What the Schools Teach and Might Teach - John Franklin Bobbitt

(Perpustakaan Sri Jauhari) #1

those things. One gets his ideas from watching others and then learns to do by
doing. There is no reason to believe that as the school lends its help to some of
the more difficult things, this normal plan of learning can be set aside and
another substituted. Of course the schools must take in hand the difficult
portions of the process. Where complicated knowledge is needed, the schools
must teach that knowledge. Where drill is required, they must give the drill. But
the knowledge and the drill should be given in their relation to the human
activities in which they are used. As the school helps young people to take on the
nature of adulthood, it will still do so by helping them to enter adequately into
the activities of adulthood. Youth will learn to think, to judge, and to do, by
thinking, judging, and doing. They will acquire a sense of responsibility by
bearing responsibility. They will take on serious forms of thought by doing the
serious things which require serious thought.


It cannot be urged that young people have a life of their own which is to be lived
only for youth's sake and without reference to the adult world about them. As a
matter of fact children and youth are a part of the total community of which the
mature adults are the natural and responsible leaders. At an early age they begin
to perform adult activities, to take on adult points of view, to bear adult
responsibilities. Naturally it is done in ways appropriate to their natures. At first
it is imitative play, constructive play, etc.—nature's method of bringing children
to observe the serious world about them, and to gird themselves for entering into
it. The next stage, if normal opportunities are provided, is playful participation in
the activities of their elders. This changes gradually into serious participation as
they grow older, becoming at the end of the process responsible adult action. It is
not possible to determine the educational materials and processes at any stage of
growth without looking at the same time to that entire world of which youth
forms a part, and in which the nature and abilities of their elders point the goal of
their training.


The social point of view herein expressed is sometimes characterized as being
utilitarian. It may be so; but not in any narrow or undesirable sense. It demands
that training be as wide as life itself. It looks to human activities of every type:
religious activities; civic activities; the duties of one's calling; one's family
duties; one's recreations; one's reading and meditation; and the rest of the things
that are done by the complete man or woman.

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