Wednesday, October 2, 2019
Excellence in Education :: essays research papers
 The concept of excellence in education is one that, on the  surface, seems to be unquestionable. After all, who would  not accede that students within our schools should, in fact,  excel? Certainly teachers, parents, and administrators can  agree on excellence as an aim to shoot for. The  interpretation of the term "excellence" is, however, less  obvious. How do we regard excellence? Is it the college  bound student with a broad liberal arts education? Is it the  student who graduates high school trained in a specific  trade? Many in the field of education cannot come to an  agreement on how our schools can best achieve excellence  for and from our students.     One of the many authorities who have contributed a model  for what schools should be is Robert L. Ebel. According to  Ebel, knowledge is the single most significant and most  important goal in the education of children. In his article  "What are schools for?" Ebel answers "that schools are for  learning, and that what ought to be learned mostly is useful  knowledge" (3). He builds this declaration in answer to  trends in education that focus upon other aspects of  learning in schools. Ebel states in the beginning of his  article, that he does not assume schools should be social  research agencies, recreational facilities, adjustment  centers, or custodial institutions. (3). While he does not  deny that our nation is currently wrestling with a dreary  array of social ailments, he does argue that the answer to  such problems can or should lie within the jurisdiction of  our schools.    In discussing educationââ¬â¢s mission to provide useful  knowledge, Ebel defines what he means by the word  knowledge: "It is an integrated structure of relationships  among concepts and propositions" (5). Knowledge, the  way Ebel describes it is not the same as information. Ebel  states that "knowledge is built out of information by  thinking". Knowledge, according to Ebel, must be  constructed from information by each individual learner; it  cannot be looked up, or given to students by a parent or  teacher. " A student must earn the right to say ââ¬ËI knowââ¬â¢ by  his own thoughtful efforts to understand" (Ebel, 5). The  intellectual proficiencies many educators hope to teach are,  like information, essentially useless to Ebel without a  knowledge base on which to draw from.    Ebel feels that a good teacher can "motivate, direct, and  assist the learning process to great advantage". Although  Ebel feels that good teachers are essential to providing a  "favorable learning environment," he puts much of the  accountability for learning on the students themselves. Ebel  feels that teachers are there to facilitate students in their  learning, not to coerce those who are indifferent and  unmotivated and do not wish to learn, against their will.  					    
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