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Archive for the ‘Mason Around the World’ Category

‘Knowledge . . . is the product of the vital action of the mind on the material presented to it’ (CM, School Education, 224)

Once again I am writing this blog just a day or two after returning from Greece, where each July for many years now I have had the pleasure (and it really is a pleasure when you have enthusiastic students) of teaching Homer in his original Greek to an international group of students from all over Europe. I now have the help of a Greek teacher, Antony Makrinos, who actually works at London University. This year we all read parts of Iliad book 6. From the whole Iliad this is the one book where for a while Homer pauses from the war raging on the plain of Troy, and he describes Hector’s return to the city to see his mother Hecabe, his brother Paris with his wife Helen, and his own wife Andromache and his little son Astyanax. Now all Homer is great stuff, but I didn’t fancy a whole week and more of blood and battle, so I chose book 6 of the Iliad.

As a teacher I was not trained specifically in Charlotte Mason’s philosophy. I suppose over the years, in schools and in university, I have tried to follow what I thought were my own most inspiring teachers, with a bit of educational theory thrown in, and I have thus developed, as I think all teachers do, my own style of teaching. Then I look back, as I have just done, at what Charlotte Mason said, and I find that in School Education, which happens to be on the bookshelf next to me as I type this, she summed up what I have been trying, with mixed success, to do all these years. She distinguishes clearly between Knowledge and Information. She says (reference above) ‘Information is the record of facts, experiences, appearances, etc., whether in books or in the verbal memory of the individual; knowledge, it seems to me, implies the result of the voluntary and delightful action of the mind upon the material presented to it.’ As so often, we find that Charlotte Mason said in the later 19th century what has been taken up by other educationists and has gradually become best practice in teaching. But ‘best practice’ has to be worked at; and it is so easy to revert to bad habits.

Well, I hope that my students in Greece did experience at least some of what Charlotte was advocating. I put to them the idea that in really getting to know the original text of Homer (a living book if ever there was one) we can, in a sense, meet the poet himself, just him speaking directly to us in his own language. Do you remember Robin Williams in the film Dead Poets’ Society?  I didn’t go so far as to tell my students to tear out the editor’s introduction in their books, but the film did have a similar message, and perhaps a little bit of Charlotte Mason was in there. We read some of the Greek text together, and then students, in groups of two or three, worked at sections of the text themselves (there really is no substitute for sorting it out oneself). They had to translate the text into English, by the way, since they needed to communicate their translations to the rest of the class. We only had one native English speaker among the eight languages (including Modern Greek) spoken in the class, so for most this was an additional mental exercise.

Then on the final day of the conference we did a presentation to the rest of the conference (there were nearly 100 people there). In five groups students read a section of the original Greek text, a translation of it into English, and a translation into their own language. All I had to do was to link the passages with a short account of the story in between (it’s all on video on the Facebook site of Antony Makrinos). So I do hope that the students did experience ‘the voluntary and delightful action of the mind upon the material presented to it.’

After the presentation one of our students from Athens said to me, ‘I was terrified! I’ve never spoken to an audience before!’ Of course, if she had been taught narration then she would have done so many times before.

© Dr. John Thorley 2012

 

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I have just returned from the island of Chios, in Greece (just a few miles from the coast of Turkey), where each year I help with a conference on Homer run by an organisation called EUROCLASSICA, which consists of the Classical Associations of nearly thirty European countries. Course members are students, teachers, university faculty and people who are just interested in Homer. This is the 15th ‘Academia Homerica’ as we call it, and despite the economic problems in Greece today its great poet Homer still pulls in a lot of support for the conference. My job is to deliver a lecture or two to the whole conference, but mainly to run the student programme, in which we read most of a book of Homer in the original Greek and also have a few short lectures on Homeric topics. This year the student numbers were somewhat down because of the economic crisis, but five Greek students (i.e. students from Greece!) also joined us.
As any teacher knows, it is very satisfying, even exhilarating, to teach a group of very willing, eager students. This year my group of students ranged in age from 18 to 70+, and we had eight nationalities represented. At the end of the conference each year the students do a presentation to the whole conference which consists of passages of the original Greek read by students, followed by a translation into their own language. If you want to see some of our presentations this year, you can see video clips on the site called The Homeridae – The Children of Homer, videoed by Antonis Makrinos, who helps me with the teaching programme. The only instructions that I give students is that we want to hear the original text of Homer that I allocate to them and a translation into their own language. How they do it is up to them. The afternoon of the day before the presentation they were all sitting on the beach doing their translations and testing their pronunciation of ancient Greek and their own translations on their fellow-students. Several translations at the presentation were into verse of some kind, but this year our two students from Lithuania went a step further and translated their ten-line passages of Homer into Lithuanian poetry using Homer’s hexameter verse-pattern – no mean feat; I couldn’t even think of attempting to do this in English! I can’t claim that I teach the students using Charlotte Mason methods, but I think she would at least approve of the fact that we are reading a ‘big book’ (none bigger than Homer!), and that our particular form of ‘narration’ consists of the students actually creating their own translations of the great poet.
But even on the island of Chios Charlotte Mason was not far away. One of my students was actually a primary school teacher from Athens, and in a conversation over a lunch it was quite clear that she is a very enthusiastic teacher, and she mentioned that she was interested in ‘child-centred’ teaching methods. We had quite a lengthy conversation, and I suggested that she should have a look at the now numerous websites that give information about Charlotte Mason and her teaching methods, which I was sure she would find interesting. So we may yet have a Greek association of Charlotte Mason enthusiasts.
As I was being driven in an ‘airport taxi’ from Manchester airport back home to Milnthorpe last night, the taxi driver, who happens to know me from previous trips, told me that the headlines in the Westmorland Gazette last Thursday were ‘University U-turn brings joy to town’ – referring to the decision last week by the University of Cumbria to re-open the Ambleside campus and to develop it for up to 600 students. But before we get too deep into the ‘joy’, further reading of the article reveals that there may be problems, not least associated with the fact that the site has been mainly closed down for over a year and a lot of money will have to be spent to restore it. Nevertheless, the university’s intention is to re-open the site. We shall have to wait and see what happens in the next few months. 
© Dr. John Thorley 2011

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