Society exists through a process of transmission. This transmission occurs by means of communication of habits of doing, thinking, and feeling from the older to the younger. So obvious is the necessity of teaching and learning for the continued existence of a society that we may seem to be dwelling excessively on a self-evident truth.But justification is found in the fact that such emphasis is a means of getting us away from an unduly scholastic and formal notion of education. Schools are, indeed, one important method of the transmission which forms the dispositions of the immature; but it is only one means, and, compared with other agencies, a relatively superficial means. Only as we have grasped the necessity of more fundamental and persistent modes of tuition can we make sure of placing the scholastic methods in their true context.
Society not only continues to exist by transmission, by communication, but it may fairly be said to exist in transmission, in communication.All communication (and hence all genuine social life) is educative. To be a recipient of a communication is to have an enlarged and changed experience. One shares in what another has thought and felt and in so far, meagerly or amply, has his own attitude modifieD、Nor is the one who communicates left unaffecteD、Try the experiment of communicating, with fullness and accuracy, some experience to another, especially if it be somewhat complicated ,and you will find your own attitude toward your experience changing; otherwise you resort to swearwords and exclamations. The experience has to be formulated in order to be communicateD、To formulate requires getting outside of it, seeing it as another would see it considering what points Of contact it has with the life of another so that it may be got into such form that he can appreciate its meaning.Except in dealing with commonplaces and catch phrases one has to assimilate, imaginatively, something of another’s experience in order to tell him intelligently of one’s own experience.All communication is like art. It may fairly be said, therefore, that any social arrangement that remains vitally social, or vitally shared, is educative to those who participate in it. Only when it becomes cast in a mold and runs in a routine way does it lose its educative power.