ON EDUCATION

The Mother

 

Contents

 

PRE CONTENT

 

Part One:

 

Articles

 

Articles

The Science of Living

Education

Physical Education

Vital Education

Mental Education

Psychic Education and Spiritual Education

An International University Centre

The Four Austerities and the Four Liberations

To the Students, Young and Old

Foresight

Transformation

The Fear of Death and the Four Methods of  Conquering It

A Dream

Helping Humanity

The Problem of Woman

 

 

Part Two:

 

Messages, Letters and Conversations

 

I

 

SRI AUROBINDO INTERNATIONAL CENTRE OF EDUCATION

 

Sri Aurobindo International Centre of Education

Messages

Aims

Students

Study

Reading

Conduct

Holidays

Studies Elsewhere

Teachers

Teaching

Discipline

Homework

Tests

Curriculum

Languages

Facsimilies of the Mother's Handwriting in Various Language

Arts

Other Subject

National Education

 

II

 

SRI AUROBINDO ASHRAM DEPARTMENT OF PHYSICAL EDUCATION

 

Sri Aurobindo Ashram Department of Physical Education

Youth

Concentration and Dispersion

Our Flag and Our Cover

Energy Inexhaustible

Correct Judgment

The Olympic Rings

The Championship Badge

Tournaments

Replies to Prayers of the Physical Education Groups

Messages for Competitions

Messages for the Annual Demonstration of Physical Culture

General Messages and Letters

To Women about Their Body

 

III

 

THE NEW AGE ASSOCIATION

 

The New Age Association

 

IV

 

A GLIMPSE OF THE MOTHER'S WORK IN THE SCHOOL

 

French in the Ashram and the School

The Organisation of Work in French Class

Teaching French to Indian Teachers Who Teach in French

Teaching French to Students

The "Bibliotheque Choisie"

Mother's Action in a Class of Children Aged ten to Eleven

Mother's Action in a Class  of Children Aged Seven to Nine

Mother's Action in a Class of Children Aged Sixteen to Eighteen

 

V

 

ANSWERS TO A MONITRESS

 

Sutras

Correspondence-(a)

Correspondence-(b)

 

VI

 

ANSWERS TO A MONITOR

 

Answers to a Monitor

 

VII

 

CONVERSATIONS

 

5 April 1967

11 November 1967

8 February 1973

14 February 1973

18 February 1973

24 February 1973

26 February 1973

14 March 1973

 

Part Three:

 

Dramas

 

TOWARDS THE FUTURE

 

Towards the futures

 

THE GREAT SECRET

 

The great Secret (a)

The Great Secret (b)

 

THE ASCENT TO TRUTH

 

The Ascent to truth

(4)

 

TEACHING FRENCH TO THE STUDENTS 

 

How can we improve the children's spelling?

 

Generally, for spelling, one must take the help of the eyes. Each word should have its own form, which the eye remembers. Visual memory is more useful than mental memory. One should read a lot – see, see, see, on the blackboard, in books, on pictures.

And as for style, gender, and grammar too, the best thing is to read, to read a great deal. In this way all this goes into the subconscient. It is the best way to learn.  

 January 1962  

Page - 326


ABOUT TESTS

 

Tests may be useful in giving you the academic worth of a child, but not his real worth.

As for the real worth of a child, something else is to be found, but that will be for later on, and will be of a different nature.

I am not opposing real worth to academic worth; they can coexist in the same individual, but it is a rather rare phenomenon which produces exceptional types of people.

1962 

(Mother's comments in the margin of a letter from a teacher about French in the school. The students were using work-sheets.)

 

One of the reasons why the children do not make any progress in French is that the teachers do not correct them.

 

Very true.

 

Working with the work-sheets will be effective only if corrections are strict.

 

Very true.

 

I have begun to prepare corrected versions of all the exercises for the benefit of the teachers and the students.

 

Very good.

 

The teachers should read these corrected versions at least once… 

Page – 327


Certainly more than once.

 

 so that they can become aware of their own mistakes.

 

Yes, they need that very much.

 

It would be good for the child to have this corrected version in hand so that he can compare it with his own work.

 

Yes, that is very useful.

 

Merely to underline the mistakes teaches the children nothing.

 

True.

 

I am afraid that the corrected versions I am making for the teachers may remain piously in a drawer.

 

Heaven forbid!

 

If so, by the end of the year the children will have done a considerable amount of work to no purpose.

 

You are right. It is the teachers, almost all of them, with only a few exceptions, who are lazy – more than the students.

 

I think I am bothering you with this French.

 

No, you are not bothering me, you are quite right.

 

It seems to me that so much goodwill is wasted. The goodwill of the children is wasted because, although the atmosphere in the classes is good, the work is in-

 Page – 228


effective and the work that is needed is not done.

 

Yes.  

25 December 1962  

Page – 329