“Do not ask for lessons; all I can give are opportunities.”
–Aphorism 3
This is an interesting one, to be sure. To
understand what it might be taken to mean, we must consider the
possible meanings of different parts of it. For instance, what is meant
by ‘lesson’, and what by ‘opportunities’? More profoundly, in
whose voice should it be taken as being? At the same time, it is a
very simple statement that seems to have a fairly straightforward
meaning, at least from the point of view of certain approaches to
education. So straightforward that it might be considered a pat
answer itself, in fact (though that adjective, pat,
has some divergence in meaning that means it might be appropriate
whether the explanation is trivial and misguiding or simple and
correct).
Let us first
consider that straightforward answer. A popular view of education, of
the process of learning, is that the only true agent in the process
is the learner. Constructivist theories of education hold that
knowledge cannot be transmitted, only constructed by the individual.
In that context, even modified in such variants as social
constructivism (where knowledge construction takes place in the
context of interaction between individuals), a more traditional
‘lesson’, in which knowledge is transmitted from teacher to
student, is impossible – or at least ineffective. The educator
instead provides opportunities for the construction of knowledge,
facilitates the process. It might be said, then, that this aphorism
is simply a truism in the context of constructivist educational
theory. However, in receiving it as ministry it behoves us to look
beyond that simple explanation. That is where we must consider the
possible meanings, beyond that of constructivism, and the voice of
the statement.