“What is Education?”
I sat in the Foundations
of Education course (2250) and looked at the board. At first, I thought the question easy. My classmate, Mariasol, echoed my thoughts
when she succinctly stated, “Education is the transfer of knowledge from one
person to another.” However, the more I
heard the discussions of my classmates and the more I thought about it, I found
the definition of education elusive. For
every thought, two more began to formulate in my mind, changing the facet of my
view, as a diamond turned in light.
The simple definition
of education began to broaden in my mind as my classmate, Sun Ray, mentioned
the concept of education for the purpose of the “greater good.” My limited
view immediately placed us in the American society, guided by laws and Judeo-Christian
morals. Yet, whose greater good do we
need to consider in defining education? Society’s? The individual’s? Then, Mr. Chenven added a new facet to the concept
of the “greater good” by mentioning societies beyond the one in which we live. Education for “the greater good” may vary
from society to society and from individual to individual, just as the view of
a diamond changes when looking at it from various angles and in varying degrees
of light.
Does this mean I need to set parameters around my definition
of education? Perhaps one parameter is the
setting in which the education occurs, such as a school, church or family. Will the definition of education change based
on the setting, just as the look of a diamond changes when set in silver or
when set on a backdrop of black velvet ?
Already, I sense an area that I
need to explore: To set parameters in my
definition of education or not.
Another thought for defining education came from a classmate whose name I
cannot remember. (I do, however,
remember one of his truthful statements about himself, which was he has water
molecules tattooed on his body, so I shall refer to him as “H2O Man” until I find out his real name). “H2O Man” brought up the thought
that an education must be valued by those being taught. That brought several questions to my
mind: Must a student value what he or
she is learning to qualify as an education?
Must he or she even want to receive the information? And, on the opposite side, must the educator
value what he or she teaches? These questions turn the diamond that is education a bit more, so we can see more facets.
If “Education” is simply the transfer of knowledge from one
person to another,” then can I safely assume that the educator has the
knowledge (in either content or skill) and has the means of effectively
conveying that knowledge such that the student receives it and, perhaps, even
retains it and utilizes it? I may start
here in formulating a definition of education.
As I continue to phlog (philosophically blog), I must move from the
simple to the complex, from definition to philosophy.
As I ponder the meaning of education, I realize it will take
far more than 8 weeks of phlogging and a completed philosophy of education paper
to capture every aspect. My current view of education is a diamond in
the rough. It may take a lifetime of cleaning,
cutting, polishing and turning the diamond in the light to see what I can
discover as I develop my philosophy of education.
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