FOUR
A
VERY
remarkable feature of modern training which has been subjected in India to a reductio
ad absurdum is the practice of teaching by snippets. A subject is taught a
little at a time, in conjunction with a host of others, with the result that
what might be well learnt in a single year is badly learned in seven and the boy
goes out ill-equipped, served with imperfect parcels of knowledge, master of
none of the great departments of human knowledge. The system of education
adopted by the National Council, an amphibious and twy-natured creation,
attempts to heighten this practice of teaching by snippets at the bottom and the
middle and suddenly change it to a grandiose specialism at the top. This is to
base the triangle on its apex and hope that it will stand. Page-213
are the children of modern times
then so different from the ancients, and, if
so, have we not made them so by discouraging prolonged concentration? A very
young child cannot, indeed, apply himself; but a very young child is unfit for
school teaching of any kind. A child of seven or eight, and that is the earliest
permissible age for the commencement of any regular kind of study, is capable of
a good deal of concentration if he is interested. 'Interest is, after all, the
basis of concentration. We make his lessons supremely uninteresting and
repellent to the child, a harsh compulsion the basis of teaching and then
complain of his restless inattention! The substitution of a natural self-education
by the child for the present unnatural system will remove this objection of
inability. A child, like a man, if he is interested, much prefers to get to the
end of his subject rather than leave it unfinished. To lead him on step by step,
interesting and absorbing him in each as it comes, until he has mastered his
subject is the true art of teaching. Page-214
should be
introduced by rapidly progressive stages to the most interesting parts of his
own literature and the life around him and behind him, and they should be put
before him in such a way as to attract and appeal to the qualities of which I
have spoken. All other study at this period should be devoted to the perfection
of the mental functions and the moral character. A foundation should be laid at
this time for the study of history, science, philosophy, art, but not in an
obtrusive and formal manner. Every child is a lover of interesting narrative, a
hero-worshipper and a patriot. Appeal to these qualities in him and through them
let him master without knowing it the living and human parts of his nation's
history. Every child is an inquirer, an investigator, analyser, a merciless
anatomist. Appeal to those qualities in him and let him acquire without knowing
it the right temper and the necessary fundamental knowledge of the scientist.
Every child has an insatiable intellectual curiosity and turn for metaphysical
enquiry. Use it to draw him on slowly to an understanding of the world and
himself. Every child has the gift of imitation and a touch of imaginative power.
Use it to give him the ground- work of the faculty of the artist. Page-215 |