|
Publications “Curriculum, Pedagogy, and Teacherly Ethos,” Pedagogy: Critical Approaches to Teaching Literature, Language, Composition, and Culture I.1 (Winter 2001): 69-89. Curriculum versus Pedagogy All teachers need to remember that exposing students to a well thought-out curriculum is not the same thing as educating them, if educating them means, as I think it does, helping them learn how to integrate the contents of the curriculum into their minds, hearts, and everyday lives. Much of the time, academic considerations of education bracket off to the side the all important fact that teaching not only influences but often determines what students make of the curriculum. A good illustration of my point is offered by Martha Nussbaum's fine book on liberal education, Cultivating Humanity (1997). While I agree with Nussbaum's argument about the value of integrating new foci of liberal arts education with the old foci, it is interesting that the whole book is argued in terms of curricular content. Teaching and pedagogy do not appear in the index, and the chapter titles—“Narrative Imagination,” “Study of Non-Western Cultures,” “African-American Studies,” “Women's Studies,” “Human Sexuality,” and so on—reveal clearly the emphasis on curriculum rather than pedagogy. It is important for teachers to remember that great texts, fine art, and liberating topics are not automatically or transparently great, fine, and liberating to most students. (In all honesty, this goes for most teachers as well.) Just like our students now, most of our own interests when we were students were not fired merely by coming into the presence of great art or great books or lofty topics. More likely than not, our interests were fired by the example of a teacher who seemed filled, somehow, with a special kind of life because of his or her love of a particular subject or discipline. As I look back, I realize that one commonality shared by all my favorite teachers is the way they seemed filled and animated by presences-by Jane Austen's power of language, by Kant’s depth of thought, by Wollstonecraft’s powerful arguments about the education of women, by the spirit of Bach’s music, by whatever. In addition, I found that the larger life these presences gave my teachers was in itself compelling to me. I was drawn to this larger life the way iron filings are drawn to a magnet. Once there, I found myself delightfully attracted, pleasurably bonded. In his most recent book, The Courage to Teach, Parker Palmer (1998: 21) says that “the power of our mentors . . . is in their capacity to awaken a truth within us, a truth we can reclaim years later by recalling their impact on our lives.” This special power of teachers to infect others with the virus of their own passion for learning often gives teachers more power than they either realize or want. As Wayne Booth (1988: 298) says in The Vocation of a Teacher, “Anyone who embraces teaching as a vocation takes on considerable power with that embrace. . . . When college teachers are fully successful, they are successful beyond any of their conscious intentions about particular subjects: they make converts, they make souls that have been turned around to face a given way of being and moving in the world.” Although everyone pays lip service to the value of “good teaching,” few teachers (Booth is an obvious and well-known exception) take time to think deeply about this power, about the special opportunities it offers or the special responsibilities it imposes, but I think our avoidance has less to do with time than with the fact that we are not sure what to do with this power. We are not sure how best to employ it, and we naturally shrink from fully facing the damage we might do if we fail to use it responsibly. So we think about curriculum instead. Indeed, we think so hard and exclusively about curriculum that we sometimes forget the obvious fact that curriculum seldom shapes anyone on its own but shapes us, instead, as a consequence of how we are directed, informed, and led inside that curriculum by a teacher. An exaggerated and misguided belief in the automatic influence of great books and great art (evaluated apart from teaching) often lies at the heart of the confused and highly controversial accusations against liberal education made by thinkers such as George Steiner, who seem never to tire of pointing out that the liberal education received by many of Europe’s political leaders in the early part of the twentieth century did nothing to prevent the Holocaust or the spread of fascism across Europe in the middle years of the century. The traditional belief going back at least to the Renaissance was that a classical curriculum automatically turned students into morally refined and sensitive persons. When that turned out not to be the case, the backlash against the imputed moral benefits of the classical liberal arts curriculum turned out to be strong and enduring.
The presumption behind this and many similar accusations is that the content of education counts for everything or for nothing. What is never considered in such accusations-and insofar as I know, “never” is not an exaggeration is the relationship between content and pedagogy. I am not claiming that good pedagogy would have made all the difference, that the Holocaust and the spread of fascism would never have occurred if teachers had only done a better job, but I do find it curious that the alleged failure of the classical curriculum is never analyzed within the context of the pedagogy of the day, a pedagogy which in fact presumed that curriculum is all, that texts teach themselves, and that the curriculum would automatically impose its benefits on students. For centuries the pedagogy of the classical curriculum was a dry and sterile pedagogy of grammar instruction, not a pedagogy of ideas, values, critical thinking, historical perspective, moral deliberation, argumentation, or logical reasoning. What students did with the classical curriculum they were "learning" was in fact not to learn it at all but merely to translate it-a given number of lines a day-and what they were judged on was not their thoughts about it, or their criticism of it, or their ability to connect its content with their own social, political, or private lives, but merely the technical (grammatical) accuracy of their translation. End of pedagogical story. Writing near the end of the nineteenth century, Thomas Henry Huxley (1938)gives a vivid portrait of the kind of pedagogy I am here describing. He asks, "What is to be said of classical teaching at its worst, or in other words, of the classics of our ordinary middle-class schools?" And he goes on to answer his own question, rather bitterly:
Clearly, the failure of the classical curriculum in England and Europe, a failure that has so exercised such people as Steiner, may perhaps be as well described, or perhaps better described, as a failure of pedagogy. In light of a pedagogy that stonewalled real student learning, that allowed students to avoid ever confronting what they were learning with what they believed about the world or how they conducted themselves in it, then of course it follows that such learning, which was learning in name only, would have no effect on the tremendous pressures in culture that pushed for social intolerance and, ultimately, ethnic genocide. The only possible response to such accusations as Steiner’s and others' is that of course the classical curriculum failed to deflect such overriding influences on social life in Europe as nationalistic arrogance, centuries of anti-Semitism, territorial greed, racist bigotry, the injustice of World War I political settlements, and so on. Anyone who ever thought that translating a requisite number of lines of the Aeneid every day as a purely grammatical exercise would automatically produce citizens of superior sensitivity and morality was surely not thinking but merely repeating delusory bromides. We can learn at least two things from the “failure” of the classical curriculum. First, we can learn that to expect any educational curriculum or system to make human beings morally virtuous in itself will always be an expectation absurdly and naively too high. Cardinal Newman (1852: 145), a realist in such matters, expresses the needed insight here with intellectual depth and poetic grace. “Quarry the granite rock with razors, or moor the vessel with a thread of silk,” he says, “then you may hope with such keen and delicate instruments as human knowledge and human reason to contend against those giants, the passion and the pride of man.” Even non-Christians can easily see that Newman’s location of the causes of moral failure in passion and pride is less naive, more searching, than the anguished anger of those who expected that, somehow, the classical liberal education of their youth in the first decades of the century should have “saved” Europe from war and genocide in the thirties and forties. The second thing we can learn is that the effects of curriculum should never be considered in isolation from the kind of pedagogy that delivers that curriculum. This does not mean that a particular pedagogy will “save” civilization any more than a particular curriculum, but it does mean that if we want to know how or why a curriculum either works or doesn’t, we have to consider how we teach it, for none of its contents is transparently or automatically predictable. Surely the “failure” of the classical liberal arts curriculum in Europe was also and perhaps even primarily a failure of pedagogy. The potential advantages to heart and mind offered by the curriculum of the classics were effectively masked for most students by a pedagogy that deflected all genuine encounters with the classics in favor of a sterile pedagogy of right or wrong answers about verb irregularities, tenses, declensions, and inflections. The fundamental reason why pedagogy deserves careful thought is that pedagogy is the primary force, the engine, that accomplishes the "leading out" (from Latin educare) that lies as the etymological source of educate and that also describes education's most basic aim. Since at birth all human skills and forms of development are mere potentialities, it follows that we have to go someplace else in the world from where we are at any given rime - we have to be led out, or educated-in order to turn those potentialities into realities. As Bartlett Giamatti (1976: 194) has said, “Teaching is an instinctual art, mindful of potential, craving of realization.” The content of any curriculum, whether a single course or a whole program of study, seldom exerts a sufficient pull on a person's imagination to draw him or her out of the inertia of being a standing body and into the activity that takes mind and heart to new places and new levels of development. What does exert this pull is the sight of another human being who has gone there before us and who brings back the good news: how exciting it is to read Shakespeare’s plays! how transporting to learn about string theory or recursive functions! how uplifting to understand the relation between form and content in a Platonic dialogue or a piano sonata! and so on. In his famous essay, “On a Certain Blindness in Human Beings,” William James (1958: 149) hazards the observation that "our judgments concerning the worth of things, big or little, depend on the feelings the things arouse in us. Where we judge a thing to be precious in consequence of the idea we frame of it, this is only because the idea is itself associated already with a feeling. If we were radically feelingless, and if ideas were the only things our mind could entertain, we should lose all our likes and dislikes at a stroke, and be unable to point to any one situation or experience in life more valuable or significant than any other.” The significance of this keen insight for teaching is this: if it is curriculum that contains and displays the idea, it is teaching that bonds the student’s mind to the idea by creating the feelings that make the importance of the idea a vital force in the life of the student. Teachers are the good-news messengers—the exemplars—who create for curriculum what I call a “context of feeling” that turns curricular content into a burrowing force that gets under our skin, that irritates our natural self satisfaction and by so doing turns it into the kind of dissatisfaction that only real learning can salve. A curriculum in the catalog isn't worth a hill of beans to most students except as a list of requirements, and students are quite right to think that the only real meaning the curriculum possesses for them is its delivery or non-delivery by teachers in their everyday classrooms. In Aristotle’s account of the imitative arts, he makes clear his view that no work of art finds its proper fulfillment, its “final cause,” until it has elicited the appropriate response from an understanding auditor. The fulfillment of teaching follows a parallel course. Teaching finds its final cause when it is taken in by students who understand, who acknowledge its power, and whorespond to it not just with intelligence but with pleasure. This fulfillment is accomplished in the classroom—not in the catalog or on any other piece of paper—or it is accomplished nowhere. Teachers’ Methods, Students’ Criteria The weakness of an excessive reliance on method can be exposed by a single, two-pronged question: what kinds of student development do we want, and what kinds of teaching promote those kinds? Whether we are talking about liberal education or professional education or technical education it is development, after all, that we want from our students, and it is by the extent of students’ development that teachers measure their own success or failure. Not even in the most technical or professional programs of education do we expect to turn out students who have a once-and-for-all doneness about them, like turned table legs or bronze castings. We want to put students on the path of developing powers that they will continue to use—and continue to develop—throughout their lives, and if none of us thinks that students should concentrate on only one form of development, then it follows that no one method will serve all needs. Besides, there is at least one fundamental need that is obscured by a myopic focus on methods: the fundamental need for practice. Practice on the part of the student fosters development more than one method pushed by the teacher. Weight lifters lift heavier and heavier weights; dancers endure countless classes and rehearsals; students read, write, and organize their thoughts over and over. Practice, however, is not just a repetition of sameness. If I repeat a skill I am learning over and over in exactly the same way, it follows that I will repeat the skill at exactly the same level of proficiency. Practice has to be governed not merely by a repetition of sameness but by two mental activities: first, by criticism, the ability to see the imperfections in the performance so far, and, second, by imagination, the ability to visualize the performance or the skill not asit is actually being done now but as it might be done in the future, differently and better, after more practice. The very concept of practice recognizes the inevitability of interim failure. If we did a thing right the first time we would not need to practice it. Real learning is always risky because the possibility of failure is always real. There is always the possibility for the student of being inadequate or simply getting something wrong: the date, the formula, the explanation, the interpretation, the cause, the analysis, or whatever. Some students want teachers to address risk simply by minimizing it, but this is surely unproductive and self-defeating. Progress requires risk. The most productive way of addressing risk, therefore, is not by minimizing it but by supporting it. Helping students to take risks required for progress is an absolutely necessary teaching strategy, and students' sense of being supported sufficiently to take risks depends more on teacher ethos than on any other single variable. Whether we are lifting weights or dancing or learning Middle English, none of us gets it right the first time-and neither do our students-which points up a potential conflict between teacher desires and student needs. While teachers feel pressed to cover more and more material in their discipline, what students need is time to make mistakes, to correct them, to fail and try again-and they need teachers who can help them view each failure as merely interim, as merely a halt in forward progress, not as a terminal judgment on their abilities. Taking this kind of time in class, not to mention establishing the personal relations of trust that make it work, would force many teachers to revise their pedagogy considerably and even, perhaps, to elevate pedagogy above curriculum. Most teachers at present would find it difficult to consider fully the practical reforms that such ideas point to, for these ideas suggest, simply, that we must all, as Gerald Graff (1990)says, worry less about coverage and more about helping students find reasons to become engaged. And one way to foster engagement is to allow practice. Conceptually as well as practically, the notion of practice as a learning tool is not simple, for analogies between students and dancers and weight lifters begin to break down when we consider that learning to be a developed human being involves more skills and more forms of awareness than either dancing or weight lifting. The implications become not only boggling for what we might call “conventional pedagogy,” but highly suggestive for teacherly ethos. A teacherly ethos of seamless and impenetrable authority, for example—an ethos that suggests that the teacher never had to practice in order to learn because he or she first grasped knowledge the way Athena sprang from the head of Zeus, fully formed—presents an immensely different, and potentially forbidding, teacherly ethos to students. On the other hand, a teacherly ethos that suggests that the teacher, like his or her students, not only did practice but still has to practice in order to improve—at writing, at argumentation, at close reading—both models what students need to see in order to learn themselves and shows them how to assume that model on their own. One of the attractions for a concentration on method is that method, like curriculum, can be intellectualized and theorized more easily than teaching, which often has to be done on the wing. But rather than turn all considerations of teaching into considerations of method, teachers could better help their students and themselves if they learned to look at teaching from the student's point of view. Such a view suggests at once that students care little about what method their teachers use but do care immensely about what kinds of persons their teachers are. Without using the word ethos, ethos is nevertheless a primary concern for most students. It may strike many teachers as unpleasant and perhaps even unfair that the most important variable in the chemical mix that produces student learning or student stalling in the classroom is the students' sense of who their teachers are as persons. Some teachers may resist—“What difference does it make what kind of person Iam as long as I really know what I claim to know within my discipline?”—but this question misses the point. What student learners see in front of them as they enter a classroom is not a disembodied skill or a dissociated idea but a person who has mastery over a skill or possession of an idea, and the first thing students respond to is whether the value of the skill or idea is recommended by the manner and the mind—in short, the ethos—of the teacher. Teacherly ethos—who the teacher seems to be asa person—only increases in influence (although that influence may be negative as well as positive) the longer and more deeply the student becomes acquainted with the teacher. If the teacher exhibits an ethos of passion, commitment, deep interest, involvement, honesty, curiosity, excitement, and so on, then what students are moved to imitate is not the skill or the idea directly, but the passion, commitment, excitement, and interest that clearly vivifies the life of the teacher. Everyone—we teachers included—loves imitating an ethos that says, “I love knowing this stuff about opera or calculus or chemistry.” Such enthusiasm justifies our efforts as learners because we, too, want to know things that will make us love our lives more. Then, at that point, and only at that point-when we are moved as students to want what the teacher has and is as a person-do we as students begin to place high value on the skill or the idea that the teacher is trying to teach us. It’s never just for the sake of the skill or idea alone that the learner learns it, but for the sake of the life that is heightened, vivified, intensified, and enriched by means of the skill or idea. The possibility of such added value to learning can never be conveyed by the skill or idea alone, but only by the ethos of the teacher who has already integrated those skills and ideas into his or her life and thus offers us as students, via an appropriately vivid teacherly ethos, an existential invitation to, an existential reason for, learning. Teachers may not like being assessed by students in deeply personal ways—as likable or worthy of respect as human beings—but teachers don't have the option of not being assessed this way, and they don't have to like it in order to concede that such evaluations both always occur and always play a crucial role in student learning. Besides, likability as a student criterion is generally not as simpleminded-and therefore not as deserving of resentment or contempt-as some teachers may fear. In my experience, not even the least thoughtful student reduces a teacher's likability to mere good looks or entertainment skills. To students, evaluations of likability and respect rest primarily on five criteria: their views of the teacher's trustworthiness; their views of the teacher's competence; their views of the teacher's depth of commitment to the importance or value of the skills and ideas being taught; their views of the teacher's dedication not just to teaching as a profession but to students as persons; and their views of the teacher's commitment to fairness. These five criteria are applied to the teacher not as an exemplar of a particular pedagogical method or as the possessor of a particular level of professional expertise but as a human being, as a moral agent. Teachers who show up late, who never quite get the syllabus passed out, or who react defensively to student questions can be said to behave unprofessionally, but this language masks the fact that the problem in such cases is only marginally professional and primarily personal. The issues are trustworthiness and respect, and students begin making judgments not only about trustworthiness and respect but also about competence, commitment, dedication, and fairness from the moment the teacher walks into the classroom on the very first day, long before they are aware that he or she prefers any particular teaching method. Students don’t separate method from ethos, and they are quite right not to do so. To students, we are what we do. Teacherly Ethos: A Friendship Model
Whatever the whys of the disappearance of discourse about friendship, its paucity renders recommendations based on a model of friendship less clear than they would have been a hundred years ago. Yet this model must be rightly understood if it is to assist teachers in thinking about their teaching in deeper and more creative ways, and “rightly understood” means, first, separating the friendship model I am recommending from a friendship model of buddies or other kinds of companions who share a lot of social time and activities together. Most of all, the model of friendship I recommend must be separated from contemporary images of friendship in movies and on television. Friends as contemporary television and movies portray them share mutual interests in entertainment and something universally called a “lifestyle,” and they are supposed to like and support each other- to “be there” (as the buzz phrase goes) is the friend's job—but friends do not offer serious criticism of each other in either intellectual or moral terms. Unlike teachers, friends on TVsitcoms do not judge each other. (This is true despite that fact that TV sitcoms contain a lot of ridicule, but flippant ridicule and deliberative judging are not the same thing.) Being described as a “nonjudgmental kind of person,” on the friendship front, is a big compliment on TV sitcoms. On occasions when serious judgments might be forthcoming, the evaluating friend who is violating the nonjudgmental dictum is typically warned, “Back off, I have a right to make my own decisions,” or “Back off, what gives you the right to judge me?” or “Back off, I have to do what I feel is right, not what you say is right,” and, according to current notions, the moralizing friend has to do just that: back off. Without anyone's having to say so explicitly, this dynamic presumes that intellectual and moral integrity is decided upon solely by the individual agent and that intellectual and moral principlesare pretty much what Alasdair MacIntyre (1981: 11) in After Virtue accuses them of being, that is, “nothing but expressions of preference, expressions of attitude or feeling.” If, on the sitcoms, a friend is definitely nonjudgmental, a friend is also definitely cool. In particular, Iam referring to the attitude of ironic detachment that young people learn primarily from television. David Foster Wallace (1997: 63-64) describes this demeanor with vivid clarity:
Clearly, insofar as Wallace's description of student ethos is accurate, teaching and learning will both be affected. Jane Tompkins’s (1990) famous account of her graduate class at Duke in which personal emotions suddenly erupted illuminates the issue, for the greatest consternation among the participants was not the content of the emotion itself, or even the reasons behind it, but its sheer appearance, its disruption of the “everything's cool” surface of classroom relations. Deborah Chappel (1992: 21), a teacher who was a student in Tompkins’s graduate class, provides an account of the students’ perspective:
Taken together, Wallace’s and Chappel’s comments suggest that teachers who are frustrated by their failure to strike sparks from students may simply not have noticed how generally pervasive the obligatory demeanor of cool has become. In the contemporary context of cool detachment, cynical put-downs, and never letting on that one is naive about anything, friendship is being pressured to reconfigure itself as something that we might well call “the convocation of the cool.” Sometimes teachers attempt to join the convocation of the cool themselves, a tendency especially noticeable in older teachers who persist in holding on to their own but increasingly distant cool from graduate school days. When this tendency takes over, however, responsible pedagogy suffers. As James Banner and Harold Cannon (1997: 113) say, “Teachers should try to become, as teachers, the people they are. . . . Teachers who impersonate themselves at earlier points in their careers invite ridicule.” In a much-discussed essay on liberal education in Harper's magazine, Mark Edmundson (1997) reflects on the views of himself as a teacher offered by his students on course evaluation forms. He is particularly struck by the way his students approve of his cool but also reveal to him a disquieting and flabby kind of friendliness devoid of rigor or sharp edges: I have to admit that I do not much like the image of myself that emerges from these [student evaluation] forms, the image of knowledgeable, humorous detachment and bland tolerance. . . . I'm disturbed by the serene belief that my function—and, more important, Freud’s, or Shakespeare’s, or Blake’s—is to divert, entertain, and interest. Observes one respondent, not at all unrepresentative: “Edmundson has done a fantastic job of presenting this difficult, important & controversial material in an enjoyable and approachable way.” Thanks but no thanks. I don't teach to amuse, to divert, or even, for that matter, to be merely interesting . . . but the affability and the one-liners often seem to be all that land with the students. . . . Why are my students describing the Oedipus complex and the death drive as being interesting and enjoyable to contemplate? And why am I coming across as an urbane, mildly ironic, endlessly affable guide to this intellectual territory, operating without intensity, generous, funny, and loose? (39-40) The Ethos of Befriending versus Being Friendly The befriending model of teaching is not the same thing as merely wishing for others what they wish for themselves. None of us always knows what is best for us, and even when we do, we don't always want it. All of us require, at times, help from our friends, not only to discover what really is good for us but to improve what we desire. Discussing things with friends helps us clear our own heads, but when our friends befriend us rather than give us flabby friendliness, we have to be prepared to receive instruction, criticism, or even reproof. Likewise, when teachers befriend students, we do not merely feel for them, and we certainly do not feel just as they feel. Friendship from a befriending teacher is likely to be challenging, not merely friendly. Befriending is not a touchy-feely, I’m-OK-you're-OK activity, nor does befriending students entail being personally intimate with them, or sharing personal secrets with them, or sharing the same tastes in entertainment and “lifestyle,” or being the same age, and it certainly does not entail uncritical acceptance of their failures or mistakes. Primarily, the kind of teacherly befriending I am talking about entails creating an atmosphere of classroom trust in which the teacher's willingness to call a bad job a bad job is seen by the student as helpful and productive rather than as mean and destructive. Teachers who have earned this kind of trust help create students who are willing to take the risk of real engagement, the risk of failure, and the commitment to practice that constitute the grounds of learning. Once this trust is present, any teaching method can be productive. Teachers whose students know they are befriending them can lecture productively, discuss productively, imitate Socrates productively, or swing from the chandelier productively. Students can best learn the skills of criticism and imagination—especially when it is themselves they need to criticize and the course of their own lives they must imagine—when they have teachers whose critical and imaginative activity they can imitate. No single model or single list will solve all problems of pedagogy, but the following list of ten ethical qualities may provide a useful guide for helping teachers see more clearly the complicated relations among curriculum, pedagogy, and teacherly ethos. Honesty Unpretentiousness Curiosity Humor Tolerance Courage Indignation Passion Charity Love Notice that these features of teacherly ethos completely background those features of teacherly life that usually get foregrounded: professional standing, disciplinary expertise, intellectual ability, and so on. It's not that these are unimportant to good teaching, but they are not sufficient to guarantee it in the absence of the ethical features I have just discussed. Since who we are is a n integral part of what we know and what we do, we need to think about what goes into “who we are” as carefully as we think about what we know and do. Good Teaching-A Definition A good teacher, one who is not merely friendly but befriends, can help students engage in criticism that avoids cynicism and can also help them engage in imaginings that avoid solipsism. The teacher who knows how to befriend students teaches them how to befriend the world: how to work for the humanization of the social order, how to be critical of self without falling into self-loathing, how to be critical of others without being thoughtlessly callous, and how to be compassionate of others without being unduly sentimental. Socrates was a teacher who was neither a banker nor a barnstormer and who was sometimes not even very friendly either to his interlocutors in particular or to Athens in general. Nevertheless, Socrates' vision of what his fellow citizens might become made them uncomfortable with what they were, and in that discomfort-theirs then, ours now-lie the seeds of growth and improvement. Socrates did not say to his interlocutors, “I'm OK, you're OK.” He did not say, “Learning is hard. Let us proceed in risk-free increments.” He said, instead, “I'm ignorant. I know practically nothing. But in knowing my own ignorance I know more than most of you. Let's talk. Let's see how, in sharing good talk, we can together learn more and turn ourselves into better people.” His is perhaps our best, most enduring, and most inspirational model of befriending as good teaching. If students need teachers, and they do, to become the best versions of themselves, teachers need students to become the best versions of themselves as well, and in this reciprocity of mutual assistance all of us, students and teachers alike, may learn, if we are careful, how to tend better through education the fragile relations of personal development, human community, and civilized conduct. Notes 1. See Brinton 1986 for an incisive analysis of the relation between ethos and argument that is highly relevant for teachers. 2. In an essay that is both brief and insightful, novelist Jay Parini (1997: 92) develops an analogy between the teacher's ethos and the writer's voice. 3. Both Robert Audi (1994) and Peter Markie (1990) offer convincing arguments against teacher/student friendships of the buddy, mutually affectionate, and social companion kinds. 4. For more on students’ ethos see my “Many-Headed Hydra” (199711) and “Introductory Courses” (1997a). Works Cited Aristotle. 1952. Rhetoric. Trans. W. Rhys Roberts. In Great Books of the Western World, vol. 9,ed. Robert Maynard Hutchins, 587-685. Chicago: Encyclopedia Britannica. Audi, Robert. 1994. "On the Ethics of Teaching and the Ideals of Learning." Academe(September-October): 27-36. Banner, James M., Jr., and Harold C. Cannon. 1997. The Elements of Teaching.NewHaven, CT.: Yale University Press. Booth, Wayne C. 1980. “’The Way I Loved George Eliot’: Friendship with Books As aNeglected Critical Metaphor.” Kenyon Review,n.s., 2: 4-27. Booth, Wayne C. 1988. The Vocation of a Teacher.Chicago: University of Chicago Press. Brinton, Alan. 1986. “Ethotic Argument.” History of Philosophy Quarterly3: 245-58. Chappel, Deborah K. 1992. “The Stories We Tell: Acknowledging Emotion in the Classroom.”ADE Bulletin102: 20-23. Eble, Kenneth E. 1983. The Aims of College Teaching. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass. Edmundson, Mark. 1997. “On the Uses of Liberal Education as Lite Entertainment for Bored College Students.” Harper's,September, 39-49. Giamatti, A. Bartlett. 1976. A Free and. Ordered Space: The Real World of the University. NewYork: W. W. Norton. Graff, Gerald. 1990. “How to Deal with the Humanities Crisis: Organize It” ADE Bulletin95: 4-10. Gregory, Marshall. 1982. “Liberal Education, Human Development, and Social Vision.” Journal of General Education 34,no. 2: 143-58. Gregory, Marshall. l997a. “Introductory Courses, Student Ethos, and Living the Life of theMind.” Journal of College Teaching 40, no. 2: 63-71. Gregory, Marshall. l997b. “The Many-Headed Hydra of Theory vs. the Unifying Mission ofTeaching.” College English 59: 41-58. Hooks, Bell. 1994. Teaching to Transgress.New York: Routledge. Huxley, Thomas Henry. 1938. “A Liberal Education and Where to Find It.” In English Proseof the Victorian Era, ed. Charles Frederick Harrold, 1316-38. New York: Oxford U P. James, William. 1958. “On a Certain Blindness in Human Beings.” In Talks to Teachers onPsychology: And to Students on Some of Life's Ideals,149-69. New York: Norton. Maclntyre, Alasdair. 1981. After Virtue.Notre Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame Press. Markie, Peter. 1990. “Professors, Students, and Friendship.” In Morality, Responsibility, andthe University,ed. Stephen M.Cohen, 134-49. Philadelphia: Temple University Press. Newman, John Henry Cardinal. 1959. The Idea of a University.New York: Doubleday. Nussbaum, Martha. 1997. Cultivating Humanity: A Classical Defense of Reform in LiberalEducation.Cambridge: Harvard University Press. Palmer, Parker. 1998. The Courage to Teach: Exploring the Inner Landscape of a Teacher's Life.San Francisco: Jossey-Bass. Parini, Jay. 1997. "Cultivating a Teaching Persona." Chronicle of Higher Education,5September, 92. Sharp, Ronald A. 1986. Friendship and Literature, Spirit and Form. Durham, N.C.:Duke University Press. Shelley, Percy Bysshe. 1961.“A Defence of Poetry.” In Prose of the Romantic Period, ed.Carl R. Woodring, 488 -513.Boston: Houghton, ME. Steiner, George. 1971. In Bluebeard's Castle: Some Notes towards the Redefinition of Culture.New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press. Tompkins, Jane. 1990. "Pedagogy of the Distressed." College English 52: 653-60. Wallace, David Foster. 1997. “E Unibus Pluram: Television and U.S. Fiction.” In A SupposedlyFun Thing I'll NeverDo Again, 21-82.Boston: Little, Brown © 2005 Copyright Marshall Gregory |