<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> Chapter Six: Education as Conservative and Progressive </h2>
<p>1. Education as Formation. We now come to a type of theory which denies
the existence of faculties and emphasizes the unique role of subject
matter in the development of mental and moral disposition. According to
it, education is neither a process of unfolding from within nor is it a
training of faculties resident in mind itself. It is rather the formation
of mind by setting up certain associations or connections of content by
means of a subject matter presented from without. Education proceeds by
instruction taken in a strictly literal sense, a building into the mind
from without. That education is formative of mind is not questioned; it is
the conception already propounded. But formation here has a technical
meaning dependent upon the idea of something operating from without.
Herbart is the best historical representative of this type of theory. He
denies absolutely the existence of innate faculties. The mind is simply
endowed with the power of producing various qualities in reaction to the
various realities which act upon it. These qualitatively different
reactions are called presentations (Vorstellungen). Every presentation
once called into being persists; it may be driven below the "threshold" of
consciousness by new and stronger presentations, produced by the reaction
of the soul to new material, but its activity continues by its own
inherent momentum, below the surface of consciousness. What are termed
faculties—attention, memory, thinking, perception, even the
sentiments, are arrangements, associations, and complications, formed by
the interaction of these submerged presentations with one another and with
new presentations. Perception, for example, is the complication of
presentations which result from the rise of old presentations to greet and
combine with new ones; memory is the evoking of an old presentation above
the threshold of consciousness by getting entangled with another
presentation, etc. Pleasure is the result of reinforcement among the
independent activities of presentations; pain of their pulling different
ways, etc.</p>
<p>The concrete character of mind consists, then, wholly of the various
arrangements formed by the various presentations in their different
qualities. The "furniture" of the mind is the mind. Mind is wholly a
matter of "contents." The educational implications of this doctrine are
threefold.</p>
<p>(1) This or that kind of mind is formed by the use of objects which evoke
this or that kind of reaction and which produce this or that arrangement
among the reactions called out. The formation of mind is wholly a matter
of the presentation of the proper educational materials.</p>
<p>(2) Since the earlier presentations constitute the "apperceiving organs"
which control the assimilation of new presentations, their character is
all important. The effect of new presentations is to reinforce groupings
previously formed. The business of the educator is, first, to select the
proper material in order to fix the nature of the original reactions, and,
secondly, to arrange the sequence of subsequent presentations on the basis
of the store of ideas secured by prior transactions. The control is from
behind, from the past, instead of, as in the unfolding conception, in the
ultimate goal.</p>
<p>(3) Certain formal steps of all method in teaching may be laid down.
Presentation of new subject matter is obviously the central thing, but
since knowing consists in the way in which this interacts with the
contents already submerged below consciousness, the first thing is the
step of "preparation,"—that is, calling into special activity and
getting above the floor of consciousness those older presentations which
are to assimilate the new one. Then after the presentation, follow the
processes of interaction of new and old; then comes the application of the
newly formed content to the performance of some task. Everything must go
through this course; consequently there is a perfectly uniform method in
instruction in all subjects for all pupils of all ages.</p>
<p>Herbart's great service lay in taking the work of teaching out of the
region of routine and accident. He brought it into the sphere of conscious
method; it became a conscious business with a definite aim and procedure,
instead of being a compound of casual inspiration and subservience to
tradition. Moreover, everything in teaching and discipline could be
specified, instead of our having to be content with vague and more or less
mystic generalities about ultimate ideals and speculative spiritual
symbols. He abolished the notion of ready-made faculties, which might be
trained by exercise upon any sort of material, and made attention to
concrete subject matter, to the content, all-important. Herbart
undoubtedly has had a greater influence in bringing to the front questions
connected with the material of study than any other educational
philosopher. He stated problems of method from the standpoint of their
connection with subject matter: method having to do with the manner and
sequence of presenting new subject matter to insure its proper interaction
with old.</p>
<p>The fundamental theoretical defect of this view lies in ignoring the
existence in a living being of active and specific functions which are
developed in the redirection and combination which occur as they are
occupied with their environment. The theory represents the Schoolmaster
come to his own. This fact expresses at once its strength and its
weakness. The conception that the mind consists of what has been taught,
and that the importance of what has been taught consists in its
availability for further teaching, reflects the pedagogue's view of life.
The philosophy is eloquent about the duty of the teacher in instructing
pupils; it is almost silent regarding his privilege of learning. It
emphasizes the influence of intellectual environment upon the mind; it
slurs over the fact that the environment involves a personal sharing in
common experiences. It exaggerates beyond reason the possibilities of
consciously formulated and used methods, and underestimates the role of
vital, unconscious, attitudes. It insists upon the old, the past, and
passes lightly over the operation of the genuinely novel and
unforeseeable. It takes, in brief, everything educational into account
save its essence,—vital energy seeking opportunity for effective
exercise. All education forms character, mental and moral, but formation
consists in the selection and coordination of native activities so that
they may utilize the subject matter of the social environment. Moreover,
the formation is not only a formation of native activities, but it takes
place through them. It is a process of reconstruction, reorganization.</p>
<p>2. Education as Recapitulation and Retrospection. A peculiar combination
of the ideas of development and formation from without has given rise to
the recapitulation theory of education, biological and cultural. The
individual develops, but his proper development consists in repeating in
orderly stages the past evolution of animal life and human history. The
former recapitulation occurs physiologically; the latter should be made to
occur by means of education. The alleged biological truth that the
individual in his growth from the simple embryo to maturity repeats the
history of the evolution of animal life in the progress of forms from the
simplest to the most complex (or expressed technically, that ontogenesis
parallels phylogenesis) does not concern us, save as it is supposed to
afford scientific foundation for cultural recapitulation of the past.
Cultural recapitulation says, first, that children at a certain age are in
the mental and moral condition of savagery; their instincts are vagrant
and predatory because their ancestors at one time lived such a life.
Consequently (so it is concluded) the proper subject matter of their
education at this time is the material—especially the literary
material of myths, folk-tale, and song—produced by humanity in the
analogous stage. Then the child passes on to something corresponding, say,
to the pastoral stage, and so on till at the time when he is ready to take
part in contemporary life, he arrives at the present epoch of culture.</p>
<p>In this detailed and consistent form, the theory, outside of a small
school in Germany (followers of Herbart for the most part), has had little
currency. But the idea which underlies it is that education is essentially
retrospective; that it looks primarily to the past and especially to the
literary products of the past, and that mind is adequately formed in the
degree in which it is patterned upon the spiritual heritage of the past.
This idea has had such immense influence upon higher instruction
especially, that it is worth examination in its extreme formulation.</p>
<p>In the first place, its biological basis is fallacious. Embyronic growth
of the human infant preserves, without doubt, some of the traits of lower
forms of life. But in no respect is it a strict traversing of past stages.
If there were any strict "law" of repetition, evolutionary development
would clearly not have taken place. Each new generation would simply have
repeated its predecessors' existence. Development, in short, has taken
place by the entrance of shortcuts and alterations in the prior scheme of
growth. And this suggests that the aim of education is to facilitate such
short-circuited growth. The great advantage of immaturity, educationally
speaking, is that it enables us to emancipate the young from the need of
dwelling in an outgrown past. The business of education is rather to
liberate the young from reviving and retraversing the past than to lead
them to a recapitulation of it. The social environment of the young is
constituted by the presence and action of the habits of thinking and
feeling of civilized men. To ignore the directive influence of this
present environment upon the young is simply to abdicate the educational
function. A biologist has said: "The history of development in different
animals. . . offers to us. . . a series of ingenious, determined, varied
but more or less unsuccessful efforts to escape from the necessity of
recapitulating, and to substitute for the ancestral method a more direct
method." Surely it would be foolish if education did not deliberately
attempt to facilitate similar efforts in conscious experience so that they
become increasingly successful.</p>
<p>The two factors of truth in the conception may easily be disentangled from
association with the false context which perverts them. On the biological
side we have simply the fact that any infant starts with precisely the
assortment of impulsive activities with which he does start, they being
blind, and many of them conflicting with one another, casual, sporadic,
and unadapted to their immediate environment. The other point is that it
is a part of wisdom to utilize the products of past history so far as they
are of help for the future. Since they represent the results of prior
experience, their value for future experience may, of course, be
indefinitely great. Literatures produced in the past are, so far as men
are now in possession and use of them, a part of the present environment
of individuals; but there is an enormous difference between availing
ourselves of them as present resources and taking them as standards and
patterns in their retrospective character.</p>
<p>(1) The distortion of the first point usually comes about through misuse
of the idea of heredity. It is assumed that heredity means that past life
has somehow predetermined the main traits of an individual, and that they
are so fixed that little serious change can be introduced into them. Thus
taken, the influence of heredity is opposed to that of the environment,
and the efficacy of the latter belittled. But for educational purposes
heredity means neither more nor less than the original endowment of an
individual. Education must take the being as he is; that a particular
individual has just such and such an equipment of native activities is a
basic fact. That they were produced in such and such a way, or that they
are derived from one's ancestry, is not especially important for the
educator, however it may be with the biologist, as compared with the fact
that they now exist. Suppose one had to advise or direct a person
regarding his inheritance of property. The fallacy of assuming that the
fact it is an inheritance, predetermines its future use, is obvious. The
advisor is concerned with making the best use of what is there—putting
it at work under the most favorable conditions. Obviously he cannot
utilize what is not there; neither can the educator. In this sense,
heredity is a limit of education. Recognition of this fact prevents the
waste of energy and the irritation that ensue from the too prevalent habit
of trying to make by instruction something out of an individual which he
is not naturally fitted to become. But the doctrine does not determine
what use shall be made of the capacities which exist. And, except in the
case of the imbecile, these original capacities are much more varied and
potential, even in the case of the more stupid, than we as yet know
properly how to utilize. Consequently, while a careful study of the native
aptitudes and deficiencies of an individual is always a preliminary
necessity, the subsequent and important step is to furnish an environment
which will adequately function whatever activities are present. The
relation of heredity and environment is well expressed in the case of
language. If a being had no vocal organs from which issue articulate
sounds, if he had no auditory or other sense-receptors and no connections
between the two sets of apparatus, it would be a sheer waste of time to
try to teach him to converse. He is born short in that respect, and
education must accept the limitation. But if he has this native equipment,
its possession in no way guarantees that he will ever talk any language or
what language he will talk. The environment in which his activities occur
and by which they are carried into execution settles these things. If he
lived in a dumb unsocial environment where men refused to talk to one
another and used only that minimum of gestures without which they could
not get along, vocal language would be as unachieved by him as if he had
no vocal organs. If the sounds which he makes occur in a medium of persons
speaking the Chinese language, the activities which make like sounds will
be selected and coordinated. This illustration may be applied to the
entire range of the educability of any individual. It places the heritage
from the past in its right connection with the demands and opportunities
of the present.</p>
<p>(2) The theory that the proper subject matter of instruction is found in
the culture-products of past ages (either in general, or more specifically
in the particular literatures which were produced in the culture epoch
which is supposed to correspond with the stage of development of those
taught) affords another instance of that divorce between the process and
product of growth which has been criticized. To keep the process alive, to
keep it alive in ways which make it easier to keep it alive in the future,
is the function of educational subject matter. But an individual can live
only in the present. The present is not just something which comes after
the past; much less something produced by it. It is what life is in
leaving the past behind it. The study of past products will not help us
understand the present, because the present is not due to the products,
but to the life of which they were the products. A knowledge of the past
and its heritage is of great significance when it enters into the present,
but not otherwise. And the mistake of making the records and remains of
the past the main material of education is that it cuts the vital
connection of present and past, and tends to make the past a rival of the
present and the present a more or less futile imitation of the past. Under
such circumstances, culture becomes an ornament and solace; a refuge and
an asylum. Men escape from the crudities of the present to live in its
imagined refinements, instead of using what the past offers as an agency
for ripening these crudities. The present, in short, generates the
problems which lead us to search the past for suggestion, and which
supplies meaning to what we find when we search. The past is the past
precisely because it does not include what is characteristic in the
present. The moving present includes the past on condition that it uses
the past to direct its own movement. The past is a great resource for the
imagination; it adds a new dimension to life, but OD condition that it be
seen as the past of the present, and not as another and disconnected
world. The principle which makes little of the present act of living and
operation of growing, the only thing always present, naturally looks to
the past because the future goal which it sets up is remote and empty. But
having turned its back upon the present, it has no way of returning to it
laden with the spoils of the past. A mind that is adequately sensitive to
the needs and occasions of the present actuality will have the liveliest
of motives for interest in the background of the present, and will never
have to hunt for a way back because it will never have lost connection.</p>
<p>3. Education as Reconstruction. In its contrast with the ideas both of
unfolding of latent powers from within, and of the formation from without,
whether by physical nature or by the cultural products of the past, the
ideal of growth results in the conception that education is a constant
reorganizing or reconstructing of experience. It has all the time an
immediate end, and so far as activity is educative, it reaches that end—the
direct transformation of the quality of experience. Infancy, youth, adult
life,—all stand on the same educative level in the sense that what
is really learned at any and every stage of experience constitutes the
value of that experience, and in the sense that it is the chief business
of life at every point to make living thus contribute to an enrichment of
its own perceptible meaning.</p>
<p>We thus reach a technical definition of education: It is that
reconstruction or reorganization of experience which adds to the meaning
of experience, and which increases ability to direct the course of
subsequent experience. (1) The increment of meaning corresponds to the
increased perception of the connections and continuities of the activities
in which we are engaged. The activity begins in an impulsive form; that
is, it is blind. It does not know what it is about; that is to say, what
are its interactions with other activities. An activity which brings
education or instruction with it makes one aware of some of the
connections which had been imperceptible. To recur to our simple example,
a child who reaches for a bright light gets burned. Henceforth he knows
that a certain act of touching in connection with a certain act of vision
(and vice-versa) means heat and pain; or, a certain light means a source
of heat. The acts by which a scientific man in his laboratory learns more
about flame differ no whit in principle. By doing certain things, he makes
perceptible certain connections of heat with other things, which had been
previously ignored. Thus his acts in relation to these things get more
meaning; he knows better what he is doing or "is about" when he has to do
with them; he can intend consequences instead of just letting them happen—all
synonymous ways of saying the same thing. At the same stroke, the flame
has gained in meaning; all that is known about combustion, oxidation,
about light and temperature, may become an intrinsic part of its
intellectual content.</p>
<p>(2) The other side of an educative experience is an added power of
subsequent direction or control. To say that one knows what he is about,
or can intend certain consequences, is to say, of course, that he can
better anticipate what is going to happen; that he can, therefore, get
ready or prepare in advance so as to secure beneficial consequences and
avert undesirable ones. A genuinely educative experience, then, one in
which instruction is conveyed and ability increased, is
contradistinguished from a routine activity on one hand, and a capricious
activity on the other. (a) In the latter one "does not care what happens";
one just lets himself go and avoids connecting the consequences of one's
act (the evidences of its connections with other things) with the act. It
is customary to frown upon such aimless random activity, treating it as
willful mischief or carelessness or lawlessness. But there is a tendency
to seek the cause of such aimless activities in the youth's own
disposition, isolated from everything else. But in fact such activity is
explosive, and due to maladjustment with surroundings. Individuals act
capriciously whenever they act under external dictation, or from being
told, without having a purpose of their own or perceiving the bearing of
the deed upon other acts. One may learn by doing something which he does
not understand; even in the most intelligent action, we do much which we
do not mean, because the largest portion of the connections of the act we
consciously intend are not perceived or anticipated. But we learn only
because after the act is performed we note results which we had not noted
before. But much work in school consists in setting up rules by which
pupils are to act of such a sort that even after pupils have acted, they
are not led to see the connection between the result—say the answer—and
the method pursued. So far as they are concerned, the whole thing is a
trick and a kind of miracle. Such action is essentially capricious, and
leads to capricious habits. (b) Routine action, action which is automatic,
may increase skill to do a particular thing. In so far, it might be said
to have an educative effect. But it does not lead to new perceptions of
bearings and connections; it limits rather than widens the
meaning-horizon. And since the environment changes and our way of acting
has to be modified in order successfully to keep a balanced connection
with things, an isolated uniform way of acting becomes disastrous at some
critical moment. The vaunted "skill" turns out gross ineptitude.</p>
<p>The essential contrast of the idea of education as continuous
reconstruction with the other one-sided conceptions which have been
criticized in this and the previous chapter is that it identifies the end
(the result) and the process. This is verbally self-contradictory, but
only verbally. It means that experience as an active process occupies time
and that its later period completes its earlier portion; it brings to
light connections involved, but hitherto unperceived. The later outcome
thus reveals the meaning of the earlier, while the experience as a whole
establishes a bent or disposition toward the things possessing this
meaning. Every such continuous experience or activity is educative, and
all education resides in having such experiences.</p>
<p>It remains only to point out (what will receive more ample attention
later) that the reconstruction of experience may be social as well as
personal. For purposes of simplification we have spoken in the earlier
chapters somewhat as if the education of the immature which fills them
with the spirit of the social group to which they belong, were a sort of
catching up of the child with the aptitudes and resources of the adult
group. In static societies, societies which make the maintenance of
established custom their measure of value, this conception applies in the
main. But not in progressive communities. They endeavor to shape the
experiences of the young so that instead of reproducing current habits,
better habits shall be formed, and thus the future adult society be an
improvement on their own. Men have long had some intimation of the extent
to which education may be consciously used to eliminate obvious social
evils through starting the young on paths which shall not produce these
ills, and some idea of the extent in which education may be made an
instrument of realizing the better hopes of men. But we are doubtless far
from realizing the potential efficacy of education as a constructive
agency of improving society, from realizing that it represents not only a
development of children and youth but also of the future society of which
they will be the constituents.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_SUMM6" id="link2H_SUMM6"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> Summary. Education may be conceived either retrospectively or </h2>
<p>prospectively. That is to say, it may be treated as process of
accommodating the future to the past, or as an utilization of the past for
a resource in a developing future. The former finds its standards and
patterns in what has gone before. The mind may be regarded as a group of
contents resulting from having certain things presented. In this case, the
earlier presentations constitute the material to which the later are to be
assimilated. Emphasis upon the value of the early experiences of immature
beings is most important, especially because of the tendency to regard
them as of little account. But these experiences do not consist of
externally presented material, but of interaction of native activities
with the environment which progressively modifies both the activities and
the environment. The defect of the Herbartian theory of formation through
presentations consists in slighting this constant interaction and change.
The same principle of criticism applies to theories which find the primary
subject matter of study in the cultural products—especially the
literary products—of man's history. Isolated from their connection
with the present environment in which individuals have to act, they become
a kind of rival and distracting environment. Their value lies in their use
to increase the meaning of the things with which we have actively to do at
the present time. The idea of education advanced in these chapters is
formally summed up in the idea of continuous reconstruction of experience,
an idea which is marked off from education as preparation for a remote
future, as unfolding, as external formation, and as recapitulation of the
past.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />