Jón Bjarnason Academy - 01.05.1935, Side 23

Jón Bjarnason Academy - 01.05.1935, Side 23
There is an ultimate reason for both the main and these minor activities. Acquiring the ability to think in French as one masters the art of speaking, reading or writing, without having to revert to the translation method represents mental power added, a proper attitude toward study formed, a new interest mastered, and personality strengthened. Turn briefly to history and civics. During adolescence one is becoming aware of his relation to and responsibility in the home, the school and the community. It is a period when social iiiterests and a sense of responsibility may he and should be acquired. The secondary school, be it private or public, must accept responsibility for shaping the social and civic attitudes of those who enter. The value of history and civics in the secondary school curriculum lies not in acquiring factual in- formation but rather in utilizing such material in order that the individual may come to understand the forces underlying social progress and the meaning of worthy social institutions. The learning product is a new attitude towards one’s fellows and a greater sense of responsibility for social and civic affairs. The learning comes by way of organizing facts and seeing them in their proper relations. The process of learning is reflective thinking. Facts may fade but social and civic attitudes remain the one real gain from good instruction and guided reading. Across the ages man has sought happiness and peace of soul in the good, the beautiful and the true; in the simple recognition of worth as expressed in the plastic and pictorial arts, in music, in the great literatures and in religion. From contact with these cultural treasures of his past and present one feels the grandeur and in silent contemplation idealizes the unseen powers that ultimately shape moral standards and laws governing human relations. Learning comes through fre- quent contact with these models of human achievement which create tastes and attitudes in turn accompanied hv an emotional coloring that reacts upon behavior and conduct. The parent of ancient Athens, recognizing the importance of such training during adolescence, accompanied his son to the temple, the theatre and among the art treasures that lined the streets so that the boy might have a rich experience of values, which could scarcely be acquired otherwise. Just taking leave of frontier conditions, we in Western Canada have not understood the significance for adolescent education of much which for us lies waiting within the field of the appreciation studies. Apart from religion and to some extent music, we have scarcely gone beyond impressions, nor can we until the understanding of its educational worth in shaping ideals and the power to pass along the message have in a much larger measure become the possession of the secondary school instructor. The process of learning is by contact and casual instruction, the learning product a new and acquired sense of values. The reaction may 21

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