As democracy modifies our conception
of life, it constantly raises the value and function
of each member of the community, however humble he
may be. We have come to believe that the most
“brutish man” has a value in our common
life, a function to perform which can be fulfilled
by no one else. We are gradually requiring of
the educator that he shall free the powers of each
man and connect him with the rest of life. We
ask this not merely because it is the man’s
right to be thus connected, but because we have become
convinced that the social order cannot afford to get
along without his special contribution. Just as
we have come to resent all hindrances which keep us
from untrammelled comradeship with our fellows, and
as we throw down unnatural divisions, not in the spirit
of the eighteenth-century reformers, but in the spirit
of those to whom social equality has become a necessity
for further social development, so we are impatient
to use the dynamic power residing in the mass of men,
and demand that the educator free that power.
We believe that man’s moral idealism is the
constructive force of progress, as it has always been;
but because every human being is a creative agent
and a possible generator of fine enthusiasm, we are
sceptical of the moral idealism of the few and demand
the education of the many, that there may be greater
freedom, strength, and subtilty of intercourse and
hence an increase of dynamic power. We are not
content to include all men in our hopes, but have
become conscious that all men are hoping and are part
of the same movement of which we are a part.
Many people impelled by these ideas
have become impatient with the slow recognition on
the part of the educators of their manifest obligation
to prepare and nourish the child and the citizen for
social relations. The educators should certainly
conserve the learning and training necessary for the
successful individual and family life, but should add
to that a preparation for the enlarged social efforts
which our increasing democracy requires. The
democratic ideal demands of the school that it shall
give the child’s own experience a social value;
that it shall teach him to direct his own activities
and adjust them to those of other people. We
are not willing that thousands of industrial workers
shall put all of their activity and toil into services
from which the community as a whole reaps the benefit,
while their mental conceptions and code of morals
are narrow and untouched by any uplift which the consciousness
of social value might give them.
We are impatient with the schools
which lay all stress on reading and writing, suspecting
them to rest upon the assumption that the ordinary
experience of life is worth little, and that all knowledge
and interest must be brought to the children through
the medium of books. Such an assumption fails
to give the child any clew to the life about him, or
any power to usefully or intelligently connect himself
with it. This may be illustrated by observations
made in a large Italian colony situated in Chicago,
the children from which are, for the most part, sent
to the public schools.
The members of the Italian colony
are largely from South Italy,Calabrian
and Sicilian peasants, or Neapolitans from the workingmen’s
quarters of that city. They have come to America
with the distinct aim of earning money, and finding
more room for the energies of themselves and their
children. In almost all cases they mean to go
back again, simply because their imaginations cannot
picture a continuous life away from the old surroundings.
Their experiences in Italy have been those of simple
outdoor activity, and their ideas have come directly
to them from their struggle with Nature,such
a hand-to-hand struggle as takes place when each man
gets his living largely through his own cultivation
of the soil, or with tools simply fashioned by his
own hands. The women, as in all primitive life,
have had more diversified activities than the men.
They have cooked, spun, and knitted, in addition to
their almost equal work in the fields. Very few
of the peasant men or women can either read or write.
They are devoted to their children, strong in their
family feeling, even to remote relationships, and
clannish in their community life.
The entire family has been upheaved,
and is striving to adjust itself to its new surroundings.
The men, for the most part, work on railroad extensions
through the summer, under the direction of a padrone,
who finds the work for them, regulates the amount
of their wages, and supplies them with food.
The first effect of immigration upon the women is
that of idleness. They no longer work in the fields,
nor milk the goats, nor pick up faggots. The
mother of the family buys all the clothing, not only
already spun and woven but made up into garments, of
a cut and fashion beyond her powers. It is, indeed,
the most economical thing for her to do. Her
house-cleaning and cooking are of the simplest; the
bread is usually baked outside of the house, and the
macaroni bought prepared for boiling. All of
those outdoor and domestic activities, which she would
naturally have handed on to her daughters, have slipped
away from her. The domestic arts are gone, with
their absorbing interests for the children, their
educational value, and incentive to activity.
A household in a tenement receives almost no raw material.
For the hundreds of children who have never seen wheat
grow, there are dozens who have never seen bread baked.
The occasional washings and scrubbings are associated
only with discomfort. The child of such a family
receives constant stimulus of most exciting sort from
his city street life, but he has little or no opportunity
to use his energies in domestic manufacture, or, indeed,
constructively in any direction. No activity
is supplied to take the place of that which, in Italy,
he would naturally have found in his own surroundings,
and no new union with wholesome life is made for him.
Italian parents count upon the fact
that their children learn the English language and
American customs before they do themselves, and the
children act not only as interpreters of the language,
but as buffers between them and Chicago, resulting
in a certain almost pathetic dependence of the family
upon the child. When a child of the family, therefore,
first goes to school, the event is fraught with much
significance to all the others. The family has
no social life in any structural form and can supply
none to the child. He ought to get it in the
school and give it to his family, the school thus becoming
the connector with the organized society about them.
It is the children aged six, eight, and ten, who go
to school, entering, of course, the primary grades.
If a boy is twelve or thirteen on his arrival in America,
his parents see in him a wage-earning factor, and the
girl of the same age is already looking toward her
marriage.
Let us take one of these boys, who
has learned in his six or eight years to speak his
native language, and to feel himself strongly identified
with the fortunes of his family. Whatever interest
has come to the minds of his ancestors has come through
the use of their hands in the open air; and open air
and activity of body have been the inevitable accompaniments
of all their experiences. Yet the first thing
that the boy must do when he reaches school is to
sit still, at least part of the time, and he must
learn to listen to what is said to him, with all the
perplexity of listening to a foreign tongue. He
does not find this very stimulating, and is slow to
respond to the more subtle incentives of the schoolroom.
The peasant child is perfectly indifferent to showing
off and making a good recitation. He leaves all
that to his schoolfellows, who are more sophisticated
and equipped with better English. His parents
are not deeply interested in keeping him in school,
and will not hold him there against his inclination.
Their experience does not point to the good American
tradition that it is the educated man who finally
succeeds. The richest man in the Italian colony
can neither read nor writeeven Italian.
His cunning and acquisitiveness, combined with the
credulity and ignorance of his countrymen, have slowly
brought about his large fortune. The child himself
may feel the stirring of a vague ambition to go on
until he is as the other children are; but he is not
popular with his schoolfellows, and he sadly feels
the lack of dramatic interest. Even the pictures
and objects presented to him, as well as the language,
are strange.
If we admit that in education it is
necessary to begin with the experiences which the
child already has and to use his spontaneous and social
activity, then the city streets begin this education
for him in a more natural way than does the school.
The South Italian peasant comes from a life of picking
olives and oranges, and he easily sends his children
out to pick up coal from railroad tracks, or wood from
buildings which have been burned down. Unfortunately,
this process leads by easy transition to petty thieving.
It is easy to go from the coal on the railroad track
to the coal and wood which stand before a dealer’s
shop; from the potatoes which have rolled from a rumbling
wagon to the vegetables displayed by the grocer.
This is apt to be the record of the boy who responds
constantly to the stimulus and temptations of the
street, although in the beginning his search for bits
of food and fuel was prompted by the best of motives.
The school has to compete with a great
deal from the outside in addition to the distractions
of the neighborhood. Nothing is more fascinating
than that mysterious “down town,” whither
the boy longs to go to sell papers and black boots,
to attend theatres, and, if possible, to stay all
night on the pretence of waiting for the early edition
of the great dailies. If a boy is once thoroughly
caught in these excitements, nothing can save him
from over-stimulation and consequent debility and
worthlessness; he arrives at maturity with no habits
of regular work and with a distaste for its dulness.
On the other hand, there are hundreds
of boys of various nationalities who conscientiously
remain in school and fulfil all the requirements of
the early grades, and at the age of fourteen are found
in factories, painstakingly performing their work
year after year. These later are the men who
form the mass of the population in every industrial
neighborhood of every large city; but they carry on
the industrial processes year after year without in
the least knowing what it is all about. The one
fixed habit which the boy carries away with him from
the school to the factory is the feeling that his
work is merely provisional. In school the next
grade was continually held before him as an object
of attainment, and it resulted in the conviction that
the sole object of present effort is to get ready
for something else. This tentative attitude takes
the last bit of social stimulus out of his factory
work; he pursues it merely as a necessity, and his
very mental attitude destroys his chance for a realization
of its social value. As the boy in school contracted
the habit of doing his work in certain hours and taking
his pleasure in certain other hours, so in the factory
he earns his money by ten hours of dull work and spends
it in three hours of lurid and unprofitable pleasure
in the evening. Both in the school and in the
factory, in proportion as his work grows dull and monotonous,
his recreation must become more exciting and stimulating.
The hopelessness of adding evening classes and social
entertainments as a mere frill to a day filled with
monotonous and deadening drudgery constantly becomes
more apparent to those who are endeavoring to bring
a fuller life to the industrial members of the community,
and who are looking forward to a time when work shall
cease to be senseless drudgery with no self-expression
on the part of the worker. It sometimes seems
that the public schools should contribute much more
than they do to the consummation of this time.
If the army of school children who enter the factories
every year possessed thoroughly vitalized faculties,
they might do much to lighten this incubus of dull
factory work which presses so heavily upon so large
a number of our fellow-citizens. Has our commercialism
been so strong that our schools have become insensibly
commercialized, whereas we supposed that our industrial
life was receiving the broadening and illuminating
effects of the schools? The training of these
children, so far as it has been vocational at all,
has been in the direction of clerical work. It
is possible that the business men, whom we in America
so tremendously admire, have really been dictating
the curriculum of our public schools, in spite of the
conventions of educators and the suggestions of university
professors. The business man, of course, has
not said, “I will have the public schools train
office boys and clerks so that I may have them easily
and cheaply,” but he has sometimes said, “Teach
the children to write legibly and to figure accurately
and quickly; to acquire habits of punctuality and
order; to be prompt to obey; and you will fit them
to make their way in the world as I have made mine.”
Has the workingman been silent as to what he desires
for his children, and allowed the business man to
decide for him there, as he has allowed the politician
to manage his municipal affairs, or has the workingman
so far shared our universal optimism that he has really
believed that his children would never need to go
into industrial life at all, but that all of his sons
would become bankers and merchants?
Certain it is that no sufficient study
has been made of the child who enters into industrial
life early and stays there permanently, to give him
some offset to its monotony and dulness, some historic
significance of the part he is taking in the life
of the community.
It is at last on behalf of the average
workingmen that our increasing democracy impels us
to make a new demand upon the educator. As the
political expression of democracy has claimed for the
workingman the free right of citizenship, so a code
of social ethics is now insisting that he shall be
a conscious member of society, having some notion of
his social and industrial value.
The early ideal of a city that it
was a market-place in which to exchange produce, and
a mere trading-post for merchants, apparently still
survives in our minds and is constantly reflected in
our schools. We have either failed to realize
that cities have become great centres of production
and manufacture in which a huge population is engaged,
or we have lacked sufficient presence of mind to adjust
ourselves to the change. We admire much more
the men who accumulate riches, and who gather to themselves
the results of industry, than the men who actually
carry forward industrial processes; and, as has been
pointed out, our schools still prepare children almost
exclusively for commercial and professional life.
Quite as the country boy dreams of
leaving the farm for life in town and begins early
to imitate the travelling salesman in dress and manner,
so the school boy within the town hopes to be an office
boy, and later a clerk or salesman, and looks upon
work in the factory as the occupation of ignorant
and unsuccessful men. The schools do so little
really to interest the child in the life of production,
or to excite his ambition in the line of industrial
occupation, that the ideal of life, almost from the
very beginning, becomes not an absorbing interest in
one’s work and a consciousness of its value
and social relation, but a desire for money with which
unmeaning purchases may be made and an unmeaning social
standing obtained.
The son of a workingman who is successful
in commercial life, impresses his family and neighbors
quite as does the prominent city man when he comes
back to dazzle his native town. The children of
the working people learn many useful things in the
public schools, but the commercial arithmetic, and
many other studies, are founded on the tacit assumption
that a boy rises in life by getting away from manual
labor,that every promising boy goes into
business or a profession. The children destined
for factory life are furnished with what would be most
useful under other conditions, quite as the prosperous
farmer’s wife buys a folding-bed for her huge
four-cornered “spare room,” because her
sister, who has married a city man, is obliged to
have a folding-bed in the cramped limits of her flat
Partly because so little is done for him educationally,
and partly because he must live narrowly and dress
meanly, the life of the average laborer tends to become
flat and monotonous, with nothing in his work to feed
his mind or hold his interest. Theoretically,
we would all admit that the man at the bottom, who
performs the meanest and humblest work, so long as
the work is necessary, performs a useful function;
but we do not live up to our theories, and in addition
to his hard and uninteresting work he is covered with
a sort of contempt, and unless he falls into illness
or trouble, he receives little sympathy or attention.
Certainly no serious effort is made to give him a
participation in the social and industrial life with
which he comes in contact, nor any insight and inspiration
regarding it.
Apparently we have not yet recovered
manual labor from the deep distrust which centuries
of slavery and the feudal system have cast upon it.
To get away from menial work, to do obviously little
with one’s hands, is still the desirable status.
This may readily be seen all along the line.
A workingman’s family will make every effort
and sacrifice that the brightest daughter be sent
to the high school and through the normal school,
quite as much because a teacher in the family raises
the general social standing and sense of family consequence,
as that the returns are superior to factory or even
office work. “Teacher” in the vocabulary
of many children is a synonym for women-folk gentry,
and the name is indiscriminately applied to women
of certain dress and manner. The same desire
for social advancement is expressed by the purchasing
of a piano, or the fact that the son is an office
boy, and not a factory hand. The overcrowding
of the professions by poorly equipped men arises from
much the same source, and from the conviction that
“an education” is wasted if a boy goes
into a factory or shop.
A Chicago manufacturer tells a story
of twin boys, whom he befriended and meant to give
a start in life. He sent them both to the Athenaeum
for several winters as a preparatory business training,
and then took them into his office, where they speedily
became known as the bright one and the stupid one.
The stupid one was finally dismissed after repeated
trials, when to the surprise of the entire establishment,
he quickly betook himself into the shops, where he
became a wide-awake and valuable workman. His
chagrined benefactor, in telling the story, admits
that he himself had fallen a victim to his own business
training and his early notion of rising in life.
In reality he had merely followed the lead of most
benevolent people who help poor boys. They test
the success of their efforts by the number whom they
have taken out of factory work into some other and
“higher occupation.”
Quite in line with this commercial
ideal are the night schools and institutions of learning
most accessible to working people. First among
them is the business college which teaches largely
the mechanism of type-writing and book-keeping, and
lays all stress upon commerce and methods of distribution.
Commodities are treated as exports and imports, or
solely in regard to their commercial value, and not,
of course, in relation to their historic development
or the manufacturing processes to which they have
been subjected. These schools do not in the least
minister to the needs of the actual factory employee,
who is in the shop and not in the office. We
assume that all men are searching for “puddings
and power,” to use Carlyle’s phrase, and
furnish only the schools which help them to those
ends.
The business college man, or even
the man who goes through an academic course in order
to prepare for a profession, comes to look on learning
too much as an investment from which he will later
reap the benefits in earning money. He does not
connect learning with industrial pursuits, nor does
he in the least lighten or illuminate those pursuits
for those of his friends who have not risen in life.
“It is as though nets were laid at the entrance
to education, in which those who by some means or
other escape from the masses bowed down by labor, are
inevitably caught and held from substantial service
to their fellows.” The academic teaching
which is accessible to workingmen through University
Extension lectures and classes at settlements, is
usually bookish and remote, and concerning subjects
completely divorced from their actual experiences.
The men come to think of learning as something to be
added to the end of a hard day’s work, and to
be gained at the cost of toilsome mental exertion.
There are, of course, exceptions, but many men who
persist in attending classes and lectures year after
year find themselves possessed of a mass of inert
knowledge which nothing in their experience fuses
into availability or realization.
Among the many disappointments which
the settlement experiment has brought to its promoters,
perhaps none is keener than the fact that they have
as yet failed to work out methods of education, specialized
and adapted to the needs of adult working people in
contra-distinction to those employed in schools
and colleges, or those used in teaching children.
There are many excellent reasons and explanations for
this failure. In the first place, the residents
themselves are for the most part imbued with academic
methods and ideals, which it is most difficult to
modify. To quote from a late settlement report,
“The most vaunted educational work in settlements
amounts often to the stimulation mentally of a select
few who are, in a sense, of the academic type of mind,
and who easily and quickly respond to the academic
methods employed.” These classes may be
valuable, but they leave quite untouched the great
mass of the factory population, the ordinary workingman
of the ordinary workingman’s street, whose attitude
is best described as that of “acquiescence,”
who lives through the aimless passage of the years
without incentive “to imagine, to design, or
to aspire.” These men are totally untouched
by all the educational and philanthropic machinery
which is designed for the young and the helpless who
live on the same streets with them. They do not
often drink to excess, they regularly give all their
wages to their wives, they have a vague pride in their
superior children; but they grow prematurely old and
stiff in all their muscles, and become more and more
taciturn, their entire energies consumed in “holding
a job.”
Various attempts have been made to
break through the inadequate educational facilities
supplied by commercialism and scholarship, both of
which have followed their own ideals and have failed
to look at the situation as it actually presents itself.
The most noteworthy attempt has been the movement
toward industrial education, the agitation for which
has been ably seconded by manufacturers of a practical
type, who have from time to time founded and endowed
technical schools, designed for workingmen’s
sons. The early schools of this type inevitably
reflected the ideal of the self-made man. They
succeeded in transferring a few skilled workers into
the upper class of trained engineers, and a few less
skilled workers into the class of trained mechanics,
but did not aim to educate the many who are doomed
to the unskilled work which the permanent specialization
of the division of labor demands.
The Peter Coopers and other good men
honestly believed that if intelligence could be added
to industry, each workingman who faithfully attended
these schools could walk into increased skill and wages,
and in time even become an employer himself.
Such schools are useful beyond doubt; but so far as
educating workingmen is concerned or in any measure
satisfying the democratic ideal, they plainly beg the
question.
Almost every large city has two or
three polytechnic institutions founded by rich men,
anxious to help “poor boys.” These
have been captured by conventional educators for the
purpose of fitting young men for the colleges and
universities. They have compromised by merely
adding to the usual academic course manual work, applied
mathematics, mechanical drawing and engineering.
Two schools in Chicago, plainly founded for the sons
of workingmen, afford an illustration of this tendency
and result. On the other hand, so far as schools
of this type have been captured by commercialism,
they turn out trained engineers, professional chemists,
and electricians. They are polytechnics of a high
order, but do not even pretend to admit the workingman
with his meagre intellectual equipment. They
graduate machine builders, but not educated machine
tenders. Even the textile schools are largely
seized by young men who expect to be superintendents
of factories, designers, or manufacturers themselves,
and the textile worker who actually “holds the
thread” is seldom seen in them; indeed, in one
of the largest schools women are not allowed, in spite
of the fact that spinning and weaving have traditionally
been woman’s work, and that thousands of women
are at present employed in the textile mills.
It is much easier to go over the old
paths of education with “manual training”
thrown in, as it were; it is much simpler to appeal
to the old ambitions of “getting on in life,”
or of “preparing for a profession,” or
“for a commercial career,” than to work
out new methods on democratic lines. These schools
gradually drop back into the conventional courses,
modified in some slight degree, while the adaptation
to workingmen’s needs is never made, nor, indeed,
vigorously attempted. In the meantime, the manufacturers
continually protest that engineers, especially trained
for devising machines, are not satisfactory. Three
generations of workers have invented, but we are told
that invention no longer goes on in the workshop,
even when it is artificially stimulated by the offer
of prizes, and that the inventions of the last quarter
of the nineteenth century have by no means fulfilled
the promise of the earlier three-quarters.
Every foreman in a large factory has
had experience with two classes of men: first
with those who become rigid and tolerate no change
in their work, partly because they make more money
“working by the piece,” when they stick
to that work which they have learned to do rapidly,
and partly because the entire muscular and nervous
system has become by daily use adapted to particular
motions and resents change. Secondly, there are
the men who float in and out of the factory, in a constantly
changing stream. They “quit work”
for the slightest reason or none at all, and never
become skilled at anything. Some of them are men
of low intelligence, but many of them are merely too
nervous and restless, too impatient, too easily “driven
to drink,” to be of any use in a modern factory.
They are the men for whom the demanded adaptation is
impossible.
The individual from whom the industrial
order demands ever larger drafts of time and energy,
should be nourished and enriched from social sources,
in proportion as he is drained. He, more than
other men, needs the conception of historic continuity
in order to reveal to him the purpose and utility
of his work, and he can only be stimulated and dignified
as he obtains a conception of his proper relation to
society. Scholarship is evidently unable to do
this for him; for, unfortunately, the same tendency
to division of labor has also produced over-specialization
in scholarship, with the sad result that when the
scholar attempts to minister to a worker, he gives
him the result of more specialization rather than
an offset from it. He cannot bring healing and
solace because he himself is suffering from the same
disease. There is indeed a deplorable lack of
perception and adaptation on the part of educators
all along the line.
It will certainly be embarrassing
to have our age written down triumphant in the matter
of inventions, in that our factories were filled with
intricate machines, the result of advancing mathematical
and mechanical knowledge in relation to manufacturing
processes, but defeated in that it lost its head over
the achievement and forgot the men. The accusation
would stand, that the age failed to perform a like
service in the extension of history and art to the
factory employees who ran the machines; that the machine
tenders, heavy and almost dehumanized by monotonous
toil, walked about in the same streets with us, and
sat in the same cars; but that we were absolutely
indifferent and made no genuine effort to supply to
them the artist’s perception or student’s
insight, which alone could fuse them into social consciousness.
It would further stand that the scholars among us
continued with yet more research, that the educators
were concerned only with the young and the promising,
and the philanthropists with the criminals and helpless.
There is a pitiful failure to recognize
the situation in which the majority of working people
are placed, a tendency to ignore their real experiences
and needs, and, most stupid of all, we leave quite
untouched affections and memories which would afford
a tremendous dynamic if they were utilized.
We constantly hear it said in educational
circles, that a child learns only by “doing,”
and that education must proceed “through the
eyes and hands to the brain”; and yet for the
vast number of people all around us who do not need
to have activities artificially provided, and who use
their hands and eyes all the time, we do not seem able
to reverse the process. We quote the dictum,
“What is learned in the schoolroom must be applied
in the workshop,” and yet the skill and handicraft
constantly used in the workshop have no relevance
or meaning given to them by the school; and when we
do try to help the workingman in an educational way,
we completely ignore his everyday occupation.
Yet the task is merely one of adaptation. It
is to take actual conditions and to make them the
basis for a large and generous method of education,
to perform a difficult idealization doubtless, but
not an impossible one.
We apparently believe that the workingman
has no chance to realize life through his vocation.
We easily recognize the historic association in regard
to ancient buildings. We say that “generation
after generation have stamped their mark upon them,
have recorded their thoughts in them, until they have
become the property of all.” And yet this
is even more true of the instruments of labor, which
have constantly been held in human hands. A machine
really represents the “seasoned life of man”
preserved and treasured up within itself, quite as
much as an ancient building does. At present,
workmen are brought in contact with the machinery
with which they work as abruptly as if the present
set of industrial implements had been newly created.
They handle the machinery day by day, without any
notion of its gradual evolution and growth. Few
of the men who perform the mechanical work in the great
factories have any comprehension of the fact that
the inventions upon which the factory depends, the
instruments which they use, have been slowly worked
out, each generation using the gifts of the last and
transmitting the inheritance until it has become a
social possession. This can only be understood
by a man who has obtained some idea of social progress.
We are still childishly pleased when we see the further
subdivision of labor going on, because the quantity
of the output is increased thereby, and we apparently
are unable to take our attention away from the product
long enough to really focus it upon the producer.
Theoretically, “the division of labor”
makes men more interdependent and human by drawing
them together into a unity of purpose. “If
a number of people decide to build a road, and one
digs, and one brings stones, and another breaks them,
they are quite inevitably united by their interest
in the road. But this naturally presupposes that
they know where the road is going to, that they have
some curiosity and interest about it, and perhaps a
chance to travel upon it.” If the division
of labor robs them of interest in any part of it,
the mere mechanical fact of interdependence amounts
to nothing.
The man in the factory, as well as
the man with the hoe, has a grievance beyond being
overworked and disinherited, in that he does not know
what it is all about. We may well regret the
passing of the time when the variety of work performed
in the unspecialized workshop naturally stimulated
the intelligence of the workingmen and brought them
into contact both with the raw material and the finished
product. But the problem of education, as any
advanced educator will tell us, is to supply the essentials
of experience by a short cut, as it were. If the
shop constantly tends to make the workman a specialist,
then the problem of the educator in regard to him
is quite clear: it is to give him what may be
an offset from the over-specialization of his daily
work, to supply him with general information and to
insist that he shall be a cultivated member of society
with a consciousness of his industrial and social
value.
As sad a sight as an old hand-loom
worker in a factory attempting to make his clumsy
machine compete with the flying shuttles about him,
is a workingman equipped with knowledge so meagre
that he can get no meaning into his life nor sequence
between his acts and the far-off results.
Manufacturers, as a whole, however,
when they attempt educational institutions in connection
with their factories, are prone to follow conventional
lines, and to exhibit the weakness of imitation.
We find, indeed, that the middle-class educator constantly
makes the mistakes of the middle-class moralist when
he attempts to aid working people. The latter
has constantly and traditionally urged upon the workingman
the specialized virtues of thrift, industry, and sobrietyall
virtues pertaining to the individual. When each
man had his own shop, it was perhaps wise to lay almost
exclusive stress upon the industrial virtues of diligence
and thrift; but as industry has become more highly
organized, life becomes incredibly complex and interdependent.
If a workingman is to have a conception of his value
at all, he must see industry in its unity and entirety;
he must have a conception that will include not only
himself and his immediate family and community, but
the industrial organization as a whole. It is
doubtless true that dexterity of hand becomes less
and less imperative as the invention of machinery
and subdivision of labor proceeds; but it becomes all
the more necessary, if the workman is to save his
life at all, that he should get a sense of his individual
relation to the system. Feeding a machine with
a material of which he has no knowledge, producing
a product, totally unrelated to the rest of his life,
without in the least knowing what becomes of it, or
its connection with the community, is, of course,
unquestionably deadening to his intellectual and moral
life. To make the moral connection it would be
necessary to give him a social consciousness of the
value of his work, and at least a sense of participation
and a certain joy in its ultimate use; to make the
intellectual connection it would be essential to create
in him some historic conception of the development
of industry and the relation of his individual work
to it.
Workingmen themselves have made attempts
in both directions, which it would be well for moralists
and educators to study. It is a striking fact
that when workingmen formulate their own moral code,
and try to inspire and encourage each other, it is
always a large and general doctrine which they preach.
They were the first class of men to organize an international
association, and the constant talk at a modern labor
meeting is of solidarity and of the identity of the
interests of workingmen the world over. It is
difficult to secure a successful organization of men
into the simplest trades organization without an appeal
to the most abstract principles of justice and brotherhood.
As they have formulated their own morals by laying
the greatest stress upon the largest morality, so
if they could found their own schools, it is doubtful
whether they would be of the mechanic institute type.
Courses of study arranged by a group of workingmen
are most naïve in their breadth and generality.
They will select the history of the world in preference
to that of any period or nation. The “wonders
of science” or “the story of evolution”
will attract workingmen to a lecture when zooelogy
or chemistry will drive them away. The “outlines
of literature” or “the best in literature”
will draw an audience when a lecturer in English poetry
will be solitary. This results partly from a wholesome
desire to have general knowledge before special knowledge,
and is partly a rebound from the specialization of
labor to which the workingman is subjected. When
he is free from work and can direct his own mind, he
tends to roam, to dwell upon large themes. Much
the same tendency is found in programmes of study
arranged by Woman’s Clubs in country places.
The untrained mind, wearied with meaningless detail,
when it gets an opportunity to make its demand heard,
asks for general philosophy and background.
In a certain sense commercialism itself,
at least in its larger aspect, tends to educate the
workingman better than organized education does.
Its interests are certainly world-wide and democratic,
while it is absolutely undiscriminating as to country
and creed, coming into contact with all climes and
races. If this aspect of commercialism were utilized,
it would in a measure counterbalance the tendency which
results from the subdivision of labor.
The most noteworthy attempt to utilize
this democracy of commerce in relation to manufacturing
is found at Dayton, Ohio, in the yearly gatherings
held in a large factory there. Once a year the
entire force is gathered together to hear the returns
of the business, not so much in respect to the profits,
as in regard to its extension. At these meetings,
the travelling salesmen from various parts of the worldfrom
Constantinople, from Berlin, from Rome, from Hong Kongreport
upon the sales they have made, and the methods of
advertisement and promotion adapted to the various
countries.
Stereopticon lectures are given upon
each new country as soon as it has been successfully
invaded by the product of the factory. The foremen
in the various departments of the factory give accounts
of the increased efficiency and the larger output
over former years. Any man who has made an invention
in connection with the machinery of the factory, at
this time publicly receives a prize, and suggestions
are approved that tend to increase the comfort and
social facilities of the employees. At least
for the moment there is a complete esprit de corps,
and the youngest and least skilled employee sees himself
in connection with the interests of the firm, and
the spread of an invention. It is a crude example
of what might be done in the way of giving a large
framework of meaning to factory labor, and of putting
it into a sentient background, at least on the commercial
side.
It is easy to indict the educator,
to say that he has gotten entangled in his own material,
and has fallen a victim to his own methods; but granting
this, what has the artist done about ithe
who is supposed to have a more intimate insight into
the needs of his contemporaries, and to minister to
them as none other can?
It is quite true that a few writers
are insisting that the growing desire for labor, on
the part of many people of leisure, has its counterpart
in the increasing desire for general knowledge on the
part of many laborers. They point to the fact
that the same duality of conscience which seems to
stifle the noblest effort in the individual because
his intellectual conception and his achievement are
so difficult to bring together, is found on a large
scale in society itself, when we have the separation
of the people who think from those who work. And
yet, since Ruskin ceased, no one has really formulated
this in a convincing form. And even Ruskin’s
famous dictum, that labor without art brutalizes,
has always been interpreted as if art could only be
a sense of beauty or joy in one’s own work,
and not a sense of companionship with all other workers.
The situation demands the consciousness of participation
and well-being which comes to the individual when he
is able to see himself “in connection and cooperation
with the whole”; it needs the solace of collective
art inherent in collective labor.
As the poet bathes the outer world
for us in the hues of human feeling, so the workman
needs some one to bathe his surroundings with a human
significancesome one who shall teach him
to find that which will give a potency to his life.
His education, however simple, should tend to make
him widely at home in the world, and to give him a
sense of simplicity and peace in the midst of the
triviality and noise to which he is constantly subjected.
He, like other men, can learn to be content to see
but a part, although it must be a part of something.
It is because of a lack of democracy
that we do not really incorporate him in the hopes
and advantages of society, and give him the place which
is his by simple right. We have learned to say
that the good must be extended to all of society before
it can be held secure by any one person or any one
class; but we have not yet learned to add to that
statement, that unless all men and all classes contribute
to a good, we cannot even be sure that it is worth
having. In spite of many attempts we do not really
act upon either statement.