Pondhaven

Aug. 14, 2006

TWEM: Chapter 1

The Great Books Reading Partnership is now proceeding through Susan Wise Bauer's The Well-Educated Mind. See http://www.homeschoolblogger.com/ClassicalMamma to find out more or to join.

I started with the Partnership when they were reading Adler's How to Read a Book. Preparing for our U.S. road trip, the trip itself, family life, and other less noble distractions prevented me from completing that study. I hope to finish it someday. However, when I returned from the trip, I found them just beginning TWEM. So I'm now joining them for that read.

The Well-Educated Mind
Chapter 1
"Training Your Own Mind: The Classical Education You Never Had"

As I am late posting, and as other members have already left great notes on this chapter, I'll try to hit some different thoughts.

Bauer opens with a quote from William Dean Howells that says, in part, "All civilization comes through literature now, especially in our country...." No one challenged this, perhaps because as a group we are all focused on reading, or perhaps because we are still buying the school-taught notion of not questioning the teacher.

I understand the intent of the quote, and it is an appropriate introduction to Bauer's text. I agree with it in principle. However, there is far more to civilization than just the printed word. Although "literature" can mean more than just written material, that does seem to be the intended connotation here.

In this exerpt, Howells does not define "civilization." I assume it to mean  all that lifts us up and unites us as people--past, present, and future. Or something lofty like that. This would include noble expressions of human thought and creativity. I would simply say "culture" if that word had not come to include a somewhat less noble connotation.

Other sources of "civilization" include: Internet, documentaries,
travel, live theatre and concerts, museums, observation, and conversation, to name a few. Some may argue that attending a performance of Shakespeare is not a very full experience unless you know the history behind it and are familiar with the language. But only reading the play in a book is a flat view. It is best to both read to prepare and then actually experience.

Granted, no one can actually travel to see everything that is worthwhile to see. But it is important to add to reading seeing live what you can, and seeing the rest through someone's sound or video recording.

That said, my other thought during the opening quote is right out of popular culture. I pictured Dr. McCoy giving Captain Kirk an ancient pair of wire-rim specs
(I think that was how it happened?), so he could more easily read his antiquated printed books.

Bauer's discussion of graduate school versus self-education hit home--I read it shortly after doing some research on scholarships for grad school. I arrived at a list of pro's and con's of self-education.

Pro's:
You can study what you want to, not what the professor decides.

You can study it for as long as you want to before moving on--no artificial syllabus to follow (Unless you are a member of the GBRP ~G~).

You don't have to divide your time for intense study between  several subjects at once.

It's cheaper--free at the library, low cost at used stores and garage sales, and
even if you have to buy new it is still far less expensive than a university.

Con's (Well, not con's exactly. Rather, reasons to still get a formal education in addition to self-education):

It's difficult to become a doctor without formal education. Or a lawyer, or a CPA, or.... Reality is that for some callings you have to jump through the hoops to get--and keep--the certification.

Some areas of interest become prohibitively expensive to pursue on your own. You may have to go through a university to get your hands on that huge telescope, awesome laboratory set up, etc.

Finding a group of like-minded people to discuss things with may be easier in a scholastic setting. GBRP is a wonderful outlet, but even a chatroom gathering isn't the same as sitting down and discussing face to face.

Page 18: "Secondary schools don't typically train us how to read seriously, how to study."

This was certainly true for me. Although I attended what were supposedly challenging classes in high school and college, I don't think I ever deeply studied a piece of literature. I do recall the discomfort I felt at marking up a book. I was taught young to mark my Bible, but was also taught young that in all other regards we don't write in books. I remember a beloved college English prof. who shared how she was always thrilled to get a book that someone else had read and notated. She enjoyed the mental conversation with that person as she read the text, read their notes, and responded to both with notes of her own.

My daughter, now a senior at the local public high school (that decision is another story for another time), has had quite another experience. She has been taking honors and IB courses. Here junior English class really tore into what they were reading. They did close reads on selected poems and passages from longer works. Tests included evaluations of literary selections. Part of her grade was based on how she marked up the books they were reading. It was a very good experience, and she is well on her way to learning to read.

"...not every book is worthy of serious attention. (p. 18)"

This is a relief. I sometimes feel irritated with myself about how fast I race through historical fiction; I must be missing so much, but the story propels me on! But it's okay to only taste some books. However, even then, some deeper process takes place over time as I find myself remembering and reprocessing sections of the story, seeking out plot holes, etc.

"...[T]he habit of leaping directly to the rhetoric stage can prevent even mature minds from learning how to read properly...Like badly taught six-year-olds, we are too quick to go straight to opinion making without the itermediate steps of understanding and evaluation. (p. 19)"

Guilty! It is much easier to read or listen lightly, then go on to form and express opinions. It is much harder to put off forming those opinions until all the information is in, pondered, chewed, looked at from different angles, and then finally conciously decided before being expressed.

Isaac Watts: "Engage not the mind in the pursuit of too many things at once.... (p. 20)"

This one I find difficult. On the one hand, I dream of a brief time of retreat; time to read, rest, think, and ponder, without all the distractions of daily life. On the other hand, I find there is a need inside of me to do a variety of things with intensity, always seeming to believe I could handle just one more thing.

Life should be found somewhere in the middle. It isn't practical to think a mother could--or should-- truly only engage her mind in one thing. Although it doesn't take deep thought to change a diaper, do a load of laundry, or put a bandaid on a knee, it does take deep thought to deal with grief, to help a child through a difficult friendship, plan and implement the education of multiple children, and fulfill whatever one's calling may be in setting the example of service to church and community. However, it is wise to prayerfully consider the load, include Bible study and subject study, and determine what the priorities of the time period should be.

When to read?

This has always been a quandry for me. Morning seems reasonable, yet I am a night person. But even then, there seems to be no consistency. At the time of my life where I find myself now, often at the mercy of my husband's changeable work schedule and with the increasing demands of outside activities as my children near adulthood, regular hours of sleep and study seem nearly impossible.

Yet, reading isn't really the problem. I'm an avid reader and nearly always carry something around with me to read. For me, the harder part is finding time to write around daily life and inevitable interruptions. For instance, I started this narrative 10 days ago, thinking I would just jot a few quick notes and move on to the next chapter. Oh well! At this point, I still hope to read in the morning, or maybe I'll read chapter two tonight, then try to write again in the morning. Either way, first I have to go save the porch furniture from the wind!

*******

Dear Lord,

Thank You for the opportunity to delve deeper. Help me to redeem my time in a way that is pleasing to You, ordering my days to rightly care for my family, studying Your Word, and still making space to continue educating myself. Thank You that You created me with a hunger to learn. I desire to pursue that hunger in ways that bring You glory.

Amen
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This is a haven to share my experiences, thoughts, and prayers. I enjoy working out my ideas, and appreciate anyone who comes along for the read. I gratefully acknowledge that, although no one else may ever notice, I will always have an audience of One.

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