October 1963 VOL. 44, No 10
Adult Learning
is Necessary
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An intellectual revolution is needed
among adults. Not so many years ago they could coast along
very well on what they had learned in school, and whatever
they did in the way of further learning was by way of being
a hobby. But things have changed. Continued education is now
necessary to life.
There are at least four influences contributing to this
state of affairs. (1) What is going on in the world has implications
for every individual, not merely for nations, statesmen, and
politicians; (2) Automation demands wide knowledge, resiliency,
and adaptation; (3) The social flux has taken adults by surprise,
and their unpreparedness embarrasses them; (4) Increased leisure
threatens to ruin the essential humanness of human beings.
It takes wider knowledge and deeper understanding to live
happily in the modern world. Applied science has revolutionized
personal attitudes and beliefs. Without up to date knowledge,
we are plunged into fearridden confusion.
Instead of putting periods here and there in life, as at
the end of school days or the end of bachelorhood or the end
of employment on going on pension, only commas are allowed
before branching out into a more spacious version of life.
Continued learning carries us beyond the easy judgments
and superficial training of youthful immaturity. It builds
qualities of the mind which enable us to understand responsibilities
and to detect opportunities and to build a philosophy which
becomes a part of life. It is a continuing initiation in the
art of living everyday life.
State of the world
Nothing other than adult learning can build the wisdom indispensable
to the preservation and strengthening of our society. In a
democracy like Canada, the basic social power has been entrusted
to the people. Therefore the people must continue their development
so as to be able to judge new ideas, assess happenings for
their significance, and judge the purposes and effects of
legislation.
This constructive approach to life is an essential of enduring
freedom. We need straight thinking, disciplined creativity
and responsible cooperation. Such qualities as sound
values, understanding, and sympathy which only develop in
an environment of knowledge. All these combine to qualify
us to exercise the rights and meet the obligations of freedom.
John Dewey, the United States philosopher and educator, suggested
that "we are free in the degree in which we act knowing what
we are about".
It is not to be expected that individuals in any nation
can solve world problems, but there is no need for us to feel
baffled. We can learn about the national aspect of these world
problems, do our own thinking about the issues that confront
us, and then take positive steps to promote the solution of
the problems through the democratic process. Every kind of
knowledge, every acquaintance with nature and art, every new
understanding of human ways, helps toward a comprehensive
understanding of life.
It is undeniable that our state of confusion came upon us
unawares. Young people are growing into the new ideas and
new ways of life: their parents were pushed into them and
are still sputtering. We expected to live all our lives in
the world into which we were born, but that world changed
and is changing. Now we must develop a capacity for self renewal
in this new environment.
It isn't enough to hold ground: we must make progress. The
world will not wait until a new generation takes charge. It
is adults who make the homes, the churches, the schools, the
communities. It is adults who determine policy on our political,
economic and social fronts. It is adults who have to cope
with the dangers and opportunities of every pressing day.
Men and women must act while their children are preparing.
Their decisions will create the world the children inherit.
As C. Scott Fletcher, President of the Fund for Adult Education,
said a few years ago" "However fervently all of us may hope
that our children and their children will exceed us in ability
and judgment, the fateful decisions of the present and the
immediate future will be made by those men and women who are
now mature. In continuing liberal education they have a means
for endeavouring to make these decisions in the wisdom of
reflection and with the courage of examined beliefs."
This involves effort
Alas! at the same time as this need is pressing upon them,
men and women are enmeshed in a mood of the age which worships
leisure. Some are content to breathe, thinking that is living.
Some know no other pleasure but gratification of the senses
and the delights of society, leaving their minds unenlightened
and their faculties unused. Some indulge themselves in the
conceit that they are making good use of free time when they
are only employed in the humbler occupation of killing time
of which perhaps the best that can be said is that
it keeps them from doing worse things.
When Dr. Wilder Penfield was asked what he would teach adults,
he wrote: "Constructive use of idle time".
Nearly everyone has had the experience of sitting on the
bank of a slowflowing river with the feeling that it
passes unceasingly "without haste and without rest". That
is not the way to look upon life. We need to look upon it
passionately, as if every drop and every eddy were important.
The boredom that a man feels when he is doing necessary
though uninteresting work is as nothing in comparison with
the boredom that he feels when he has nothing constructive
to do with his days. And boredom is like the ancient water
torture: the minutes fall drop by drop on the mind until sanity
trembles.
He is wise who avoids boredom by keeping his mind wide open
and responsive to what is going on around him, but this involves
effort. We can no longer acquire knowledge under the guise
of amusement as we did in elementary school, but if we are
persistent in trying, then the energy to proceed will become
habitual.
It is, in fact, by work that we attain our best sense of
achievement, of recognition, of personal worth. It is by properly
directed effort that we rise above mediocrity.
On the cover of one of its "Values in Education" booklets
the Sun Life Assurance Co. of Canada quotes the late Dr. M.
M. Coady, noted for his leadership in the cooperative
and adult education movements centred at Antigonish: "The
man who has ceased to learn ought not to be allowed to wander
around loose in these dangerous days".
Have many interests
To live fully and discharge one's responsibilities as an
adult it is not necessary to be an intellectual: one need
only be an appreciator of life. Broad, multiple, interests
are insurance against cracking up, and they open the way to
a fullness hitherto unimagined. The more interests a man has,
the less he is at the mercy of fate, because if he loses one
thing he can take up another.
This is not to say that we should be busy about a multiplicity
of trivialities that occupy without enriching the mind. It
does mean that we should not become overcentred on anything,
pleasure or pain, garden or grandchildren, politics or golf,
thus becoming singletracked. It is an interesting experiment
to try becoming interested in something new once a month.
It may be merely hanging a new picture on the wall or potting
a new plant or walking through the office asking "Why do we
do this in this way?"
Interest in things is first of all interest within ourselves.
Even a faked interest is useful, because it heightens your
perceptiveness and starts lights glowing in your mind.
Too often, we have flashes of ideas which we fit without
consideration into conceptions already in our minds. We do
not allow them to start new lines of thought, nor do we embellish
them with thoughts from the past. We just put down mental
ditto marks. Herein lies an opportunity for expansion. Seize
one of the ideas and consider alternatives, start a hare and
have fun chasing it.
How do you find new interests? Think of all the many things
in which other people are interested and consider your own
bent. Or look inward for a vacant space in your life, find
a vacuum and expand into it. Have you neglected an area of
reading in which you might find value and pleasure? Is there
room for music or art or writing? Combine curiosity with energy
and you will be pleasantly surprised by the liveliness life
takes on. The Irishman, when asked if he could play the piano,
replied: "I don't know, I never tried".
Keep moving. Some composers of music work up to a colossal
climax and then blast away at the same chord over and over
again. They ruin the effect by being reluctant to move on.
Get as much variety as possible into life. Try inventing things,
contriving for the joy of contriving, not to save money or
to add to your possessions but just because it is fun to be
original.
Don't be held back by lack of experience. It was not the
makers of lenses in a city famous for its optical craftsmen,
but a dry goods clerk, who made the first really good lens
for microscopes and was the first to see the teeming world
of life in a drop of water. The incandescent lamp was not
the invention of lampmakers, but of the former telegraph
operator, Thomas Edison.
Choosing what to do
You cannot expect attractive occupations to come rapping
insistently at your door. You may have to chase them to their
lairs, developing a nose for interesting things as hounds
smell out rabbits. That, too, is zestful.
Most people are capable of keen interest in something or
other, in the doing of which forgotten or unknown skills show
themselves. Edgar Dale wrote in one of his Ohio State University
News Letters: "The saddest of all obituaries might
well be: 'His hidden talents were never discovered'."
Take a blank sheet of paper and write down three column
headings:
What if? How about? What else?
Then write under them what your imagination prompts you
to write. "What if I took up study of the earth?" A man visiting
the Royal Ontario Museum felt frustrated by his ignorance
when he toured the geological section, so he took up the study
of geology with pleasure to himself and possible benefit to
the science. How about learning another language? A young
couple looking forward to touring Europe started a year ahead
to learn, one French and the other Italian. They enhanced
the pleasure of their trip, learned things unknown to onelanguage
travellers, and brought home memories that would never have
existed but for their imaginative foresight. What else? What
else can I do with my colour slides besides looking at them?
A man who was a photographer of nature subjects made up an
illustrated talk which he gives to Boy Scouts and Girl Guides,
school groups and community hall audiences.
Here is another approach to finding out how you can fix
upon some activity that will add relish to your life. Ask
yourself: "What interests have I that I can pursue alone?
What interests have I that will involve me in group participation?
What interests have I indoors? outdoors?" This little quiz
helps toward diversification.
Or try the nostalgic approach. Write down the things that
interested you when you were young, like playing the piano,
collecting butterflies, building model trains. Write down
the ways in which you have earned a livelihood: clerking,
baby sitting, typing, selling. Write down the things in which
you were interested as you moved from adolescence into adulthood:
Scout or Guide leader, Sunday School teacher, camping. Write
down the odds and ends that occupied you at various times:
whittling wood (perhaps you would enjoy carving); collecting
stamps (there are variations today which make this hobby constructively
interesting); writing letters, poems or a diary (you may find
that your talent has developed to the point where you can
produce items that will be published).
Your investigation may not lead directly or at once to a
decision, but you are on the right track, you are finding
out, and that in itself is fun. You will be surprised in two
ways: by the number of options that are open, and by the qualities
you have for making life interesting.
Having arrived at a tentative list, sample the things on
it. Try this and that for a fair length of time and with some
enthusiasm.
Encourage your imagination to suggest additions and variations.
If you take up botany, in addition to studying what makes
the flowers grow get acquainted with the little light elves
that come every night with their tiny buckets to sprinkle
dew on the petals.
You may have tried to develop interests, and failed. That
does not mean that you cannot develop interests, but that
you were trying the wrong thing.
Don't be in a hurry for results. When nature wishes to grow
an oak she spends a hundred years doing it; only little things
like radishes can be grown in three or four weeks.
Keeping up with the world
Most of this has had to do with making pleasurable use of
free time, but a great many people would like to go a step
further: they would like to devote their free time to keeping
abreast of the world not only in knowledge but in understanding
also.
It may have been true once upon a time, but it simply is
not true today, that we can make our way through life subsisting
on what we stored in our minds during our school days. We
have to add new facts and to rethink old thoughts.
The Canadian Association for Adult Education and its Frenchlanguage
counterpart, Institut Canadien d'Education des Adultes, are
the national organizations concerned with the entire field
of adult learning. They are the agencies for communication
between individuals and organizations, private and public,
local, provincial and federal, and for their cooperative
action. There are 120 national and provincial agencies which
coordinate their work through the C.A.A.E.
Scores of thousands of young adults take courses provided
by the Y's or Women's Institutes, by municipal school boards,
provincial education departments, university extension staffs,
social welfare agencies, trade unions, church groups, and
industrial concerns.
These are people who recognize that continued learning is
an urgent social responsibility as well as being good for
their peace of mind. They have found that when they left school
or college there was a vast range of things they did not know,
and that many of the things they did know have changed. Today
they are picking up what they missed and looking at things
that have changed, and considering them thoughtfully and reasonably
in the light of present times.
Discussion groups
Some people enjoy the challenge of working alone, of seeking
out knowledge without a teacher and exercising their critical
ability. Most people, however, appreciate the stimulating
experience of joining others in search of principles.
The Fund for Adult Education, which gives its support to
agencies of adult learning in both the United States and Canada,
says it "believes that the most satisfactory means for the
liberal education of adults is individual study combined with
the small discussion group. In such a climate each person
may learn to think for and express himself, and because no
authoritarian methods are applied, a good discussion group
represents democracy at work."
A discussion group is not a place where the conversation
goes round in circles, revolving upon trivialities, but a
place to stimulate thought. Ideas which might be fragile in
the mind of an individual take on robustness and suppleness
when brought out into the open and given exercise.
Studydiscussion programmes are aimed at improving
the ability of participants to make independent judgments
on critical issues, to develop their intellectual faculties
and aesthetic sensibilities, and to encourage sustained intellectual
curiosity.
What is this liberal education sought by men and women who
read great books and join discussion groups? It is not directed
toward specific improvements in techniques or raises in salary
or gratification of physical yearnings. It is a continuous
growth of the mind, shedding a few beams of light on our lives
and on life itself.
Liberal education does not mean possession of the mere materials
of knowledge, but the gaining of wisdom and understanding.
It goes beyond the protected harbour of formal schooling so
as to provide a man with navigational equipment for the wide
sea of life. It enables him to use what he knows with judgment
and discrimination.
Does age matter?
None but the frivolous or the indolent will say "I am too
old to tackle that sort of thing". It isn't one's age, but
one's attitude to life, that counts toward serenity. Every
plateau in life, including the threescoreyearsandten
plateau, is connected by steps to a higher plateau.
The Michigan Employment Security Commission quotes Dr. Harry
Meyers in one of its booklets: "If you think you know all
about something, you are old. And if you believe you are now
doing something as well as it can be done, you are old. But
if you are glad to admit that you know but little about anything,
you are young".
It is obvious that anyone fifty years old has more richness
of experience upon which to draw, and a greater appreciation
of values, than has a person of twenty. Instead of sinking
into a nearvegetable state requiring only food and drink,
clothing and a roof, he can actually renew his youth by using
and expanding his thoughts.
Adulthood whether we mean age 21 or age 48
is an ideal time of life. Youth and its conflicts and uncertainties
are over, and it is time to expand into the fullness of life.
Continued learning gives us more understanding of things
as they are, more foresight of things as they may become,
and more insight into our own place as connecting links. It
helps, too, when the time comes to retire from active business
life, because with it we may retire forward. Dr. Penfield
said in an article: "The time for retirement should be reorganized
and renamed. It is the time for embarking on a new career."
Getting ready for retirement is not merely a matter of laying
up money resources, but equally important of laying up mental
resources so as to regard retirement as a chance and a challenge
rather than as a finale.
What is learning?
It becomes obvious, then, that education is not merely to
fill the mind with other men's thoughts and to be the passive
recipient of their impressions of things and the acquiescent
concurrer in their judgments. The purpose of learning is to
enlarge our individual intelligence: we do not wish to copy
a master's work, but to express our own thought and feeling.
Learning is not something to be worn on one's cuff, for
display. There were wise, valiant and truehearted men
bred in England long before literacy became the vogue. Magna
Charta was secured by men who signed the deed with their marks,
because they could not write their names. Though altogether
unskilled in the art of deciphering the literary signs by
which principles were spread upon paper, they yet understood
and appreciated, and boldly contended for, the things themselves.
To some, exhortations toward continuing education may seem
visionary, but in the conditions of modern society they become
a requisite of survival. Life offers no higher pleasure than
that of mastering difficulties, passing from step to step,
forming new wishes and seeing them gratified. That frees men
and women from insignificance, from the sense of being powerless,
from being lonely.
Such study will not guarantee happiness, but at the least
it will improve your bargaining position with Fate. And, at
the end of life you may be able to say with Richter, the German
novelist known as "Jean Paul": "I have made as much out of
myself as could be made of the stuff".
Published by RBC Financial Group. All editions from the RBC
Letter collection are available on our web site at www.rbc.com/responsibility/letter.
Our e-mail address is: rbcletter@rbc.com.
Publié aussi en francais.
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