Whatever his reasons for rejecting the classical curriculum, [the modern educator's] classrooms suffer from its absence in three notable ways. in them, human experience tends to be dealt with narrowly and reductively, broken down into isolated, unconnected units; students ignorant of what questions to ask are presented with uninvited and consequently meaningless informtion; and there is no basis for making moral and aesthetic judgments or for attaching learning to behavior.
~David Hicks,
Norms and Nobility: A Treatise on Education
, p.19
No comments:
Post a Comment