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<h2> Chapter Thirteen: The Nature of Method </h2>
<h3> 1. The Unity of Subject Matter and Method. </h3>
<p>The trinity of school topics is subject matter, methods, and
administration or government. We have been concerned with the two former
in recent chapters. It remains to disentangle them from the context in
which they have been referred to, and discuss explicitly their nature. We
shall begin with the topic of method, since that lies closest to the
considerations of the last chapter. Before taking it up, it may be well,
however, to call express attention to one implication of our theory; the
connection of subject matter and method with each other. The idea that
mind and the world of things and persons are two separate and independent
realms—a theory which philosophically is known as dualism—carries
with it the conclusion that method and subject matter of instruction are
separate affairs. Subject matter then becomes a ready-made systematized
classification of the facts and principles of the world of nature and man.
Method then has for its province a consideration of the ways in which this
antecedent subject matter may be best presented to and impressed upon the
mind; or, a consideration of the ways in which the mind may be externally
brought to bear upon the matter so as to facilitate its acquisition and
possession. In theory, at least, one might deduce from a science of the
mind as something existing by itself a complete theory of methods of
learning, with no knowledge of the subjects to which the methods are to be
applied. Since many who are actually most proficient in various branches
of subject matter are wholly innocent of these methods, this state of
affairs gives opportunity for the retort that pedagogy, as an alleged
science of methods of the mind in learning, is futile;—a mere screen
for concealing the necessity a teacher is under of profound and accurate
acquaintance with the subject in hand.</p>
<p>But since thinking is a directed movement of subject matter to a
completing issue, and since mind is the deliberate and intentional phase
of the process, the notion of any such split is radically false. The fact
that the material of a science is organized is evidence that it has
already been subjected to intelligence; it has been methodized, so to say.
Zoology as a systematic branch of knowledge represents crude, scattered
facts of our ordinary acquaintance with animals after they have been
subjected to careful examination, to deliberate supplementation, and to
arrangement to bring out connections which assist observation, memory, and
further inquiry. Instead of furnishing a starting point for learning, they
mark out a consummation. Method means that arrangement of subject matter
which makes it most effective in use. Never is method something outside of
the material.</p>
<p>How about method from the standpoint of an individual who is dealing with
subject matter? Again, it is not something external. It is simply an
effective treatment of material—efficiency meaning such treatment as
utilizes the material (puts it to a purpose) with a minimum of waste of
time and energy. We can distinguish a way of acting, and discuss it by
itself; but the way exists only as way-of-dealing-with-material. Method is
not antithetical to subject matter; it is the effective direction of
subject matter to desired results. It is antithetical to random and
ill-considered action,—ill-considered signifying ill-adapted.</p>
<p>The statement that method means directed movement of subject matter
towards ends is formal. An illustration may give it content. Every artist
must have a method, a technique, in doing his work. Piano playing is not
hitting the keys at random. It is an orderly way of using them, and the
order is not something which exists ready-made in the musician's hands or
brain prior to an activity dealing with the piano. Order is found in the
disposition of acts which use the piano and the hands and brain so as to
achieve the result intended. It is the action of the piano directed to
accomplish the purpose of the piano as a musical instrument. It is the
same with "pedagogical" method. The only difference is that the piano is a
mechanism constructed in advance for a single end; while the material of
study is capable of indefinite uses. But even in this regard the
illustration may apply if we consider the infinite variety of kinds of
music which a piano may produce, and the variations in technique required
in the different musical results secured. Method in any case is but an
effective way of employing some material for some end.</p>
<p>These considerations may be generalized by going back to the conception of
experience. Experience as the perception of the connection between
something tried and something undergone in consequence is a process. Apart
from effort to control the course which the process takes, there is no
distinction of subject matter and method. There is simply an activity
which includes both what an individual does and what the environment does.
A piano player who had perfect mastery of his instrument would have no
occasion to distinguish between his contribution and that of the piano. In
well-formed, smooth-running functions of any sort,—skating,
conversing, hearing music, enjoying a landscape,—there is no
consciousness of separation of the method of the person and of the subject
matter. In whole-hearted play and work there is the same phenomenon.</p>
<p>When we reflect upon an experience instead of just having it, we
inevitably distinguish between our own attitude and the objects toward
which we sustain the attitude. When a man is eating, he is eating food. He
does not divide his act into eating and food. But if he makes a scientific
investigation of the act, such a discrimination is the first thing he
would effect. He would examine on the one hand the properties of the
nutritive material, and on the other hand the acts of the organism in
appropriating and digesting. Such reflection upon experience gives rise to
a distinction of what we experience (the experienced) and the experiencing—the
how. When we give names to this distinction we have subject matter and
method as our terms. There is the thing seen, heard, loved, hated,
imagined, and there is the act of seeing, hearing, loving, hating,
imagining, etc.</p>
<p>This distinction is so natural and so important for certain purposes, that
we are only too apt to regard it as a separation in existence and not as a
distinction in thought. Then we make a division between a self and the
environment or world. This separation is the root of the dualism of method
and subject matter. That is, we assume that knowing, feeling, willing,
etc., are things which belong to the self or mind in its isolation, and
which then may be brought to bear upon an independent subject matter. We
assume that the things which belong in isolation to the self or mind have
their own laws of operation irrespective of the modes of active energy of
the object. These laws are supposed to furnish method. It would be no less
absurd to suppose that men can eat without eating something, or that the
structure and movements of the jaws, throat muscles, the digestive
activities of stomach, etc., are not what they are because of the material
with which their activity is engaged. Just as the organs of the organism
are a continuous part of the very world in which food materials exist, so
the capacities of seeing, hearing, loving, imagining are intrinsically
connected with the subject matter of the world. They are more truly ways
in which the environment enters into experience and functions there than
they are independent acts brought to bear upon things. Experience, in
short, is not a combination of mind and world, subject and object, method
and subject matter, but is a single continuous interaction of a great
diversity (literally countless in number) of energies.</p>
<p>For the purpose of controlling the course or direction which the moving
unity of experience takes we draw a mental distinction between the how and
the what. While there is no way of walking or of eating or of learning
over and above the actual walking, eating, and studying, there are certain
elements in the act which give the key to its more effective control.
Special attention to these elements makes them more obvious to perception
(letting other factors recede for the time being from conspicuous
recognition). Getting an idea of how the experience proceeds indicates to
us what factors must be secured or modified in order that it may go on
more successfully. This is only a somewhat elaborate way of saying that if
a man watches carefully the growth of several plants, some of which do
well and some of which amount to little or nothing, he may be able to
detect the special conditions upon which the prosperous development of a
plant depends. These conditions, stated in an orderly sequence, would
constitute the method or way or manner of its growth. There is no
difference between the growth of a plant and the prosperous development of
an experience. It is not easy, in either case, to seize upon just the
factors which make for its best movement. But study of cases of success
and failure and minute and extensive comparison, helps to seize upon
causes. When we have arranged these causes in order, we have a method of
procedure or a technique.</p>
<p>A consideration of some evils in education that flow from the isolation of
method from subject matter will make the point more definite.</p>
<p>(I) In the first place, there is the neglect (of which we have spoken) of
concrete situations of experience. There can be no discovery of a method
without cases to be studied. The method is derived from observation of
what actually happens, with a view to seeing that it happen better next
time. But in instruction and discipline, there is rarely sufficient
opportunity for children and youth to have the direct normal experiences
from which educators might derive an idea of method or order of best
development. Experiences are had under conditions of such constraint that
they throw little or no light upon the normal course of an experience to
its fruition. "Methods" have then to be authoritatively recommended to
teachers, instead of being an expression of their own intelligent
observations. Under such circumstances, they have a mechanical uniformity,
assumed to be alike for all minds. Where flexible personal experiences are
promoted by providing an environment which calls out directed occupations
in work and play, the methods ascertained will vary with individuals—for
it is certain that each individual has something characteristic in his way
of going at things.</p>
<p>(ii) In the second place, the notion of methods isolated from subject
matter is responsible for the false conceptions of discipline and interest
already noted. When the effective way of managing material is treated as
something ready-made apart from material, there are just three possible
ways in which to establish a relationship lacking by assumption. One is to
utilize excitement, shock of pleasure, tickling the palate. Another is to
make the consequences of not attending painful; we may use the menace of
harm to motivate concern with the alien subject matter. Or a direct appeal
may be made to the person to put forth effort without any reason. We may
rely upon immediate strain of "will." In practice, however, the latter
method is effectual only when instigated by fear of unpleasant results.
(iii) In the third place, the act of learning is made a direct and
conscious end in itself. Under normal conditions, learning is a product
and reward of occupation with subject matter. Children do not set out,
consciously, to learn walking or talking. One sets out to give his
impulses for communication and for fuller intercourse with others a show.
He learns in consequence of his direct activities. The better methods of
teaching a child, say, to read, follow the same road. They do not fix his
attention upon the fact that he has to learn something and so make his
attitude self-conscious and constrained. They engage his activities, and
in the process of engagement he learns: the same is true of the more
successful methods in dealing with number or whatever. But when the
subject matter is not used in carrying forward impulses and habits to
significant results, it is just something to be learned. The pupil's
attitude to it is just that of having to learn it. Conditions more
unfavorable to an alert and concentrated response would be hard to devise.
Frontal attacks are even more wasteful in learning than in war. This does
not mean, however, that students are to be seduced unaware into
preoccupation with lessons. It means that they shall be occupied with them
for real reasons or ends, and not just as something to be learned. This is
accomplished whenever the pupil perceives the place occupied by the
subject matter in the fulfilling of some experience.</p>
<p>(iv) In the fourth place, under the influence of the conception of the
separation of mind and material, method tends to be reduced to a cut and
dried routine, to following mechanically prescribed steps. No one can tell
in how many schoolrooms children reciting in arithmetic or grammar are
compelled to go through, under the alleged sanction of method, certain
preordained verbal formulae. Instead of being encouraged to attack their
topics directly, experimenting with methods that seem promising and
learning to discriminate by the consequences that accrue, it is assumed
that there is one fixed method to be followed. It is also naively assumed
that if the pupils make their statements and explanations in a certain
form of "analysis," their mental habits will in time conform. Nothing has
brought pedagogical theory into greater disrepute than the belief that it
is identified with handing out to teachers recipes and models to be
followed in teaching. Flexibility and initiative in dealing with problems
are characteristic of any conception to which method is a way of managing
material to develop a conclusion. Mechanical rigid woodenness is an
inevitable corollary of any theory which separates mind from activity
motivated by a purpose.</p>
<p>2. Method as General and as Individual. In brief, the method of teaching
is the method of an art, of action intelligently directed by ends. But the
practice of a fine art is far from being a matter of extemporized
inspirations. Study of the operations and results of those in the past who
have greatly succeeded is essential. There is always a tradition, or
schools of art, definite enough to impress beginners, and often to take
them captive. Methods of artists in every branch depend upon thorough
acquaintance with materials and tools; the painter must know canvas,
pigments, brushes, and the technique of manipulation of all his
appliances. Attainment of this knowledge requires persistent and
concentrated attention to objective materials. The artist studies the
progress of his own attempts to see what succeeds and what fails. The
assumption that there are no alternatives between following ready-made
rules and trusting to native gifts, the inspiration of the moment and
undirected "hard work," is contradicted by the procedures of every art.</p>
<p>Such matters as knowledge of the past, of current technique, of materials,
of the ways in which one's own best results are assured, supply the
material for what may be called general method. There exists a cumulative
body of fairly stable methods for reaching results, a body authorized by
past experience and by intellectual analysis, which an individual ignores
at his peril. As was pointed out in the discussion of habit-forming (ante,
p. 49), there is always a danger that these methods will become mechanized
and rigid, mastering an agent instead of being powers at command for his
own ends. But it is also true that the innovator who achieves anything
enduring, whose work is more than a passing sensation, utilizes classic
methods more than may appear to himself or to his critics. He devotes them
to new uses, and in so far transforms them.</p>
<p>Education also has its general methods. And if the application of this
remark is more obvious in the case of the teacher than of the pupil, it is
equally real in the case of the latter. Part of his learning, a very
important part, consists in becoming master of the methods which the
experience of others has shown to be more efficient in like cases of
getting knowledge. 1 These general methods are in no way opposed to
individual initiative and originality—to personal ways of doing
things. On the contrary they are reinforcements of them. For there is
radical difference between even the most general method and a prescribed
rule. The latter is a direct guide to action; the former operates
indirectly through the enlightenment it supplies as to ends and means. It
operates, that is to say, through intelligence, and not through conformity
to orders externally imposed. Ability to use even in a masterly way an
established technique gives no warranty of artistic work, for the latter
also depends upon an animating idea.</p>
<p>If knowledge of methods used by others does not directly tell us what to
do, or furnish ready-made models, how does it operate? What is meant by
calling a method intellectual? Take the case of a physician. No mode of
behavior more imperiously demands knowledge of established modes of
diagnosis and treatment than does his. But after all, cases are like, not
identical. To be used intelligently, existing practices, however
authorized they may be, have to be adapted to the exigencies of particular
cases. Accordingly, recognized procedures indicate to the physician what
inquiries to set on foot for himself, what measures to try. They are
standpoints from which to carry on investigations; they economize a survey
of the features of the particular case by suggesting the things to be
especially looked into. The physician's own personal attitudes, his own
ways (individual methods) of dealing with the situation in which he is
concerned, are not subordinated to the general principles of procedure,
but are facilitated and directed by the latter. The instance may serve to
point out the value to the teacher of a knowledge of the psychological
methods and the empirical devices found useful in the past. When they get
in the way of his own common sense, when they come between him and the
situation in which he has to act, they are worse than useless. But if he
has acquired them as intellectual aids in sizing up the needs, resources,
and difficulties of the unique experiences in which he engages, they are
of constructive value. In the last resort, just because everything depends
upon his own methods of response, much depends upon how far he can
utilize, in making his own response, the knowledge which has accrued in
the experience of others. As already intimated, every word of this account
is directly applicable also to the method of the pupil, the way of
learning. To suppose that students, whether in the primary school or in
the university, can be supplied with models of method to be followed in
acquiring and expounding a subject is to fall into a self-deception that
has lamentable consequences. (See ante, p. 169.) One must make his own
reaction in any case. Indications of the standardized or general methods
used in like cases by others—particularly by those who are already
experts—are of worth or of harm according as they make his personal
reaction more intelligent or as they induce a person to dispense with
exercise of his own judgment. If what was said earlier (See p. 159) about
originality of thought seemed overstrained, demanding more of education
than the capacities of average human nature permit, the difficulty is that
we lie under the incubus of a superstition. We have set up the notion of
mind at large, of intellectual method that is the same for all. Then we
regard individuals as differing in the quantity of mind with which they
are charged. Ordinary persons are then expected to be ordinary. Only the
exceptional are allowed to have originality. The measure of difference
between the average student and the genius is a measure of the absence of
originality in the former. But this notion of mind in general is a
fiction. How one person's abilities compare in quantity with those of
another is none of the teacher's business. It is irrelevant to his work.
What is required is that every individual shall have opportunities to
employ his own powers in activities that have meaning. Mind, individual
method, originality (these are convertible terms) signify the quality of
purposive or directed action. If we act upon this conviction, we shall
secure more originality even by the conventional standard than now
develops. Imposing an alleged uniform general method upon everybody breeds
mediocrity in all but the very exceptional. And measuring originality by
deviation from the mass breeds eccentricity in them. Thus we stifle the
distinctive quality of the many, and save in rare instances (like, say,
that of Darwin) infect the rare geniuses with an unwholesome quality.</p>
<p>3. The Traits of Individual Method. The most general features of the
method of knowing have been given in our chapter on thinking. They are the
features of the reflective situation: Problem, collection and analysis of
data, projection and elaboration of suggestions or ideas, experimental
application and testing; the resulting conclusion or judgment. The
specific elements of an individual's method or way of attack upon a
problem are found ultimately in his native tendencies and his acquired
habits and interests. The method of one will vary from that of another
(and properly vary) as his original instinctive capacities vary, as his
past experiences and his preferences vary. Those who have already studied
these matters are in possession of information which will help teachers in
understanding the responses different pupils make, and help them in
guiding these responses to greater efficiency. Child-study, psychology,
and a knowledge of social environment supplement the personal acquaintance
gained by the teacher. But methods remain the personal concern, approach,
and attack of an individual, and no catalogue can ever exhaust their
diversity of form and tint.</p>
<p>Some attitudes may be named, however,-which are central in effective
intellectual ways of dealing with subject matter. Among the most important
are directness, open-mindedness, single-mindedness (or whole-heartedness),
and responsibility.</p>
<p>1. It is easier to indicate what is meant by directness through negative
terms than in positive ones. Self-consciousness, embarrassment, and
constraint are its menacing foes. They indicate that a person is not
immediately concerned with subject matter. Something has come between
which deflects concern to side issues. A self-conscious person is partly
thinking about his problem and partly about what others think of his
performances. Diverted energy means loss of power and confusion of ideas.
Taking an attitude is by no means identical with being conscious of one's
attitude. The former is spontaneous, naive, and simple. It is a sign of
whole-souled relationship between a person and what he is dealing with.
The latter is not of necessity abnormal. It is sometimes the easiest way
of correcting a false method of approach, and of improving the
effectiveness of the means one is employing,—as golf players, piano
players, public speakers, etc., have occasionally to give especial
attention to their position and movements. But this need is occasional and
temporary. When it is effectual a person thinks of himself in terms of
what is to be done, as one means among others of the realization of an end—as
in the case of a tennis player practicing to get the "feel" of a stroke.
In abnormal cases, one thinks of himself not as part of the agencies of
execution, but as a separate object—as when the player strikes an
attitude thinking of the impression it will make upon spectators, or is
worried because of the impression he fears his movements give rise to.</p>
<p>Confidence is a good name for what is intended by the term directness. It
should not be confused, however, with self-confidence which may be a form
of self-consciousness—or of "cheek." Confidence is not a name for
what one thinks or feels about his attitude it is not reflex. It denotes
the straightforwardness with which one goes at what he has to do. It
denotes not conscious trust in the efficacy of one's powers but
unconscious faith in the possibilities of the situation. It signifies
rising to the needs of the situation. We have already pointed out (See p.
169) the objections to making students emphatically aware of the fact that
they are studying or learning. Just in the degree in which they are
induced by the conditions to be so aware, they are not studying and
learning. They are in a divided and complicated attitude. Whatever methods
of a teacher call a pupil's attention off from what he has to do and
transfer it to his own attitude towards what he is doing impair directness
of concern and action. Persisted in, the pupil acquires a permanent
tendency to fumble, to gaze about aimlessly, to look for some clew of
action beside that which the subject matter supplies. Dependence upon
extraneous suggestions and directions, a state of foggy confusion, take
the place of that sureness with which children (and grown-up people who
have not been sophisticated by "education") confront the situations of
life.</p>
<p>2. Open-mindedness. Partiality is, as we have seen, an accompaniment of
the existence of interest, since this means sharing, partaking, taking
sides in some movement. All the more reason, therefore, for an attitude of
mind which actively welcomes suggestions and relevant information from all
sides. In the chapter on Aims it was shown that foreseen ends are factors
in the development of a changing situation. They are the means by which
the direction of action is controlled. They are subordinate to the
situation, therefore, not the situation to them. They are not ends in the
sense of finalities to which everything must be bent and sacrificed. They
are, as foreseen, means of guiding the development of a situation. A
target is not the future goal of shooting; it is the centering factor in a
present shooting. Openness of mind means accessibility of mind to any and
every consideration that will throw light upon the situation that needs to
be cleared up, and that will help determine the consequences of acting
this way or that. Efficiency in accomplishing ends which have been settled
upon as unalterable can coexist with a narrowly opened mind. But
intellectual growth means constant expansion of horizons and consequent
formation of new purposes and new responses. These are impossible without
an active disposition to welcome points of view hitherto alien; an active
desire to entertain considerations which modify existing purposes.
Retention of capacity to grow is the reward of such intellectual
hospitality. The worst thing about stubbornness of mind, about prejudices,
is that they arrest development; they shut the mind off from new stimuli.
Open-mindedness means retention of the childlike attitude;
closed-mindedness means premature intellectual old age.</p>
<p>Exorbitant desire for uniformity of procedure and for prompt external
results are the chief foes which the open-minded attitude meets in school.
The teacher who does not permit and encourage diversity of operation in
dealing with questions is imposing intellectual blinders upon pupils—restricting
their vision to the one path the teacher's mind happens to approve.
Probably the chief cause of devotion to rigidity of method is, however,
that it seems to promise speedy, accurately measurable, correct results.
The zeal for "answers" is the explanation of much of the zeal for rigid
and mechanical methods. Forcing and overpressure have the same origin, and
the same result upon alert and varied intellectual interest.</p>
<p>Open-mindedness is not the same as empty-mindedness. To hang out a sign
saying "Come right in; there is no one at home" is not the equivalent of
hospitality. But there is a kind of passivity, willingness to let
experiences accumulate and sink in and ripen, which is an essential of
development. Results (external answers or solutions) may be hurried;
processes may not be forced. They take their own time to mature. Were all
instructors to realize that the quality of mental process, not the
production of correct answers, is the measure of educative growth
something hardly less than a revolution in teaching would be worked.</p>
<p>3. Single-mindedness. So far as the word is concerned, much that was said
under the head of "directness" is applicable. But what the word is here
intended to convey is completeness of interest, unity of purpose; the
absence of suppressed but effectual ulterior aims for which the professed
aim is but a mask. It is equivalent to mental integrity. Absorption,
engrossment, full concern with subject matter for its own sake, nurture
it. Divided interest and evasion destroy it.</p>
<p>Intellectual integrity, honesty, and sincerity are at bottom not matters
of conscious purpose but of quality of active response. Their acquisition
is fostered of course by conscious intent, but self-deception is very
easy. Desires are urgent. When the demands and wishes of others forbid
their direct expression they are easily driven into subterranean and deep
channels. Entire surrender, and wholehearted adoption of the course of
action demanded by others are almost impossible. Deliberate revolt or
deliberate attempts to deceive others may result. But the more frequent
outcome is a confused and divided state of interest in which one is fooled
as to one's own real intent. One tries to serve two masters at once.
Social instincts, the strong desire to please others and get their
approval, social training, the general sense of duty and of authority,
apprehension of penalty, all lead to a half-hearted effort to conform, to
"pay attention to the lesson," or whatever the requirement is. Amiable
individuals want to do what they are expected to do. Consciously the pupil
thinks he is doing this. But his own desires are not abolished. Only their
evident exhibition is suppressed. Strain of attention to what is hostile
to desire is irksome; in spite of one's conscious wish, the underlying
desires determine the main course of thought, the deeper emotional
responses. The mind wanders from the nominal subject and devotes itself to
what is intrinsically more desirable. A systematized divided attention
expressing the duplicity of the state of desire is the result. One has
only to recall his own experiences in school or at the present time when
outwardly employed in actions which do not engage one's desires and
purposes, to realize how prevalent is this attitude of divided attention—double-mindedness.
We are so used to it that we take it for granted that a considerable
amount of it is necessary. It may be; if so, it is the more important to
face its bad intellectual effects. Obvious is the loss of energy of
thought immediately available when one is consciously trying (or trying to
seem to try) to attend to one matter, while unconsciously one's
imagination is spontaneously going out to more congenial affairs. More
subtle and more permanently crippling to efficiency of intellectual
activity is a fostering of habitual self-deception, with the confused
sense of reality which accompanies it. A double standard of reality, one
for our own private and more or less concealed interests, and another for
public and acknowledged concerns, hampers, in most of us, integrity and
completeness of mental action. Equally serious is the fact that a split is
set up between conscious thought and attention and impulsive blind
affection and desire. Reflective dealings with the material of instruction
is constrained and half-hearted; attention wanders. The topics to which it
wanders are unavowed and hence intellectually illicit; transactions with
them are furtive. The discipline that comes from regulating response by
deliberate inquiry having a purpose fails; worse than that, the deepest
concern and most congenial enterprises of the imagination (since they
center about the things dearest to desire) are casual, concealed. They
enter into action in ways which are unacknowledged. Not subject to
rectification by consideration of consequences, they are demoralizing.</p>
<p>School conditions favorable to this division of mind between avowed,
public, and socially responsible undertakings, and private, ill-regulated,
and suppressed indulgences of thought are not hard to find. What is
sometimes called "stern discipline," i.e., external coercive pressure, has
this tendency. Motivation through rewards extraneous to the thing to be
done has a like effect. Everything that makes schooling merely preparatory
(See ante, p. 55) works in this direction. Ends being beyond the pupil's
present grasp, other agencies have to be found to procure immediate
attention to assigned tasks. Some responses are secured, but desires and
affections not enlisted must find other outlets. Not less serious is
exaggerated emphasis upon drill exercises designed to produce skill in
action, independent of any engagement of thought—exercises have no
purpose but the production of automatic skill. Nature abhors a mental
vacuum. What do teachers imagine is happening to thought and emotion when
the latter get no outlet in the things of immediate activity? Were they
merely kept in temporary abeyance, or even only calloused, it would not be
a matter of so much moment. But they are not abolished; they are not
suspended; they are not suppressed—save with reference to the task
in question. They follow their own chaotic and undisciplined course. What
is native, spontaneous, and vital in mental reaction goes unused and
untested, and the habits formed are such that these qualities become less
and less available for public and avowed ends.</p>
<p>4. Responsibility. By responsibility as an element in intellectual
attitude is meant the disposition to consider in advance the probable
consequences of any projected step and deliberately to accept them: to
accept them in the sense of taking them into account, acknowledging them
in action, not yielding a mere verbal assent. Ideas, as we have seen, are
intrinsically standpoints and methods for bringing about a solution of a
perplexing situation; forecasts calculated to influence responses. It is
only too easy to think that one accepts a statement or believes a
suggested truth when one has not considered its implications; when one has
made but a cursory and superficial survey of what further things one is
committed to by acceptance. Observation and recognition, belief and
assent, then become names for lazy acquiescence in what is externally
presented.</p>
<p>It would be much better to have fewer facts and truths in instruction—that
is, fewer things supposedly accepted,—if a smaller number of
situations could be intellectually worked out to the point where
conviction meant something real—some identification of the self with
the type of conduct demanded by facts and foresight of results. The most
permanent bad results of undue complication of school subjects and
congestion of school studies and lessons are not the worry, nervous
strain, and superficial acquaintance that follow (serious as these are),
but the failure to make clear what is involved in really knowing and
believing a thing. Intellectual responsibility means severe standards in
this regard. These standards can be built up only through practice in
following up and acting upon the meaning of what is acquired.</p>
<p>Intellectual thoroughness is thus another name for the attitude we are
considering. There is a kind of thoroughness which is almost purely
physical: the kind that signifies mechanical and exhausting drill upon all
the details of a subject. Intellectual thoroughness is seeing a thing
through. It depends upon a unity of purpose to which details are
subordinated, not upon presenting a multitude of disconnected details. It
is manifested in the firmness with which the full meaning of the purpose
is developed, not in attention, however "conscientious" it may be, to the
steps of action externally imposed and directed.</p>
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<h2> Summary. Method is a statement of the way the subject matter of an </h2>
<p>experience develops most effectively and fruitfully. It is derived,
accordingly, from observation of the course of experiences where there is
no conscious distinction of personal attitude and manner from material
dealt with. The assumption that method is something separate is connected
with the notion of the isolation of mind and self from the world of
things. It makes instruction and learning formal, mechanical, constrained.
While methods are individualized, certain features of the normal course of
an experience to its fruition may be discriminated, because of the fund of
wisdom derived from prior experiences and because of general similarities
in the materials dealt with from time to time. Expressed in terms of the
attitude of the individual the traits of good method are
straightforwardness, flexible intellectual interest or open-minded will to
learn, integrity of purpose, and acceptance of responsibility for the
consequences of one's activity including thought.</p>
<p>1 This point is developed below in a discussion of what are termed
psychological and logical methods respectively. See p. 219.</p>
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