友情提示:如果本网页打开太慢或显示不完整,请尝试鼠标右键“刷新”本网页!阅读过程发现任何错误请告诉我们,谢谢!! 报告错误
哔哔读书 返回本书目录 我的书架 我的书签 TXT全本下载 进入书吧 加入书签

the new machiavelli-第5章

按键盘上方向键 ← 或 → 可快速上下翻页,按键盘上的 Enter 键可回到本书目录页,按键盘上方向键 ↑ 可回到本页顶部!
————未阅读完?加入书签已便下次继续阅读!




transitory zeal and success。



I do not remember anything of my father's earlier and more energetic 

time。  I was the child of my parents' middle years; they married 

when my father was thirty…five and my mother past forty; and I saw 

only the last decadent phase of his educational career。



The Science and Art Department has vanished altogether from the 

world; and people are forgetting it now with the utmost readiness 

and generosity。  Part of its substance and staff and spirit survive; 

more or less completely digested into the Board of Education。



The world does move on; even in its government。  It is wonderful how 

many of the clumsy and limited governing bodies of my youth and 

early manhood have given place now to more scientific and efficient 

machinery。  When I was a boy; Bromstead; which is now a borough; was 

ruled by a strange body called a Local Boardit was the Age of 

Boardsand I still remember indistinctly my father rejoicing at the 

breakfast…table over the liberation of London from the corrupt and 

devastating control of a Metropolitan Board of Works。  Then there 

were also School Boards; I was already practically in politics 

before the London School Board was absorbed by the spreading 

tentacles of the London County Council。



It gives a measure of the newness of our modern ideas of the State 

to remember that the very beginnings of public education lie within 

my father's lifetime; and that many most intelligent and patriotic 

people were shocked beyond measure at the State doing anything of 

the sort。  When he was born; totally illiterate people who could 

neither read a book nor write more than perhaps a clumsy signature; 

were to be found everywhere in England; and great masses of the 

population were getting no instruction at all。  Only a few schools 

flourished upon the patronage of exceptional parents; all over the 

country the old endowed grammar schools were to be found sinking and 

dwindling; many of them had closed altogether。  In the new great 

centres of population multitudes of children were sweated in the 

factories; darkly ignorant and wretched and the under…equipped and 

under…staffed National and British schools; supported by voluntary 

contributions and sectarian rivalries; made an ineffectual fight 

against this festering darkness。  It was a condition of affairs 

clamouring for remedies; but there was an immense amount of 

indifference and prejudice to be overcome before any remedies were 

possible。  Perhaps some day some industrious and lucid historian 

will disentangle all the muddle of impulses and antagonisms; the 

commercialism; utilitarianism; obstinate conservatism; humanitarian 

enthusiasm; out of which our present educational organisation arose。  

I have long since come to believe it necessary that all new social 

institutions should be born in confusion; and that at first they 

should present chiefly crude and ridiculous aspects。  The distrust 

of government in the Victorian days was far too great; and the 

general intelligence far too low; to permit the State to go about 

the new business it was taking up in a businesslike way; to train 

teachers; build and equip schools; endow pedagogic research; and 

provide properly written school…books。  These things it was felt 

MUST be provided by individual and local effort; and since it was 

manifest that it was individual and local effort that were in 

default; it was reluctantly agreed to stimulate them by money 

payments。  The State set up a machinery of examination both in 

Science and Art and for the elementary schools; and payments; known 

technically as grants; were made in accordance with the examination 

results attained; to such schools as Providence might see fit to 

send into the world。  In this way it was felt the Demand would be 

established that would; according to the beliefs of that time; 

inevitably ensure the Supply。  An industry of 〃Grant earning〃 was 

created; and this would give education as a necessary by…product。



In the end this belief was found to need qualification; but Grant…

earning was still in full activity when I was a small boy。  So far 

as the Science and Art Department and my father are concerned; the 

task of examination was entrusted to eminent scientific men; for the 

most part quite unaccustomed to teaching。  You see; if they also 

were teaching similar classes to those they examined; it was feared 

that injustice might be done。  Year after year these eminent persons 

set questions and employed subordinates to read and mark the 

increasing thousands of answers that ensued; and having no doubt the 

national ideal of fairness well developed in their minds; they were 

careful each year to re…read the preceding papers before composing 

the current one; in order to see what it was usual to ask。  As a 

result of this; in the course of a few years the recurrence and 

permutation of questions became almost calculable; and since the 

practical object of the teaching was to teach people not science; 

but how to write answers to these questions; the industry of Grant…

earning assumed a form easily distinguished from any kind of genuine 

education whatever。



Other remarkable compromises had also to be made with the spirit of 

the age。  The unfortunate conflict between Religion and Science 

prevalent at this time was mitigated; if I remember rightly; by 

making graduates in arts and priests in the established church 

Science Teachers EX OFFICIO; and leaving local and private 

enterprise to provide schools; diagrams; books; material; according 

to the conceptions of efficiency prevalent in the district。  Private 

enterprise made a particularly good thing of the books。  A number of 

competing firms of publishers sprang into existence specialising in 

Science and Art Department work; they set themselves to produce 

text…books that should supply exactly the quantity and quality of 

knowledge necessary for every stage of each of five and twenty 

subjects into which desirable science was divided; and copies and 

models and instructions that should give precisely the method and 

gestures esteemed as proficiency in art。  Every section of each book 

was written in the idiom found to be most satisfactory to the 

examiners; and test questions extracted from papers set in former 

years were appended to every chapter。  By means of these last the 

teacher was able to train his class to the very highest level of 

grant…earning efficiency; and very naturally he cast all other 

methods of exposition aside。  First he posed his pupils with 

questions and then dictated model replies。



That was my father's method of instruction。  I attended his classes 

as an elementary grant…earner from the age of ten until his death; 

and it is so I remember him; sitting on the edge of a table; 

smothering a yawn occasionally and giving out the infallible 

formulae to the industriously scribbling class sitting in rows of 

desks before him。  Occasionally be would slide to his feet and go to 

a blackboard on an easel and draw on that very slowly and 

deliberately in coloured chalks a diagram for the class to copy in 

coloured pencils; and sometimes he would display a specimen or 

arrange an experiment for them to see。  The room in the Institute in 

which he taught was equipped with a certain amount of apparatus 

prescribed as necessary for subject this and subject that by the 

Science and Art Department; and this my father would supplement with 

maps and diagrams and drawings of his own。



But he never really did experiments; except that in the class in 

systematic botany he sometimes made us tease common flowers to 

pieces。  He did not do experiments if he could possibly help it; 

because in the first place they used up time and gas for the Bunsen 

burner and good material in a ruinous fashion; and in the second 

they were; in his rather careless and sketchy hands; apt to endanger
返回目录 上一页 下一页 回到顶部 0 0
未阅读完?加入书签已便下次继续阅读!
温馨提示: 温看小说的同时发表评论,说出自己的看法和其它小伙伴们分享也不错哦!发表书评还可以获得积分和经验奖励,认真写原创书评 被采纳为精评可以获得大量金币、积分和经验奖励哦!