POINT
OF VIEW
What
The School Is...
I believe that the school is primarily a social institution. Education
being a social process, the school is simply that form of community
life in which all those agencies are concentrated that will be
most effective in bringing the child to share in the inherited
resources of the race, and to use his own powers for social ends.
I believe that education, therefore, is a process of living and
not a preparation for future living. I believe that the school
must represent present life-life as real and vital to the child
as that which he carries on in the home, in the neighborhood,
or on the playground. I believe that education which does not
occur through forms of life, or that are worth living for their
own sake, is always a poor substitute for the genuine reality
and tends to cramp and to deaden. I believe that the school, as
an institution, should simplify existing social life; should reduce
it, as it were, to an embryonic form. Existing life is so complex
that the child cannot be brought into contact with it without
either confusion or distraction; he is either overwhelmed by the
multiplicity of activities which are going on, so that he loses
his own power of orderly reaction, or he is so stimulated by these
various activities that his powers are prematurely called into
play and he becomes either unduly specialized or else disintegrated.
I believe that as such simplified social life, the school life
should grow gradually out of the home life; that it should take
up and continue the activities with which the child is already
familiar in the home. I believe that it should exhibit these activities
to the child, and reproduce them in such ways that the child will
gradually learn the meaning of them, and be capable of playing
his own part in relation to them. I believe that this is a psychological
necessity, because it is the only way of securing continuity in
the child’s growth, the only way of giving a back-ground
of past experience to the new ideas given in school. I believe
that it is also a social necessity because the home is the form
of social life in which the child has been nurtured and in connection
with which he has had his moral training. It is the business of
the school to deepen and extend his sense of the values bound
up in his home life. I believe that much of present education
fails because it neglects this fundamental principle of the school
as a form of community life. It conceives the school as a place
where certain information is to be given, where certain lessons
are to be ]earned, or where certain habits are to be formed. The
value of these is conceived as lying largely in the remote future;
the child must do these things for the sake of something else
he is to do; they are mere preparation. As a result they do not
become a part of the life experience of the child and so are not
truly educative. I believe that the moral education centers upon
this conception of the school as a mode of social life, that the
best and deepest moral training is precisely that which one gets
through having to enter into proper relations with others in a
unity of work and thought. The present educational systems, so
far as they destroy or neglect this unity, render it difficult
or impossible to get any genuine, regular moral training. I believe
that the child should be stimulated and controlled in his work
through the life of the community. I believe that under existing
conditions far too much of the stimulus and control proceeds from
the teacher, because of neglect of the idea of the school as a
form of social life. I believe that the teacher’s place
and work in the school is to be interpreted from this same basis.
The teacher is not in the school to impose certain ideas or to
form certain habits in the child, but is there as a member of
the community to select the influences which shall affect the
child and to assist him in properly responding to these influences.
I believe that the discipline of the school should proceed from
the life of the school as a whole and not directly from the teacher.
I believe that the teacher’s business is simply to determine
on the basis of larger experience and riper wisdom, how the discipline
of life shall come to the child. I believe that all questions
of the grading of the child and his promotion should be determined
by reference to the same standard. Examinations are of use only
so far as they test the child’s fitness for social life
and reveal the place in which he can be of the most service and
where he can receive the most help.
from My Pedagogic Creed
by John Dewey, 1897
|