|
Bertrand Russell
Education And Discipline
Any serious educational theory must consist of two parts: a conception of the
ends of life, and a science of psychological dynamics, i.e. of the laws of
mental change. Two men who differ as to the ends of life cannot hope to agree
about education. The educational machine, throughout Western civilization, is
dominated by two ethical theories: that of Christianity, and that of
nationalism. These two, when taken seriously, are incompatible, as is becoming
evident in Germany. For my part, I hold that, where they differ, Christianity
is preferable, but where they agree, both are mistaken.
The conception which I should substitute as the purpose of education is
civilization, a term which, as I mean it, has a definition which is partly
individual, partly social. It consists, in the individual, of both intellectual
and moral qualities: intellectually, a certain minimum of general knowledge,
technical skill in one's own profession, and a habit of forming opinions on
evidence; morally, of impartiality, kindliness, and a modicum of self-control.
I should add a quality which is neither moral nor intellectual, but perhaps
physiological: zest and joy of life. In communities, civilization demands
respect for law, justice as between man and man, purposes not involving
permanent injury to any section of the human race, and intelligent adaptation
of means to ends. If these are to be the purpose of education, it is a question
for the science of psychology to consider what can be done towards realizing
them, and, in particular, what degree of freedom is likely to prove most
effective.
On the question of freedom in education there are at present three main schools
of thought, deriving partly from differences as to ends and partly from
differences in psychological theory. There are those who say that children
should be completely free, however bad they may be; there are those who say
they should be completely subject to authority, however good they may be; and
there are those who say they should be free, but in spite of freedom they
should be always good. This last party is larger than it has any logical right
to be; children, like adults, will not all be virtuous if they are all free.
The belief that liberty will ensure moral perfection is a relic of Rousseauism,
and would not survive a study of animals and babies. Those who hold this belief
think that education should have no positive purpose, but should merely offer
an environment suitable for spontaneous development. I cannot agree with this
school, which seems to me too individualistic, and unduly indifferent to the
importance of knowledge. We live in communities which require co-operation, and
it would be utopian to expect all the necessary co-operation to result from
spontaneous impulse.
The existence of a large population on a limited area is only possible owing to
science and technique; education must, therefore, hand on the necessary minimum
of these. The educators who allow most freedom are men whose success depends
upon a degree of benevolence, self-control, and trained intelligence which can
hardly be generated where every impulse is left unchecked; their merits,
therefore, are not likely to be perpetuated if their methods are undiluted.
Education, viewed from a social standpoint, must be something more positive
than a mere opportunity for growth. It must, of course, provide this, but it
must also provide a mental and moral equipment which children cannot acquire
entirely for themselves.
The arguments in favour of a great degree of freedom in education are derived
not from man's natural goodness, but from the effects of authority, both on
those who suffer it and on those who exercise it. Those who are subject to
authority become either submissive or rebellious, and each attitude has its
drawbacks.
The submissive lose initiative, both in thought and action; moreover, the anger
generated by the feeling of being thwarted tends to find an outlet in bullying
those who are weaker. That is why tyrannical institutions are
self-perpetuating: what a man has suffered from his father he inflicts upon his
son, and the humiliations which he remembers having endured at his public
school he passes on to 'natives' when he becomes an empire-builder. Thus an
unduly authoritative education turns the pupils into timid tyrants, incapable
of either claiming or tolerating originality in word or deed. The effect upon
the educators is even worse: they tend to become sadistic disciplinarians, glad
to inspire terror, and content to inspire nothing else. As these men represent
knowledge, the pupils acquire a horror of knowledge, which, among the English
upper-class, is supposed to be part of human nature, but is really part of the
well-grounded hatred of the authoritarian pedagogue.
Rebels, on the other hand,, though they may be necessary, can hardly be just to
what exists. Moreover, there are many ways of rebelling, and only a small
minority of these are wise. Galileo was a rebel and was wise; believers in the
flat-earth theory are equally rebels, but are foolish. There is a great danger
in the tendency to suppose that opposition to authority is essentially
meritorious and that unconventional opinions are bound to be correct: no useful
purpose is served by smashing lamp-posts or maintaining Shakespeare to be no
poet. Yet this excessive rebelliousness is often the effect that too much
authority has on spirited pupils. And when rebels become educators, they
sometimes encourage defiance in their pupils, for whom at the same time they
are trying to produce a perfect environment, although these two aims are
scarcely compatible.
What is wanted is neither submissiveness nor rebellion, but good nature, and
general friendliness both to people and to new ideas. These qualities are due
in part to physical causes, to which old-fashioned educators paid too little
attention; but they are due still more to freedom from the feeling of baffled
impotence which arises when vital impulses are thwarted. If the young are to
grow into friendly adults, it is necessary, in most cases, that they should
feel their environment friendly. This requires that there should be a certain
sympathy with the child's important desires, and not merely an attempt to use
him for some abstract end such as the glory of God or the greatness of one's
country. And, in teaching, every attempt should be made to cause the pupil to
feel that it is worth his while to know what is being taught-at least when this
is true. When the pupil co-operates willingly, he learns twice as fast and with
half the fatigue. All these are valid reasons for a very great degree of
freedom.
It is easy, however, to carry the argument too far. It is not desirable that
children, in avoiding the vices of the slave, should acquire those of the
aristocrat. Consideration for others, not only in great matters, but also in
little everyday things, is an essential element in civilization, without which
social life would be intolerable. I am not thinking of mere forms of
politeness, such as saying "please" and "thank you": formal
manners are most fully developed among barbarians, and diminish with every
advance in culture. I am thinking rather of willingness to take a fair share of
necessary work, to be obliging in small ways that save trouble on the balance.
Sanity itself is a form of politeness and it is not desirable to give a child a
sense of omnipotence, or a belief that adults exist only to minister to the
pleasures of the young. And those who disapprove of the existence of the idle
rich are hardly consistent if they bring up their children without any sense
that work is necessary, and without the habits that make continuous application
possible.
There is another consideration to which some advocates of freedom attach too
little importance. In a community of children which is left without adult
interference there is a tyranny of the stronger, which is likely to be far more
brutal than most adult tyranny. If two children of two or three years old are
left to play together, they will, after a few fights, discover which is bound
to be the victor, and the other will then become a slave. Where the number of
children is larger, one or two acquire complete mastery, and the others have
far less liberty than they would have if the adults interfered to protect the
weaker and less pugnacious. Consideration for others does not, with most
children, arise spontaneously, but has to be taught, and can hardly be taught
except by the exercise of authority. This is perhaps the most important
argument against the abdication of the adults.
I do not think that educators have yet solved the problem of combining the
desirable forms of freedom with the necessary minimum of moral training. The
right solution, it must be admitted, is often made impossible by parents before
the child is brought to an enlightened school. just as psychoanalysts, from
their clinical experience, conclude that we are all mad, so the authorities in
modern schools, from their contact with pupils whose parents have made them
unmanageable, are disposed to conclude that all children are
"difficult" and all parents utterly foolish. Children who have been
driven wild by parental tyranny (which often takes the form of solicitous
affection) may require a longer or shorter period of complete liberty before
they can view any adult without suspicion. But children who have been sensibly
handled at home can bear to be checked in minor ways, so long as they feel that
they are being helped in the ways that they themselves regard as important.
Adults who like children, and are not reduced to a condition of nervous
exhaustion by their company, can achieve a great deal in the way of discipline
without ceasing to be regarded with friendly feelings by their pupils.
I think modern educational theorists are inclined to attach too much importance
to the negative virtue of not interfering with children, and too little to the
positive merit of enjoying their company. If you have the sort of liking for
children that many people have for horses or dogs, they will be apt to respond
to your suggestions, and to accept prohibitions, perhaps with some
good-humoured grumbling, but without resentment. It is no use to have the sort
of liking that consists in regarding them as a field for valuable social
endeavour, orÑwhat amounts to the same thingÑas an outlet for
power-impulses. No child will be grateful for an interest in him that springs
from the thought that he will have a vote to be secured for your party or a
body to be sacrificed to king and country. The desirable sort of interest is
that which consists in spontaneous pleasure in the presence of children,
without any ulterior purpose. Teachers who have this quality will seldom need
to interfere with children's freedom, but will be able to do so, when
necessary, without causing psychological damage.
Unfortunately, it is utterly impossible for over-worked teachers to preserve an
instinctive liking for children; they are bound to come to feel towards them as
the proverbial confectioner's apprentice does towards macaroons. I do not think
that education ought to be anyone's whole profession: it should be undertaken
for at most two hours a day by people whose remaining hours are spent away from
children. The society of the young is fatiguing, especially when strict
discipline is avoided. Fatigue, in the end, produces irritation, which is
likely to express itself somehow, whatever theories the harassed teacher may
have taught himself or herself to believe. The necessary friendliness cannot be
preserved by self-control alone. But where it exists, it should be unnecessary
to have rules in advance as to how "naughty" children are to be
treated, since impulse is likely to lead to the right decision, and almost any
decision will be right if the child feels that you like him. No rules, however
wise, are a substitute for affection and tact.
|