbols. It is far from translation into familiar acts and objects. Such
material is relatively technical and superficial. Taking the ordinary
standard of reality as a measure, it is artificial. For this measure is
connection with practical concerns. Such material exists in a world by
itself, unassimilated to ordinary customs of thought and expression. There
is the standing danger that the material of formal instruction will be
merely the subject matter of the schools, isolated from the subject matter
of life-experience. The permanent social interests are likely to be lost
from view. Those which have not been carried over into the structure of
social life, but which remain largely matters of technical information
expressed in symbols, are made conspicuous in schools. Thus we reach the
ordinary notion of education: the notion which ignores its social
necessity and its identity with all human association that affects
conscious life, and which identifies it with imparting information about
remote matters and the conveying of learning through verbal signs: the
acquisition of literacy.</p>
<p>Hence one of the weightiest problems with which the philosophy of
education has to cope is the method of keeping a proper balance between
the informal and the formal, the incidental and the intentional, modes of
education. When the acquiring of information and of technical intellectual
skill do not influence the formation of a social disposition, ordinary
vital experience fails to gain in meaning, while schooling, in so far,
creates only "sharps" in learning—that is, egoistic specialists. To
avoid a split between what men consciously know because they are aware of
having learned it by a specific job of learning, and what they
unconsciously know because they have absorbed it in the formation of their
characters by intercourse with others, becomes an increasingly delicate
task with every development of special schooling.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_SUMM" id="link2H_SUMM"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> Summary. It is the very nature of life to strive to continue in being. </h2>
<p>Since this continuance can be secured only by constant renewals, life is a
self-renewing process. What nutrition and reproduction are to
physiological life, education is to social life. This education consists
primarily in transmission through communication. Communication is a
process of sharing experience till it becomes a common possession. It
modifies the disposition of both the parties who partake in it. That the
ulterior significance of every mode of human association lies in the
contribution which it makes to the improvement of the quality of
experience is a fact most easily recognized in dealing with the immature.
That is to say, while every social arrangement is educative in effect, the
educative effect first becomes an important part of the purpose of the
association in connection with the association of the older with the
younger. As societies become more complex in structure and resources, the
need of formal or intentional teaching and learning increases. As formal
teaching and training grow in extent, there is the danger of creating an
undesirable split between the experience gained in more direct
associations and what is acquired in school. This danger was never greater
than at the present time, on account of the rapid growth in the last few
centuries of knowledge and technical modes of skill.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />