Even admitting, however, that the produces a certain amount of passivity on the student, it is nevertheless small discussion group, whether a or tutorial, in several respects.
In contrast to the section meeting, The lecture is also important in that it Nothing that is said here should be mean that small group teaching has Not the least of these would be An even greater problem is presented Exclusive of 300 and 99 courses, Practical considerations are not an adequate defense of the lecture system, of course, for there might well be better methods of handling large numbers. Some have even gone so far as to suggest that professors would do everyone concerned a favor if they simply passed out mimeographed copies of their lectures instead of delivering them in person. They argue that the student would thus get the swift synthesis of the material and the lectures point of view in about 1/4 the time it now takes him to listen to a lecture. But there are several reasons for retaining the in-person lecture. Some lecturers, though admittedly a minority, have an inspirational impact which can not be put down in black and white. Merely to hear these men speak is often enough to arouse the student's interest in the subject. Clarifying Value Most lecturers do not have this impact, of course, but even for the ordinary, workaday lecturer there are several advantages in a personal delivery. For one thing, if he is there facing his students the lecturer can see what goes over and what doesn't, and he can thus expand and clarify confusing points. This can be particularly important when dealing with highly technical or highly complex material. Secondly, the lecture can be an important tool in the lecturer's learning process, and has served as the proving ground for many a book. Oscar Handlin, professor of History, notes that lectures are an excellent arena in which to test one's ideas. He reports that he often begins a lecture thinking he has the answers, but by the time he reaches the end he sees that they weren't such good ideas after all. "It's easy to come up with what look like sound theories in your head," he says, "but when you try to convince a group you sometimes see them in a different light." Admittedly, the lecture system has limitations. It tends to induce a certain amount of passivity on the part of the student; it tends to widen the gap between student and instructor; it tends to over-emphasize the position of one authority, and the student is in danger of coming out of the lecture of even an undogmatic professor in a dogmatic frame of mind. Moreover, it can be abused. A few lecturers are unprepared and disorganized. Some, with the power of hypnotic verbalization, manage to hold their audiences through sheer personality rather than because they have anything important to say. And an insecure professor with psychological problems can misuse the lecture to bolster his ego. The value of the lecture system is also less in some fields than in others. In the sciences, for example, it has a limited usefulness. In sharp contrast to the humanities, where differences of opinion and personal interpretations make a lecture stimulating, the aim of a science lecture is mainly to get over a considerable body of knowledge. The facts and theories are generally accepted, at least in the College-level courses, and personal viewpoints become less important. As Preston observes: "Much that you get in a science lecture could be gotten through mimeographed notes. In physics we have to aim at coverage of the whole structure of knowledge, and the lecture system is probably not the best way to do this. The textbooks have been worked over from edition to edition and can pretend to a greater completeness." There is a definite place for the science lecture, particularly in the treatment of the concepts, such as force and mass, which are generally dismissed in a one-sentence definition in the texts. But there is an equally definite place for the thorough textbook and the small section meeting to clarify confusing points in it. The teaching of the sciences would probably be improved if the rigid lecture system were modified to put more emphasis on the section meeting. Most of the defects of the lecture system are not irreparable, and it must be realized that all systems of teaching can be abused Although one defender of the discussion group may find that "the ingenuousness, the insight, the mad spontaneity of freshmen discussing Hobbs or Adam Smith or Burke is like nothing else in the realm of discourse," a large number of sections tend to be dominated by glib, superficial people. The real problem is not to find a substitute for lectures, but to find a means of improving them. To a large extent the impetus for improvement will have to come from the lectures themselves Too many of them use the lecture as a means of shot gunning vast quantities of information at the hapless student, who spends an uncomfortable fifty minutes frantically scribbling down everything that is said. This kind of lecturer, would do the student a favor by handing out mimeographed copies of his lecture, for then the student would be certain that he had the facts straight, and he would be able to absorb them in a fraction of the time. Howard Mumford Jones, professor of English and a staunch defender of the lecture system, feels that another weakness of the lecture system is that it is the "star system" at the moment and that each lecturer acts too much on his own. He believes that if lectures met together periodically to exchange views they might help one another develop better men. A large part of the responsibility improving the lecture system lies the students, however. Too many of regard themselves as mere Prohibit Note-Taking Perhaps the situation would automatically improve if all lecturers stopped regarding the lecture as a means of vast quantities of information Whatever improvements are It seems patently absurd to Raphael Demos discusses the morning Philosophy lecture with one of his section men. John Finley,