Ethics in the High School [excerpt]
T problem of
the high school is to provide for its students such an exercise
of their individual powers as will tend toward the development of
self-determined beings; as will make internal, in so far
as it can be made, the authority which has hitherto been external
to the students; as will make them intelligent actors in the complex
social situation into which they are born.
We cannot, if we would, hinder the
youth of today from imbibing ideas ethical, or non-ethical, from
the life around him and from the national life as reflected in the
daily press. For example, the week of the execution of President
McKinley’s assassin, a group of Polish Jew children were found in
a secluded corner of a school yard, pronouncing their sentence upon
one of their comrades (an imaginary assassin) whom they were about
to put to death in the electric chair. This incident is significant
from an ethical point of view in two respects: the one is, that
in the seclusion which they sought, in their desire not to be found
out, these children showed a recognition of ethical standards in
their immediate environment, and that their conduct would not receive
the sanction of those placed in authority over them; the other is,
that they reflected the national consciousness as they understood
it; they imagined themselves the nation for the moment, in espousing
the nation’s cause and administering punishment for an offense against
the outraged national sense.
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