Recently
gathered statistics on the values and behaviours of adolescents points to a
need to refocus on those values that are supportive of positive social
relationships and a positive sense of self. A national survey of 20,000 middle
and high school students in the USA, for instance, paints a disturbing picture
of the attitudes and actions of young people. Some observations from this
survey include:
·
24%
of male students said they had taken a weapon to school at least once in the
past year
·
73%
of both male and female students said they hit a person in the last year
because they were angry
·
47%
acknowledged they had stolen something from a store in the last 12 months
Add
to this the feedback from another survey in the USA in which two-thirds of
American teenagers claimed that, when they were adults, they would have no
hesitation in padding business expenses and cheating on taxes to have more
money.
Anecdotally,
the situation in Australia does not seem to be as extreme, but the trends are
there. So it seems timely to heed the call of the1998 UNESCO ‘Values in
Education Summit’ for schools to ‘review their charters in terms of values
education’.
The
following story illustrates how we sometimes unconsciously teach values:
The children were lined up in the cafeteria of
an elementary school for lunch. At the head of the table was a large pile of
apples. The teacher made a note, and posted it on the apple tray:
"Take only ONE. - God is watching."
Moving further along the lunch line, at the other end of the table was a large
pile of chocolate chip cookies.
A child had written a note, "Take all you want. God is watching the apples."
At
other times values are taught quite explicitly as part of the curriculum and
the development of students’ social and emotional competence. So there appears
to be growing support for acknowledging that values are taught in schools and
that schools can and should foster and encourage students to become ethical
people. This general agreement then leads to further questions. Whose values
should be taught?, What values should be taught? For independent schools whose
charter clearly defines a set of values, these are not difficult questions.
But for government schools whose students can come from a variety of ethnic,
religious and experiential backgrounds, the question can be more difficult.
Schools embarking on consciously including the promotion of positive values
into the school curriculum usually find it effective for the school community
to come together to discuss and agree upon the values that are most important to
the school as a community. This requires an agreement about the principles
that guide ethical behaviour, as well as an awareness that each person comes to
this understanding from a different social and cultural experience with
possibly different beliefs about the importance of particular values.
So
what values are communities likely to agree upon? Some proponents of values
education suggest that there are ‘objective values or principles that transcend
time, space, and culture; that they are consistent, universal and
transcultural; and that they inform and direct our behaviour.’ (John Heeman)
These universal values include:
- honesty
and truthfulness
-
kindness
- consideration
and concern for others
-
compassion
-
obedience
(to your spiritual principles)
-
responsibility
- respect
-
duty
These
values are seen to enhance the well-being of the individual and the community,
prevent harm to both the individual and society and embody the essence of
healthy relationships. This set of values resonates with many of the values
that we can identify within theosophical teachings.
According
to NZ values educator, John Heeman, realising values has three essential
components: moral knowing, moral feeling and moral behaviour. Manifestation of
all objective values requires the integrated involvement of the head, heart and
hand.
Emotional Intelligence
Another
strategy being explored in education is the development of Emotional
Intelligence. The principal writer on this topic, Daniel Goleman, describes
Emotional Intelligence as encompassing five characteristics and abilities:
self-awareness, mood management, self-motivation, empathy, managing
relationships.
In
a report on the current state of emotional literacy in the US, Daniel Goleman stated ‘ ... in navigating our lives, it is our fears and envies, our rages
and depressions, our worries and anxieties that steer us day by day. The
remedy is in preventive education, teaching our children the essential skills
of Emotional Intelligence.’
According
to a report from the National Centre for Clinical Infant Programs in the USA, the most critical element for a student’s success in school is an understanding of how
to learn. The key ingredients for this understanding are: confidence,
curiosity, intentionality, self-control, relatedness, capacity to communicate, and
the ability to cooperate. These traits are all aspects of Emotional
Intelligence. Emotional Intelligence is not only important in school, it is
also positively correlated with career and personal success.
*Many
schools in English speaking countries are taking up the challenge of building a
focus on Emotional Intelligence into their curricula. Emotional Intelligence
is largely learnt through modelling, action and reflection and so many schools
are endeavouring to create caring school communities. This has academic as
well as social gains. Recent brain research on emotional engagement
demonstrates strongly that people’s brains are more receptive to learning if
they have a positive relationship with others, both adults and peers, in the
learning community. Having respect for others, and by extension, all life,
underpins much of this work, as does developing self-responsibility, empathy
and the ability to see situations and events from various perspectives.
Developing Emotional Intelligence has benefits for individuals at many levels.
The
third strategy that can develop some of those attributes that lead to
theosophical living is Service learning.
Service Learning
Service
learning is an integration of community service with the academic curriculum
and reflection. It is becoming widely used in the USA, with the support of high
profile proponents such as ex-Presidents Clinton and Bush. Individual schools
in Australia have been using this approach for several years. With this
approach, students link personal and social development with academic and
cognitive development as they investigate and develop projects that benefit the
community.
Service
learning is a powerful strategy. ‘Education is not just about acquiring
knowledge, but about learning how to do significant things with what you know’,
says David Perkins (Educational Leadership, Sept 04). It involves wrestling
with ideas and values; connecting with life outside schools, and organising and
communicating understandings. And more than that, it provides an avenue for
expressing and further developing the values of theosophical living.
Dispositions
that Assist us to be Seekers after Truth
The final
question I raised was about teaching those dispositions that assist us to be
‘seekers after truth’. This requires at least curiosity, openness, active
listening, the patience to live with ambiguity, a willingness to test
hypotheses and the ability to see a question from several viewpoints.
Philosophy
for children or young people is an approach to developing these capacities
through philosophical enquiry. It recognises that ‘living’ means perpetually
searching for meaning–looking at the ‘big ideas’.
Small
numbers of schools in Australia and North America are currently using
‘Philosophy for children as an important part of their curricula.* In this
approach, children from as young as five explore a wide range of questions that
appeal to their curiosity. These are not simple questions with definite
answers, but open-ended questions that encourage speculation, logical reasoning
and inventiveness. Teachers stimulate discussion by posing questions. For
example, an exploration of dreams and reality could be stimulated by questions
such as: Are the experiences we have when we are dreaming as real as the
experiences we have when we are awake? What makes something real? How do we
know we are not dreaming? Could we be created by someone else’s dream?
Children will pose even more intriguing questions.
*Other
topics frequently explored by students schools using this approach, include:
What is life?; Death; What makes something good or right?; Mind and body;
Wisdom and Infinity.
Numerous
benefits from engaging young people in philosophical enquiry have been
documented. Some of these are:
- Students
are members of a ‘community of inquiry’. This approach explicitly teaches that
respect for others’ opinions is a necessary precondition for developing your
own.
- The
form of discussion students engage in, encourages social responsibility and
skills such as attentive listening.
- The
questions enquired into are fundamental to the human condition and remain
important throughout one’s life.
- Philosophy
is at the base of all learning and education.
It
is important that adults who engage in these discussions take them seriously
and respect young people as partners in inquiry, who often offer new
philosophical perspectives. Indeed, many adults speak of feeling regenerated
and inspired to try to ‘find the questioning child’ within themselves.
As
philosophers who draw on theosophical ideas, as we explore the big questions of
life ourselves, we are very close to the child quoted by Gareth Matthews in The
Philosophy of Childhood, Harvard University Press, 1994. ‘The universe is
everything and everywhere’, announced nine year old Nick, and then paused. ‘But
then if there was a big bang or something, what was the big bang in?’
So, to
recapitulate, there is the potential to teach Theosophy through education in
our schools–to begin considering some of the basic ideas of the Ancient Wisdom;
to develop understandings and dispositions that will lead to theosophical
living; and to develop those dispositions and habits of mind that assist us to
be ‘seekers after truth’.
REFERENCES:
Goleman,
Daniel, Emotional Intelligence, Bantam, USA, 1997.
Heeman, John,
A Case for Teaching Objective Values, www.teachingvalues.com
Hill, Dr Brian,
Core Values in the Balance, keynote paper at the Australian Council for
Educational Research Conference, October 2004.
Krishnamurti,
J., Think on These Things, Krishnamurti Writings Inc., Great Britain, 1964.
Matthews,
Gareth, The Philosophy of Childhood, Harvard University Press, *Cambridge, Mass., 1994.
Perkins,
David, Knowledge Alive in Educational Leadership, September 2004.
Heart Start: The Emotional Foundations of School
Readiness. National Center for Clinical Infant Programs, USA, 1992.
1998 Report
Card on the Ethics of American Youth, The Josephson Institute of Ethics,
1999.
Sri Ram, N., Thoughts
for Aspirants, TPH, Adyar, 1977.
Winner, Anna
Kennedy, The Basic Ideas of Occult Wisdom, Theosophical Publishing
House, Wheaton, 1990.