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Older children might do a good deal before beginning their
collegiate education. What is the matter with our universities is that all the students
are schoolboys, whereas it is of the very essence of university education that they should
be men. The function of a university is not to teach things that can now be taught as well
or better by University Extension lectures or by private tutors or modern correspondence
classes with gramophones. We go to them to be socialized; to acquire the hall mark of
communal training; to become citizens of the world instead of inmates of the enlarged
rabbit hutches we call homes; to learn manners and become unchallengeable ladies and
gentlemen. The social pressure which effects these changes should be that of persons who
have faced the full responsibilities of adults as working members of the general
community, not that of a barbarous rabble of half emancipated schoolboys and unemancipable
pedants. It is true that in a reasonable state of society this outside experience would do
for us very completely what the university does now so corruptly that we tolerate its bad
manners only because they are better than no manners at all. But the university will
always exist in some form as a community of persons desirous of pushing their culture to
the highest pitch they are capable of, not as solitary students reading in seclusion, but
as members of a body of individuals all pursuing culture, talking culture, thinking
culture, above all, criticizing culture. If such persons are to read and talk and
criticize to any purpose, they must know the world outside the university at least as well
as the shopkeeper in the High Street does. And this is just what they do not know at
present. You may say of them, paraphrasing Mr. Kipling, "What do they know of Plato
that only Plato know?" If our universities would exclude everybody who had not earned
a living by his or her own exertions for at least a couple of years, their effect would be
vastly improved. |
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