BERNHARD RUST
Reich and Prussian Minister of Science, Education and Popular Enlightenment
Reich and Prussian Minister of Science, Education and Popular Enlightenment
The nineteenth century
witnessed so much educational progress in the domain of intellectual refinement
that it may be justly described as the century of education. Germany took a
leading part in this development, and her educational system was universally
acknowledged to be particularly efficient. Many foreigners therefore availed
themselves of the educational facilities Germany had to offer. If we now see
that, despite these splendid achievements, the Third Reich has seen fit to make
a radical change in the system of education, we may feel sure that it has been
done for very good reasons.
There is, indeed, twofold
evidence to show that something was wrong with education. In the first place,
the high level of popular enlightenment had failed to protect the German people
against the poisonous effects of Marxist teaching and other false doctrines.
Large masses of people had fallen victims to them, whilst other sections - more
especially those of higher education - had been unable to take up an effective
stand against the spread of the poison. If they had, the events of 1918 and the
succeeding period of national disintegration and deterioration would have been
prevented.
In the second place, a
careful study of the situation shows that the German people are sound to the
core and are gifted with just as much national sentiment as any other. Hence,
the temporary lowering of their previous high standards could not have been the
result of any innate inferiority, but the reason must be sought in a faulty
system of education, which - notwithstanding its high intellectual achievements
- tended to impair the healthy spirit of the nation, men's energies and their
soundness of judgment, and to produce selfishness and a deficient sense of
national solidarity. Besides, it was obvious that certain elements intending to
secure private advantages for themselves by injuring the healthy forces of the nation
had succeeded in achieving undue prominence in public life.
National Socialism was
therefore compelled to ascertain and remove the causes that had brought about
so unsatisfactory a condition, and to open up new resources capable of being
used for a regeneration, the Führer, in his book" Mein Kampf," having
clearly indicated the road that had to be followed.
Two main causes had contributed
towards the unsatisfactory results.
1. Although the
intellectual capacities of young persons had been excellently trained and
although they were thoroughly qualified for their vocations in after-life, the
importance of knowledge for knowledge's sake had been over-estimated, whilst
physical education and the training of the character and the will had been
neglected. Metaphorically speaking, youth had been offered crystal-clear water
to drink, but the health-giving mineral constituents contained in it had first
been carefully removed. This interference was bound to do much harm to popular
health.
2. Excessive importance
had been attached to the individual as such, whilst it was almost forgotten
that each individual is at the same time a member of a racial community, that
it is only in that capacity that he can perfect his powers to their fullest
extent, and that it is his duty to work for the good of that community. Such
natural forms of the racial community as the family, the clan, the tribe, and
the nation (natural because they are based on the ties of blood) either failed
to receive the attention to which they are entitled, or they were disintegrated
by an exaggerated individualism or superseded by artificial and super-national
sham communities. Such a mental attitude enabled Jews and others animated by
selfish motives or by international and anti-racial ideas to obtain a prominent
influence upon all spheres of national life and access to high offices of State
and to poison the healthy feelings of the nation by means of their educational
policy.
It is the purpose of all
education to prepare the rising generation for its functions in after-life as
the true representatives of the nation and the State, both in a political and a
cultural sense. Their training, therefore, must proceed along the lines just
indicated. In conformity with the teaching of history and the laws of
biological and racial science, it is necessary to train the faculties of the
body, the character and the will just as much as the intellectual ones. The
lost equilibrium must be restored; or rather, the harmonious co-existence of
all these faculties must be maintained and developed instead of being
destroyed. To be and to remain strong and healthy, has become the fundamental
law governing Germany's youth, and it is the first and foremost duty of
educationists to give effect to it. Such strength and health, however, is
unthinkable without racial purity and the striving after a perfect racial type.
The attainment of high intellectual
standards will certainly continue to be urged upon the young people; but they
will be taught at the same time that their achievements must be of benefit to
the national community to which they belong. As a consequence of the demand
thus clearly formulated by the Nuremberg Laws, Jewish teachers and Jewish
pupils have had to quit German schools, and schools of their own have been
provided by and for them as far as possible. In this way, the natural race
instincts of German boys and girls are preserved; and the young people are made
aware of their duty to maintain their racial purity and to bequeath it to
succeeding generations. As the mere teaching of these principles is not enough,
it is constantly supplemented, in the National Socialist State, by
opportunities for what may be called" community life." By this term
we mean school journeys, school camps, school" homes" in rural
neighbourhoods, and similar applications of the corporate principle to the life
of schools and scholars.
History insists that
every biological race deterioration coincides with the growth of big towns,
that these latter exercise a paralysing effect upon community life, and that a
nation's strength is rooted in its rural elements. Our National Socialist
system of education pays due regard to these important considerations, and
makes every effort to take the young people from the towns to the country, whilst
impressing upon them the inseparable connection between racial strength and a
healthy open-air life.
The systematic reform of
Germany's educational system was started immediately after the coming-into-power
of National Socialism, and received a great stimulus when, on May 1st, 1934, a
National Department of Education was established.
The steps that had to be
taken comprised the internal reorganisation of school teaching in accordance
with the above principles, new methods for the training of teachers, and a
re-modelling of the existing types of schools.
If these far-reaching
changes were to materialise, teachers had first to be made capable of
introducing them. This task has since been taken in hand by the Department in
conjunction with the National Socialist Association of Teachers (N.S. Deutscher Lehrerbund). Numerous
courses, camps and working communities have been arranged to provide the
necessary instruction, which includes the teaching of the philosophy of
National Socialism in addition to the strictly educational subjects. The
uniform carrying-out of this work has been entrusted by the Department to the
Central Institute for Education and Instruction (Zentralinstitut für Erziehung und Unterricht). In the two training
camps maintained by the Institute, prominent educationists - both men and women
- are given such instruction for several weeks at a time; and on leaving the
camps, they are commissioned to disseminate the newly-acquired knowledge among
their colleagues through the medium of working communities. In addition, the
various educational authorities frequently arrange for conferences for the same
purpose, whilst special camps organised by the N.S. Lehrerbund provide instruction in the political aspects of
National Socialism.
These arrangements are
intended to enable the older generation of teachers to apply to their work the
principles of National Socialism. The Government, of course, has also
introduced fundamental alterations in the methods of training the younger
teachers. Elementary teachers are required to attend one of the training colleges
(Hochschulen für Lehrerbildung),
where they receive instruction in scientific and educational subjects and where
life is based on the principles of comradeship. Attendance at these colleges - most
of which are established outside the big towns - is also compulsory for
teachers in intermediate and higher schools as a preliminary to their studies
at other institutions where they receive the kind of special training they
need. This arrangement ensures that a certain uniformity governs the training
of teachers of all kinds. It goes without saying that the courses of study and
the regulations for the examination of teachers, more particularly those in the
higher schools, have been revised on similar lines.
The internal
reorganisation of the educational system was introduced by several decrees
dealing with fundamentals. As early as 1933, it was announced that all
education had to be founded on the principles of biological and racial science,
with which - in compliance with the Führer's wish - all schoolchildren were to
be made familiar. Detailed regulations were issued for giving practical effect
to this announcement.
Much information on the
educational policy of National Socialism may be gathered from a perusal of the
so-called selection Decree (Ausleseerlass),
which was issued by the Department in close collaboration with the Racial
Policy Board (Rassenpolitisches Amt)
of the National Socialist party. The decree names the conditions that have to
be satisfied by the pupils of the higher schools at the time of their admission
and in connection with their achievements. A strict control is to be exercised
to ensure that all those who, after completing their studies, are likely to
rise to leading positions in life, are racially sound, valuable and efficient.
Attention is paid to the physical, ethical, intellectual and racial aspects,
and is not confined - as hitherto - to the intellectual aspect only. The
demands now made on young persons are: increased intellectual achievements;
good physical health; a capacity for endurance; high ethical standards; a sense
of community, and descent from pure German stock. A nation desiring to see
these ideals realised must have for its guides persons that can be held up as models
in all these respects. It does not follow that young persons not possessing
good physical health are to be left outside or to be prevented from rising in
life. On the contrary, the National Socialist State looks well after their
interests; and it must also be remembered that, whenever a question of physical
unfitness arises, the medical practitioner has an important say in the matter.
Physical fitness is to be
assured by the extended cultivation of gymnastic exercises and sports in
accordance with the Regulations for Physical Culture in Boys' Schools (Richtlinien für die Leibeserziehung in Jungenschulen).
This matter has had the attention of the Government for several years past, a
special section of the Department giving systematic instruction to teachers - especially
head teachers - of all kinds of schools. The regular cultivation in the
training camps already mentioned of early sports, bodily work, and marching
exercise serves the same purpose.
A far-reaching change has
also been introduced in the domain of intellectual education. In the past,
there had been a tendency towards cramming into pupils' heads every new
addition to learning, but restrictions are now to be imposed upon that
tendency. It is not necessary to teach everything that is interesting or
otherwise worth knowing. The selection of subjects will be guided by the answer
to the question : What must boys and girls be taught so that they may become
useful members of the national community and of the vocation or profession they
may take up? It stands to reason that they must be made familiar with the
civilisation of their country and with its origins, or - in other words - they
must be taught subjects that have a direct bearing upon the life and history of
the German people and that are of real use to them when they have grown up. To
these must be added a knowledge of the benefits German civilisation has
received from contact with other nations, the extent of this teaching being
dependent upon the needs of the schools concerned in each instance.
The courses of study
drawn up for all categories of schools are therefore founded on the principle
that the fullest possible recognition must be accorded to the national aspect
of education and to the practical requirements of life. Thus, the decree
governing the teaching work done in the Grundschule
(i.e., the lowest four grades of the Elementary School or Volksschule) provides that such work must start from and centre on
a knowledge of the children's home district, that the pupils must acquire a solid
knowledge of the rudiments of correct speaking, writing and arithmetic, and
that due attention must be paid to the teaching of physical exercises, music,
and manual training. Similar rules have been laid down for other schools, each
according to its own type. The rural vocational schools, for instance, must
concentrate upon the life and labour of the rural population, and the urban
ones upon local handicrafts and industries, whilst the higher schools must
group all their teaching around the so-called deutschkundliche Fächer (i.e., German, history, geography, the fine
arts, and music). As regards elementary schools, the application of the
above-mentioned principle has resulted in the compiling of a National Reader (Reichslesebuch) consisting of a nucleus
compulsory for the whole country, which is supplemented by sections
representative of the local literature of the different districts.
The introduction of
National Socialist ideas into all schools has greatly stimulated their
activities; and the uniform National Socialist outlook of the teachers sees to
it that the German schools will not for a second time become the victims of that
spirit of disunion which prevailed during a period when party strife and a lack
of creative principles had their counterparts in education. The concentrated
determination of the teaching profession and the systematic selection of the
subjects taught ensure that German intellectual education will not only
maintain, but even transcend its present high level. In the past, decisions
regarding the internal affairs of each school were made by the whole teaching
staff assembled in conference and were therefore subject to fluctuating majorities;
but now that the National Socialist principle of leadership has been
introduced, the conference has merely consultative functions, whilst the power
to make decisions is restricted to the school leader who knows that his
superiors, and the whole community, expect him to make his school a model of a
German educational institution conducted on National Socialist principles.
It is also the duty of
the school leader to maintain regular contact between his school and the
progress of events, so that all questions of topical importance that affect our
nation can receive attention as part of the teaching work. All the steps taken
by the German people as represented by their vigorous National Socialist
leaders, in order to preserve and strengthen its national existence and status,
concern the schools too. This applies, for example, to aviation, air-raid protection,
the self-sufficiency policy, the Four-Year Plan, etc. School children are to
take an active interest in everything done by the nation and its rulers, so
that they may realise that their own destinies are identical with those of the
nation. This will enable them in after-life to render active assistance in
moulding the nation's future.
The external structure of
German education is as concentrated and systematic as its internal
organisation. This explains, inter alia,
why public schools are accorded preference to private ones. Although it is
quite true that the National Socialist State attaches great importance to the
vigorous initiative of the individual, it nevertheless demands that the special
desires of the individual must adjust themselves to the requirements of the
community. This applies more particularly to all matters capable of vitally
affecting the life of the nation. The State must therefore claim that its own
institutions are entitled to receive unconditional preference over those established
by individuals or by organisations, more especially so whenever there is a
danger that the latter kind cannot be unconditionally relied upon to follow the
lead given by the State. In view of the importance of education, the State must
therefore maintain that private schools and private teaching are justified only
in those localities whose educational needs cannot be satisfied by public
schools. Moreover, the denominational aspect being looked upon as a matter of
secondary importance that must no longer be allowed to divide all Germans in
their early youth and ever afterwards into two different camps, it has been the
practice to impose restrictions upon private denominational schools wherever it
is seen that efficient provision has been made for publicly conducted schools.
This does not affect the continued existence of such private institutions as,
for example, those of the Lietz Landschulheim type and others.
As regards children below
school age (six years), provision has been made wherever necessary by the
establishment of crèches (for younger infants) and kindergartens (for the older
ones). They are conducted by Government-trained teachers and are partly of a
public and partly of a private character. Attendance at them is optional.
At the age of six,
children enter the elementary schools (Volksschulen),
which - generally speaking - are not organised on the co-educational principle.
There they are taught, apart from general racial education, those theoretical
and practical subjects which are required for all vocations. Special schools (Hilfsschulen) are provided for children
whose mental faculties are below the normal. Another type of special schools (Sonderschulen) are provided for normally
developed children suffering from serious physical disabilities (e.g.,
deaf-mutes, blind children, etc.). Specially-trained teachers are in charge of
them while there. Attendance at the elementary schools is compulsory for eight
years. Whenever the number of pupils is too small to justify a separate grade
for each year, several grades may be combined, or boys and girls may be taught
together.
Recognition of the fact
that many boys and girls of healthy racial stock are rather out of place in the
artificial and unhealthy atmosphere of our big towns, so that their valuable
faculties cannot or but imperfectly develop there, has led me to introduce in
1934 a scheme I had long contemplated. I refer to what is called the Landjahr. The children spend nine months
of the year in one of the Landjahr
camps where specially suitable men and women teachers of youthful age are in
charge of them. There, their physical health is to be promoted; they are to
become familiar with every aspect of country life; their will-power is to be
strengthened; they are to be politically educated, and to experience the
blessings derived from an unselfish corporate life. Upon completing the Landjahr course, the children start upon
their vocational training, or - if they prove especially gifted - they may be
admitted to an Aufbauschule.
The four lower grades of
the elementary schools are sometimes called the Grundschule, because they form the foundation for most of the
higher schools. Children who are not going to join one of the latter, leave the
elementary school at the age of 14. They are required to spend the next three
years at a vocational school of the Berufsschule
or Fachschule type. This part of the
educational system is now also looked after by the Department of Education,
having previously (up to 1934) been the domain of several other departments.
The same as at the elementary schools, no fees are charged to pupils attending
the Berufsschulen. These schools are
not intended, as a rule, to furnish a general education, although their courses
of studies include some subjects dealing with national politics. Their
principal function is to supplement the work of training the young persons for
some definite vocation. They are of many different types, according to the
trades or industries domiciled in the localities concerned. Such schools have
also been established for juvenile workers not apprenticed to an employer. The
teaching work of the Berufsschulen
not only acquaints pupils with the practical needs of their vocation, but also
with its national political aspects. This is of particular importance to the
agricultural type of Berufsschulen,
because National Socialism has always stressed the great value of a healthy
farming community. Thus, the former continuation schools (Fortbildungssehulen) have been superseded, except for a few special
kinds, by the agricultural schools for boys and the rural economy schools for
girls.
Attendance at a Fachschule is optional and implies
exemption from attendance at a Berufsschule.
The Fachschule supply a more
extensive knowledge of the subjects taught than the Berufssehulen, and fees are payable by their pupils. Like the Berufsschulen, there are a great many
different types of them, but all are supervised by the State. Their pupils, on
leaving, may continue their studies at some höhere
Fachschule, at which they may qualify themselves for a university career or
for some leading position or appointment.
Attendance at the Berufsschulen and Fachschulen, therefore, coincides with the practical vocational
work of the young people. The intermediate schools (mittlere Schulen) and higher schools (höhere Schulen), however, continue the education of their pupils
for a few more years prior to their choice of a profession, and are therefore
called schools of general education (allgemeinbildende
Schulen). Those which admit candidates after they have attended the Grundschule for the customary four years
are known as the grundständige Form,
and those whose pupils join them after spending six years at the elementary
schools, are called the Aufbauform.
Attendance at the Mittelschulen lasts
six, or four years, according as they are of the grundständige Form or of the Aufbauform.
They are intended for boys and girls with a pronounced gift for practical work,
and are differentiated to some extent on vocational or professional lines. The
compulsory subjects taught by them are: the deutschkundige
Fächer, physical exercises, natural science, mathematics, and English.
Besides these, French - but not Latin - is an optional language. Their leaving
examination used to be described as the mittlere
Reife. Pupils desirous of continuing their studies at a höhere Schule, must first pass an
entrance examination for the latter. So far, Mittelschulen only exist in Prussia and a few other parts of
Germany.
The höhere Schulen have had a varied development since the foundation
of the first humanistisches Gymnasium
about a century ago. There have always been two principal types of them: (I)
the humanistische Schulen or Gymnasien, with Latin and Greek as the
two chief foreign languages, and (2) the Realanstalten,
where attention was specially concentrated upon modern languages, mathematics,
and natural science. As a result of the competition between them, a large
number of intermediate types were also established, so that the desired unity
of final purpose became more and more hypothetical. This drawback was
particularly manifest in connection with the order of teaching foreign
languages, so that pupils .whose parents had moved from one town to another
were frequently unable to attend a school of the type they were accustomed to,
which involved much loss of time and effort.
For these reasons the
Department, after a careful study of the problem, decided to introduce a fundamental
reorganisation of higher education at the Easter 1937 term, affecting boys' as
well as girls' schools, both of the grundständige
Form and the Aufbauform. At the grundständige höhere Schule attendance
has been reduced from nine to eight years, by combining its lower and
intermediary sections and dropping one of the six years formerly spent in them,
whilst leaving the upper section's three years unchanged. This reduction of
school time was necessary for reasons of population policy. There need be no
apprehension lest the quality of the work done by the schools should suffer,
because the uniform National Socialist attitude of the teachers and the compactness
of the courses of study renders it possible to make the teaching far more
intensive and to accelerate progress.
The teaching of boys and
girls, though of identical value, proceeds along different roads, which is
necessary for the reason that the respective spheres of men and women in
after-life are likewise different. Henceforth, there will be practically two
types of höhere Schulen for boys as
well as for girls. For boys, there is the Oberschule
and alongside with it the Gymnasium,
and for girls there is also an Oberschule,
which is split up (during the last three years of attendance) into a section
for domestic economy and another for languages. Both categories are supplemented
by an Oberschule in Aufbauform, which
- in the case of girls - gives prominence to domestic economy. The Oberschule for boys has to be regarded
as the principal type, as it is the one that must be provided in a district if
there is one higher school only. Thus, the difficulties above referred to when
parents change from one town to another can now be obviated much more easily.
Apart from some exceptional cases, only one Gymnasium can be established in
towns where more higher schools than one are needed.
With a view to meeting
the various preferences and capacities of pupils, the upper section of the Oberschule is divided into two branches.
In the language branch provision is made for a second modern language, whilst
comparatively limited attention is given to natural science and mathematics. In
the science and mathematics branch no second language is included, whilst the
chief interest centres around natural science and mathematics. In the Gymnasium there is no analogous
division.
The reduced number of Gymnasien is due to the fact that a
knowledge of both ancient languages is not considered necessary for the
majority of German boys and girls. This is borne out by the constant decline in
the number of pupils attending the former Gymnasien.
The subjects common to
all höhere Schulen and to the Mittelschulen are: the deutschkundliche Fächer, physical
exercises, natural science, and mathematics. The höhere Schulen, of course, provide more far-reaching instruction in
them than the others; and no regard is paid to the pupil's future profession.
Foreign languages are
taught on the following plan:
(a) Oberschule - English (1st grade), Latin
(3rd grade), French or some other modern language ( 6th grade).
(b) Gymnasium - Latin (1st grade), Greek
(3rd grade), English (6th grade).
The Oberschulen for girls give instruction in the same subjects as
those for boys, except that they add some that are of special importance to
women, whilst curtailing the teaching of foreign languages. Thus, in those
specialising in languages, English is begun in the 1st grade, and French and
Latin in the 6th, whilst in those where domestic economy is taught in the upper
section, the only foreign language taught is English.
Apart from these grundständige Schulen there are the Aufbauschulen for boys and girls. In
those for boys, foreign language teaching is started in the 1st, 3rd and 4th
grades respectively (corresponding to the 3rd, 5th and 6th grades of the grundständige Oberschule).
The Aufbauschulen - which were first introduced by the reform scheme
for the schools of Prussia in 1925 - have to fulfil a special purpose in
connection with our population policy. In many parts of Germany there are few
(if any) fairly large towns possessing grundständige
höhere Schulen. These parts are inhabited by a particularly robust type of
population closely associated with the soil they cultivate. National Socialists
look upon it as an important item to counteract the tendency among country
people of migrating to the towns, but want them nevertheless to secure leading
positions. For that reason extended facilities must be given them for acquiring
a sound education.
The Aufbauschulen are intended to assist in this task. Accordingly,
they are largely domiciled in rural districts, and Schülerheime are connected with them. The children in rural
districts can now attend their local Volksschule for six years and have then an
opportunity of continuing their studies for another six years until they
possess the qualifications for university study. During the whole of that time
they remain in direct connection with rural life.
The Schülerheim is no longer a place where school children are merely
housed and fed, but an educational institution. Whilst there, the children's
corporate instincts can be encouraged by their close association with their
comrades, thus laying the foundations for their sense of racial community.
Similar purposes are to
be achieved by the National Political Courses of Instruction (Nationalpolitische Lehrgänge) for the
pupils of the higher schools and by the children's stay in the Landheime. In view of the increased
demands on pupils due to the reorganisation of higher education, the Courses
named have had to be temporarily discontinued notwithstanding the benefits
already derived from them. All the more important, therefore, is the children's
stay in the Landheime and Youth
Hostels (Jugendherbergen). These
facilities are open to pupils from all types of schools. They are an essential
part of our educational system, because without them it would be impossible to
master the great tasks that have still to be carried out if the young people
are to take their proper share in shaping the country's future.
The leaving examination
of all higher schools is called the Reifepräfung.
After passing it, the young people are qualified for admission to any German
university or other institution of university rank, and for entering a number
of professions, including that of officers in the army.
The categories of higher
schools have been increased in number since 1933 by the so-called Nationalpolitische Erziehungsanstalten.
There are fifteen of them in Prussia and in some other parts of the country.
Their educational purposes and their courses of study are the same as those of
the other higher schools. They are, however, of the boarding-school type and
work in close collaboration with the Hitler Youth. Their special aim is to give
a good all-round training to boys who have already distinguished themselves for
their intellectual capacities, their physical prowess and bodily skill, their
strength of mind, and their loyalty towards their comrades. These institutions
are also under the administration of the Department of Education. Early in
1937, the Reich Youth Leader - acting in co-operation with the Reich
Organisation Leader - founded seven Adolf
Hitler Schulen, whose specific purpose it is to train boys for the position
of leaders in the National Socialist party. It is too early to state details
regarding their work and their organisation, as they have only been in
existence for a short time.
The third educational
factor, in addition to the home and the school, is the Hitler Youth. It has
been commissioned by the Führer to train German boys - in close collaboration
with the home and the school - for their great tasks in the future. The schools
have to devote the major part of their time to intellectual education; and
although, by that means and by other special arrangements, they do exercise an
important influence in the direction named, they have but few opportunities for
enabling their pupils to cultivate the corporate spirit beyond their own limits.
This drawback is to be overcome by the Hitler Youth. The youth of all classes
and all vocations is initiated by it in the practical working of a national community
and is to be prepared for that achievement by physical, ethical and political
training. Even though a certain overlapping was unavoidable during the early
stages, it is evident by now that the collaboration of the three factors is
becoming closer and closer.
Germany's former school
system has done much. The new National Socialist school system will do more
still and will make the young people racially sound, efficient and ready for
sacrifices. They will regard their nation, their national existence and their
national freedom as their greatest assets. They will be taught - in conformity
with the wish of the Führer - that the vital rights of other nations must be
equally respected and that co-operation between all nations is both necessary
and desirable. These aims are consciously fostered by the schools themselves
and by special arrangements for the international exchange of students. The
central organisation for such exchange is the Akademischer Austauschdienst, which works in close collaboration with
the Department of Education, and whose activities receive a valuable stimulus
from the successful efforts of the National Socialist party for international
co-operation. Thus, the call addressed to German youth is: Love your German
nation above everything, and be a good neighbour to all those nations that
desire to live in peace with your own.
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