16 March, 1923 THE WESTERN AMERICAN than to recall those words of the first great philosopher and prophet of the elementary school, Comenius. His me­ thod of solving the problem of correla­ tion was very different from any of the logical, psychological, or pedagogical methods proposed by the Committee, but, when interpreted broadly, very like the principle of correlation in Plato and Aristotle, Milton and Ascham, Arnold and Horace Mann. All studies and me­ thods and discipline were, he maintained, to teach the child “to know and rule himself, and to direct his steps toward God.”2 Such is the only true correla­ tion of studies, and only under such a conception can character receive its due. The more specialized and less widely- known repoits will, in genera), manifest the same emphasis; the discussion of History in the Report of the Committee of Eight may be cited as a striking example, inasmuch as it deals with the one subject in the whole curriculum that is richest in ethical matter and most fruitful in possible moral education. Compare, if you will, the attitude of Montaigne, of Milton, and of Dr. Arn­ old, regarding the teaching and use of History, with that embodied or implied in this modern report. The prevailing neglect of the moral element is shown no less strikingly by a comparison of modern text-books with those of the past. I have in my pos­ session one of the most widely-used Readers of the early part of the nine­ teenth century in America, Murray’s English Reader. We might well tran­ scribe the table of contents entire, for almost every title shows the contrast between this Reader of the days of our grandfathers and the Readers of today. Out of the eighty-four prose selections in the first part of the volume, fifty-four are distinctly and avowedly moral; eighteen others are religious; of the re­ maining twelve all, with scarcely an ex­ ception, have a moral or religious mo­ tive. The poetical selections have the same strongly ethical character. Now, let the reader take in hand a typical modem Reader, or inspect the list of classics prescribed for high schools. The contrast with the old Mur­ ray will be striking. The distinctly and avowedly ethical and religious is con­ spicuous by its absence. The great ma­ jority of the selections are non-moral: narratives to entertain or amuse, his­ torical matter to inform and instruct, essays to whet the wit and cultivate the literary taste (would that they actually did!), and a good admixture of the hu­ morous, or even ludicrous. Of course, Murray’s Reader of 1835 is not a good text-book for our schools to­ day. The complete absence of the humor­ ous from its pages would alone suffice to condemn it, and its whole tone is painfully pietistic and goody-goody. But it is imbued from beginning to end with a profound and ever active desire to train the moral natures of the pupils; that purpose is always in the focus of 2 Se nosse et regere, et ad Deum dirigere. attention and never takes a second place. Truly, “we have changed all that,” but with the error of the old letter, may we not have cast away some of the excel­ lence of the old spirit? In our dread of the goody-goody, may we not have shut the door on that all-surpassing end of education, the Good? Let us consider one more manifesta­ tion of the lapse of attention to moral education, found in another part of the educational field, the college • and the university. Whither has the old-time college chapel vanished? Within the memory of many of us who are not yet old, it was the custom in American colleges not ex­ cepting state institutions, for students and. faculty to meet regularly and fre­ quently for a religious and moral exer­ cise. The ears of the youth were at least accustomed to the words of Holy Writ and the voice of prayer and the serious counsel and admonition of their elders. We have heard not a few who passed through college in those days de­ clare that no part of the college train­ ing was more 'beneficent in its influence than the chapel. How have the times changed in all save a constantly diminishing and apolo- ¿iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiim CLASSIFIED I | Professions—Business ___________________________________________________________ |_________ ATTORNEYS_________ f | | I f | NELS JACOBSON 806 N. W. Bank Bldg. Main 4416 i DAVID E. LOFGREN 1030 Ch. of Com. Bldg. 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