Manual Training
Outline:
1.
Meaning of manual training.
2. The object of manual training is to make
the movements of the hands automatic.
3.
For example, learning to type.
4.
This accomplished by constant practice.
5.
Manual training in social education.
The word “manual” comes from the
Latin words for a “hand” manus. Manual works in hand work, and a manual worker
is one who works with his hands. So manual training is “hand-training”,
training a person to use his hands rightly in a particular kind of work.
Manual training consists mainly in
constant practice, or the repeating over and over again of certain movements of
the hands until they become what we call automatic. When we first begin to
learn any manual work (such as carpentry, carving, spinning, weaving,
typewriting, sewing, knitting, and so on), we have to think carefully of every
movement, and do it with careful and conscious attention. And at that stage our
hands are clumsy and awkward, and do not answer quickly to the orders of the
brain. In consequence, the work is slow, and mistakes are many.
For example , watch a person learning
to type. He has to remember where they key for each letter is on the machine
and carefully pick it out, then strike it properly. Consequently he types very
slowly; and sometimes his memory fails him and he gets confused and touches the
wrong key. But constant practice teaches his hands to answer immediately to the
direction of his brain, and he knows, without thinking, where each letter-key
is, and his fingers find it promptly, accurately and without conscious
direction. The work has become automatic, and the typist can type a letter
correctly and at great speed.
All manual training must of course
begin with careful instruction by precept and example. The learner has to know
what his tools are for and how to handle them properly. But once this is learnt,
the rest is all practice. In nothing more than in manual training is the old
maxim true, “Practice makes perfect”. The workman must practice until he
becomes dexterous, a word that comes from the Latin word dexter, the “right
hand”. Dexterity means literally “right handedness”, and so comes to means
manual skill, because people generally use their right hand for doing work
rather than their left.
Manual training of some sort should
form a regular p[art of school education, which is generally too abstract and
literary. Children should learn such crafts as carpentry, woodcarving,
metal-work, knitting and sewing, as well as the three R’s-reading, writing and
arithmetic. For manual work is also mental work, and trains the head as well as
the hand.
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