The Battle for Understanding

Released on: September 14, 2008, 8:13 pm

Press Release Author: Carlynn McCormick/Applied Scholastics Academy San Diego

Industry: Education

Press Release Summary: Memorization as a system of education does not teach children
to think. Providing children with the power of choice in their education can make a
world of difference to motivation and judgment.


Press Release Body: Too often, in education, the student is relegated to the status
of a data-processing machine. Day after day he sits at his desk taking in more and
more information from the pages of his textbook, or from his teacher’s tongue. He
is expected to memorize formulas, historic dates and happenings, etc., etc. Under
such a system, the quicker the student absorbs the information and the more
accurately he repeats it back on a test paper, the better grade he gets, and the
more educated he is supposed to be.


While we may end up with a student who can recite rhyme and verse from his
literature books, recite the name of every General who ever fought a war, recite his
multiplication tables flawlessly, you can hardly call him educated if he stares at
you blankly when you ask him why he has learned all this information. The truth of
the matter is, if the student cannot evaluate the information he learns, cannot
think with it, cannot use it in some aspect of his life, it really doesn’t do him
much good.


The trick then is to give the child power of choice over the information we are
trying to teach him. He should be free to reject it if he sees no worth in it, he
should be allowed to set it aside if he has nothing with which to align it, or he
should be encouraged to embrace it if he sees its purpose and does have a use for
it.

A student may want to study computers, for example, so he can design his own web
page. He may be interested in learning perspective and geometry so he can draw more
realistic illustrations. Or he may delve into the stories of history to extract
answers on how to adjust the environment to fit his needs.

When a student finds reasons to study that make sense to him, he is in the driver’s
seat, able to steer his own education. If he wishes to know something verbatim,
because it is of value to him, he will learn it quite easily. If he investigates
those phenomena he finds most curious, or those that strike his fancy, study will
tend to be synonymous with pleasure.

From the writings of educator and humanitarian L. Ron Hubbard comes the following
sage advice, “Stress the right of the individual to select only what he desires to
know, to use any knowledge as he wishes, that he himself owns what he has learned.”

Indeed, the greatest educational experience a student can receive is to be given
control over his own studies. Such an approach has no use for mountains of facts or
mindless memorization for it ascends into the realm of understanding.

It is that road traveled by such individuals as Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin Franklin,
Thomas Edison, Einstein, Mother Teresa, Martin Luther King, Jr. and other geniuses
who have brought inspiration to mankind. But most importantly, a self-determined
education invites the student to walk the only path capable of giving him the means
of reaching his full potential.

Applied Scholastics Academy San Diego, is a tutoring center and private school in
the La Jolla area. For more information, call 1-858-454-1972 or go to
www.LearnSanDiego.org.

Carlynn McCormick, freelance writer and textbook author, is an educational
consultant for Applied Scholastics Academy San Diego.


Web Site: http://www.LearnSanDiego.org

Contact Details: Ian Lyons
Applied Scholastics Academy San Diego
7527 Cuvier Street
La Jolla, CA 92037
858 454 1972
info@LearnSanDiego.org

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