Education: How Old The New

Education: How Old The New
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James Joseph Walsh. Education: How Old The New

PREFACE

EDUCATION, HOW OLD THE NEW1

THE FIRST MODERN UNIVERSITY

THE FIRST MODERN UNIVERSITY6

MEDIAEVAL SCIENTIFIC UNIVERSITIES

MEDIAEVAL SCIENTIFIC UNIVERSITIES8

IDEAL POPULAR EDUCATION

IDEAL POPULAR EDUCATION12

CYCLES OF FEMININE EDUCATION AND INFLUENCE

CYCLES OF FEMININE EDUCATION AND INFLUENCE15

THE CHURCH AND FEMININE EDUCATION

THE CHURCH AND FEMININE EDUCATION18

ORIGINS IN AMERICAN EDUCATION

ORIGINS IN AMERICAN EDUCATION19

THE MEDICAL PROFESSION FOR SIX THOUSAND YEARS

THE MEDICAL PROFESSION FOR SIX THOUSAND YEARS20

UNIVERSITY MEDICAL SCHOOLS

UNIVERSITY MEDICAL SCHOOLS25

THE COLLEGE MAN IN LIFE

THE COLLEGE MAN IN LIFE26

NEW ENGLANDISM

NEW ENGLANDISM27

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The reason for publishing this volume of lectures and addresses is the persuasion that present-day educators are viewing the history of education with short-sighted vision. An impression prevails that only the last few generations have done work of serious significance in education. The history of old-time education is neglected, or is treated as of at most antiquarian interest and there is a failure to understand its true value. The connecting link between the lectures and addresses is the effort to express in terms of the present what educators were doing in the past. Once upon a time, when I proclaimed the happiness of the English workmen of the Middle Ages, the very positive objection was raised, "How could they be happy since their wages were only a few cents a day?" For response it was only necessary to point out that for his eight cents, the minimum wage by act of Parliament, the workman could buy a pair of handmade shoes, that being the maximum price established by law, and other necessaries at similar prices. If old-time education is studied with this same care to translate its meaning into modern values, then the very oldest education of which we have any record takes on significance even for our time.

While it is generally supposed that there are many new features in modern education, it requires but slight familiarity with educational history to know that there is very little that is novel. Such supposedly new phases as nature-study and technical training and science, physical as well as ethical, are all old stories, though they have had negative phases during which it would be hard to to trace them. The more we know about the history of education the greater is our respect for educators at all times. Nearly always they had a perfectly clear idea of what they were trying to do, they faced the problems of education in quite the same spirit that we do and often solved them very well. Indeed the results of many periods of old-time education are much better than our own, even when judged by our standards.

.....

Of one thing the old prime minister was especially sure. It was that employment at no single occupation, no matter what it was or how interesting soever it might be, could satisfy a man or even keep him in good health. He felt, probably by experience, the necessity for diversity of mind and of occupation, if there was to be any happiness or any real success in life. He has a quiet way of putting it, but he says, as confidently as the most modern of pedagogues, that all work and no play makes Jack a dull boy, and all play and no work makes it impossible for Jack to get on. But a proper mixture of both makes life livable; and if a man has only the work that he cares for, and can get some of his pleasure in life out of his work, then is all well. "One that reckoneth accounts all the day passeth not an happy moment. One that gladdeneth his heart all the day provideth not for his house. The bowman hitteth the mark, as the steersman reacheth land, by diversity of aim. He that obeyeth his heart shall command."

There are some conclusions in the philosophy of life that we are very much inclined to think are the products of modern practical wisdom, and it is rather surprising to find them stated plainly in this old-time advice of the father to his boy. If there is one idea more than another that we are confident is modern, and are almost sure to attribute to the social development of our own generation, it is that riches do not belong to the man who makes them to be used for his own purpose alone, but their possession is justified only if he uses them for the benefit of the community. This is so up-to-date an idea indeed that it is startling to find it expressed in all its completeness in this oldest of books. Ptah Hotep said: "If thou be great after being of no account, and hast gotten riches after poverty, being foremost in these in the city, and hast knowledge concerning useful matters so that promotion is come unto thee, then swathe not thine heart in thine hoard, for thou art become the steward of the endowments [of God]. Thou art not the last; another shall be thine equal, and to him shall come the like [fortune and station]."

.....

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