This text first appeared in The Educating Professor on December 17, 2018 © Magna Publications. All rights reserved. Try a FREE three-week trial of The Teaching Professor!
First snowflakes of the season at present. Winter is settling in out right here within the Pennsylvania countryside. It’s quiet, no birdsongs within the morning, few leaves left on the timber to rustle, and frost muting the crunch of these on the bottom. Within the woods the place I stroll, the silence brings every part else into sharper focus.
We don’t at all times take into consideration silence positively. Guests typically inform us it’s too quiet out right here. They really feel anxious. Silence might be awkward—we’ve all that these moments of not understanding what to say. It might additionally really feel like an affront. Ask a query in school, hear the silence, and really feel a small surge of anger. It’s a confrontation. It’s college students’ manner of claiming that they don’t need to sit at this studying desk we’ve so fastidiously set. The feelings encourage us to behave. We transfer in, drive a response that then disappoints.
Silence does have all these unfavourable meanings however in programs it could actually additionally present the area wanted to course of the query, to seek for the reply, to ponder attainable responses, to consider the query that comes earlier than the one which’s been requested. And there are different constructive meanings to silence as nicely. Generally there aren’t any phrases; the most effective response is reverential silence. “Beneath sure situations, silence is likely to be essentially the most acceptable response, as a result of it’s only in silence that any attainable which means might be discovered.” (p. 197) We stand in silent awe earlier than a sundown, a masterpiece, or a selfless sacrifice.
I would like silence to suppose, to focus, to pay attention. For a few of us that will not be the absence of noise however a form inner quiet just like the woods right here in winter, that settling sense that comes when issues are as they need to be. The area has been cleared and now considering can happen. Parker Palmer describes “the important function silence has at all times performed within the lifetime of the thoughts. Think about Charles Darwin observing his finches or Jane Austen dealing with a clean web page or Karl Marx at his hushed desk within the British Museum or Barbara McClintock journeying inward to think about herself as a gene.…How unhappy it’s that the academy appears to grasp so little of silence, that teachers so usually confuse the capability to make public noise with true mental powers.” (p. 164)
However there’s something fantastic about noise within the classroom or a web based dialogue. College students speaking, making feedback, to one another, ideally concerning the content material. College students impatiently elevating their palms whereas I’m speaking, considering what they’ve bought to say is extra necessary, and typically it’s. One remark after one other popping up on the display. However to orchestrate the chaos of a classroom and make room for studying I’ve to be quiet inside. I can unfurl classroom dynamics solely once I give them my full undivided consideration.
We want silence to pay attention—to ourselves and to others—and that’s the silence we now have such a tough time discovering. We hearken to others, however with ideas racing as we assemble a response. We watch for that quick pause and shortly interject what we now have to say. We don’t have time, can’t discover a place and typically merely ignore the necessity to hearken to what that voice inside has to say. It hardly ever speaks loudly however it impacts educating dramatically.
We pause, we mirror, and within the stillness we now have an opportunity to hearken to the small voice inside.
December is a loud month however largely it’s full of fine sounds; music we love, household conversations, kin arriving, pals checking in, excited kids, meals preparations, gatherings round tables, hustling and bustling. Nevertheless it’s additionally a season that lends itself to quiet occasions. One other set of programs has ended, one other 12 months is all however over. We pause, we mirror, and within the stillness we now have an opportunity to hearken to that small voice inside. It speaks fact about who we’re as lecturers, as relations, and pals. It’s the voice that honors what we’ve completed and but calls us to be extra. It makes us really feel grateful. We now have work to try this issues and makes a distinction.
My excited about silence has been modified by an extended and tough piece I’m making my manner via. I’ll put the reference under though it’s not gentle vacation studying. It’s huge on understanding silence extra broadly and positively. “The Western mystics and Jap Buddhist masters immediate us to learn to expertise silence, to ‘wrap our phrases round areas with out phrases and depart them wordless.’” (p. 200) That’s a high-quality thought for the season.
Maryellen Weimer, PhD has edited The Educating Professor since 1987. She is a Penn State Professor Emeritus of Educating and Studying. Along with editorship of the publication, Dr. Weimer has authored and edited eight books; most just lately Learner-Centered Educating and Enhancing Scholarly Work on Educating and Studying.
References
Zemlylas, M. and Michaelides, P. (2004). The sound of silence in pedagogy. Academic Idea, 54 (2), 193-2004.
Palmer, P. (2002). “Assembly for Studying” revisited: Trailing Quaker crumbs via the wilderness of upper schooling. M. L. Birkel, ed., The Inward Educating: Essays to Honor Paul A. Lacey. Richmond, Indiana: The Earlham School Press.