Learning is an inside job. Some people instinctively know how to
learn *(definitions below); some never do learn a comprehensive
and efficient way to learn.
To be a student* is to be in eager pursuit of knowledge*.
In other words, learning is something that a student does - from
the inside.
When children first go to school, adults teach* or instruct*
them about basic subjects that they can use as tools for learning. Few
teachers impart the knowledge of how to coordinate and integrate these
tools.
No matter how willing someone is to share their knowledge, if there
is no way for a student to synthesize it into the whole, it remains
fragmented information*; and the information continues to pile up. If
there is no context with which to contain and structure the
information, it is soon forgotten.
Haphazard gathering of information can be interesting and fun, but
a student’s eagerness is soon lost.
Special schools have been created to train* diverse groups
of students, or to indoctrinate* students in specialized
subjects. These processes are not designed to respect the wholeness of
the student.
One who shares his or her knowledge in a special way is called an
educator. An educator* does not push information into a
student, but presents or uses a conceptual system or framework to draw
the inherent knowledge out of the student. Then the student sees not
disconnected facts, but how everything fits into a whole.
Each student is an individual whole. When a framework or a plan for
organization of knowledge is present in the consciousness of an
individual, information that is received finds the necessary links
within the whole. When learning is organized through a system, then
information becomes knowledge.
Most schools assume that a student already know how to learn. And
so, it is up to the student to assess each course and class leader,
and apply his or her consciousness to learn much more that the class
leader presents. The aim of an educator is to create an environment
where a student can surpass the educator.
Which of the above would you consider the most valuable way to
learn?
Learn: Middle English, lernen, leornen, to gain knowledge;
to acquire information, skill, habit or attitude; to fix in mind; to
memorize.
Student: Latin, studere, to be eager about; to study; to
investigate; to apply the mind to learning; to acquire knowledge.
Knowledge: Latin, gnoscere; Greek, gnostikos, to know or
recognize from within; to surround and envelope.
Teach: Middle English, techen, to show; to demonstrate; to
impart; to direct; to admonish; to indoctrinate.
Instruct: Latin, instruere, to pile upon; to put in order;
to give directions; to train.
Information: Latin, informare; in- in, and formare, to give
form or shape; as in character; facts or details.
Train: Latin, trahere, to drag; to follow; to draw from
behind; a retinue; to instill habitual behavior.
Indoctrinate: Latin, in-, in, and doctrinare, to teach
doctrines, theories, beliefs, or principles; to place specific
learning inside; doctrina, learning.
Educate: Latin, educere; e-, out, and ducere, to lead; draw;
bring; to draw out from within.
• Choose a system through which to filter information.
Libraries contain information on systems analysis, structured
analysis, taxonometric analysis, Mind Mapping©, Psychodynamics,
General Semantics, Waldorf, Ganesa, astrology, or linguistic structure
from which you can choose a framework, e.g.: A simple organizing
framework -- Sentence structure: Subject, verb, object, etc.
• Choose your discipline or subject and apply your system
structure to it.