It is easy to give up on America these days. In considering what we need to move forward I always seem to return to education and the fact that our current education systems do not teach the basic thinking skills that allow individuals to make informed decisions about the direction they would like their country to take. Indeed, today our education system seems to be more aligned with the narrowness of propaganda than with the open-mindedness that true education requires.
Recently I heard someone
on the radio arguing that college is a waste of money because you can learn
as much by simply looking up the subjects you would study on Google and reading
the information there.
Certainly, one can read
up on a subject and in so doing gain information about that subject – that is,
learn something about the subject. But
that is not all that education entails and it is not all that occurs in a
healthy college environment. Learning in
the sense of acquiring information is but one part of education. Education also includes reflection both on
oneself and on the information being learned, it requires an open mind in
coming to information and in listening to views of others about that
information. Most importantly, it
requires constant questioning – of the information being presented, of the presenter,
and of oneself
Simply acquiring knowledge is not true learning. Learning and true education have at their core the question “why?” The student must be taught to ask that question repeatedly, to move step by step into a deeper understanding of the subject being studied and of the understanding of others about that subject.
In a true educational
setting students will be pushed to use “why?” to push themselves to levels of
understanding and achievement of which they did not even know they were capable. They will be asked to address topics with
open and curious minds, not minds that are preset or predisposed to merely
accept views of others as their own without question.
Those who try to avoid
questioning or who try to block the questioning and its resulting mental growth
in others are actually quite insecure.
They need a certain and unchanging world in which everyone agrees with
their assumptions and beliefs. (I
suspect such is the case of the radio voice I heard – afraid that college might
force questioning of his own firmly established views.)
Such people exist on both
sides of the political aisle and are always dangerous. They are the false prophets, the purveyors of
propaganda. They are in many ways the
evil opposite of true educators.
These false prophets tell
people what they want to hear; they feed existing fears and provide false
solutions. They demand their students
accept what they are told without question, presenting their own view on topics as
the one and only acceptable viewpoint. Their
“teaching” provides comfort; it is easy to accept in its certainty.
True education is
anything but comfortable. It demands
that students embrace the discovery and investigation of new ideas, even when
that information is painful. Its lessons
can be disturbing as the students explore the depths and uncertainties of their
own minds and their world. It demands
that students read beyond superficialities and plunge to depths of
understanding that in the end allow a deeper sense of a common humanity that
joins us all.
With that education comes
a confidence in who one truly is and about the world in which we all live. That confidence overcomes the fear of real
learning that the propogandists purvey and the cowards accept.
Today in America we have a lot of cowards. On both sides. They have dug into their positions and both sides can make arguments supportive of their views. But what they cannot do is listen to, let alone understand the views of others. (I note here that understanding does not necessarily require acceptance or a change in one’s own position, but it does result in tolerance.) Too many are afraid to question their own beliefs and who they are and where they are really going – they are imprisoned by their own fears and insecurity, afraid to evolve, denying the humanity that is common to us all.
True education requires
that one not fear human interaction, even with uncomfortable ideas of
others. True education is far more than
merely acquiring information. In true
education the student takes the acquired information and is both externally
pushed and internally motivated to transform that information into a deeper
knowledge of the world, humanity, and one’s place in it; the true student, like
all of humanity, is ever evolving and that evolution is reflected in the
student’s interactions in the world and with others.
Yet, today, we have
teachers who do not educate. They do not
teach their students to think critically – to ask “why?”. Teachers should delight when a student
questions, even and especially when a student questions their own teacher. But too many of today’s “educators” simply provide
information that reflects their own world view and expect students to accept
and adopt what they are told without question.
Students are too often punished rather than praised for questioning what
they are told. Too many “educators” are
teaching students to become receivers of propaganda, primed to accept the words
of false prophets.
The discord and dystopia
that we see around us is not going to go away unless and until we once again
become real students of our world and our humanity, until we encourage, indeed
demand, that education be led by questioning, not simply acquiring. We must think, ask “why?”, interact with open
minds until once again we are able to know ourselves and see our true and common
humanity. This we must teach our
children, and this we must model for them as adults.
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