Mohon tunggu...
Carlos Camelo
Carlos Camelo Mohon Tunggu... Educator and life learner

Read my blog for insights on education, spirituality, and practical wisdom—let’s make a positive impact together!

Selanjutnya

Tutup

Pendidikan

Trusting Students: A Lesson from The Ignorant Schoolmaster

30 Agustus 2025   12:43 Diperbarui: 30 Agustus 2025   12:43 25
+
Laporkan Konten
Laporkan Akun
Kompasiana adalah platform blog. Konten ini menjadi tanggung jawab bloger dan tidak mewakili pandangan redaksi Kompas.
Lihat foto
The power of trust in education, not constant explanation.  (Source: Unsplash)

What if students needed less explanation than we think? Jacques Rancire's The Ignorant Schoolmaster raises this unsettling but inspiring question.

The book recounts the story of Joseph Jacotot, a French educator in the early nineteenth century. Tasked with teaching French to Dutch students---without knowing Dutch himself---he offered them a bilingual text and left them to explore. To his surprise, they learned. The experience suggested something radical: learners do not always need a teacher's explanations to progress.

From this, Rancire develops his central claim: all intelligences are equal. What separates people is not the ability to think but the circumstances that allow---or prevent---that ability from being used. In his view, the act of constant explanation reinforces inequality. It keeps the student dependent on the teacher, convinced they cannot learn without being guided step by step.

The power of trust in education, not constant explanation.  (Source: Unsplash)
The power of trust in education, not constant explanation.  (Source: Unsplash)

Instead, the "ignorant schoolmaster" is one who trusts. This teacher sets challenges, demands effort, and refuses to underestimate learners. The result is what Rancire calls intellectual emancipation: the moment students discover that they are capable of moving forward on their own.

For today's classrooms, this perspective is both provocative and valuable. It invites us to question how much instruction is truly necessary, and how much is habit. It encourages us to see students not as passive recipients of knowledge but as capable thinkers, already equipped with the intelligence to tackle the unfamiliar.

Students exploring a text independently, discovering their own learning.  (Source: Unsplash)
Students exploring a text independently, discovering their own learning.  (Source: Unsplash)

Rancire does not provide a method; he offers a challenge. He asks us to consider whether trust, rather than constant explanation, might be the foundation of genuine learning.

Follow Instagram @kompasianacom juga Tiktok @kompasiana biar nggak ketinggalan event seru komunitas dan tips dapat cuan dari Kompasiana. Baca juga cerita inspiratif langsung dari smartphone kamu dengan bergabung di WhatsApp Channel Kompasiana di SINI

Mohon tunggu...

Lihat Konten Pendidikan Selengkapnya
Lihat Pendidikan Selengkapnya
Beri Komentar
Berkomentarlah secara bijaksana dan bertanggung jawab. Komentar sepenuhnya menjadi tanggung jawab komentator seperti diatur dalam UU ITE

Belum ada komentar. Jadilah yang pertama untuk memberikan komentar!
LAPORKAN KONTEN
Alasan
Laporkan Konten
Laporkan Akun