Thursday, July 4, 2019

Two Education Mini-Posts

Here’s a mix of silliness and profundity: Immanuel Kant and View-Masters are my favorite analogies for education.

Kant was the phenomenological philosopher of the 1700s. View-Masters are those little thingies you hold up to your eyes and click through a wheel of slides to see different images.

They are related in my mind because Kant said we can’t help but see the world through the “lenses of space and time” – they are irremovable goggles. His (vastly oversimplified) model is of a single way to see the world. Contrast that idea with a View-Master model – where that you can ‘flip’ through different ways of seeing – that is my model of a good education. A poor education leaves you like Kant – with a single way of seeing the world. A good education allows you to change your view as you wish.

An example of this central idea I guide students through, of different ways of seeing, is the farmer’s market. The biologist walking down the street would probably notice particular things: the displays of cultivated fruits and vegetables, the trees lining the sidewalks, the invasive pigeons. An economist, however, would be aware of a totally different market: the setting of prices, the haggling, the effects of abundance and scarcity, the competition of the egg vendors. Still again, the photographer while winding through the crowds is looking at light, angles, potential subjects, and strong contrasts.

Each experiences the farmer’s market in a different way. An education should, ideally, allow one to flip through these ways of seeing at will. The educated person should have the choice to walk through the market however they choose.

The world has specialists – rare, talented, students with an outstanding gift in dance or math, poetry or programming. The kids who can’t take off the goggles of the scientist or the painter. We, as a society, all benefit from those schools that nurture those unique gifts. For the rest of us mere mortals, though, a well-rounded model is best. How come?

Some argue education is to get you ready for the workforce, but this is not very persuasive. With the current rate of change, a large number of students will work in fields that don’t yet exist. The original education system was developed in the industrial revolution – and the goal was, indeed, to ensure a workforce that could handle the factory system. But, nowadays, as technologies progress, every field has had to adapt. Whether you want to be a journalist or a musician, the role of technology in just the past five years has radically altered your world: so, can we really say education is to get job training?

Exploring your passions is another reason for education, some say. There is some truth to this – if your passion is part of school. Alas, as many of my middle school students will lament, Fortnite and Karate are not part of the curriculum. If your passion is basketball, American History, or writing stories, school is great. But we are fooling ourselves if we think that schools cater to all passions. We do our best, allowing students to explore their passions through clubs, electives, and extra-curriculars – but must admit, due to limitations, that school serves a different function.

No, the best reason to develop well-rounded people, students who have the View-Master of vision instead of the Kantian irremovable goggles, is because we all live in this world together. We share a society, and are fortunate enough to have a say in that society. When you go to the polling place, or to the gym, the coffee hour at church, or the office party, we all do well to see the world through the eyes of others. To be able to make decisions that are open-, rather than narrow-, minded. To consider the effects of a policy, or a law, from all the angles we are capable of. We educate, in short, so that our children see the world through as many pairs of eyes, and “ways of seeing”, as possible. Armed with this pluralism of vision, our students will be able to take on everything the future holds, far better than if limited to a single viewpoint, or simple set of skills.

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When living in Singapore I gave a repeated lecture, in different areas around the island. The topic was on how to teach History – of interest to me, since I am a History teacher. It opened, after pleasantries, with the following:

“History is unique in the global curriculum. Most classes you take teach you how to do the subject they profess – the subject in the title of the course. In a Science class you do science. You complete lab work, write lab reports, formulate hypotheses: in a word, scientific research. In literature courses you learn how to write fiction, write criticisms, analyze texts, and gain some familiarity with the classics.

“History doesn't do this, and is unique for it. No professional historian sits around memorizing facts. Not a one. The only poor souls who have to do that are history teachers. In the US I teach World History. This is a course that covers everything – everything worth knowing apparently – between Australopithecus and the Renaissance. No joke.”

My Singaporean audience was often startled and amused by this notion. The lecture continued:

“Why is this useful?

“The predominant argument comes from E.D. Hirsch, the main name behind cultural literacy. Basically, if you and I share a cultural background, we can communicate through cultural shorthand. An example: You are feeling guilty about treating someone badly. To convey that I'm aware of your distress, I can look at you and say, in a certain reproachful but leading tone, ‘Out, damned spot!’ If you know Macbeth it makes sense. If you don't, it doesn't. We use this shorthand all the time: A Faustian bargain, his Achilles heel. Of course, it's not just literary: movies, comics, music: nearly all media is part of our shared cultural literacy.

“The problem is, since cultures are geographically bound, so, too, are historical events part of this literacy. If you live in America there are certain historical names, events, and places of significance: the Alamo, Graceland, Gettysburg, Franklin, the 49ers.

“This is what history classes teach, the world over. Only, now that the world is globalized, it has become necessary to not only know your own stuff, but everyone else's, as well. Now that I'm in Singapore what do I teach? The Cold War. Because they need to know about McCarthyism, Stalin, and the Brandenburg Gate. That's not fatuous – they really do need to know.”

At this point in the lecture I gave a quick history of History (how meta!) which is, perhaps surprisingly, a very young field of study. You could get a University degree in North Africa in theology in the 900s, or a medical degree in Italy by 1300. Oxford’s been handing out law degrees for a millennium. But American schools didn’t recognize History majors until the Civil War era.

So, what do these Historians do, if not sit around memorizing facts? From the lecture:

“On my American syllabus – it doesn't matter for which course – I begin with a simple statement: ‘History is about questions, not facts.’ Facts help us answer questions, but the same facts can be manipulated to serve opposing interests. (Entering WWI all the countries had the same facts, but each came up with histories, influenced by Nationalism, that ‘proved’ that they were the superior country.)

“What instead of memorizing facts, should historians do? Historians, professionally, try and answer questions about the past. They need facts to do this, of course, but it is the questions that motivate them, and drive their work. But how often do we let students devise their own history questions?

“If we were to get students together in a room and say: ‘This is a class on The Cold War. Each of you brainstorm your individual research projects, and I'll discuss them with you. In three weeks expect to present what you've written.’ Now we've gained what historians actually do, and if history is to be taught like other classes, this is what it would have to look like. But the flip side is we've lost what the classes currently provide: cultural literacy. Do we want students walking around who don't know what Gettysburg or 1776 is? No.”

The lecture’s conclusion was that the most radical approach was to teach History would be neither as cultural literacy, nor mirroring the professional actions of historians:

“Maybe research methodology isn't the ideal classroom. I propose that history isn't about questions, but is instead, not a discipline at all. It could be that history is a mental tool, like logic or scientific method. Merely a tool for making sense of things. You can apply history to anything, just as you could apply logic or scientific experimentation: some things it will work well on, others it won't. It won't work on everything: just as a wrench won't help when you need a screwdriver. When applied to the proper field, it can lend new insight. Art history is an example – by studying pieces of art, in sequence, we can reach a new understanding on what art is.

“Maybe, then, we can just teach this historical mindset. Maybe, like logic, we can teach how historians see and make sense of the world, and have students then apply history to different subjects, such as math, literature, and science. But maybe that’s more of a dream, I suppose, than a move to teach historical research methods.”

A few final pleasantries and recap, and the TED-talk-style lecture was over.

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