|
Preface
Chapter 1 - Psychology
and the Teaching Art
Chapter 2 - The
Stream of Consciousness
Chapter 3 - The
Child as a Behaving Organism
Chapter 4 - Education
and Behavior
Chapter 5 - The
Necessity of Reactions
Chapter 6 - Native
Reactions and Acquired Reactions
Chapter 7 - What
the Native Reactions Are
Chapter 8 - The Laws
of Habit
Chapter 9 - The
Association of
Ideas
Chapter 10 - Interest
Chapter 11 - Attention
Chapter 12 - Memory
Chapter 13 - The
Acquisition of Ideas
Chapter 14 - Apperception
Chapter 15 - The
Will
William James, Talks to Teachers
CHAPTER 1: Psychology and The Teaching Art
In the general activity and uprising of ideal interest
which
every one with an eye for fact can discern all about us in American
life, there is perhaps no more promising feature than the fermentation
which for a dozen years or more has been going on among the teachers.
In whatever sphere of education their functions may lie, there is to be
seen among them a really inspiring amount of searching of the heart
about the highest concerns of their profession. . . . .
No one has profited more by the fermentation of which I
speak, in pedagogical circles, than we psychologists. The desire of the
schoolteachers for a completer professional training, and their
aspiration toward the `professional' spirit in their work, have led
them more and more to turn to us for light on fundamental principles.
And in these few hours which we are to spend together you look to me, I
am sure, for information concerning the mind's operations, which may
enable you to labor more easily and effectively in the several
schoolrooms over which you preside.
Far be it from me to disclaim for psychology all title
to
such hopes. Psychology ought certainly to give the teacher radical
help. And yet I confess that, acquainted as I am with the height of
some of your expectations, I feel a little anxious lest, at the end of
these simple talks of mine, not a few of you may experience some
disappointment at the net results. In other words, I am not sure that
you may not be indulging fancies that are just a shade exaggerated. . .
.
As regards this subject of psychology, now, I wish at
the
very threshold to do what I can to dispel the mystification. So I say
at once that in my humble opinion there is no `new psychology'
worthy of the name. There is nothing but the old psychology which began
in Locke's time, plus a little physiology of the brain and senses and
theory of evolution, and a few refinements of the introspective detail,
for the most part without adaptation to the teacher's use. It is only
the fundamental conceptions of psychology which are of real value to
the teacher; and they, apart from the aforesaid theory of evolution,
are very far from being new. --- I trust that you will see better what
I mean by this at the end of all these talks.
I say moreover that you make a great, a very great
mistake,
if you think that psychology, being the science of the mind's laws, is
something from which you can deduce definite programmes and schemes and
methods of instruction for immediate schoolroom use. Psychology is a
science, and teaching is an art; and sciences never generate arts
directly out of themselves. An intermediary inventive mind must make
the application, by using its originality.
The science of logic never made a man reason rightly,
and
the science of ethics (if there be such a thing) never made a man
behave rightly. The most such sciences can do is to help us to catch
ourselves up and check ourselves, if we start to reason or to behave
wrongly; and to criticise ourselves more articulately after we have
made mistakes. A science only lays down lines within which the rules of
the art must fall, laws which the follower of the art must not
transgress; but what particular thing he shall do poitively within
those lines is left exclusively to his own genius. One genius will do
his work well and succeed in one way, while another succeeds as well
quite differently; yet neither will transgress the lines.
The art of teaching grew up in the schoolroom, out of
inventiveness and sypathetic concrete observation. Even where (as in
the case of Herbart) the advancer of the art was also a psychologist,
the pedagogics and the psychology ran side by side, and the former was
not in any sense derived from the latter. The two were congruent, but
neither was subordinate. And so everywhere the teaching must agree
with the psychology, but need not necessarily be the only kind of
teaching that would so agree; for many diverse methods of teaching may
equally well agree with psychological laws.
To know psychology, therefore, is absolutely no
guarantee
that we shall be good teachers. To advance to that result, we must have
an additional endowment altogether, a happy tact and ingenuity to tell
us what definite things to say and do when the pupil is before us. That
ingenuity in meeting and pursuing the pupil, that tact for the concrete
situation, though they are the alpha and omega of the teacher's art,
are things to which psychology cannot help us in the least.
The science of psychology, and whatever science of
general
pedagogics may be based on it, are in fact much like the science of
war. Nothing is simpler or more definite that the principles of either.
In war, all you have to do is to work your enemy into a position from
which the natural obstacles prevent him from escaping if he tries to;
then to fall on him in numbers superior to his own, at a moment when
you have led him to think you far away; and so, with a minimum of
exposure of your own troops, to hack his force to pieces, and take the
remainder prisoners. Just so, in teaching, you must simply work your
pupil into such a state of interest in what your ar going t teach him
that every other object of attention is banished from his mind; then
reveal it to him so impressively that he will remember the occasion to
his dying day; and finally fill him with devouring curiosity to know
what the next steps in the subject are. The principles being so plain,
there would be nothing but victories for the masters of the science,
either on the battlefield or in the schoolroom, if they did not both
have to make their application to an incalculable quantity in the shape
of the mind of their opponent. The mind of your own enemy, the pupil,
is working away from you as keenly and eagerly as is the mind of the
commander on the other side from the scientific general. Just what the
respective enemies want and think, and what they know and do not know,
are as hard thig for the teacher and the general to find out.
Divination and perception, not psychological pedagogics or theoretical
strategy, are the only helpers here.
CHAPTER 5: The Necessity of Reactions
IF ALL this be true, then immediately one general
aphorism
emerges which ought by logical right to dominate the entire conduct of
the teacher in the classroom.
No reception without reaction, no impression
without
correlative expression,—this is the great maxim which the teacher
ought never to forget.
An impression which simply flows in at the pupil's
eyes or
ears, and in no way modifies his active life, is an impression gone to
waste. It is physiologically incomplete. It leaves no fruits behind it
in the way of capacity acquired. Even as mere impression, it fails to
produce its proper effect upon the memory; for, to remain fully among
the acquisitions of this latter faculty, it must be wrought into the
whole cycle of our operations. Its motor consequences are what
clinch it. Some effect due to it in the way of an activity must return
to the mind in the form of the sensation of having acted, and
connect itself with the impression. The most durable impressions are
those on account of which we speak or act, or else are inwardly
convulsed. The older pedagogic method of learning things by rote, and
reciting them parrot-like in the schoolroom, rested on the truth that a
thing merely read or heard, and never verbally reproduced, contracts
the weakest possible adhesion in the mind. Verbal recitation or
reproduction is thus a highly important kind of reactive behavior on
our impressions; and it is to be feared that, in the reaction against
the old parrot-recitations as the beginning and end of instruction, the
extreme value of verbal recitation as an element of complete training
may nowadays be too much forgotten.
When we turn to modern pedagogics, we see how
enormously the
field of reactive conduct has been extended by the introduction of all
those methods of concrete object teaching which are the glory of our
contemporary schools. Verbal reactions, useful as they are, are
insufficient. The pupil's words may be right, but the conceptions
corresponding to them are often direfully wrong. In a modern school,
therefore, they form only a small part of what the pupil is required to
do. He must keep notebooks, make drawings, plans, and maps, take
measurements, enter the laboratory and perform experiments, consult
authorities, and write essays. He must do in his fashion what is often
laughed at by outsiders when it appears in prospectuses under the title
of 'original work,' but what is really the only possible training for
the doing of original work thereafter. The most colossal improvement
which recent years have seen in secondary education lies in the
introduction of the manual training schools; not because they will give
us a people more handy and practical for domestic life and better
skilled in trades, but because they will give us citizens with an
entirely different intellectual fibre. Laboratory work and shop work
engender a habit of observation, a knowledge of the difference between
accuracy and vagueness, and an insight into nature's complexity and
into the inadequacy of all abstract verbal accounts of real phenomena,
which once wrought into the mind, remain there as lifelong possessions.
They confer precision; because, if you are doing a thing, you
must do it definitely right or definitely wrong. They give honesty;
for, when you express yourself by making things, and not by using
words, it becomes impossible to dissimulate your vagueness or ignorance
by ambiguity. They beget a habit of self-reliance; they keep the
interest and attention always cheerfully engaged, and reduce the
teacher's disciplinary functions to a minimum.
. . . .
No impression without expression, then,—that is the
first
pedagogic fruit of our evolutionary conception of the mind as something
instrumental to adaptive behavior. But a word may be said in
continuation. The expression itself comes back to us, as I intimated a
moment ago, in the form of a still farther impression,—the impression,
namely, of what we have done. We thus receive sensible news of our
behavior and its results. We hear the words we have spoken, feel our
own blow as we give it, or read in the bystander's eyes the success or
failure of our conduct. Now this return wave of impression pertains to
the completeness of the whole experience, and a word about its
importance in the schoolroom may not be out of place.
It would seem only natural to say that, since after
acting
we normally get some return impression of result, it must be well to
let the pupil get such a return impression in every possible case.
Nevertheless, in schools where examination marks and 'standing' and
other returns of result are concealed, the pupil is frustrated of this
natural termination of the cycle of his activities, and often suffers
from the sense of incompleteness and uncertainty; and there are persons
who defend this system as encouraging the pupil to work for the work's
sake, and not for extraneous reward. Of course, here as elsewhere,
concrete experience must prevail over psychological deduction. But, so
far as our psychological deduction goes, it would suggest that the
pupil's eagerness to know how well he does is in the line of his normal
completeness of function, and should never be balked except for very
definite reasons indeed.
Acquaint them, therefore, with their marks and
standing and
prospects, unless in the individual case you have some special
practical reason for not so doing.
|
|