EDUCATION QUOTES IV

quotations about education

I say that our system of tests and grades, as it now exists, is one source of the low yield of great men from our universities. The marking system is a traumatic experience from which most students emerge with a deep determination never to get into a situation where they can be marked again. They just won't ever again take a chance.

EDWIN H. LAND

address at MIT, "Generation of Greatness: The Idea of a University in an Age of Science", May 22, 1957


Education is a better safeguard of liberty than a standing army. If we retrench the wages of the schoolmaster, we must raise those of the recruiting sergeant.

EDWARD EVERETT

Public Documents of Massachusetts, 1868


Education is so much of an organic unity that, if any of the stages or elements of it be defective, the deficiency is felt throughout all the subsequent growth of the organism.

GEORGE TRUMBULL LADD

Essays on the Higher Education


I consider that it is on instruction and education, that the future security and direction of the destiny of every nation chiefly and fundamentally rests.

LAJOS KOSSUTH

The Future of Nations


The enthusiastic advocate of what is new in educational ideas--as to subjects, methods, curricula, organization, etc.--regards it as highly unfortunate that institutions are not so plastic, so easy to change, as are ideas. The man who is wise in practical affairs, and profound in his reflections upon the truths of history, knows that, on the contrary, this abiding and relatively stable character of the institutional expression of ideas is the fortunate thing about educational, as about other forms of progress. Most fortunate of all are those institutions which change just fast and far enough to conserve the priceless lessons of the past, while unfolding constantly to receive the suggestions of the better time coming.

GEORGE TRUMBULL LADD

preface, Essays on the Higher Education


True men are not supplied by school; if they are nevertheless there, they are there in spite of school.

MAX STIRNER

The False Principle of Our Education


A child educated only at school is an uneducated child.

GEORGE SANTAYANA

Atoms of Thought


Each nature requires its own education. The training which will help the man of undue self-esteem, will hurt the man who has too little. A chief end of life is to grow aright; and no man can grow aright.

LYMAN ABBOTT

A Study in Human Nature


Getting an education by itself, of course, does not guarantee financial success. There must, after all, be an increase in demand for educated labor to match the increase in supply.

FRANK LEVY

The Economic Future of American Families: Income and Wealth Trends


Apart from any other basis which might justify a superiority, education, as a power, raised him who possessed it over the weak, who lacked it, and the educated man counted in his circle, however large or small it was, as the mighty, the powerful, the imposing one: for he was an authority.

MAX STIRNER

The False Principle of Our Education


Education without values, as useful as it is, seems rather to make man a more clever devil.

C. S. LEWIS

attributed, Christianity & Culture


Laws for the liberal education of youth, especially of the lower class of people, are so extremely wise and useful, that, to a humane and generous mind, no expense for this purpose would be thought extravagant.

JOHN ADAMS

Thoughts on Government


Education is one of those subjects which, from their very nature, do not admit of a very close approach to demonstrative argument. Neither from history, nor from our knowledge of nature and of the human soul, nor from the study of the details of experience in the past, can we construct a science--strictly speaking--of education. Pedagogics will probably never hold a place among the exact sciences. We may, however, form comprehensive and defensible opinions on this subject; and these opinions will be the more entitled to respect and acceptance, as the mind holding them is itself genial and truly liberal, and is also acquainted with the truths of history, of nature, and especially of the human soul.

GEORGE TRUMBULL LADD

Essays on the Higher Education


If you had to explain America’s economic success with one word, that word would be “education".... Until now, the results of educational neglect have been gradual -- a slow-motion erosion of America’s relative position. But things are about to get much worse, as the economic crisis ... deals a severe blow to education across the board.... We need to wake up and realize that one of the keys to our nation’s historic success is now a wasting asset. Education made America great; neglect of education can reverse the process.

PAUL KRUGMAN

New York Times, Oct. 8, 2009


All education has this provisional quality. In school, as well as in dreams, we learn in childhood a great deal that finds no immediate use or expression. For many years we may scarcely remember the lesson, then comes the occasion for it, and the information needed is suddenly restored.

AMELIA E. BARR

All the Days of My Life


All State education is a sort of dynamo machine for polarizing the popular mind; for turning and holding its lines of force in the direction supposed to be most effective for State purposes.

HENRY ADAMS

The Education of Henry Adams


As education becomes inclusive, introspective, cosmic, promoting whole populations to power and privilege, it enthrones a vast, invisible, personal rule over the common mind.

AMOS BRONSON ALCOTT

Table Talk


The founding fathers in their wisdom decided that children were an unnatural strain on parents. So they provided jails called schools, equipped with torture called education.

JOHN UPDIKE

The Centaur


Without education, we are in a horrible and deadly danger of taking educated people seriously.

G. K. CHESTERTON

Collected Works of G. K. CHESTERTON


As we educate a child -- removing out of its path those obstacles over which we ourselves, in early days, have stumbled, and strengthening its mind with the aid of our own matured experience -- we, as it were, construct a new and better replica of ourselves, and thus enable the race to move slowly, but surely, forward towards the ultimate goal of existence -- towards perfection.

LEONID ANDREYEV

The Life of Man