I'm glad I re-discovered this passage - a defence of repetition:
We should be suspicious of claims for innate, untrained talent. "I could write a good novel if only I had the time" or "if only I could pull myself together" is usually a narcissist's fantasy. Going over an action again and again, by contrast, enables self-criticism. Modern education fears repetitive learning as mind-numbing. Afraid of boring children, avid to present ever-different stimulation, the enlightened teacher may avoid routine - but thus deprive children of the experience of studying their own ingrained practice and modulating it from within."
I particularly agree with reference to a subject like Latin - so much of the joy of what Mary Beard calls the "command and control" of Latin comes from the pencil-breaking frustration of all those mistakes - all that self-correcting - early on.

1 comment:
I thank for the information. I did not know it.
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