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Schooling
is Not Education
by Mortimer Adler, Ph.D.
For more than 70 years, a controlling insight in
my educational philosophy has been the recognition
that no one has ever been -- no one can ever be --
educated in school or college.
That would be the case if our schools and
colleges were at their very best, which they
certainly are not, and even if the students were
among the best and the brightest as well as
conscientious in the application of their
powers.
The reason is simply that youth itself --
immaturity -- is an insuperable obstacle to
becoming educated. Schooling is for the young.
Education comes later, usually much later. The very
best thing for our schools to do is to prepare the
young for continued learning by giving them the
skills of learning and the love of it. Our schools
and colleges are not doing that now, but that is
what they should be doing.
To speak of an educated young person, rich in
understanding of basic ideas and issues, is as much
a contradiction in terms as to speak of a round
square. The young can be prepared for education in
the years to come, but only mature men and women
can become educated, beginning the process in their
40's and 50's and reaching some modicum of genuine
insight, sound judgment and practical wisdom after
the age 60.
This is what no high school or college graduate
knows or can understand. As a matter of fact, most
of their teachers do not seem to know it. In their
obsession with covering ground and in the way in
which they test or examine their students, they
certainly do not act as if they understood that
they were only preparing their students for
education in later life rather than trying to
complete it within the precincts of their
institutions.
There is, of course, some truth in the ancient
insight that awareness of ignorance is the
beginning of wisdom. But, remember, it is just the
beginning. From there on one has to do something
about it.
And to do it intelligently one must know
something of its causes and cures--why adults need
education and what, if anything, they can do about
it. When young adults realize how little they
learned in school, they usually assume there was
something wrong with the school they attended or
with the way they spent their time there. But the
fact is that the best possible graduate of the best
possible school needs to continue learning every
bit as much as the worst.
How should they go about doing this? In a recent
book, I tried to answer the question, "How should
persons proceed who wish to conduct for themselves
the continuation of learning after all schooling
has been finished?" The brief and simple answer is:
Read and discuss.
Never just read, for reading without discussion
with others who have read the same book is not
nearly as profitable. And as reading without
discussion can fail to yield the full measure of
understanding that should be sought, so discussion
without the substance that good and great books
afford is likely to degenerate into little more
than an exchange of opinions or personal
prejudices.
Those who take this prescription seriously
would, of course, be better off if their schooling
had given them the intellectual discipline and
skill they need to carry it out, and if it had also
introduced them to the world of learning with some
appreciation of its basic ideas and issues. But
even the individual who is fortunate to leave
school or college with a mind so disciplined, and
with an abiding love of learning, would still have
a long road to travel before he or she became an
educated person.
If our schools and colleges were doing their
part and adults were doing theirs, all would be
well. However, our schools and colleges are not
doing their part because they are trying to do
everything else. And adults are not doing their
part because most are under the illusion that they
had completed their education when they finished
their schooling.
Only the person who realizes that mature life is
the time to get the education that no young person
can ever acquire is at last on the high road to
learning. The road is steep and rocky, but it is
the high road, open to anyone who has the skill in
learning and the ultimate goal of all learning in
view--understanding the nature of things and man's
place in the total scheme.
An educated person is one who through the
travail of his own life has assimilated the ideas
that make him representative of his culture, that
make him a bearer of its traditions and enable him
to contribute to its improvement.
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