Title: Aristotle
1(No Transcript)
2Aristotle
- We are what we repeatedly do.
- Excellence, then, is not an act, but a habit.
3- Every gun that is made, every warship launched,
every rocket fired signifies, in the final sense,
a theft from those who hunger and are not fed,
those who are cold and are not clothed - The cost of one modern heavy bomber is this a
modern brick school in more than 30 cities. - It is two electric power plants, each serving a
town of 60,000 population. - It is two fine, fully equipped hospitals
- We pay for a single fighter plane with a half
million bushels of wheat. We pay for a single
destroyer with new homes that could have housed
8,000 people. -
- Dwight D. Eisenhower, April 1953, about three
months after his inauguration as the 34th
president of the U.S. (International Herald
Tribune, June 7, 2004, referenced in an editorial
by his son, John S.D. Eisenhower).
4Sitting Bull
What treaty that the white have kept has the red
man broken? Not One! What treaty that the
whites ever made with us red men have they kept?
Not one. When I was a boy, the Sioux owned the
world. The sun rose and set on our lands. We
sent ten thousand horsemen into battle. Where
are the warriors today? Who slew them? Where
are our lands? Who owns them? What white man
can say I ever stole his land or a penny of his
money? And yet they say I am a thief. Is it
wrong for me to love my own? Is it wicked of me
because my skin is red? Because I am a Sioux?
Because I was born where my fathers lived?
Because I would die for my people and my
country?
5Comenius, 17th Century Educator and Education
Critic
- School is the slaughterhouse of the mind.
6William Butler Yeats, English Poet
- School is not the filling of a pail. It is the
lighting of a fire.
7Whitehead, The Aims of Education
- The result of teaching small parts of a large
number of subjects is the passive reception of
disconnected ideas, not illuminated with any
spark of vitality. Let the main ideas which are
introduced into a childs education be few and
important, and let them be thrown into every
combination possible. The child should make them
his own, and should understand their application
here and now in the circumstances of his actual
life. From the very beginning of his education,
the child should experience the joy of discovery.
The discovery which he has to make is that
general ideas give an understanding of that
stream of events which pours through his life.
8George Amberson
- He had learned how to pass examinations by
cramming that is, in three or four days and
nights he could get into his head enough of a
selected fragment of some scientific or
philosophical or literary or linguistic subject
to reply plausibly to six questions out of ten.
He could retain the information necessary for
such a feat just long enough to give a successful
performance then it would evaporate utterly from
his brain, and leave him undisturbed. - What George Amberson had learned in college,
From the Magnificant Ambersons by Booth
Tarkington (1918)
9On the Effect of Cramming on Students, Anthony
Trollop
- I know well what such students are, and I know
the evil that is done to them by the cramming
they endure. They learn many names of
things---high-sounding namesIt is a knowledge
that requires no experience and very little real
thought. But it demands much memory and after
they have loaded themselves in this way, they
think that they are instructed in all things.
After all, what can they do that is of real use?
What can they create?
10Robert Reich, former secretary of labor under
Bill Clinton
- Reich identifies four components of the kind of
thinking that highly paid workers will
increasingly need to master - Command of abstractions
- Ability to think within systems
- Ability to evaluate ideas
- Ability to communicate effectively
11Donald Kennedy, Past president of Stanford, in a
letter sent to 3000 college and university
presidents.
- It simply will not do for our schools to produce
a small elite to power our scientific
establishment and a larger cadre of workers with
basic skills to do routine work. Millions of
people around the world now have these same basic
skills and are willing to work twice as long for
as little as 1/10th our basic wagesWe must
develop a leading-edge economy based on workers
who can think for a living. If skills are equal,
in the long run wage will be too. This means we
have to educate a vast mass of people capable of
thinking critically, creatively, and
imaginatively.
12H. L. Menchen on Liberty
- I believe in liberty. And when I say liberty, I
mean the thing in its widest imaginable
sense---liberty up to the extreme limits of the
feasible and tolerable. I am against forbidding
anybody to do anything, or say anything, or think
anything so long as it is at all possible to
imagine a habitable world in which he would be
free to do, say, and think it. The burden of
proof, as I see it, is always upon the policeman,
which is to say, upon the lawmaker, the
theologian, the right-thinker. He must prove his
case doubly, triply, quadruply, and then he must
start all over and prove it again. The eye
through which I view him is watery and jaundiced.
I do not pretend to be just to him---any more
than a Christian pretends to be just to the
devil. He is the enemy of everything I admire
and respect in this world---of everything that
makes it various and amusing and charming. He
impedes every honest search for the truth. He
stands against every sort of good-will and common
decency. His ideal is that of an animal trainer,
an archbishop, a major general in the army. I am
against him until the last galoots ashore.
13John Henry NewmanThe Idea of a University1852
- Truth, of whatever kind, is the proper object of
the intellect its cultivation then lies in
fitting it to apprehend and contemplate truth...
the intellect in its present state, ...does not
discern truth intuitively, or as a whole. We
know, not by a direct and simple vision, not at a
glance, but, as it were, by piecemeal and
accumulation, by a mental process, by going round
an object, by the comparison, the combination,
the mutual correction, the continual adaptation,
of many partial notions, by the employment,
concentration, and joint action of many faculties
and exercises of mind.
14- Such a union and concert of the intellectual
powers, such an enlargement and development, such
a comprehensiveness, is necessarily a matter of
training. And again, such a training is a matter
of rule it is not mere application, however
exemplary, which introduces the mind to truth,
nor the reading of many books, nor the getting up
of many subjects, nor the witnessing many
experiments, nor attending many lectures.
15- All this is short of enough a man may have done
it all, yet be lingering in the vestibule of
knowledge-he may not realize what his mouth
utters he may not see with his mental eye what
confronts him he may have no grasp of things as
they are or at least he may have no power at all
of advancing one step forward of himself, in
consequence of what he has already acquired, no
power of discriminating between truth and
falsehood, of sifting out the grains of truth
from the mass, of arranging things according the
their real value.
16- Such a power is an acquired faculty of judgment,
of clearsightedness, of sagacity, of wisdom,
...and of intellectual self-possession and repose
- qualities which do not come of mere
acquirement. The eye of the mind, of which the
object is truth, is the work of discipline and
habit.
17John Henry NewmanThe Idea of a University1852
- The intellect, which has been disciplined to the
perfection of its powers, which knows and thinks
while it knows, which has learned to leaven the
dense mass of facts and events with the elastic
force of reason, such an intellect cannot be
partial, cannot be exclusive, cannot be
impetuous, cannot be at a loss, cannot but be
patient, collected, and majestically calm,
because it discerns the end in every beginning,
the origin in every end, ...the limit in each
delay because it ever knows where it stands, and
how its path lies from one point to another.
18John Henry NewmanThe Idea of a University1852
- It is education which gives a man a clear
conscious view of his own opinions and judgments,
a truth in developing them, an eloquence in
expressing them, and a force in urging them. It
teaches him to see things as they are, to go
right to the point, to disentangle a skein of
thought, to detect what is sophistical, and to
discard what is irrelevant. It prepares him to
master any subject with facility.
19- It shows him how to accommodate himself to
others, how to throw himself into their state of
mind, how to bring before them his own, how to
influence them, how to come to an understanding
with them, how to bear with them...he can ask a
question pertinently, and gain a lesson
seasonably, when he has nothing to impart
himself...He has the repose of mind which lives
in itself while it lives in the world...The art
which tends to make a man all this, is in the
object which it pursues as useful as the art of
wealth or the art of health, though it is less
susceptible as a method, and less tangible, less
certain, less complete in its result.
20William Graham SumnerA Founding Father of
Sociology
- That we are good and others are bad is never true
21William Graham Sumner
- People educated in it critical habit of thought
cannot be stampeded by stump orators and are
never deceived by oratory. They are slow to
believe. They can hold things as possible or
probable in all degrees. They can wait for
evidence and weigh evidence, uninfluenced by the
emphasis and confidence with which assertions are
made on one side or the other. (Folkways, 1906)
22John Henry Newman
- knowledge is not a mere extrinsic or accidental
advantage,which may be got up from a book for
the occasion,it is something intellectualmaking
the objects of our knowledge subjectively our
own. (Idea of A University, 1852).
23John Stuart Mill
- since the general or prevailing opinion on any
object is rarely or never the whole truth, it is
only by the collision of adverse opinions that
the remainder of the truth has any chance of
being supplied. (On Liberty, 1859)
24The Lesson by an anonymous author
- Then Jesus took his disciplines up the mountain
and, gathering then around him, he taught them
saying
25- Blessed are the poor in spirit for theirs is the
Kingdom of Heaven. - Blessed are the meek.
- Blessed are they that mourn.
- Blessed are they who thirst for justice.
- Blessed are you when persecuted.
- Blessed are you when you suffer.
- Be glad and rejoice for your reward is great in
heaven
26- Then Simon Peter said Do we have to write this
down? - And Andrew said, Are we supposed to know this?
- And James said, Will this be on the test?
- And Phillip said, What if we dont remember
this? - And John said, The other disciplines didnt have
to learn this. - And Matthew said, When do we get out of here?
- And Judas said, What does this have to do with
the real world?
27- Then one of the Pharisees present asked to see
Jesus lesson plan and inquired of Jesus
terminal objectives in both the cognitive and
behavioral domains.
28 Jesus wept