The Meaning of Adult Education - E.C. Lindeman PDF
The Meaning of Adult Education - E.C. Lindeman PDF
The Meaning of Adult Education - E.C. Lindeman PDF
EDUCATION
E. C. Lindeman
-Published on demand by
UNIVERSITY MICROFILMS
University Microfilms Limited, High Wycomb, England
A Xerox Company, Ann A; bor, Michigan, U.S.A.
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5215
L5
1926a
* * *
Mis is an authorized facsimile of the original book, and was
oduced in 1970 by microfilm-xerography by University
icrofilms, A Xerox Company, Ann Arbor, Michigan, U.S.A.
* * *
The Meaning
of ADULT
EDUCATION
-*! v*J
\W
by Eduard C.
Lindeman
Author The Community,
of:
Social Discovery
NEW YORK
NEW REPUBLIC, INC
1926
I
llCiSl
THIS is one of the scries of the New Republic'*
DOLLAR BOOKS. Other titles are given below.
All bound in soft covers and cost $1.00 post-paid.
m*^ ;. .
THE MEANING OF
ADULT EDUCATION
l
Copyright, 1926, by
NEW REPUBLIC, INC
[ix]
FOREWORD
FOREWORD
"Each of us," wrote Anatole France, "must
even be allowed to possess two or three philos-
ophies at the same time," for the purpose, I
[xui]
FOREWORD
[xiv]
FOREWORD
[xv]
FOREWORD
[xvi]
FOREWORD
[xvii]
FOREWORD
[xviii]
FOREWORD
meaning.
I have therefore chosen the theme: The
Meaning of Adult Education. The topic is,
[xix]
FOREWORD
"Greystone"
High Bridge,
New Jersey.
August, 1926.
M
FOR THOSE WHO NEED TO BE
LEARNERS
"We need, then, to reintegrate, to synthesize, to
bind up together the different forces and influences
in our national life. We need a greater courage : seri-
[3]
ADULT EDUCATION
[4]
THOSE WHO NEED TO BE LEARNERS
[5]
ADULT EDUCATION
[6]
THOSE WHO NEED TO BE LEARNERS
of learning.
[7]
ADULT EDUCATION
[8]
THOSE WHO NEED TO BE LEARNERS
[9]
ADULT EDUCATION
[10]
THOSE WHO NEED TO BE LEARNERS
life's meaning.
But where does one search for life's meaning?
If adult education is not to fall into the pitfalls
which have vulgarized public education, caution
in]
ADULT EDUCATION
[12]
THOSE WHO NEED TO BE LEARNERS
[13]
ADULT EDUCATION
[hi
n
TO THOSE WHO HAVE FAITH IN
INTELLIGENCE
"Thinking cannot be the function of an exclusive
caste, still less a function which can be inherited. . .
F. G. Crookshank.
John Dewey.
TO THOSE WHO HAVE FAITH IN
INTELLIGENCE
Psychologists have not yet told us what
intelligence is nor how it operates. In fact
those psychologists who lay claim to superior
actions.
[17]
ADULT EDUCATION
[18]
FAITH IN INTELLIGENCE
[19]
ADULT EDUCATION
[20]
FAITH IN INTELLIGENCE
[21]
ADULT EDUCATION
[22]
FAITH IN INTELLIGENCE
fact-using.
[231
ADULT EDUCATION
[24]
FAITH IN INTELLIGENCE
meaning.
That the quantity and the quality of intelli-
[26]
FAITH IN INTELLIGENCE
[27]
ADULT EDUCATION
learning.
[28]
m
WITH RESPECT TO THE USE OF
POWER
"We can have power only over ourselves. . . .
stances."
[31]
ADULT EDUCATION
[32]
WITH RESPECT TO USE OF POWER
[33]
ADULT EDUCATION
[34]
WITH RESPECT TO USE OF POWER
[35]
ADULT EDUCATION
[36]
WITH RESPECT TO USE OF POWER
[37]
ADULT EDUCATION
[38]
WITH RESPECT TO USE OF POWER
[39]
ADULT EDUCATION
[40]
WITH RESPECT TO USE OF POWER
group that
: my advantage must mean your dis-
[41]
ADULT EDUCATION
[42]
WITH RESPECT TO USE OF POWER
[43]
ADULT EDUCATION
[44]
IV
Horace Kallbn.
IN VIEW OF THE NEED
FOR SELF-EXPRESSION
Intelligence is consciousness in action-
behavior with a purpose. The person who is
[47]
ADULT EDUCATION
of ends.
In the previous chapter we have dealt with
[48]
THE NEED FOR SELF-EXPRESSION
[49]
ADULT EDUCATION
[5]
ADULT EDUCATION
starved personalities.
[52]
THE NEED FOR SELF-EXPRESSION
[53]
ADULT EDUCATION
[54]
THE NEED FOR SELF-EXPRESSION
[55}
ADULT EDUCATION
[56]
THE NEED FOR SELF-EXPRESSION
[57]
ADULT EDUCATION
[58]
THE NEED FOR SELF-EXPRESSION
[59]
ADULT EDUCATION
something
ity which necessary work could
[60]
THE NEED FOR SELF-EXPRESSION
[61]
FOR THOSE WHO REQUIRE
FREEDOM
". . . and a man is free in whom all capacities for
C. Delisle Burns.
[65]
ADULT EDUCATION
[66]
THOSE WHO REQUIRE FREEDOM
[67]
ADULT EDUCATION
[68]
THOSE WHO REQUIRE FREEDOM
[69]
ADULT EDUCATION
portance to education.
[70]
THOSE WHO REQUIRE FREEDOM
t7i]
ADULT EDUCATION
self-knowledge.
[72]
THOSE WHO REQUIRE FREEDOM
[73]
ADULT EDUCATION
[74]
THOSE WHO REQUIRE FREEDOM
i i
X75]
ADULT EDUCATION
[76]
THOSE WHO REQUIRE FREEDOM
[77]
ADULT EDUCATION
[78]
THOSE WHO REQUIRE FREEDOM
[79]
VI
Up to our means;"
Quoted by Harry Snell.
[83]
ADULT EDUCATION
[8 4 ]
THOSE WHO WOULD CREATE
[85]
ADULT EDUCATION
[86]
THOSE WHO WOULD CREATE
[87]
ADULT EDUCATION
[88]
THOSE WHO WOULD CREATE
[89]
ADULT EDUCATION
lived artistically.
[90]
THOSE WHO WOULD CREATE
adventures.
[91]
ADULT EDUCATION
[92]
THOSE WHO WOULD CREATE
[93]
ADULT EDUCATION
[94]
vn
TO THOSE WHO APPRECIATE
"Annette, who instinctively loved the light, had
sought for it where she could, in those university
studies which in her set were regarded as pretentious.
But the light she had found there had been much
filtered ; it was the light of lecture-rooms and libraries,
ROMAIN ROLLAND.
effort."
John Dewey.
TO THOSE WHO APPRECIATE
The classic tradition in art is one of the
many hurdles which adult learners must jump
before they can participate freely and creatively
in cultural enjoyments. Nothing so effectively
T97]
ADULT EDUCATION
[98]
TO THOSE WHO APPRECIATE
dividual enjoyments.
[99]
ADULT EDUCATION
[101]
ADULT EDUCATION
[102]
TO THOSE WHO APPRECIATE
[103]
ADULT EDUCATION
[104]
TO THOSE WHO APPRECIATE
[105]
ADULT EDUCATION
[106]
TO THOSE WHO APPRECIATE
[107]
ADULT EDUCATION
[108]
TO THOSE WHO APPRECIATE
[109]
ADULT EDUCATION
[no]
TO THOSE WHO APPRECIATE
Tin]
ADULT EDUCATION
[112]
vm
TO AN AGE OF SPECIALISM
''Effective knowledge is professionalized knowledge,
vision. . . .
balanced development."
A. N. Whitehead.
"I take it that what the particularist mainly needs
is a philosophy and general culture which shall en-
able him to see his own point of view in something
TO AN AGE OF SPECIALISM
The evils of specialism have been duly noted
by college presidents, publicists and philoso-
[118]
TO AN AGE OF SPECIALISM
functions.
tii9]
ADULT EDUCATION
[no]
: :
TO AN AGE OF SPECIALISM
appear political.
[121]
ADULT EDUCATION
citizenship, et cetera.
training.
ADULT EDUCATION
[124]
:
TO AN AGE OF SPECIALISM
significant are
[125]
ADULT EDUCATION
[126]
TO AN AGE OF SPECIALISM
[127]
ADULT EDUCATION
[128]
TO AN AGE OF SPECIALISM
[129]
ADULT EDUCATION
[130]
TO AN AGE OF SPECIALISM
,T
Cooky's words, become "particularists," that
[131]
ADULT EDUCATION
[132]
TO AN AGE OF SPECIALISM
[133]
ADULT EDUCATION
[134]
TO AN AGE OF SPECIALISM
sult, for
[135]
ADULT EDUCATION
[136]
TO AN AGE OF SPECIALISM
[137]
ADULT EDUCATION
[138]
TO AN AGE OF SPECIALISM
[139]
ADULT EDUCATION
[140]
TO AN AGE OF SPECIALISM
Ti4]
IX
A. D. Sheffield.
AS DYNAMIC FOR COLLECTIVE
ENTERPRISE
Emphasis has been placed in the foregoing
[145]
ADULT EDUCATION
[i 46]
FOR COLLECTIVE ENTERPRISE
[147]
ADULT EDUCATION
social.
[i 4 8]
FOR COLLECTIVE ENTERPRISE
[H9]
!
ADULT EDUCATION
[150]
!
thought
Modern psychology may be considerably
[151]
ADULT EDUCATION
[152]
FOR COLLECTIVE ENTERPRISE
[153]
ADULT EDUCATION
[154]
FOR COLLECTIVE ENTERPRISE
[155]
ADULT EDUCATION
[156]
FOR COLLECTIVE ENTERPRISE
[157]
ADULT EDUCATION
[158]
FOR COLLECTIVE ENTERPRISE
T159]
ADULT EDUCATION
savagery.
[160]
FOR COLLECTIVE ENTERPRISE
[161]
ADULT EDUCATION
[162]
FOR COLLECTIVE ENTERPRISE
[163]
a
ADULT EDUCATION
is
intelligent less or more with respect to
[164]
FOR COLLECTIVE ENTERPRISE
[165]
ADULT EDUCATION
pose.
[66]
X
IN TERMS OF METHOD
"A method which permits us to determine only cases
of stereotyped activity and leaves us helpless in the
face of changed conditions is not a scientific method
at all, and becomes less and less practically useful
-W. I. Thomas.
C. P. Conger.
IN TERMS OF METHOD
Adult education is a process through which
learners become aware of significant experi-
[169]
ADULT EDUCATION
[170]
;
IN TERMS OF METHOD
Ti7>J
ADULT EDUCATION
[172]
IN TERMS OF METHOD
[173]
ADULT EDUCATION
[174]
IN TERMS OF METHOD
[175]
ADULT EDUCATION
ments knowledge
: like fish, either grows or dies.
[i 7 6]
a
IN TERMS OF METHOD
[1771
ADULT EDUCATION
ti?8]
IN TERMS OF METHOD
[179]
ADULT EDUCATION
[180]
IN TERMS OF METHOD
[181]
ADULT EDUCATION
[182]
IN TERMS OF METHOD
[183]
;
ADULT EDUCATION
[i8 4 ]
IN TERMS OF METHOD
to our needs.
[is*]
ADULT EDUCATION
[186]
IN TERMS OF METHOD
serious contexts.)
[187)
ADULT EDUCATION
[188]
IN TERMS OF METHOD
[189]
ADULT EDUCATION
*
life." In debates we can win only by exclud-
ing other points of view whereas in discussions
[190]
IN TERMS OF METHOD
[191]
ADULT EDUCATION
ness of verbalism.
[192]
IN TERMS OF METHOD
[193]
ADULT EDUCATION
[194]
IN TERMS OF METHOD
[195]
POSTSCRIPT
POSTSCRIPT
"There are two ways of taking the present world-
wide agitation. We may take it negatively, as an
evidence of disintegration, or positively, as a search
for new meanings."
M. C. Otto.
[199]
ADULT EDUCATION
[200]
POSTSCRIPT
[201]
ADULT EDUCATION
wasted.
[202]
POSTSCRIPT
ing.
Q.
"Does effort become impossible the mo-
ment success is seen to be impossible ?"
A.
"No. But it at once becomes irra-
tional."
[203]
ADULT EDUCATION
Education is life.
[204]
REFERENCES
REFERENCES
[207]
ADULT EDUCATION
Foreword
Chapter I
Chapter III
[208]
REFERENCES
4. Same, p. 279.
5. Nikolai Bukharin, Historical Material*
ism; International Publishers 1925; p. 34.
Chapter IV
Chapter V
[209]
;
ADULT EDUCATION
Chapter VI
Chapter VII
[210]
REFERENCES
Chapter VIII
[211]
ADULT EDUCATION
Chapter IX
Chapter X
31. John Dewey, How We Think; Heath
1910; p. 78.
32. For further details in connection with
discussion methods, see Joining in Public Dis-
cussion by A. D. Sheffield; Foundations of
Method by W. H. Kilpatrick; Macmillan
1925; Conferences, Committees, Conventions
and How to Run Them by E. E. Hunt; Har-
per 1925; The Why and How of Group Dis-
[212]
REFERENCES
Postscript
[213]
INDEX
INDEX
Casts, hereditary, 134
Cause and effect, 132
Activity, 107 Centrality, illusion of, 131
Activities, 162 Chairman, 188
Adjusting process, 135 Character, 54
Adjustment, 68 Child, 50
Adjustments, 135, 146, 147, Children, 172
156, 199 Choice, 48
JEschylus, 43 Citizen, 56, 126, 128, 156
Americans, 51 Citizenship, 127, 128
American art, 102 Class, 151
Amusements, 124 Class-consciousness, 151
Applied science, XX9 Classic tradition, 97
Art, 106, 112 Classicism, 102
Art-collecting, 87 Coercion, 161
Art impulses, 112 Collective ideas, IOI
Artistic experience, 109 Collectivism, 151, 152, 159
Artists, 92 Collectivity, 148
Art spirit, no College, 76
Aspirations, 85
College presidents, 118
Association, 156
Commissions, 125
Attitudes, 162
Communication, 139, 140,
148
B
Communities, 53
Bacon, Francis, 31, 32, 43 Community, 50, 154
Beauty, 88, 106, 107 Community process, 93
Behavior, 138 Compensation, psychic, 124
Bosses, 125 Conduct, 18
Brandes, Georg, 109 Conference, 191
British Parliament, 120 Conflict, 71, 146, 159, 163,
Bukharin, N., 34 Conflict, creative, 153
Burns, CDelisle, 154 Congress, 121
Conversation, 138, 185
Cooley, Charles H., 131
Cortex, 69
Capitalism, j6 Creative discussion, 193
Capitalist, 22t 36 Creative mood, 90, 93
[217]
INDEX
Fact-finding, 23
Facts, 20, 21, 170
Economics, 74 Fact-using, 23
Educational Opportunities, Fantasies, 73, 93
28 Farmer, 150
Egotist, 77 Feelings, 100, 106
Eighth Grade, 27 Fellowship, Dynamic, 201
[218]
INDEX
H
Habits, 25, 187 James, William, 52
Habit Systems, 51
Happiness, 74 K
Heredity, 74
Higher Life, 100 Knowledgment, 20
High School, 27 Knowledge, 31
[219]
INDEX
Nationalism, 36
Need, 149
Nietzsche, 77 Reason, 18
Recreation, 58-124
Relation, 78, 155
Religionists, 161
Objectivity, 158 Renaissance, 118
Oculist, 135 Response, 23, 155
[220]
INDEX
Scholasticism, 118
Schools, 50 Tariff Commission, 126
Science, 31-32, 105, 118, 152 Taste, 97
Scientific Method, 34 Teachers, 12, 107-108, 159,
Scientific Subjects, 35 194
Scientists, 117 Technicians, 125
Self, 49, 79 Technique, Collective, 159
Self-expression, 57, 83, 84, Technologies, 40
148 Technologists, 126
Self -improvement, 164 Textbook, 194
Self-knowledge, 72 Theory, Social, 148
Sensibility, 112 Thinkers, 133
Sentimentality, 160 Thinking, 104, 152
Sentiments, 104 Thinking, orderly, 192
Singer, Edgar A., 32 Thought, 18
Situations, 8, 180-181-182 Trade Unionism, 123-124
Situations, Approach, 9, 193 Trade Union, 38
Situation-as-a-whole, 183 Trade Unionists, 91, 156
Skill, 19 Traditions, 42
Social Control, 92, 139 Twain, Mark, 186
Social Order, 14
Socrates, 43 U
Society, 66, 159
Specialism, 49, 109-110, 117 Unamuno, Miguel, 19
Specialists, Medical, 132 Undergraduate Study, 122
Stimulus, 23, 67, 68, 155 United States, 76, 121, 140
State, 120 Universities, 118
Structure, Social, 153 Utopias, 72, 130
Struggle, 145-146
Struggle Technique, 38
Subjects, 173, 176
Subject, approach, 177 Valuations, 171
Subject matter, 9 Values, 22, 158
[221]
INDEX
W
Wateau, 71 Yeaxlee, Basil M. 11
Western Civilization, 33 Youth, 42, 92
Whitehead, A. N., 106 Youths, 85
[222]
,-.
LC5215.L5 1926a
3 9358 00290182 2
290182