APPRECIATION, AN IMPORTANT ELEMENT IN EDUCATION
Appreciation belongs to the general
field of feeling rather than that of knowing.
The element which distinguishes appreciation from memory
or imagination or perception is an affective one.
Any one of these mental states may be present without
the state being an appreciative one. But appreciation
does not occur by itself as an elementary state, it
is rather a complex a feeling tone accompanying
a mental state or process and coloring it. In
other words, appreciation involves the presence of
some intellectual states, but its addition makes the
total complex of an emotional rather than a cognitive
nature. The difficulty found in discussing emotions
in general, that of defining or describing them in
language, which is a tool of the intellect, is felt
here. The only way to know what appreciation
means is to appreciate. No phase of feeling can
be adequately described its essence is then
lost it must be felt. Nevertheless
something may be done to differentiate this type of
feeling from others.
Appreciation is an attitude of mind
which is passive, contemplative. It may grow
out of an active attitude or emotion, or it may lead
to one, but in either case the state changes from
one of appreciation to something else. In appreciation
the individual is quiescent. Appreciation, therefore,
has no end outside of itself. It is a sufficient
cause for being. The individual is satisfied with
it. This puts appreciation into the category
of recreation. Appreciation then always involves
the pleasure tone, otherwise it could not be enjoyed.
It is always impersonal. It takes the individual
outside and beyond his own affairs; it is an other-regarding
feeling. Possession, achievement, and the like
do not arouse appreciation, but rather an egoistical
emotion.
One of the salient characteristics
of emotions is their unifying power. It has aptly
been said that in extreme emotional states one is
the emotion. The individual and his emotional
state become one a very different state
of affairs from what is true in cognition. This
element of unification is present to some extent in
appreciation, although, because of its complex nature,
to a lesser extent than in a simpler, more primitive
feeling state. Still, in true appreciation one
does become absorbed in the object of appreciation;
he, for the time being, to some extent becomes identified
with what he is appreciating. In, order to appreciate
this submerging of one’s self, this identification
is necessary.
Appreciation is bound up with four
different types of situations which are of most importance
to the teacher (1) appreciation of the
beautiful, (2) appreciation of human nature, (3) appreciation
of the humorous, (4) appreciation of intellectual
powers. The appreciation found in these four
types of situations must vary somewhat because of
the concomitants, but the characteristics which mark
appreciation as such seem to be present in all four.
True, in certain of the situations occurring under
these types the emotional element may be stronger than
in others in some the intellectual element
may seem to almost outweigh the affective, but still
the predominant characteristics will be found to be
those of an attitude which has the earmarks of appreciation.
Appreciation of beauty has usually
been discussed under the head of aesthetic emotions.
As to what rightfully belongs under the head of aesthetics
is in dispute writers on the subject varying
tremendously in their opinions. Most of the recent
writers, however, agree that the stimulus for aesthetic
appreciation must be a sense percept or an image of
some sense object. Ideas, meanings, in and of
themselves, are not then objects of aesthetic enjoyment.
The two senses which furnish the stimuli for this
sort of appreciation are the eye and the ear the
former combining sensations under space form and the
latter under time form to produce aesthetic feelings.
Our senses may cause feelings of pleasure, but the
enjoyment is sensuous rather than aesthetic. Nature,
in all its myriad forms, art, architecture, music,
literature, and the dance are the chief sources of
aesthetic appreciation. That there is a definite
connection between physiological processes and the
feeling of appreciation is without doubt true, but
just what physiological conditions in connection with
visual and auditory perception are fulfilled when
some experience gives rise to aesthetic appreciation,
and just what is violated when there is lack of such
appreciation, is not known. It is known that
both harmony and rhythm must be considered in music,
and that the structure and muscular control of the
eye plus the ease of mental apprehension play important
parts in rousing aesthetic feelings in connection
with vision, but further than that little is known.
The chief danger met in developing
the aesthetic appreciation is the tendency to overestimate
its dependence on, in the first place, skill in creative
work and the active emotions involved in achievement,
and in the second place, the intellectual understanding
of the situation. It has been largely taken for
granted that the constructive work in the arts or
in music increased one’s power of appreciation.
That, if a child used color and painted a little picture,
or composed a melody, or modeled in clay, he would
therefore be able to appreciate better in these fields.
And further that the very development of this power
to do necessarily developed the power to appreciate.
These two beliefs are true to some extent, but only
to a limited extent, and not nearly so far as practice
has taken for granted. It is true that some power
to do increases power to appreciate, but they parallel
each other only for a short time and then diverge,
and either may be developed at the expense of the
other. In most people the power to appreciate,
the passive, contemplative enjoyment, far surpasses
the ability to create. On the other hand, men
of creative genius often lack power of aesthetic appreciation.
This result is natural if one thinks of the mental
processes involved in the two. Power to do is
associated with muscular skill, with technique, and
with the personal emotions of active achievement.
AEsthetic appreciation, on the other hand, is associated
with neither, but with a mental attitude and feelings
which are quite different. Cultivating one set
of processes will not develop the other to any great
extent and may, on the other hand, be antagonistic
to their development. If the aesthetic emotions,
if appreciations of the beautiful, are desired, they
must be trained and developed directly.
The second danger to be avoided in
developing aesthetic appreciation is that of magnifying
its dependence on the intellectual factors. To
understand, to be able to analyze, to pick out the
flaws in a musical selection, or a painting, is not
necessary to its appreciation. True, some understanding
is necessary, but, as in the case of skill, it is
much less than has been taken for granted. Appreciation
can go far ahead of understanding. The intellectual
factor and the feeling response are not absolutely
interdependent in degree. Not only so, but the
prominence of the intellectual factor precludes that
of the feeling. When one is emphasized the other
cannot be, as they are different sorts of mental stuff.
Continuous and emphatic development of the intellectual
may result in the atrophy of the power of appreciation
in any given field either temporarily or permanently.
Many a boy’s power to enjoy the rhythm and melody
of poetry has been destroyed by the overemphasis of
the critical facility during his high school course.
The fact that a person can analyze the painting, point
out the plans in its composition, and so on, does
not at all mean that he can aesthetically appreciate.
Contemplative enjoyment may be impossible for him it
bores him. Botanists are not noted for their
power of aesthetic appreciation. It is an acknowledged
fact that some art and music critics have lost their
power of appreciation of the things they are continually
criticizing. This discussion is not intended
to minimize the value of creative skill, or of power
of intellectual criticism. Both are talents that
are well worth while cultivating. But it is necessary
for one to decide which of the three, aesthetic appreciation,
creative skill, or intellectual criticism, in the
fields of art, nature, and music, is most worth while
for the majority of people and then make plans accordingly.
No one of the three can be best developed and brought
to its highest perfection by emphasizing any one of
the others.
The second type of appreciation is
appreciation of human nature: appreciation of
the value of human life, appreciation of its virtues
and trials, appreciation of great characters, and
so on. Some writers would probably class this
type of appreciation under moral feelings but
moral feelings usually are thought of as active, as
accompaniments of conduct, whereas these appreciations
are feelings aroused in the onlooker they
are passive and for the time being are an end in themselves.
These feelings are stimulated by such studies as literature
and history particularly. Geography and civics
offer some opportunity for their development, and,
of course, contact with people is the greatest stimulus.
In this latter type of situation the feelings of appreciation
easily pass over into active emotions, but so long
as one remains an onlooker, they need not do so.
This appreciation, sympathy with and enjoyment and
approval of human nature, finds its source in the social
instincts, but it needs development and training if
it is to be perfected. Very much of the time
this appreciation is inhibited by the emphasis put
on understanding. The intellectual faculties of
memory, judgment, and criticism are the ones called
into play in the study of history and often of literature.
These studies leave the learner cold. He knows,
but it does not make any difference to him. He
can analyze the period or the character, but he lacks
any feeling response, any appreciation of the qualities
of endurance and loyalty portrayed, lacks any sympathetic
understanding of the difficulties met and conquered.
As was true of the aesthetic appreciation, a certain
amount of understanding is necessary for true appreciation
of any kind, but overemphasis of the intellectual
element destroys the feeling element.
The third type of appreciation to
be discussed is the appreciation of humor. Perhaps
this does not belong with the other type, but it certainly
has many of the same characteristics. Calkins
defines a sense of humor as “enjoyment of an
unessential incongruity.... This incongruity
must be, as has been said, an unessential one, else
the mood of the observer changes from happiness to
unhappiness, and the comic becomes the pathetic.
A fall on the ice which seemed to offer only a ludicrous
contrast between the dignity and grace of the man erect
and the ungainly attitude of the falling figure ceases
utterly to be funny when it is seen to entail some
physical injury; and wit which burns and sears is
not amusing to its victim." The ability to appreciate
the humorous in life is a great gift and should be
cultivated to a much greater extent than it is at
present.
A fourth type of appreciation has
been called appreciation of intellectual powers a
poor name perhaps, but the feeling is a real one.
Enjoyment of style, of logical sequence, of the harmony
of the whole, of the clear-cut, concise, telling sentences,
are illustrations of what is meant. Enjoyment
of a piece of literature, of a debate, of an argument,
of a piece of scientific research, is not limited to
the appreciation of the meanings expressed in
fact, in many cases the only factor that can arouse
the feeling element, the appreciation, is this element
of form. One may understand an argument
or a debate as he hears it, but appreciation, enjoyment
of it, comes only as a result of the consciousness
of these elements of form.
That one possesses these feelings
of appreciation, at least to some degree, is a matter
of human equipment, but what one appreciates
in art, literature, human nature, etc., depends
primarily on training. There is almost no situation
in life that with all people at all times will arouse
appreciative feelings. Although there are a few
fundamental conditions established by the physical
make-up of the sense organs and by the original capacities
of the human race, still they are few, and at present
largely unknown, and experience does much to modify
even these. What is crude, vulgar, inharmonious,
in art and music to some people, arouses extreme aesthetic
appreciation in others. Literature that causes
one person to throw the book down in disgust will give
greatest enjoyment to another. What is malice
to one person is humorous to another. What people
enjoy and appreciate depends primarily on their experience
for the development of these feelings, depends upon
the laws of association, readiness, exercise, and
effect. To raise power of appreciation from low
levels to high, from almost nothing to a controlling
force, needs but the application of these laws.
But no one of them can be neglected with impunity.
It must be a gradual growth, beginning with tracks
that are ready, because of the presence of certain
instincts, and working on to others through the law
of association. To expect a child of seven to
appreciate a steel engraving, or a piece of classic
music, or moral qualities in another person is to violate
the law of readiness. To expect any one in adult
life to enjoy music, or art, or nature, who has not
had experience with each and enjoyed each continually
as a child, is to violate the laws of exercise and
effect.
Two or three suggestions as to aids
in the application of these laws may be in place.
First, a wealth of images is an aid to appreciation.
Second, the absence for the time of the critical attitude.
Third, an encouragement of the passive contemplative
attitude. Fourth, the example of others.
Suggestion and association with other people who do
appreciate and enjoy are among the best means of securing
it.
The value of feelings of appreciation
are threefold: First, they serve as recreation.
It is in enjoyment of this kind that most of the leisure
of civilized races is spent. It serves on the
mental level much the same purpose that play does,
in fact, much of it is mental play of a kind.
Second, they are impersonal. They are valuable
in that they take us out of ourselves, away from self-interests,
and therefore make for mental health and sanity as
well as for a sympathetic character. They are
also a means of broadening one’s experience.
Third, they have a close relationship with ideals
and therefore have an active bearing on conduct.
It is not necessarily true that one will tend in himself
or in his surroundings to be like what he enjoys and
appreciates, but the tendency will be strongly in
that direction. If an individual truly appreciates,
enjoys, beautiful pictures, good music and books, he
will be likely, so far as he can, to surround himself
with them. If he appreciates loyalty, openmindedness,
tolerance, as he meets them in literature and history,
he may become more so himself. At least, the
developing of appreciations is the first step towards
conduct in those lines. In order to insure the
conduct, other means must be taken, but without the
appreciation the conduct will be less sure.
One who would count most in developing
power of appreciation upon the part of children may
well inquire concerning his own power of appreciation.
There is not very much possibility of the development
of joy in poetry, in music, or any other artistic
form of expression through association with the teacher
who finds little satisfaction in these artistic forms,
who has little power of aesthetic appreciation.
It is only as teachers themselves are sincere in their
appreciation of the nobility of character possessed
by the men and women whose lives are portrayed in
history, in literature, or in contemporary social life
that one may expect that their influence will be important
in developing such appreciation upon the part of children.
Those pupils are fortunate who are taught by teachers
who have a sense of humor, who are able to grow enthusiastic
over the intellectual achievement of the leaders in
the field of study or investigation in which the children
are at work. Children are, indeed, quick to discover
sentimentalism or pseudo-appreciation upon the part
of teachers, but even though they may not give any
certain expression to their enjoyment, they are usually
largely influenced by the attitude and genuine power
of appreciation possessed by the teacher.
In our attempt to have children grow
in the field of appreciation we have often made the
mistake of attempting to impose upon them adult standards.
A great librarian in one of our eastern cities has
said that he would rather have children read dime
novels than to have them read nothing. From his
point of view it was more important to have children
appreciating and enjoying something which they read
than to have their lives barren in this respect.
In literature, in music, and in fine art the development
in power of appreciation is undoubtedly from the simple,
cruder forms to those which we as adults consider the
higher or nobler forms of expression. Mother
Goose, the rhymes of Stevenson, of Field, or of Riley,
may be the beginning of the enjoyment of literature
which finds its final expression in the reading and
in the possession of the greatest literature of the
English language. The simple rote songs which
the children learn in the first grade, or which they
hear on the phonograph, may lead through various stages
of development to the enjoyment of grand opera.
Pictures in which bright color predominates may be
the beginning of power of appreciation which finds
its fruition in a home which is decorated with reproductions
of the world’s masterpieces.
It is not only in the artistic field
that this growth in power of appreciation from the
simpler to the more complex is to be found. Children
instinctively admire the man who is brave rather than
the man who endures. Achievement is for most
boys and girls of greater significance than self-sacrifice.
It is only as we adapt our material to their present
attainment, or to an attempt to have them reach the
next higher stage of development, that we may expect
genuine growth. All too often instead of growth
we secure the development of a hypocritical attitude,
which accepts the judgment of others, and which never
really indicates genuine enjoyment.
While it is best not to insist upon
an analysis of the feelings that one has in enjoying
a picture or a poem or a great character, it is worth
while to encourage choice. Of many stories which
have been told, children may very properly choose
one which they would like to tell to others.
Of many poems which have been read in class, a group
of boys may admire one and commit it to memory, while
the girls may care for another and be allowed to memorize
it. Wherever such cooeperation is possible, the
picture which you enjoy most is the one that will mean
most in power of appreciation if placed in your room
at home. Spontaneous approval, rather than an
agreement with an adult teacher who is considered an
authority, is to be sought for. There is more
in the spontaneous laughter which results as children
read together their “Alice in Wonderland”
than could possibly result from an analysis of the
quality of humor which is involved.
We are coming to understand as a matter
of education that we may hope to develop relatively
few men and women of great creative genius. The
producers of work of great artistic worth are, for
the most part, to be determined by native capacity
rather than by school exercises. We must think
of the great majority of school children as possible
consumers rather than as producers. Schools which
furnish a maximum of opportunity to enjoy music and
pictures may hope to develop in their community a
power of discrimination in these fields which will
result in satisfaction with nothing less than the
best. The player-piano and the phonograph may
mean more in the development of musical taste in a
community than all of the lessons which are given in
the reading of music. The art gallery in the
high school, the folk dances which have been produced
as a part of the school festivals, the reading of the
best stories, may prepare the way for the utilization
of leisure time in the pursuit of the nobler pleasures.
The teacher with a saving sense of humor, large in
his power of appreciation of the great men and women
of his time, and all of the time keen in his own enjoyment
and in his ability to interpret for others those things
which are most worth while in literature and in art,may count more largely in the life of the community
than the one who is a master in some field of investigation.
QUESTIONS
1. What are the characteristics of the mental states which are involved in appreciation?
2. Name the different types of situations in which appreciation may be developed. Give examples.
3. Does the power to criticize poetry or music necessarily involve appreciation?
4. To what degree may skill in creative work result in power of appreciation?
5. What are the elements involved in appreciating human nature?
6. Give an example of appreciation of intellectual powers.
7. What is the essential element in the appreciation of humor?
8. Explain how the power of appreciation is dependent upon training.
9. What values in the education of an individual are realized through growth in power of appreciation?
10. Why is it important for a teacher to seek to cultivate his own power of appreciation?
11. What poems, or pictures, or music would you expect first-grade children to enjoy? Why?
12. Would you expect fifth-grade children to grow in appreciation of poetry by having them commit to memory selections from Milton’s Paradise Lost? Why?
13. Why is it important to allow children to choose the poems that they commit to memory, or the pictures which they hang on their walls?
14. Why would you accept spontaneous expression of approval of the characters in literature or in history, rather than seek to control the judgments of children in this respect?
15. How may teachers prove most effective in developing the power of appreciation upon the part of children?