For ages education has had to
do chiefly with the memory. This faculty has been taxed to the utmost, while
the other mental powers have not been correspondingly developed. Students have
spent their time in laboriously crowding the mind with knowledge, very little
of which could be utilized. The mind thus burdened with that which it cannot
digest and assimilate is weakened; it becomes incapable of vigorous,
self-reliant effort, and is content to depend on the judgment and perception of
others.
Seeing the evils of
this method, some have gone to another extreme. In their view, man needs only
to develop that which is within him. Such education leads the student to
self-sufficiency, thus cutting him off from the source of true knowledge and
power.
The education that
consists in the training of the memory, tending to discourage independent
thought, has a moral bearing which is too little appreciated. As the student
sacrifices the power to reason and judge for himself, he becomes incapable of
discriminating between truth and error, and falls an easy prey to deception. He
is easily led to follow tradition and custom.
It is a fact widely
ignored, though never without
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danger, that error
rarely appears for what it really is. It is by mingling with or attaching
itself to truth that it gains acceptance. The eating of the tree of knowledge
of good and evil caused the ruin of our first parents, and the acceptance of a
mingling of good and evil is the ruin of men and women today. The mind that
depends upon the judgment of others is certain, sooner or later, to be misled.
The power to
discriminate between right and wrong we can possess only through individual
dependence upon God. Each for himself is to learn from Him through His word.
Our reasoning powers were given us for use, and God desires them to be
exercised. "Come now, and let us reason together" (Isaiah 1:18), He invites us.
In reliance upon Him we may have wisdom to "refuse the evil, and choose the
good." Isaiah 7:15; James 1:5.
In all true
teaching the personal element is essential. Christ in His teaching dealt with
men individually. It was by personal contact and association that He trained
the Twelve. It was in private, often to but one listener, that He gave His most
precious instruction. To the honored rabbi at the night conference on the Mount
of Olives, to the despised woman at the well of Sychar, He opened His richest
treasures; for in these hearers He discerned the impressible heart, the open
mind, the receptive spirit. Even the crowd that so often thronged His steps was
not to Christ an indiscriminate mass of human beings. He spoke directly to
every mind and appealed to every heart. He watched the faces of His hearers,
marked the lighting up of the countenance, the quick, responsive glance, which
told that truth had reached the soul; and there vibrated in His heart the
answering chord of sympathetic joy.
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Christ discerned
the possibilities in every human being. He was not turned aside by an
unpromising exterior or by unfavorable surroundings. He called Matthew from the
tolbooth, and Peter and his brethren from the fishing boat, to learn of Him.
The same personal
interest, the same attention to individual development, are needed in
educational work today. Many apparently unpromising youth are richly endowed
with talents that are put to no use. Their faculties lie hidden because of a
lack of discernment on the part of their educators. In many a boy or girl
outwardly as unattractive as a rough-hewn stone, may be found precious material
that will stand the test of heat and storm and pressure. The true educator,
keeping in view what his pupils may become, will recognize the value of the
material upon which he is working. He will take a personal interest in each
pupil and will seek to develop all his powers. However imperfect, every effort
to conform to right principles will be encouraged.
Every youth should
be taught the necessity and the power of application. Upon this, far more than
upon genius or talent, does success depend. Without application the most
brilliant talents avail little, while with rightly directed effort persons of
very ordinary natural abilities have accomplished wonders. And genius, at whose
achievements we marvel, is almost invariably united with untiring, concentrated
effort.
The youth should be
taught to aim at the development of all their faculties, the weaker as well as
the stronger. With many there is a disposition to restrict their study to
certain lines, for which they have a natural liking. This
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error should be
guarded against. The natural aptitudes indicate the direction of the lifework,
and, when legitimate, should be carefully cultivated. At the same time it must
be kept in mind that a well-balanced character and efficient work in any line
depend, to a great degree, on that symmetrical development which is the result
of thorough, all-round training.
The teacher should
constantly aim at simplicity and effectiveness. He should teach largely by
illustration, and even in dealing with older pupils should be careful to make
every explanation plain and clear. Many pupils well advanced in years are but
children in understanding.
An important
element in educational work is enthusiasm. On this point there is a useful
suggestion in a remark once made by a celebrated actor. The archbishop of
Canterbury had put to him the question why actors in a play affect their
audiences so powerfully by speaking of things imaginary, while ministers of the
gospel often affect theirs so little by speaking of things real. "With due
submission to your grace," replied the actor, "permit me to say that the reason
is plain: It lies in the power of enthusiasm. We on the stage speak of things
imaginary as if they were real, and you in the pulpit speak of things real as
if they were imaginary."
The teacher in his
work is dealing with things real, and he should speak of them with all the
force and enthusiasm which a knowledge of their reality and importance can
inspire.
Every teacher
should see to it that his work tends to definite results. Before attempting to
teach a subject, he should have a distinct plan in mind, and should know
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just what he
desires to accomplish. He should not rest satisfied with the presentation of
any subject until the student understands the principle involved, perceives its
truth, and is able to state clearly what he has learned.
So long as the
great purpose of education is kept in view, the youth should be encouraged to
advance just as far as their capabilities will permit. But before taking up the
higher branches of study, let them master the lower. This is too often
neglected. Even among students in the higher schools and the colleges there is
great deficiency in knowledge of the common branches of education. Many
students devote their time to higher mathematics when they are incapable of
keeping simple accounts. Many study elocution with a view to acquiring the
graces of oratory when they are unable to read in an intelligible and
impressive manner. Many who have finished the study of rhetoric fail in the
composition and spelling of an ordinary letter.
A thorough
knowledge of the essentials of education should be not only the condition of
admission to a higher course, but the constant test for continuance and
advancement.
And in every branch
of education there are objects to be gained more important than those secured
by mere technical knowledge. Take language, for example. More important than
the acquirement of foreign languages, living or dead, is the ability to write
and speak one's mother tongue with ease and accuracy; but no training gained
through a knowledge of grammatical rules can compare in importance with the
study of language from a higher point of view. With this study, to a great
degree, is bound up life's weal or woe.
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The chief requisite
of language is that it be pure and kind and true--"the outward expression of an
inward grace." God says: "Whatsoever things are true, whatsoever things are
honest, whatsoever things are just, whatsoever things are pure, whatsoever
things are lovely, whatsoever things are of good report; if there be any
virtue, and if there be any praise, think on these things." Philippians 4:8.
And if such are the thoughts, such will be the expression.
The best school for
this language study is the home; but since the work of the home is so often
neglected, it devolves on the teacher to aid his pupils in forming right habits
of speech.
The teacher can do
much to discourage that evil habit, the curse of the community, the
neighborhood, and the home--the habit of backbiting, gossip, ungenerous
criticism. In this no pains should be spared. Impress upon the students the
fact that this habit reveals a lack of culture and refinement and of true
goodness of heart; it unfits one both for the society of the truly cultured and
refined in this world and for association with the holy ones of heaven.
We think with
horror of the cannibal who feasts on the still warm and trembling flesh of his
victim; but are the results of even this practice more terrible than are the
agony and ruin caused by misrepresenting motive, blackening reputation,
dissecting character? Let the children, and the youth as well, learn what God
says about these things:
"Death and life are
in the power of the tongue." Proverbs 18:21.
In Scripture,
backbiters are classed with "haters of God," with "inventors of evil things,"
with those who are "without natural affection, implacable, unmerciful," "full
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of envy, murder,
debate, deceit, malignity." It is "the judgment of God, that they which commit
such things are worthy of death." Romans 1:30, 31, 29, 32. He whom God accounts
a citizen of Zion is he that "speaketh the truth in his heart;" "that
backbiteth not with his tongue," "nor taketh up a reproach against his
neighbor." Psalm 15:2, 3. .6}
God's word condemns
also the use of those meaningless phrases and expletives that border on
profanity. It condemns the deceptive compliments, the evasions of truth, the
exaggerations, the misrepresentations in trade, that are current in society and
in the business world. "Let your speech be, Yea, yea; Nay, nay: and whatsoever
is more than these is of the evil one." Matthew 5:37, R.V.
"As a madman who
casteth firebrands, arrows, and death, so is the man that deceiveth his
neighbor, and saith, Am not I in sport?" Proverbs 26:18, 19.
Closely allied to
gossip is the covert insinuation, the sly innuendo, by which the unclean in
heart seek to insinuate the evil they dare not openly express. Every approach
to these practices the youth should be taught to shun as they would shun the
leprosy.
In the use of
language there is perhaps no error that old and young are more ready to pass
over lightly in themselves than hasty, impatient speech. They think it a
sufficient excuse to plead, "I was off my guard, and did not really mean what I
said." But God's word does not treat it lightly. The Scripture says:
"Seest thou a man
that is hasty in his words? there is more hope of a fool than of him." Proverbs
29:20.
"He that hath no
rule over his own spirit is like a city that is broken down, and without
walls." Proverbs 25:28. .6}
In one moment, by
the hasty, passionate, careless
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tongue, may be
wrought evil that a whole lifetime's repentance cannot undo. Oh, the hearts
that are broken, the friends estranged, the lives wrecked, by the harsh, hasty
words of those who might have brought help and healing! .7}
"There is that
speaketh like the piercings of a sword: but the tongue of the wise is health."
Proverbs 12:18.
One of the
characteristics that should be especially cherished and cultivated in every
child is that self-forgetfulness which imparts to the life such an unconscious
grace. Of all excellences of character this is one of the most beautiful, and
for every true lifework it is one of the qualifications most essential.
Children need
appreciation, sympathy, and encouragement, but care should be taken not to
foster in them a love of praise. It is not wise to give them special notice, or
to repeat before them their clever sayings. The parent or teacher who keeps in
view the true ideal of character and the possibilities of achievement, cannot
cherish or encourage self-sufficiency. He will not encourage in the youth the
desire or effort to display their ability or proficiency. He who looks higher
than himself will be humble; yet he will possess a dignity that is not abashed
or disconcerted by outward display or human greatness.
It is not by
arbitrary law or rule that the graces of character are developed. It is by
dwelling in the atmosphere of the pure, the noble, the true. And wherever there
is purity of heart and nobleness of character, it will be revealed in purity
and nobleness of action and of speech.
"He that loveth
pureness of heart, for the grace of his lips the King shall be his friend."
Proverbs 22:11.
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As with language,
so with every other study; it may be so conducted that it will tend to the
strengthening and upbuilding of character.
Of no study is this
true to a greater degree than of history. Let it be considered from the divine
point of view.
As too often
taught, history is little more than a record of the rise and fall of kings, the
intrigues of courts, the victories and defeats of armies--a story of ambition
and greed, of deception, cruelty, and bloodshed. Thus taught, its results
cannot but be detrimental. The heart-sickening reiteration of crimes and
atrocities, the enormities, the cruelties portrayed, plant seeds that in many
lives bring forth fruit in a harvest of evil.
Far better is it to
learn, in the light of God's word, the causes that govern the rise and fall of
kingdoms. Let the youth study these records, and see how the true prosperity of
nations has been bound up with an acceptance of the divine principles. Let him
study the history of the great reformatory movements, and see how often these
principles, though despised and hated, their advocates brought to the dungeon
and the scaffold, have through these very sacrifices triumphed.
Such study will
give broad, comprehensive views of life. It will help the youth to understand
something of its relations and dependencies, how wonderfully we are bound
together in the great brotherhood of society and nations, and to how great an
extent the oppression or degradation of one member means loss to all.
In the study of
figures the work should be made practical. Let every youth and every child be
taught, not merely to solve imaginary problems, but to keep an
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accurate account of
his own income and outgoes. Let him learn the right use of money by using it.
Whether supplied by their parents or by their own earnings, let boys and girls
learn to select and purchase their own clothing, their books, and other
necessities; and by keeping an account of their expenses they will learn, as
they could learn in no other way, the value and the use of money. This training
will help them to distinguish true economy from niggardliness on the one hand
and prodigality on the other. Rightly directed it will encourage habits of
benevolence. It will aid the youth in learning to give, not from the mere
impulse of the moment, as their feelings are stirred, but regularly and
systematically. .6}
In this way every
study may become an aid in the solution of that greatest of all problems, the
training of men and women for the best discharge of life's responsibilities.