Posted in Quote Contemplations
"Education is what remains
when we have forgotten all
that we have been taught."
~ Marquis of Halifax
How true this is... it reminded me of my public school experience.
I spent almost all of my youth in public school,
being 'taught' many things for many years.
And I am constantly reminded of how little I still recall.
Very little remains of what I was taught.
I spent all of those years reading, memorizing, researching, and working
for the mere goal of completing assignments
to procede to the next grade.
Yet I hardly took any knowledge with me that didn't soon fade.
Now many years out of school
and spending seven years of home educating my children,
I've come to the conclusion that most of my years
in public school were spent in educational vain.
I learned so much more through home educating my children
in one year than I did in all my years of public school...
So I suppose according to the quote
that my education was at a minimum from public school...
most of what I did retain, I taught myself.
I have spoken with many other people
that hardly remember much at all from public school.... hmmmm....
would I be too bold to say that public school education is an oxymoron?
The two hardly coinside... at least, that is in my case.
I praise the Lord that I have
so many teachable moments as we home educate.
Home educate... not home school....
I am educating my children for life...
not simply to pass on to the next 'grade'.
But to fuel in them a love for learning and self-education.
I praise Him that we have the freedom to step up
to our God-given responsibility, to train and bring up our children.
My prayer is that I will do all He has enabled me to do.
I just wanted to share the definition of education
from Noah Webster's 1828 American Dictionary
of the English Language:
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~ Education -
"The bringing up, as of a child; instruction; formation of manners.
Education comprehends all that series of instruction and discipline
which is intended to enlighten the understanding, correct the temper,
and form the manners and habits of youth,
and fit them for usefulness in their future stations.
To give children a good education in manners, arts and science,
is important;
to give them a religious education is indispensable;
and an immense responsibility rests
on parents and guardians who neglect these duties."
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Wow, I think that's a pretty sober and charging definition.
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