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The Art
of Teaching
by Mortimer J. Adler, Ph.D.
Socrates gives us a basic insight into the
nature of teaching when he compares the art of
teaching to the ancient craft of the midwife. Just
as the midwife assists the body to give birth to
new life, so the teacher assists the mind to
deliver itself of ideas, knowledge, and
understanding. The essential notion here is that
teaching is a humble, helping art. The teacher does
not produce knowledge or stuff ideas into an empty,
passive mind. It is the learner, not the teacher,
who is the active producer of knowledge and
ideas.
The ancients distinguish the skills of the
physician and the farmer from those of the
shoemaker and the house builder. Aristotle calls
medicine and agriculture cooperative arts, because
they work with nature to achieve results that
nature is able to produce by itself. Shoes and
houses would not exist unless men produced them;
but the living body attains health without the
intervention of doctors, and plants and animals
grow without the aid of farmers. The skilled
physician or farmer simply makes health or growth
more certain and regular.
Teaching, like farming and healing, is a
cooperative art which helps nature do what it can
do itself -- though not as well without it. We have
all learned many things without the aid of a
teacher. Some exceptional individuals have acquired
wide learning and deep insight with very little
formal schooling. But for most of us the process of
learning is made more certain and less painful when
we have a teacher's help. His methodical guidance
makes our learning -- and it is still ours --
easier and more effective.
One basic aspect of teaching is not found in the
other two cooperative arts that work with organic
nature. Teaching always involves a relation between
the mind of one person and the mind of another. The
teacher is not merely a talking book, an animated
phonograph record, broadcast to an unknown
audience. He enters into a dialogue with his
student. This dialogue goes far beyond mere "talk,"
for a good deal of what is taught is transmitted
almost unconsciously in the personal interchange
between teacher and student. We might get by with
encyclopaedias, phonograph records, and TV
broadcasts if it were not for this intangible
element, which is present in every good
teacher-student relation.
This is a two-way relation. The teacher gives,
and the student receives aid and guidance. The
student is a "disciple"; that is, he accepts and
follows the discipline prescribed by the teacher
for the development of his mind. This is not a
passive submission to arbitrary authority. It is an
active appropriation by the student of the
directions indicated by the teacher. The good
student uses his teacher just as a child uses his
parents, as a means of attaining maturity and
independence. The recalcitrant student, who spurns
a teacher's help, is wasteful and
self-destructive.
Speaking simply and in the broadest sense, the
teacher shows the student how to discern, evaluate,
judge, and recognize the truth. He does not impose
a fixed content of ideas and doctrines that the
student must learn by rote. He teaches the student
how to learn and think for himself. He encourages
rather than suppresses a critical and intelligent
response.
The student's response and growth is the only
reward suitable for such a labor of love. Teaching,
the highest of the ministerial or cooperative arts,
is devoted to the good of others. It is an act of
supreme generosity. St. Augustine calls it the
greatest act of charity.
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