9.
CHAPTER IX
NATURAL DEVELOPMENT AND SOCIAL EFFICIENCY AS AIMS:
1. Nature as Supplying the Aim.
—We have just pointed out the futility of trying to establish the
aim of education—some one final aim which subordinates all others
to itself. We have indicated that since general aims are but prospective
points of view from which to survey the existing conditions and estimate
their possibilities, we might have any number of them, all consistent with
one another. As matter of fact, a large number have been stated at
different times, all having great local value. For the statement
of aim is a matter of emphasis at a given time. And we do not emphasize
things which do not require emphasis—that is, such things as are
taking care of themselves fairly well. We tend rather to frame our statement
on the basis of the defects and needs of the contemporary situation; we take
for granted, without explicit statement which would be of no use,
whatever is right or approximately so. We frame our explicit aims in
terms of some alteration to be brought about. It is, then, no paradox
requiring explanation that a given epoch or generation tends to
emphasize in its conscious projections just the things which it has
least of in actual fact. A time of domination by authority will call
out as response the desirability of great individual freedom; one of
disorganized individual activities the need of social control as an
educational aim.
The actual and implicit practice and the conscious or stated aim thus
balance each other. At different times such aims as complete living,
better methods of language study, substitution of things for words,
social efficiency, personal culture, social service, complete
development of personality, encyclopedic knowledge, discipline, a
æsthetic contemplation, utility, etc., have served. The following
discussion takes up three statements of recent influence; certain others
have been incidentally discussed in the previous chapters, and others
will be considered later in a discussion of knowledge and of the values
of studies. We begin with a consideration that education is a process
of development in accordance with nature, taking Rousseau's statement,
which opposed natural to social
(See ante, p. 106);
and then pass over to the antithetical conception of social efficiency, which
often opposes social to natural.
(1) Educational reformers disgusted with the conventionality and
artificiality of the scholastic methods they find about them are prone
to resort to nature as a standard. Nature is supposed to furnish the
law and the end of development; ours it is to follow and conform to her
ways. The positive value of this conception lies in the forcible way in
which it calls attention to the wrongness of aims which do not have
regard to the natural endowment of those educated. Its weakness is the
ease with which natural in the sense of normal is confused with
the physical. The constructive use of intelligence in foresight, and
contriving, is then discounted; we are just to get out of the way and
allow nature to do the work. Since no one has stated in the doctrine
both its truth and falsity better than Rousseau, we shall turn to him.
"Education," he says, "we receive from three sources—Nature, men,
and things. The spontaneous development of our organs and capacities
constitutes the education of Nature. The use to which we are taught to
put this development constitutes that education given us by Men. The
acquirement of personal experience from surrounding objects constitutes
that of things. Only when these three kinds of education are consonant
and make for the same end, does a man tend towards his true goal.... If
we are asked what is this end, the answer is that of Nature. For since
the concurrence of the three kinds of education is necessary to their
completeness, the kind which is entirely independent of our control must
necessarily regulate us in determining the other two." Then he defines
Nature to mean the capacities and dispositions which are inborn, "as
they exist prior to the modification due to constraining habits and the
influence of the opinion of others."
The wording of Rousseau will repay careful study. It contains as
fundamental truths as have been uttered about education in conjunction
with a curious twist. It would be impossible to say better what is said
in the first sentences. The three factors of educative development are
(a) the native structure of our bodily organs and their functional
activities; (b) the uses to which the activities of these organs are
put under the influence of other persons; (c) their direct interaction
with the environment. This statement certainly covers the ground. His other
two propositions are equally sound; namely, (a) that only when the
three factors of education are consonant and coöperative does adequate
development of the individual occur, and (b) that the native activities
of the organs, being original, are basic in conceiving consonance.
But it requires but little reading between the lines, supplemented by
other statements of Rousseau, to perceive that instead of regarding
these three things as factors which must work together to some extent in
order that any one of them may proceed educatively, he regards them as
separate and independent operations. Especially does he believe that
there is an independent and, as he says, "spontaneous" development of
the native organs and faculties. He thinks that this development can go
on irrespective of the use to which they are put. And it is to this
separate development that education coming from social contact is to be
subordinated. Now there is an immense difference between a use of
native activities in accord with those activities themselves—as
distinct from forcing them and perverting them—and supposing that
they have a normal development apart from any use, which development
furnishes the standard and norm of all learning by use. To recur to our
previous illustration, the process of acquiring language is a
practically perfect model of proper educative growth. The start is from
native activities of the vocal apparatus, organs of hearing, etc. But
it is absurd to suppose that these have an independent growth of their
own, which left to itself would evolve a perfect speech. Taken
literally, Rousseau's principle would mean that adults should accept and
repeat the babblings and noises of children not merely as the beginnings
of the development of articulate speech—which they are—but
as furnishing language itself—the standard for all teaching of
language.
The point may be summarized by saying that Rousseau was right,
introducing a much-needed reform into education, in holding that the
structure and activities of the organs furnish the conditions of all
teaching of the use of the organs; but profoundly wrong in intimating
that they supply not only the conditions but also the ends of their
development. As matter of fact, the native activities develop, in
contrast with random and capricious exercise, through the uses to which
they are put. And the office of the social medium is, as we have seen,
to direct growth through putting powers to the best possible use. The
instinctive activities may be called, metaphorically, spontaneous, in
the sense that the organs give a strong bias for a certain sort of
operation,—a bias so strong that we cannot go contrary to it,
though by trying to go contrary we may pervert, stunt, and corrupt them.
But the notion of a spontaneous normal development of these activities
is pure mythology. The natural, or native, powers furnish the
initiating and limiting forces in all education; they do not furnish its
ends or aims. There is no learning except from a beginning in unlearned
powers, but learning is not a matter of the spontaneous overflow of the
unlearned powers. Rousseau's contrary opinion is doubtless due to the
fact that he identified God with Nature; to him the original powers are
wholly good, coming directly from a wise and good creator. To
paraphrase the old saying about the country and the town, God made the
original human organs and faculties, man makes the uses to which they
are put. Consequently the development of the former furnishes the
standard to which the latter must be subordinated. When men attempt to
determine the uses to which the original activities shall be put, they
interfere with a divine plan. The interference by social arrangements
with Nature, God's work, is the primary source of corruption in
individuals. Rousseau's passionate assertion of the intrinsic goodness
of all natural tendencies was a reaction against the prevalent notion of
the total depravity of innate human nature, and has had a powerful
influence in modifying the attitude towards children's interests. But
it is hardly necessary to say that primitive impulses are of themselves
neither good nor evil, but become one or the other according to the
objects for which they are employed. That neglect, suppression, and
premature forcing of some instincts at the expense of others, are
responsible for many avoidable ills, there can be no doubt. But the
moral is not to leave them alone to follow their own "spontaneous
development," but to provide an environment which shall organize them.
Returning to the elements of truth contained in Rousseau's statements,
we find that natural development, as an aim, enables him to point the
means of correcting many evils in current practices, and to indicate a
number of desirable specific aims. (1) Natural development as an aim
fixes attention upon the bodily organs and the need of health and vigor.
The aim of natural development says to parents and teachers: Make health
an aim; normal development cannot be had without regard to the vigor of
the body—an obvious enough fact and yet one whose due recognition
in practice would almost automatically revolutionize many of our
educational practices. "Nature" is indeed a vague and metaphorical
term, but one thing that "Nature" may be said to utter is that there are
conditions of educational efficiency, and that till we have learned what
these conditions are and have learned to make our practices accord with
them, the noblest and most ideal of our aims are doomed to
suffer—are verbal and sentimental rather than efficacious.
(2) The aim of natural development translates into the aim of respect
for physical mobility. In Rousseau's words: "Children are always in
motion; a sedentary life is injurious." When he says that "Nature's
intention is to strengthen the body before exercising the mind" he
hardly states the fact fairly. But if he had said that nature's
"intention" (to adopt his poetical form of speech) is to develop the
mind especially by exercise of the muscles of the body he would have
stated a positive fact. In other words, the aim of following nature
means, in the concrete, regard for the actual part played by use of the
bodily organs in explorations, in handling of materials, in plays and
games.
(3) The general aim translates into the aim of regard for individual
differences among children. Nobody can take the principle of
consideration of native powers into account without being struck by the
fact that these powers differ in different individuals. The difference
applies not merely to their intensity, but even more to their quality
and arrangement. As Rouseau said: "Each individual is born with a
distinctive temperament.... We indiscriminately employ children of
different bents on the same exercises; their education destroys the
special bent and leaves a dull uniformity. Therefore after we have
wasted our efforts in stunting the true gifts of nature we see the
short-lived and illusory brilliance we have substituted die away, while
the natural abilities we have crushed do not revive."
Lastly, the aim of following nature means to note the origin, the
waxing, and waning, of preferences and interests. Capacities bud and
bloom irregularly; there is no even four-abreast development. We must
strike while the iron is hot. Especially precious are the first
dawnings of power. More than we imagine, the ways in which the
tendencies of early childhood are treated fix fundamental dispositions
and condition the turn taken by powers that show themselves later.
Educational concern with the early years of life—as distinct from
inculcation of useful arts—dates almost entirely from the time of
the emphasis by Pestalozzi and Froebel, following Rousseau, of natural
principles of growth. The irregularity of growth and its significance
is indicated in the following passage of a student of the growth of the
nervous system. "While growth continues, things bodily and mental are
lopsided, for growth is never general, but is accentuated now at one
spot, now at another.... The methods which shall recognize in the
presence of these enormous differences of endowment the dynamic values
of natural inequalities of growth, and utilize them, preferring
irregularity to the rounding out gained by pruning will most closely
follow that which takes place in the body and thus prove most
effective."
[6]
Observation of natural tendencies is difficult
under conditions of restraint. They show themselves most readily in a
child's spontaneous sayings and doings,—that is, in those he
engages in when not put at set tasks and when not aware of being under
observation. It does not follow that these tendencies are all desirable
because they are natural; but it does follow that since they are there,
they are operative and must be taken account of. We must see to it that
the desirable ones have an environment which keeps them active, and that
their activity shall control the direction the others take and thereby
induce the disuse of the latter because they lead to nothing. Many
tendencies that trouble parents when they appear are likely to be
transitory, and sometimes too much direct attention to them only fixes a
child's attention upon them. At all events, adults too easily assume
their own habits and wishes as standards, and regard all deviations of
children's impulses as evils to be eliminated. That artificiality
against which the conception of following nature is so largely a
protest, is the outcome of attempts to force children directly into the
mold of grown-up standards.
In conclusion, we note that the early history of the idea of following
nature combined two factors which had no inherent connection with one
another. Before the time of Rousseau educational reformers had been
inclined to urge the importance of education by ascribing practically
unlimited power to it. All the differences between peoples and between
classes and persons among the same people were said to be due to
differences of training, of exercise, and practice. Originally, mind,
reason, understanding is, for all practical purposes, the same in all.
This essential identity of mind means the essential equality of all and
the possibility of bringing them all to the same level. As a protest
against this view, the doctrine of accord with nature meant a much less
formal and abstract view of mind and its powers. It substituted
specific instincts and impulses and physiological capacities, differing
from individual to individual ( just as they differ, as Rousseau pointed
out, even in dogs of the same litter), for abstract faculties of
discernment, memory, and generalization. Upon this side, the doctrine
of educative accord with nature has been reënforced by the development
of modern biology, physiology, and psychology. It means, in effect,
that great as is the significance of nurture, of modification, and
transformation through direct educational effort, nature, or unlearned
capacities, affords the foundation and ultimate resources for such
nurture.
On the other hand, the doctrine of following nature was a political
dogma. It meant a rebellion against existing social institutions,
customs, and ideals
(See ante, p. ).
Rousseau's statement that everything is good as it comes from the
hands of the Creator has its signification only in its contrast with
the concluding part of the same sentence: "Everything degenerates in
the hands of man." And again he says: "Natural man has an absolute
value; he is a numerical unit, a complete integer and has no relation save
to himself and to his fellow man. Civilized man is only a relative unit,
the numerator of a fraction whose value depends upon its dominator, its
relation to the integral body of society. Good political institutions
are those which make a man unnatural." It is upon this conception of the
artificial and harmful character of organized social life as it now exists
[7]
that he rested the notion that nature not merely furnishes prime forces
which initiate growth but also its plan and goal. That evil institutions
and customs work almost automatically to give a wrong education which the
most careful schooling cannot offset is true enough; but the conclusion
is not to education apart from the environment, but to provide an environment
in which native powers will be put to better uses.
2. Social Efficiency as Aim.
—A conception which made nature supply the end of a true education
and society the end of an evil one, could hardly fail to call out a
protest.
The opposing emphasis took the form of a doctrine that the business of
education is to supply precisely what nature fails to secure; namely,
habituation of an individual to social control; subordination of natural
powers to social rules. It is not surprising to find that the value in
the idea of social efficiency resides largely in its protest against the
points at which the doctrine of natural development went astray; while
its misuse comes when it is employed to slur over the truth in that
conception. It is a fact that we must look to the activities and
achievements of associated life to find what the development of power—that
is to say, efficiency—means. The error is in implying that we
must adopt measures of subordination rather than of utilization to
secure efficiency. The doctrine is rendered adequate when we recognize
that social efficiency is attained not by negative constraint but by
positive use of native individual capacities in occupations having a
social meaning.
(1) Translated into specific aims, social efficiency indicates the
importance of industrial competency. Persons cannot live without means
of subsistence; the ways in which these means are employed and consumed
have a profound influence upon all the relationships of persons to one
another. If an individual is not able to earn his own living and that
of the children dependent upon him, he is a drag or parasite upon the
activities of others. He misses for himself one of the most educative
experiences of life. If he is not trained in the right use of the
products of industry, there is grave danger that he may deprave himself
and injure others in his possession of wealth. No scheme of education
can afford to neglect such basic considerations. Yet in the name of
higher and more spiritual ideals, the arrangements for higher education
have often not only neglected them, but looked at them with scorn as
beneath the level of educative concern. With the change from an
oligarchical to a democratic society, it is natural that the
significance of an education which should have as a result ability to
make one's way economically in the world, and to manage economic
resources usefully instead of for mere display and luxury, should
receive emphasis.
There is, however, grave danger that in insisting upon this end,
existing economic conditions and standards will be accepted as final. A
democratic criterion requires us to develop capacity to the point of
competency to choose and make its own career. This principle is
violated when the attempt is made to fit individuals in advance for
definite industrial callings, selected not on the basis of trained
original capacities, but on that of the wealth or social status of
parents. As a matter of fact, industry at the present time undergoes
rapid and abrupt changes through the evolution of new inventions. New
industries spring up, and old ones are revolutionized. Consequently an
attempt to train for too specific a mode of efficiency defeats its own
purpose. When the occupation changes its methods, such individuals are
left behind with even less ability to readjust themselves than if they
had a less definite training. But, most of all, the present industrial
constitution of society is, like every society which has ever existed,
full of inequities. It is the aim of progressive education to take part
in correcting unfair privilege and unfair deprivation, not to perpetuate
them. Wherever social control means subordination of individual
activities to class authority, there is danger that industrial education
will be dominated by acceptance of the status quo. Differences of
economic opportunity then dictate what the future callings of
individuals are to be. We have an unconscious revival of the defects of
the Platonic scheme
(Ante, p. 104)
without its enlightened method of selection.
(2) Civic efficiency, or good citizenship. It is, of course, arbitrary
to separate industrial competency from capacity in good citizenship.
But the latter term may be used to indicate a number of qualifications
which are vaguer than vocational ability. These traits run from
whatever make an individual a more agreeable companion to citizenship in
the political sense: it denotes ability to judge men and measures wisely
and to take a determining part in making as well as obeying laws. The
aim of civic efficiency has at least the merit of protecting us from the
notion of a training of mental power at large. It calls attention to
the fact that power must be relative to doing something, and to the fact
that the things which most need to be done are things which involve
one's relationships with others.
Here again we have to be on guard against understanding the aim too
narrowly. An over-definite interpretation would at certain periods have
excluded scientific discoveries, in spite of the fact that in the last
analysis security of social progress depends upon them. For scientific
men would have been thought to be mere theoretical dreamers, totally
lacking in social efficiency. It must be borne in mind that ultimately
social efficiency means neither more nor less than capacity to share in
a give and take of experience. It covers all that makes one's own
experience more worth while to others, and all that enables one to
participate more richly in the worthwhile experiences of others.
Ability to produce and to enjoy art, capacity for recreation, the
significant utilization of leisure, are more important elements in it
than elements conventionally associated oftentimes with citizenship.
In the broadest sense, social efficiency is nothing less than that
socialization of mind which is actively concerned in making experiences
more communicable; in breaking down the barriers of social
stratification which make individuals impervious to the interests of
others. When social efficiency is confined to the service rendered by
overt acts, its chief constituent (because its only guarantee) is
omitted,—intelligent sympathy or good will. For sympathy as a
desirable quality is something more than mere feeling; it is a
cultivated imagination for what men have in common and a rebellion at
whatever unnecessarily divides them. What is sometimes called a
benevolent interest in others may be but an unwitting mask for an
attempt to dictate to them what their good shall be, instead of an
endeavor to free them so that they may seek and find the good of their
own choice. Social efficiency, even social service, are hard and
metallic things when severed from an active acknowledgment of the
diversity of goods which life may afford to different persons, and from
faith in the social utility of encouraging every individual to make his
own choice intelligent.
3. Culture as Aim.
—Whether or not social efficiency is an aim which is consistent
with culture turns upon these considerations. Culture means at least
something cultivated, something ripened; it is opposed to the raw and
crude. When the "natural" is identified with this rawness, culture is
opposed to what is called natural development. Culture is also
something personal; it is cultivation with respect to appreciation of
ideas and art and broad human interests. When efficiency is identified
with a narrow range of acts, instead of with the spirit and meaning of
activity, culture is opposed to efficiency. Whether called culture or
complete development of personality, the outcome is identical with the
true meaning of social efficiency whenever attention is given to what is
unique in an individual—and he would not be an individual if there
were not something incommensurable about him. Its opposite is the
mediocre, the average. Whenever distinctive quality is developed,
distinction of personality results, and with it greater promise for a
social service which goes beyond the supply in quantity of material
commodities. For how can there be a society really worth serving unless
it is constituted of individuals of significant personal qualities?
The fact is that the opposition of high worth of personality to social
efficiency is a product of a feudally organized society with its rigid
division of inferior and superior. The latter are supposed to have time
and opportunity to develop themselves as human beings; the former are
confined to providing external products. When social efficiency as
measured by product or output is urged as an ideal in a would-be
democratic society, it means that the depreciatory estimate of the
masses characteristic of an aristocratic community is accepted and
carried over. But if democracy has a moral and ideal meaning, it is
that a social return be demanded from all and that opportunity for
development of distinctive capacities be afforded all. The separation
of the two aims in education is fatal to democracy; the adoption of the
narrower meaning of efficiency deprives it of its essential
justification.
The aim of efficiency ( like any educational aim ) must be included
within the process of experience. When it is measured by tangible
external products, and not by the achieving of a distinctively valuable
experience, it becomes materialistic. Results in the way of commodities
which may be the outgrowth of an efficient personality are, in the
strictest sense, by-products of education: by-products which are
inevitable and important, but nevertheless by-products. To set up an
external aim strengthens by reaction the false conception of culture
which identifies it with something purely "inner." And the idea of
perfecting an "inner" personality is a sure sign of social divisions.
What is called inner is simply that which does not connect with others
—which is not capable of free and full communication. What is
termed spiritual culture has usually been futile, with something rotten
about it, just because it has been conceived as a thing which a man
might have internally—and therefore exclusively. What one is as a
person is what one is as associated with others, in a free give and take
of intercourse. This transcends both the efficiency which consists in
supplying products to others and the culture which is an exclusive
refinement and polish.
Any individual has missed his calling, farmer, physician, teacher,
student, who does not find that the accomplishments of results of value
to others is an accompaniment of a process of experience inherently
worth while. Why then should it be thought that one must take his
choice between sacrificing himself to doing useful things for others, or
sacrificing them to pursuit of his own exclusive ends, whether the
saving of his own soul or the building of an inner spiritual life and
personality? What happens is that since neither of these things is
persistently possible, we get a compromise and an alternation. One
tries each course by turns. There is no greater tragedy than that so
much of the professedly spiritual and religious thought of the world has
emphasized the two ideals of self-sacrifice and spiritual
self-perfecting instead of throwing its weight against this dualism of
life. The dualism is too deeply established to be easily overthrown;
for that reason, it is the particular task of education at the present
time to struggle in behalf of an aim in which social efficiency and
personal culture are synonyms instead of antagonists.
Summary.
—General or comprehensive aims are points of view for surveying
the specific problems of education. Consequently it is a test of the
value of the manner in which any large end is stated to see if it will
translate readily and consistently into the procedures which are
suggested by another. We have applied this test to three general aims:
Development according to nature, social efficiency, and culture or
personal mental enrichment. In each case we have seen that the aims
when partially stated come into conflict with each other. The partial
statement of natural development takes the primitive powers in an
alleged spontaneous development as the end-all. From this point of view
training which renders them useful to others is an abnormal constraint;
one which profoundly modifies them through deliberate nurture is
corrupting. But when we recognize that natural activities mean native
activities which develop only through the uses in which they are
nurtured, the conflict disappears. Similarly a social efficiency which
is defined in terms of rendering external service to others is of
necessity opposed to the aim of enriching the meaning of experience,
while a culture which is taken to consist in an internal refinement of a
mind is opposed to a socialized disposition. But social efficiency as
an educational purpose should mean cultivation of power to join freely
and fully in shared or common activities. This is impossible without
culture, while it brings a reward in culture, because one cannot share
in intercourse with others without learning—without getting a
broader point of view and perceiving things of which one would otherwise
be ignorant. And there is perhaps no better definition of culture than
that it is the capacity for constantly expanding the range and accuracy
of one's perception of meanings.
Footnotes
[[6]]
Donaldson, Growth of Brain, p. 356.
[[7]]
We must not forget that Rousseau had the idea of
a radically different sort of society, a fraternal society whose end
should be identical with the good of all its members, which he thought
to be as much better than existing states as these are worse than the
state of nature.