Description

The purpose of this blog is to explore the viewpoints and philosophical writings of John Dewey throughout the course of his life with a specific focus on his concept of open-mindedness and notable developments of this concept before and after he is influenced by Chinese style and culture during his visitation to the country from 1919-1921. It is to be compiled and considered for use within the broader concept of a dissertation concerning Dewey's pragmatic viewpoints and experiences to be important theoretical background for developing a practical approach to multicultural writing/rhetoric classroom settings in an open-minded fashion, and arguing an importance in teaching the differential rhetorical styles between cultures.

Monday, September 22, 2014

The Joining of Method and Subject (1916)

Past Masters, the elusive mistress of knowledge, is finally in my hands. She is just as fair as I had imagined. Beginning with a search on open-mindedness yielded plentiful results, of which I plan on going through in the next few weeks to grasp a better understanding of how Dewey arrives at this definition of open-mindedness.

In this 1916 work, Dewey is describing the Nature of Method, one of the trinity school topics (the other two being subject matter and administration.) There is immediate mention of education, pedagogy, and theory, so naturally it’s an excitingly relevant piece.

Dualism: The philosophical idea that the mind and the body are separate, that mental states cannot breach the physical and visa-versa.

By the theory of dualism, we can infer the possibility of creating methods of educating that are independent of the subject to which they apply. In other words, it is possible to create methods and theories for learning without observing the student or students to which the theories will apply. This is, of course, a bit ridiculous, as all rationalism is when put to the pragmatic test. As Dewey describes it, “this state of affairs gives opportunity for the retort that pedagogy, as an alleged science of methods of the mind in learning, is futile[.]” The idea that mind and body are separate destroys the concept that pedagogy is useful. While we may be able to devise proofs and theories in logic that support dualism, all teachers will eventually admit to the necessity to consider their reflections on true experience and alter their methods and beliefs accordingly.

Though we may already be aware that Dewey’s open-mindedness is an empirical idea, weighted by reflection both mental AND experiential, The above paragraph serves as a suitable explanation for why he believes this. Rationalistic dualism is useless and prevents us from gaining knowledge as well. Empiricism admits the futility of the metaphysical and focuses on the world at hand. The matter of whether or not this pencil exists is irrelevant and wasteful. The method by which a student is taught to use it is an enquiry of far greater importance.

Establishing that Dewey rejects the idea of dualism, we can draw that he desires to imply their connection. Mind is to body as method is to subject. And method, for Dewey, is “that arrangement of subject matter which makes it most effective in use[,] […] an effective way of employing some material for some end.” He describes this concept of method and how it is not separate from subject matter in detail. I list a few notable quotes below:

“We can distinguish a way of acting, and discuss if by itself; but the way exists only as a way-of-dealing-with-material. Method is not antithetical to subject matter; it is the effective direction of subject matter to desired results.”

“[T]here is no distinction of subject matter and method. There is simply an activity which includes both what an individual does and what the environment does.”
“When a man is eating, he is eating food. He does not divide his act into eating and food.”

“It would be no less absurd to suppose that men can eat without eating something.”

Method is fostered and refined through the empirical mindset, being the scientific method. When we experience something, we apply the successes and failures of our attempts to refine our method into something anew.

Dewey struggled with the practices used in the educational system, as we do today. He states “in instruction and discipline, there is rarely sufficient opportunity for children and youth to have direct normal experiences from which educators might derive an idea of method or order of best development.” The educational system, taking the approach of rationalism and believing that the mind can learn on its own independent of experience, hinders not only the student but the teacher as well. Methods cannot be refined and applied to the individual when there are no experiences to be considered. The individual loses the opportunity to gain the most efficient and beneficial education; the teachers lose the opportunity to experience and reflect upon their methods to further educate themselves.

I've created a list that organizes Dewey’s “evils in education that flow from the isolation of method from subject.”

1.     Neglect of concrete situations of experience
2.     The fostering of false conceptions of discipline and interest
a.     Utilization of Excitement: Reward
b.     Utilization of Consequence: Pain
c.      Utilization of Discourse: Fear
3.     “The act of learning is made a direct and conscious end in itself”

“[W]hen the subject matter is not used in carrying forward impulses and habits to significant results, it is just something to be learned.”

So when we are attempting to create the global citizen, we must do so by means of an empirical approach, accepting the twining nature of method and subject. We must create educational methods as an efficient and pragmatic approach, subject to revision based on further experiences or particular situations. We mustn't neglect experience, foster false conceptions of consequence, or beg the question when asked why we learn. What, then, characterizes the correct approach to pedagogy that will yield educated and open-minded students?

There are four attitudes that must hold constant consideration:
1.     Directness: The straightforwardness/confidence that a person directs towards what they need to do. Being a “decision-maker”
2.     Open-Mindedness: “An attitude of mind which actively welcomes suggestions and relevant information from all sides”
3.     Single-Mindedness: The completion of interest, or true mental integrity toward a subject to be learned.
4.     Responsibility: The acceptance and carefully weighed consideration of consequence of action.

(Further enquiry can be made into these four attitudes, but perhaps that should take place another day)

Dewey identifies the multiple dos and don'ts of education in this work. And among them all is this prevalent idea of the conjoining of method and experience. He describes the deprivations experienced by a student that learns in a setting deprived of true experience, where method and subject are isolated. And at the time he is writing this, I believe he is in a similar state that this hypothetical student is. With regard to open-mindedness to Chinese culture, Dewey is isolated from the subject. Anything he has learned he has learned through second-hand, from researching and reading and general conversation. He lacks the true experience of China, and for that reason he is deprived of the most beneficial education he could receive.

I believe that I have properly identified open-mindedness and it’s necessity (at least to a suitable introductory level,) but one question still haunts me. It stems from the third evil of isolation of method and subject. Namely, Learning simply to learn. What is the point of being open-minded? Thus far I have seen that it functions as a better way to learn for Dewey, but this creates the very evil that Dewey warns us to avoid. How does he escape this evil? What does Dewey believe to be the ends of this proficient method of learning?


Dewey, John. “Democracy and Education: An Introduction to the Philosophy of Education. 13: The Nature of Method” The Middle Works of John Dewey, Vol 9 (1916), pp. 172-188

1 comment:

  1. I truly appreciated your response this week because it is (as I’m sure you imagined while writing it, especially after our meeting the week before) right up my alley. This is exactly what I’m trying to get at, while focusing on the multicultural composition classroom. I agree with Dewey here, particularly as I see many teachers at JWU struggling in their attempts to somehow adjust their methodology based on the experiences and needs of their international students. They teach based on what they know to be the experiences of the American students, but when those methods don’t work, or the international students don’t respond in the anticipated way, the teachers (and students) get frustrated. I wonder how much teachers look into the past experiences of their international students, or even how deeply they consider their own experiences in terms of the impact that their own experiences have on their teaching methods. In other words, do American teachers recognize that their way is one way of doing things and that their teaching methods most likely reflect their own experiences as students? Culture and habits are so engrained into our very being that we don’t often step back to reflect on what they are or how they came to be that way. Dewey makes us step back and look at our philosophies and habits as being grounded in experience. If we could truly understand this, then I argue that it would be easier to be open-minded to other ways of doing things.
    Pragmatism is especially attractive in its practicality, in my opinion. I am drawn to ideas like this : “The matter of whether or not this pencil exists is irrelevant and wasteful. The method by which a student is taught to use it is an enquiry of far greater importance.” This seems obvious to me; I can’t relate to a philosophy that spends much time trying to figure out whether or not the pencil exists. Transferring this idea to the frustrating situation between international students and their American teachers these days, I don’t want to simply talk about the frustrations of teaching international students but rather look more closely at how the past experiences of the students and teachers have created this inevitable situation, and more importantly, to figure out how multicultural individuals can learn how to move forward together as a group.
    I’m curious about your last paragraph and would like to discuss it further on Wednesday. You say, “What is the point of being open-minded? Thus far I have seen that it functions as a better way to learn for Dewey, but this creates the very evil that Dewey warns us to avoid. How does he escape this evil? What does Dewey believe to be the ends of this proficient method of learning?” I would like to talk more about what you mean by “the very evil that Dewey warns us to avoid.”


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