The
Socratic Method in Law School:
An Imperfect but Credible Witness Against Modern Empirical
Education
& A Paradigm for Homeschooling
by THOMAS R. ORR*
After
that time those who are selected from the class of twenty
years old will be promoted to higher honour than the
rest, and the sciences which they learned without any
order in their early education will now be brought together,
and they will be able to see the natural relationship
of them to one another and to true being.
Yes,
he said, that is the only kind of knowledge which, in
a few fortunate persons, takes lasting root.
—Plato,
Republic
Before
a first-year law student ever gets to his first day
of class he has "excelled" during 8 years
of high school and undergraduate academic competition,
passed a tough entrance exam, and survived an application
process designed to find only those who have the capability
to be successful in law school. He has bested many other
students in scores on standardized tests in elementary
and secondary schools, college (e.g. PSAT, SAT, ACT)
, and to get admitted to law school (LSAT). By today’s
standards he is most often the prototypical "A"
student with a grade point average of 3.5 or better,
and an LSAT score in the 90th percentile.
Today’s
"Excellent" Student Struggles in his First
Year of Law School
Heart
racing, sweaty palms, getting mentally geared up—no,
it’s not a typical athlete experiencing pre-game
butterflies—it’s a typical first-year law
student experiencing pre-class butterflies. What could
so unnerve such an "excellent" student? Evidence
suggests that the new law student’s stress is
due largely to the combination of a sudden switch from
the lecture method of instruction to the Socratic Method;
and from objective/empirical grading of the student’s
ability to memorize lecture materials to a subjective
evaluation of the student’s actual understanding
and analytical skill as demonstrated by a one-time written
essay. Dr. Adler, a doctor of philosophy and former
faculty member of the Law School of the University of
Chicago, provides some insight:
[W]e
must also face the fact that the leading professional
schools—in law, medicine and engineering—have
long complained that they must take graduates of our
colleges and teach them how to read and write before
they can teach them law, medicine, or engineering. Some
years ago when I was on the faculty of the Law School
of the University of Chicago, a substantial portion
of the law student’s first year had to be devoted
to tutoring in the basic skills of reading and writing.
I suspect that the situation has not changed for the
better. The Bachelor of Arts degree, which should certify
that a young man or woman has the liberal skills prerequisite
to specialized study no longer certifies anything of
the sort; and the professional schools, have come to
realize with dismay that that they cannot rely on it.
"Excellence"
by the standards of modern education today does not
always reflect true understanding or skill—the
hallmarks of a true education and the prerequisites
not only to success in law school but to a happy life.
Thus, today’s "excellent" student enters
law school totally unprepared to handle a method of
education designed, not to reward memory, but to instill
understanding. Gone are the long lectures, furious note
taking, and long hours spent memorizing the opinions
of the lecturers in order to regurgitate them during
a later test (and then forget them for the most part).
Gone are the textbooks and commentaries replete with
facts, theories and concepts to be memorized and repeated
back. Gone are the familiar periodic quizzes, papers,
and midterms that judge a student’s ability to
absorb and parrot back the opinions, theories and facts
deemed important by his teacher.
In
law school, college professors lecturing about their
field and their theories are replaced with law professors
who directly question their students about cases they
have read—cases that, unlike textbooks, have neither
instructions nor explanations that will serve to answer
the question posed. To complicate matters, the cases
are often selected because of the errors they contain
or for esoteric points not easily seen upon a quick
read. Quite often, there is no definite "answer"—nothing
to memorize or repeat back. And, just when the student
thinks he has finally given "the" answer,
the professor asks another question or poses a hypothetical
that exposes the flaw and the absurdity in the student’s
reasoning. The questioning can be confrontational and
professors often leave thoughts and ideas dangling—leaving
the students with more questions than at the beginning
of class. Not surprisingly, students used to the more
predictable "lecture and memorize" method,
express immense uncertainty and frustration at this
process.
Of
course, it is just such uncertainty and frustration
that the Socratic method seeks to awaken as a means
to motivate the student to inquire and analyze further.
As in life, there are no easy answers. For many students,
this is the first time they have been asked to analyze
facts and think on their feet under the scrutiny of
a professor and their fellow students. It is a small
reflection of what these prospective lawyers will face
when asked similar questions by judges, experienced
lawyers, and clients about how the law applies in real
life situations that are never identical. Simply repeating
memorized facts would never succeed in real life and
should not succeed in a classroom. Far better to learn
how to analyze and think in the relative safety of a
classroom under the watchful eye of a professor whose
only goal is to awaken understanding, than in a court
room with real lives and fortunes at stake.
The
Law School "Classic" Method Runs Contrary
to the Precepts of Modern Education
The
method of legal education described above is a combination
of what is referred to as the "Socratic Method"
and the "Case Method". In the "Case Method",
students prepare for class by reading books containing
actual court cases. Much like students in a typical
Great Books program who prepare for class by reading
the actual text of the Great Books (as opposed to commentaries
on the texts), law students read the actual written
opinions of judges serving in various federal and state
courts (as opposed to treatises describing those cases).
Other than reading the cases, a law student has no homework,
no assignments, and no extra credit. His job is to come
to class prepared to discuss and analyze the thinking
of the judges in the cases he has read. At class, the
Socratic Method begins. The professor randomly selects
one student and asks for a summary of the case and the
judge’s decision. After the summary is over, the
"game is afoot" and the professor will probe
the student’s understanding and analysis with
questions about unclear, important, or difficult issues.
At this point, the discussion becomes a true class discussion
with the professor calling on students randomly to get
their answers to the same or new questions, or to hypotheticals
constructed by the Professor to focus attention on ambiguous
terms, assumed concepts, or fallacious reasoning. Some
form of this process can be observed in almost every
law school in America today.
Law
Schools Have Rejected The Lecture Method and the Empirical
Method of Testing
Law
Schools did not always use the Classic Method so prevalent
today. Indeed, legal education in America used to resemble
the lecture system commonly used in most of our present-day
elementary and secondary schools, and colleges and universities.
American legal education, like our legal system itself,
has its roots in the common law of England. From the
time of Edward I, British lawyers were trained through
the system of Inns of Court and apprenticeships (one
well known example of this can be found in Dickens’
David Copperfield). Like their British counterparts
and the fictional Copperfield and Traddles, most early
American lawyers learned their trade as apprentices—copying
law books and legal papers for practicing attorneys.
By copying law books and legal papers, students were
expected to learn the law through memorization.
This
process continued even after the founding of the first
American law school in 1775. Law students continued
to work as apprentices reading and copying the law from
treatises, and also attended daily hour-and-a-half lectures.
The lecture and memorization method prevailed in early
American law schools until the late 19th century when
a few legal educators began to realize that this method
was not producing lawyers with a true understanding
of legal principles and the ability to analyze how those
principles should apply in ever-changing factual situations.
Professor
Theodore Dwight of Columbia Law School is credited with
being the first law professor to do something about
this by providing black letter rules of law to his students
and then questioning them socratically as to how those
rules might apply in a new factual "laboratory"
situation. But it is Christopher Columbus Langdell,
a Harvard Law School Professor, who is hailed as the
first legal educator to combine the Socratic and Case
methods. Through his efforts other law schools soon
followed suit. Professor Beales, at Columbia’s
Law School in the 1930’s and 1940’s, came
to embody what is now also known as the "Classic
Method" of law instruction (i.e., the combination
of the "Case Method" and the "Socratic
Method"), and was, perhaps, its greatest practitioner
(Beales is reported to have been the model for Professor
Kingsfield in the book and movie "Paper Chase").
As with the fictional Professor Kingsfield, Professor
Beales is reported to have terrorized his students in
class to the point where they dreaded going to class
(many of these same students later reported that he
was the greatest teacher that they had ever encountered).
In
the classic method of legal education, accomplishment
is measured more by rapid analysis and the ability to
articulate the analysis—not by memory and regurgitation.
How then is a law student graded? The Socratic process
continues for an entire semester or year at which time
the student is given a lengthy written essay exam (2-4
hours) usually consisting of hypothetical cases rife
with legal issues in the tested subject area. The best
students usually demonstrate their analytical ability
and understanding of legal principles by taking the
same Socratic approach to the written exam, i.e., positing
questions to all possible issues and exploring the nuances
of all possible answers. After reading the written essay,
the professor assigns a grade that reflects the professor’s
subjective evaluation of the student’s understanding
and analytical ability and, in some schools, the student’s
performance in the classroom Socratic discussion.
The
Law School Socratic Method Runs Counter to the Methods
of Modern Education
For
the most part, and despite criticisms from some modern
educators, law schools to this day still insist on the
Socratic method particularly in the first year of law
school. The persistent and continuous insistence of
law schools on the Socratic method and "subjective"
written essays is an imperfect but credible witness
against the overwhelming insistence of modern elementary,
secondary and undergraduate schools on the lecture method
and "objective" tests such as multiple-choice
exams. The distinction between these means of education
is no small matter. Indeed, it is critical. Critical
not only if we want to educate our children but also
if we want to form them morally. Dr. Adler described
the importance of this distinction in 1976:
The
way in which we test or examine students and the way
in which we grade them determines what teachers teach
and how they teach, and what students learn and how
they learn. Our present methods call for indoctrination
rather than genuine teaching, and for memorizing rather
than genuine learning.
Unless
we radically change our present methods of testing and
grading students, we cannot expect our teachers to become
cooperative artists instead of mere indoctrinators,
and we cannot expect our students to become genuine
learners instead of mere memorizers.
Today,
on almost a daily basis, our modern educators ask us
for more money to solve what, all admit, is an educational
crisis. Our students, they tell us, are not well educated.
They know this because scores on standardized tests
tell them we are not measuring up as compared to others.
The solution, they tell us, is to hire more teachers,
build more classrooms, and hold teachers and students
accountable for learning as measured by standardized
tests. Indeed, the two candidates in our recent Presidential
race both agreed on these essential points while disagreeing
as to how and where to spend money to correct these
problems.
Although
many of the observations about poorly educated students
are correct, many modern educators automatically assume
that more teachers, more classrooms, and standardized
testing/accountability will improve the level of education.
Even more significantly, these educators overlook the
moral component of education. Either that or they do
not accept responsibility for education on the moral
virtues so dear to Socrates. The two components, good
education and morality, go hand-in-hand with a true
education as contemplated by Socrates. As early as 1940,
it was evident that modern education was failing on
both ends:
Scientific
measurements of the educational product of the schools
of New York and Pennsylvania show not merely a failure
to master the ordinary subject matters of instruction
but, what is much more dismal, the inadequacy of the
schools with respect to the basic operations of critical
intelligence as these occur in reading and writing.
Not only are distressingly large numbers of high school
graduates unable to read and write to that minimum degree
which must be possessed by free minds participating
in a democratic community, but the evidence further
shows that after graduation they have neither appetite
or capacity for reading anything better than the local
newspaper or mediocre fiction.
Our
colleges produce undisciplined and hence unliberated
minds, minds which are cultivated only by a superficial
literacy. Almost worse, is that they produce skeptics
about reason and knowledge, relativists about morals,
sophists in political matters, in short, liberals in
that worst sense of the word in which liberalism is
suicidal because it is unable to give a rational defense
of its sentimental protestations without contradicting
itself.
Modern
Education has Departed from Centuries of Proven Educational
Method & Testing
How
is it that our educators are so keenly aware that there
is a crisis in education yet so miss the mark on the
means to overcome the crisis? Quite simply, they are
heavily influenced (some unconsciously so) by the tide
of empiricism that has swept through the world since
the Reformation and Renaissance. They have rejected
means that have proven successful for centuries. Written
tests, grading, and normative/standardized tests are
only relatively recent newcomers in history, and their
advent was the harbinger of a major sea change in education
due to an unnatural emphasis on science and empiricism.
Aristotle and Socrates never received grades for their
efforts, yet no one can question their brilliance or
understanding. St. Thomas Aquinas had no transcript
to prove his brilliance yet his Summa Theologica makes
that self-evident. Einstein’s failing grades in
elementary school are well known yet no man can question
that he had one of the most brilliant scientific minds
in the history of mankind. None of the authors of the
Great Books of Western Civilization had to sit for a
SAT exam in order to get an advanced education yet all
of these men achieved a level of understanding and analytical
ability largely unparalleled today. How is it then that
our world has become so different? Dr. Adler explains:
[W]ith
the progressive secularization of our society and culture,
we have moved further and further in the direction taken
at the Reformation and with the Renaissance. . . . From
the fifteenth to the middle of the nineteenth century,
the main course of European and later of American Education
represents a continuity rather than a break with the
education of antiquity. . . . Only with a sense of that
continuity of Western education from the Greeks to the
nineteenth century can we fully appreciate the sharpness
of the break that has occurred since 1850.
The
Way in Which We Teach & Test Today Differs Radically
from the Ways of the Past
One
of the chief "reforms" since 1850 has been
in the way we test our students. Contrary to the educational
reform under which all of us have been educated, most
of the men that we know as authors of the Great Books
were educated when testing was done by oral examination—the
predominant mode of assessing understanding since the
time of Charlemagne. A few examples will suffice. In
the seventh century, Alcuin, Charlemagne’s Chief
Minister and head of the Cathedral School at York, used
oral examinations. The University of Paris and the University
of Bologna used oral exams in the 12th century. Evidence
exists of oral exams in Italy in the 1400s, and in England
at Oxford and Cambridge in the 1700s. In America, oral
examinations predominated from 1709 until 1845 when
Horace Mann, one of the modern reformers, forced the
Boston Public Schools to abandon oral examinations in
favor of written examinations.
In
contrast, written examinations were rare until about
1850 when Descartes’ theories really began to
take hold in education through the likes of John Dewey.
Why the change in emphasis from oral to written examinations?
All of the changes that have come in the last hundred
years flow from a desire to infuse the scientific method
into all aspects of education. In 1903, Frederick Kelly
introduced the concept of norm-referenced scoring that
still predominates today. As he explained it, educators
should create "norms in terms of which a child
can readily be scientifically classed for pedagogical
purposes." The introduction of the first successful
intelligence test in 1905 signaled the incursion of
psychology into education and it "altered testing
forever, eventually including the use of statistical
criteria to select questions for inclusion on achievement
tests."
These
notions quickly inserted themselves into testing at
all levels. For example, the Educational Testing Service,
administrator of the SAT and many other standardized
tests and successor to the College Entrance Examination
Board founded in 1900, makes no secret that its tests
(including the first known SAT exam in 1926) were based
on the principles of Binet and Kelly. Another example,
one of the purposes of testing in the Boston Public
Schools of 1916 was described as "furnish[ing]
the teacher with a standard by which she may judge whether
her class is above or below the general standard for
the city." One of the centerpieces of this movement
was the introduction of the multiple-choice test in
1914 by Fredrick Kelly and, with the advent of the appropriate
technology in 1955, this mode has predominated. Thus,
by the end of the 20th century, the incursion of the
"scientific management movement" into education
was responsible for displacing the written essay tests
that had only come to replace oral exams in the previous
century.
The
use of grades followed a similar course. In North America,
grading was reportedly first used at Yale in 1785 in
a system that used adjectives for grades. Yale is also
responsible for creating a scale-of-four system in the
1800s—a system that persists to this day under
the grade point average system seen in almost every
school. Other colleges such as Harvard, William &
Mary, and the University of Michigan experimented with
various letter and percentile grades from 1830 into
the 20th century. For example, Harvard used numerical
scales in 1877, letter grades in 1883, classifications
of groups of students in 1884, class in 1886, and classifications
for merit in 1895. Percentage grading appeared in the
late 19th century and the switch to letter grades in
elementary and secondary schools came in the 1930s and
1940s. The 1960s saw many schools opting for pass/fail
grades or written evaluations of performance. Today,
letter grades are the predominant method in elementary
and secondary schools. Report cards summarizing grades
first began appearing in 1911 and are commonplace today.
The
introduction of written and multiple choice tests, and
grades did not go unopposed. For example, as early as
1888, a school superintendent in Cincinnati complained
about the effect of written essay tests when used to
promote and classify children:
[These
essay tests] perverted the best efforts of teachers,
and narrowed and grooved their instruction; they have
occasioned and made well nigh imperative the use of
mechanical and rote methods of teaching; they have occasioned
cramming and the most vicious habits of study; they
have caused much of the overpressure charged upon schools,
some of which is real; they have tempted both teachers
and pupils to dishonesty; and last but not least, they
have permitted a mechanical method of schools supervision.
The
Influence of Scientism Has Given Us Poor-Students who
are Skeptics
Despite
such objections, these changes gained firm ground as
the scientific method gained ascendancy over the theology
and philosophy that influenced education prior to the
Reformation and Renaissance. Those imbued with the notion
that the only truth is that which is measurable could
not accept anything less than scientific "objective"
measures of performance. Lectures proved to be the most
efficient means to indoctrinate youth with the facts
they needed to know for their tests, and grades the
best means to quantify performance (as opposed to a
qualitative assessment of understanding). Over sixty
years ago, however, it was readily apparent, that the
results of these changes were disastrous for education,
the students, and our country:
The
factors operating in the current situation have been
prepared by centuries of cultural change. What has been
happening in American education since 1900, what has
finally achieved its full effect in the present generation,
flows with tragic inevitability from the seeds of modern
culture as they have developed in the past three hundred
years. The very things which constituted the cultural
departure that we call modern times have eventuated,
not only in the perverted education of American youth
today, but also in the crises that we are unprepared
to face. . . . They are both the last fruitions of modern
man’s exclusive trust in science and his gradual
disavowal of whatever lies beyond the field of science
as irrational prejudice, as opinion emotionally held.
[As
a result, a student so educated] will see for himself
that moral questions, questions of good and bad, right
and wrong, cannot be answered by the methods of natural
science or social science. He will conclude that "value
judgments" cannot be made, except of course as
expressions of personal prejudice. He will extend this
conclusion to cover not only decisions about his own
conduct but also moral judgments about economic systems
and political programs. He will accept without question
the complete divorce of economics from ethics and, in
discipleship to Machiavelli, he will become as much
a realist in politics as Hitler and Mussolini.
Modern
Education is Infused and Imbued with Cartesian Principles
What
are the differences between the education of centuries
past and present day education that would account for
the visible decline not only in the intellectual ability
of our students but also their moral decline as well?
"The chief difference between ourselves and our
ancestors is that they, for the most part, talked sense
about liberal education, whereas we for the most part—I
mean our leading educators—do not." Our modern
educators not only exaggerate the place of science in
the curriculum, but also have infused Cartesian notions
into the principle tenets of every subject. Cartesian
principles not only determine the validity and primacy
of all subjects, but also are the basis by which student
understanding is measured. In short, a religion of science
predominates modern education.
The
Lecture Method and Tests of Memory Corrupt the "Means"
of Education
The
root error of many of our modern educators imbued with
primacy of scientism is "not merely that in many
quarters the end of liberal education has been forgotten
or mistaken, but that the means have been corrupted
or deformed." The "means" of education
have been corrupted to a great extent because modern
educators have failed to understand the critical distinction
between memory and understanding. Memory is merely an
act of the senses but understanding requires an act
of the intellect. A fact remembered is not a fact understood.
Science can measure memory but "measuring"
understanding (in a Cartesian sense) is nearly an oxymoron.
Just
as our modern educators fail to appreciate the difference
between memory and understanding, so do they fail to
appreciate an important corollary distinction, i.e.,
the difference between opinion and knowledge. Knowledge
requires an understanding based on an evaluation of
reasons and evidence. Students can acquire knowledge
with or without the aid of teachers—by thinking
and making their own discoveries. As Saint Thomas Aquinas
once explained: "There is a two-fold way of acquiring
knowledge—by discovery and by being taught. .
. . Discovery is higher." Genuine teachers act
as cooperative artists to inspire students to think
on their own either through coaching or the Socratic
method. The only authority that a genuine teacher can
appeal to is the rule of reason in light of existing
evidence. The student is then expected to use his own
reason to think through and understand—to know.
But
the estimated 85% of present-day classroom time devoted
to the didatic/lecture method is merely indoctrination
of opinion—not the acquiring of knowledge. Generally,
teachers who lecture expect students to accept what
they tell them simply because they are the teacher.
At best, this is mere indoctrination of students with
the opinion of the teacher. And, as any of us who have
ever crammed for an exam know well, opinions adopted
and facts memorized as a result of lectures are soon
forgotten. Most students could not pass today’s
tests if they were repeated only one year later. How
many of us adults could still pass the standardized
tests of our high school or college years? Indeed, how
many of us even recall any lectures we had during high
school or college much less the details of those lectures?
In
contrast to opinion, knowledge that is gained through
understanding lasts forever. What is understood cannot
be forgotten because it is a habit of the intellect,
not something remembered. Dr. Adler gives the example
of a student who is learning the proposition that a
truth is self-evident only if it is undeniable. If the
student merely memorizes the proposition or accepts
that it is true because his teacher has told him so,
he cannot understand or know why it is true. It is merely
that student’s opinion based on the authority
of his teacher. But a student who contemplates that
proposition and engages in a Socratic discussion with
his teacher and classmates ultimately will discover
on his own that the proposition that a truth is self-evident
only if it is undeniable must be true because its opposite
is unthinkable.
Oral
Examination and Questioning Is Superior Because It Probes
Understanding
The
distinctions between memory and understanding; and knowledge
and opinion force the conclusion that oral examination
of a student, "the probing of the mind by persistent
questioning that penetrates its depths as far as possible",
is the only effective means to test or measure a student’s
understanding: "Only an oral examination can succeed
in separating the facile verbalizers and memorizers
from those in whom genuine intellectual skills are beginning
to develop and whose minds have become hospitable to
ideas. Written examinations, even term papers or senior
essays, are inadequate for this purpose. Where serious
written work is undertaken by the students, it should
only be made the basis for examining the student orally
to see if he can defend his thesis with some depth of
understanding that goes below the surface of his written
document."
John
Henry Cardinal Newman, in his 1851 discourse on elementary
education, illustrates the ease with which the verbalizers
and memorizers are spotted in an oral examination by
providing two sample transcripts of oral examinations
covering grammar, history and geography. The first transcript
compellingly demonstrates the weak performance of a
student who has been indoctrinated while the second
illustrates a student who knows what he is about and
has mastered what he has read. For Newman, it is better
if our students understand "a little, but well"
rather than know a great deal of information about a
variety of topics yet be incapable of true analysis
and understanding. It is better if a student learns
to "compare one idea with another; adjust truth
and facts; form them into one whole, or notice the obstacles
which occur in doing so. This is the way to make progress;
this is the way to arrive at results; not to swallow
knowledge, but (according to the figure sometimes used)
to masticate and digest it."
Legal
Education Today Has Not Forgotten The Supremacy of Oral
Questioning
It
should not be a surprise then that even the "excellent"
products of our education system stumble when they encounter
the alien world of law school. Legal education today,
in contrast to elementary, secondary and undergraduate
education, reflects both an understanding of the importance
of cooperative teaching through the Socratic method,
and an appreciation of the need to test understanding
through a probing examination. The enduring success
of the Socratic method in our law schools provides tangible
and practical evidence that the changes and reforms
advocated by Dr. Adler, Dr. Taylor, Dr. Senior, Dr.
Quinn, Dr. Redpath, Dr. Hancock, and others offer the
best hope to solve our educational crisis and, more
importantly, the moral corruption rampant in modern
society.
Let
me be clear—legal education is not perfect. The
faults of legal education include the use of a written
examination instead of an oral examination; use of the
Socratic Method divorced from Socratic principles, particularly
moral virtue; a change in focus from reading cases as
the raw materials for discussion to reading them because
they were the actual depository of a rule of law; and
reliance solely on the study of American cases to the
exclusion of natural and moral law, and the philosophy
of law. Although well-designed essay exams can approximate
an oral exam, oral examinations are the only true method
to determine a student’s understanding. Use of
the Socratic Method divorced from the moral virtues
so loved by Socrates leads to skepticism—a fault
that many lawyers of today possess. Limiting or orienting
class discussion to discovery of a single specific rule
perverts the Socratic notion of a free-ranging discussion
about the legal principles at issue in any case. Study
of the great books of western law and the philosophy
of law provides the only basis for young law students
to understand and question the morality, logic, and
justice of American laws, and to form an appreciation
that the natural law must serve as a touchstone and
guide for any system of laws. As we now see, the excessive
focus on American cases and an emphasis on deciding
legal questions and enacting laws without reference
to the natural law ultimately produces a bevy of amoral
lawyers who need ethical codes to tell them right from
wrong.
Despite
these obvious faults, however, our present day law schools
have hit upon a formula for true education albeit somewhat
imperfectly. The emphasis of law schools on the Socratic
method to instill true understanding, and a written
examination to probe and test that understanding are
an implicit rejection of modern empirical education.
Those interested in true and real education of their
children have a rough real-world confirmation that true
education is much more than the indoctrination through
memorization encouraged by the lectures and standardized
tests so prevalent today.
We
Must Remember That Many of Us Are Products of Modern
Education
As
parents, we must constantly remind ourselves that we
too are products of modern empirical education. Having
been raised and educated in a system that emphasizes
lectures, and rewards memorization with grades or percentile
rankings based on standardized tests, we naturally tend
to consider them a measure of how well "educated"
our own children are. Homeschooling parents have seen
through the errors and flaws of our educational system
and have gone to great sacrifice to make certain their
children receive a proper education. What a shame then
to repeat the errors of our modern system by insisting
entirely on memorization, high grade point averages,
and high scores on standardized tests; yet never engaging
our children poetically or Socratically to probe and
expand true understanding, and inspire a true love and
desire to learn.
To
be sure, there is no need, indeed there is no place,
for a heavy-handed, Professor Kingsfield-like Socratic
discussion in the home. But children respond wonderfully
to the more-genteel approach to Socratic and pre-Socratic
(poetic) education advocated by Dr. Senior, Dr. Quinn,
Dr. Taylor and others. As Socrates himself suggested:
"No compulsion then, my good friend, . . . in teaching
children; train them by a kind of game, and you will
be able to see more clearly the natural bent of each."
This form of the Socratic method has succeeded with
third graders even in primarily scientific/empirical
topics such as arithmetic. The results of Dr. Adler’s
Paideia program are further evidence of the effectiveness
of the coaching and Socratic methods at all levels of
education.
It
is these experiences that served as the inspiration
for the combination of the poetic method and Socratic
seminars offered by the Angelicum Academy—to help
and guide homeschooling parents and their children in
the poetic and Socratic aspects of a true education.
Although some homeschooling parents and students must
submit to standardized tests imposed by the state or
are required to submit grades to qualify for diplomas,
they can render what is due to Caesar without abandoning
true educational principles. Homeschooling parents can
and should look for opportunities every day to engage
their children on a Socratic level, and to use this
and other means to probe their understanding.
The
Way We Teach and Test Our Children Determines What and
How We Teach Them
As we educate
our children, we must keep Dr. Adler’s warning
foremost in our minds: the way we test or examine our
children, determines what and how we teach them. If
we want our children to be moral and intelligent citizens,
we must act as cooperative teachers that cause our children
to discover the delight and wonder of lifelong learning. |