The Nechoma Greisman Anthology
Section 3: EDUCATING CHILDREN When Mashiach comes, speedily in our days, we will point proudly to our children and say, "Look at the offspring we have raised."
Is Knowledge Everything?
(On Graduating from Seminary)
Having gone to school for fourteen years, I feel myself entitled to give an opinion
as to a certain contradiction encountered by school goers.
In the beginning, most students are very conscientious about school, doing all
homework assigned, sharpening their pencils every evening, and bringing the required
tzedakah money every morning (the writer, having experienced education only
in a girl's Yeshiva, can only describe students in the female gender). The child
feels, and rightly so, that her whole life revolves around the sacred institution
known as school.
As soon as our little student grows taller and smarter, however, she becomes
aware of several heretofore undiscovered facts. Not all people are gifted with the
same quantity of brainpower. In every class there are "dumb" children and "smart"
children. This unequal distribution of intelligence is evident not only from the
kindergarten to the seminary population, but even in the adult world --
some parents are smarter than others. Then comes the shocker -- "Lo
l'chachomim lechem" -- "The wise do not (always) have bread..." Success
in school does not always lead to success in life! Even more of a shocker for the
child is to slowly discover that knowing a lot doesn't always result in improved
middos, proper use of abilities, nor constructive action. She might even
come to realize that having the most stars on the chart doesn't mean you'll be the
best mommy someday...
Slowly we all learn that "Talmud study is greater, for it leads to action," i.e.
the greatness of learning is when it leads to action. The almost total emphasis
in school on the accumulation of facts, while minimizing other aspects which would
seem to outweigh learning in their value for future life and character development
is, in my eyes, neglecting the main objective. Schools stress the acquisition of
book-learning, yet in the future, it is usually the hashkafos (attitudes)
and middos (character traits) which have a direct bearing on one's life as
a mother in Israel. (After all, girls' Yeshivas are the foundation for a generation
of Torah-true women, wives, and mothers, not merely child-care and, subsequently,
mind-broadening institutions).
I believe that teachers must make a strong effort to ensure that every subject
taught is relevant and enjoyable. It is well known that a person retains much more
of what she learned if she enjoyed learning it. Can teachers begin to realize that
when standing in front of a class, they should not aim merely to pump facts (even
explanations and interpretations) into students' minds, but rather to use the subject
being studied as a vehicle to mold good personalities? Every student must learn,
but the teacher must also provide guidelines along the road of life to all students,
regardless of ability or personality.
I guess I can say, in short, that to solve this problem, our Yeshivas need dedicated,
creative teachers who care about each person they teach, and who strive to bring
learning from theory and potential into actual practice.
I hope Hashem will give my classmates and myself the strength and merit to pass
along to our future students, that which our teachers gave us. |