Annex VI
http://www.classicalhomeschooling.org/trivium.html#laws
The Three Laws of Learning
The word “trivium”
comes
from the Latin prefix “tri” meaning “three,” and the Latin root “via”
meaning “way,” or “road.” The word literally means “the three-fold way or road.”
The trivium refers to the three stages, or ways, of learning that coincide with
a child’s cognitive development as he matures. We should begin an in-depth
look
at the trivium--the three stages of learning--by reminding ourselves that the
trivium is not some arbitrary theory of teaching methodology or new fad of
learning philosophy. Rather, the trivium was developed by long
trial
and error, through the observation of the ancients in the way children learn
during the whole course of their instruction from young child to young adult.
They realized that
time
after
time,
they followed three stages in the learning process. They simply pointed out what
was obviously there; what God had designed: that there
are
three stages, which they named Grammar, Dialectic, and Rhetoric; and they
progress in that order. Think of Sir Isaac
Newton.
He didn’t invent the three laws of motion (God did that when He created the
universe), but after careful observation, he defined them by stating what was
already there. So it is with the trivium. We might even call the trivium the
three laws of learning.
How We Learn & the Trivium
There
are
two ways to
look
at the trivium. The first has to do with the affinity that children have for
thinking about things, for seeing things in one
light
or another depending on their stage of brain development. It is a well-known
fact that when a baby is born, his nervous system isn’t fully developed yet.
There is a process of myelinization of the nervous system that must occur, and
this process takes years. First he is able to hold his head up, then roll over,
crawl,
walk, run, jump, and finally do things like ballet or basketball or synchronized
swimming with style and grace. Just as a child’s physical coordination and
motor skills
develop and become more refined over
time,
following a definable progression; his cognitive coordination and thinking
skills also develop and become more refined over
time,
following a definable progression.
Therefore a child will
first embark on the stage of brain development that classicists term the grammar
stage. In this stage he has a
natural
affinity for storing up a tremendous amount of information on any number of
things, from nursery rhymes to math facts, and recalling that information at
will. He will then progress to the stage termed the dialectic, where his
abilities to reason
are
honed and sharpened, and everything is turned into an exercise in argumentation.
And lastly he will advance to the rhetoric stage, where self-discovery and
expression
are
the paramount concerns, and where cognitive abilities come into their full
flower of maturity.
The second way to
look
at the Trivium is just this: that anyone learning something new goes through
these three stages as well. A baby learning his native language starts with
vocabulary first (the grammar stage), advancing on to stringing that vocabulary
together in meaningful ways (the dialectic stage), and ending with finally
becoming proficient in completely expressing his thought in the common
standard
of language usage (the rhetoric stage.) A
teenager
learning to
drive
or an adult learning to operate a personal computer does the same thing: commit
the vocabulary, the rules, the basics of the subject to memory (grammar), string
the isolated parts together to make a meaningful whole (dialectic), then become
proficient in the operation of the car or the computer or whatever the subject
happens to be (rhetoric.)
The Grammar Stage
With that under our
belt, let us
look
at the grammar stage more completely. Simply defined, it is the learning of the
body of knowledge of a subject, and most classicists would agree that this is
best done by memorization. Most of us have been trained to have an aversion to
rote memorization, but it is not harmful, and neither does it have to be dull. I
would venture to say that no baby had to be forced to learn to talk, but rather
he enjoyed the process immensely. In reality, a child begins learning the
grammar of things when he is born and continues from there, but in
formal
education the grammar stage coincides with the elementary years. In terms of
cognitive ability, children at this age automatically
zero
in on the concrete facts. Therefore it is fine at this stage to concentrate on
the concrete and leave the analytical and the abstract out of it.
There is a big push in
modern educational theory to introduce abstract concepts to elementary children,
and while there is some overlap of the stages with
individual
children maturing in their thinking individually, for the most part they
are
not developmentally able to grasp abstracts at this age. Resist the pressure to
have young children wrestling with underlying abstract mathematical concepts;
feel free to be the only one in
miles
that does not emphasize self-expression to the detriment of all else in writing
class. Ideally, an understanding of anything is not the goal at this age, but
rather: have they memorized their math facts and demonstrated that by being able
to do computations; have they memorized their phonics and spelling rules and
demonstrated that by being able to read and spell correctly; and so on. The
problem with attempting to teach abstracts at this age is that children do not
yet have the ability to connect relationships between factors, nor do they have
the ability to question and reason out the validity of what they have been told,
but they have the ability to believe that what they have been told is the truth.
That is the beauty of the grammar stage.
The Dialectic Stage
The dialectic stage is
defined as learning to reason, and the body of knowledge learned in the grammar
stage is the stuff learning to reason is practiced on. In the grammar stage
children learned facts; in the dialectic stage children try to understand the
facts they have learned, and begin to relate those facts to one another in a
significant way. This stage coincides with middle or junior high school,
although it may actually begin for
individual
children earlier than that, in 5th or 6th
grade. It is in
the dialectic that the emphasis in cognitive skills shifts from the concrete to
the analytical. This is where children
are
naturally inclined to ask the question “Why?” This is where they question what
they have learned in the grammar stage to see if it is in fact true. Truth holds
up very well under examination, and only proves its nature by this process.
While not advocating children question the things they were taught, if what they
were taught is true, we need have no fear of it being questioned, even if that
questioning
runs
to things such as the existence of God or the veracity of the Word. Therefore
teaching the science of Logic is critical at this stage. It gives children the
tools they need to question accurately and arrive at valid conclusions. We might
be conditioned to react with shock or discipline, even, when children at this
age question, argue, or want to know why. If we can understand that going
through this process is the necessary step to arrive at the next one and
therefore on to maturity, perhaps we can temper our response and help children
learn to question and reason while maintaining an attitude of honor and respect.
The Rhetoric Stage
The last stage is the
rhetoric stage, which focuses on learning the science of communication and the
art of expression. In the grammar stage children learned facts; in the dialectic
stage children began to understand those facts, and in the rhetoric stage
children learn to express what they now understand in the most compelling manner
possible. This stage roughly coincides with high school. Cognitively speaking,
this stage is where abstract thought reaches its zenith. In this stage, the
unknown can be explored because the known is understood; the hypothetical can be
introduced and grasped with the mind. The
mental jump can be
made from the
natural
to the spiritual, from the practical to the theoretical. Self-expression finally
comes
into its own in the language arts; “hard” sciences and advanced mathematics
are
more easily mastered; history can be applied to economics and political science;
and Bible study can turn to apologetics.
The Stages & the Subjects
From this explanation of
the stages of the trivium, we can see that each instructional stage corresponds
to a related stage in cognitive development: the grammar stage to concrete
thinking, the dialectic stage to analytical thinking, and the rhetoric stage to
abstract thinking. The stages themselves also bear the name of
individual
subjects which
are at
the heart of that stage. The subject of grammar, which is the science of correct
language usage, is best learned in the grammar stage; the subject of logic,
which is the science of right thinking, is best learned in the dialectic stage;
and the subject of rhetoric, which is the science of expression, is best learned
in the rhetoric stage. Each of these subjects give our children valuable tools
of learning which enables them to grasp, understand, and act on any other
subject, area of study, or problem encountered in college and in adult life.
Some confusion in
understanding the trivium has resulted from the names of the stages themselves
sharing the names of these
individual
subjects. We must remember that each stage represents a distinct way of teaching
and learning and thinking about each subject in the curriculum, while at the
same
time
zeroing in on a
particular
field of study uniquely relevant to that stage. In discussing the trivium it is
helpful to distinguish between the stages of grammar, dialectic, and rhetoric;
and the subjects of grammar, logic, and rhetoric.
The Trivium in Summary
The trivium is most
easily understood first by realizing that it is not some fly-by-night modern
educational theory, but tried and true laws of learning. It can be looked at in
two ways: as instructional stages that correspond to cognitive development, and
as a
natural
process that is followed anytime any person of any age learns something new. As
instructional stages, the trivium follows this progression: the grammar stage,
emphasizing memorization of concrete facts and corresponding to the elementary
grades;
the dialectic stage, emphasizing understanding and analytical thinking and
corresponding to the junior high
grades;
and the rhetoric stage, emphasizing expression and abstract thinking and
corresponding to the high school
grades.
The stages of instruction should not be confused with the specific core subjects
of grammar, logic, and rhetoric; which
are
best taught during their corresponding stage and provide the tools of learning
which
are
the goal of the trivium. Comprehending these basics about the trivium will go
far in helping to unravel the mystery of how the trivium ought to be applied to
each subject in each stage.
Esta página foi modificada em
02/02/06.