Education is about absorbing what others have learned and created and believe, but it is also about our responses to those concepts and those convictions.
Julia Keller
Dominican University Commencement 2010, 2010
L'histoire derrière cette citation
Keller articulated a philosophy of education that went far beyond the accumulation of facts. She challenged the graduates: if she asked them to explain quantum mechanics, she didn't want a string of facts. She wanted them to describe 'how quantum mechanics has utterly upended everything we thought we knew about the universe, because it means — quite literally — that anything is possible.' This was her definition of what education should prepare people for: 'a passionate and ongoing engagement with facts, a way of transforming what you know into what you do.' The personal response — the moment of wonder, the ah-ha of recognition — was as essential as the knowledge itself. She reinforced this with a beautiful observation about reading: 'When you read a book, there are always two sides to that story: there is the book, but there is also you. Even if the information has been known for many years, it wasn't known to you — and that makes it a magical moment, the moment when you make the knowledge yours.'