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To help speed my recovery
after recent heart surgery, a friend of mine gave
me a set of novels and stories by Dostoevsky and
Tolstoy--a gesture I appreciated tremendously. I
read these books when I was young, and memorized
certain passages. They have been a beacon for me
in times of struggle, also in trying to help other
people. These writings are
divinely inspired and contain nuggets that point
to biblical and universal truths. For me they have
the same stature as the writings of the Old
Testament prophets, and I think every high school
student and adult should read them. After all,
these books stand at the center of a true
education.
Unfortunately, fewer and
fewer young people have even heard of such
classics, let alone read them. In recent years the
American government has worked very hard to
improve the public school system. The No Child
Left Behind law is being hailed as one of the most
significant achievements of the Bush
administration. But even if those who wrote this
legislation had noble intentions, their efforts
are badly misguided and will have devastating
results.
Nobody can truly teach by
means of computers and technology. As glamorous as
it looks, the fruits are bad. In fact, it seems to
me that we are raising a generation of robots,
with damaged and even ruined souls. Here I am
reminded of the words of Jesus, "Woe to you if you
mislead one of these my little ones. It would be
better if a millstone is hung around your neck and
you drown in the deepest sea." All of us need to
take this warning seriously.
A truly valuable education has one purpose: to
teach children that fulfillment can be found only
in serving others. A life of service leads to
community, to God, and to true nationhood. Why are
we so afraid of it?
True education takes place through the influence
of role models, not by means of robotic imitation.
Let me give you an example: When my grandfather
was a young man, at the time of the First World
War, the patriotic teachers of his native Germany
inspired a whole generation of students to enlist.
The response was overwhelming, even if misguided.
Tragically, thousands were killed. But the point
remains: the country's teachers were real role
models, and led their students into battle.
Years later, in Paraguay, where I grew up during
World War II, the teachers I had (who were highly
trained German refugees) had such enthusiasm and
passion that even though we had no textbooks and
no visual aids--only a blackboard--we had a
first-rate education. Most of it took place
outdoors in nature--in real life. But now, a
half-century later, I know that my peers and I had
an education that today’s millionaires would covet
for their children. Sadly, they will not get it,
for love or money, because we have our priorities
all wrong.
I have seen on my journeys around the world, that
the education I had as a child can still be found
in many Third World countries in South America,
Africa, and Asia. As in my day, the children of
today’s developing countries live in poverty. But
if they have nothing else, they still have a
teacher who loves them and is determined to see
their education through. Both these teachers and
their pupils have a sparkle in their eyes that has
been destroyed in this country--and a glow that
should put us to shame. Computers and audiovisual
aids are not magic. They are not even necessary to
make learning become alive.
Anyone who is involved in the field of education
(including parents!) would do well to ponder these
words from Dostoevsky's Brothers Karamazov, which
speaks about the vital importance not only of an
education, but of every single day: "You must know
that there is nothing higher and stronger and more
wholesome for life in the future than some good
memory, especially a memory of childhood, of home.
People talk to you a great deal about education.
But some good, sacred memory preserved from
childhood--that is perhaps the best education. For
if a man has only one good memory left in his
heart, even that may keep him from evil...And if
he carries many such memories with him into life,
he is safe for the end of his days."
If one day is so important, what about a month or
a year? Children are our only future. Why are we
so afraid to give them the best we have?
(c) 2006 Johann Christoph Arnold
Johann
Christoph Arnold is the author of ten books and an
advisor to some of the world's
best private schools. |