Teaching our Kids
When
our kids go to school, what do they learn? They learn from two levels,
one level is from the schools curricula, the other from their peers, but
it's not so much what they learn, but how they learn to learn.
Learning
"what" involves remembering what happened yesterday. We don't have to
create a new writing system every year, we can use the one developed
years ago. In the same manner, we learn how to become engineers,
doctors, and attorneys. This is one level of necessary learning; by
memorizing the past.
There is another level of learning, however, a
level that in many ways is far more important than any other - a level
of insight. Insight is another way of saying spontaneous discovery
without books or lectures; a discovery about ourselves and about life.
At
this level of insight, a student might be studying about world wars,
which would be about yesterday. Then, suddenly, the student might
spontaneously question the whole concept of war itself. He or she might
even come to a conclusion that war is caused by individuals, the
microcosms of countries that fight with each other. This might in turn
challenge the student to discover a solution, within each individual, to
mankind's Achilles Heal; the wars that tear humanity apart.
This
type of insight and inquiry is quite removed from dreary memorization,
so mundane, yet admittedly necessary in education. This insight is the
life that is missing in education, and why students are dropping out in
droves. The spontaneity of life, the adventure, and discovery of life is
missing, and we search for ways to instill this passion that students
so need and deserve.
So, how do we promote this spontaneity among
our students? How do we encourage them to think for themselves instead
of conform to a failed system that turns its back on life's realities
and continues to promote illusions through dry concepts and dated
ideology? It all begins with each teacher letting go of his or her past.
The
past is tradition, security, and beliefs, and completely ignores this
very moment and what is actually happening in it. The teacher that
teaches current events from a standpoint of teaching how the past
influences current human behavior does a service to her students, but if
that teacher has not gone deeply inside of herself, and discovered her
own thoughts and feelings, and how her thoughts and feelings create the
hypocrisy of tradition and the illusion of security in beliefs and
ideals, then she can never teach passionately, and passion is the
difference.
When she sees clearly that conformity in education is
safe, that it is risk free, but that it is also killing all hope of
positive change in a world that is becoming more aggressive and violent
each year by spitting out little automatons that recite the dogma of
economics that so separate us, only then will she teach differently.
Street
smart, intelligent kids aren't buying it anymore, even though they
can't communicate what they are feeling. It is an isolation from life
that they feel in our educational institutions, an estrangement, a
disconnect, and they are simply dropping out. This is what is actually
happening, and the drop outs aren't unintelligent; in many ways they are
heads and shoulders above our outdated systems.
The kids want to
know why we are struggling to make so much money, why things have become
more important than people. Is it because we are fearful that we don't
have enough? The dress codes of our kids, the old, ragged, baggy
clothes, are a dead give away of their feelings. They are mocking our
values.
Our kids want to know, for themselves, what life is really
about. But since their educators have never taken the time to find out
for themselves what life is all about, and are themselves simply
products of the establishment, we are in a gigantic "Catch 22" with no
way out. But our kids are taking a way out; they are dropping out.
As
with many things, such as health care and a basic, respectable standard
of living, this article will be ignored by policy makers, the ones in
power, the ones perpetuating an educational system that is a dinosaur.
Nothing changes until change is forced upon us, because we become
comfortable. "Let them drop out, who cares? Let them live on the street
and starve, who cares; I am taken care of."
It's only when the
tide becomes overwhelming that the ones in power are replaced, but if
the students still have not learned to go deep within themselves and
actually question power, and question the hatred and greed that
separates us, then the new ones in power will only succumb to the same
pressures as their predecessors, and humanity will continue down the
same road of violence since the beginning of time.
Who will
instill in our kids the passion of discovery, the challenge of the
inward journey so that things can change? What religious institution is
teaching this instead of indoctrinating their youth with stale ideals
and rote dogma? Who has the courage to forge a new, brave world?
Who
will teach our kids to awaken themselves and discover their real
potential, not the potential to be a successful businessman, but to be a
human being, a potential that lies dormant? How do we teach our kids to
be visionaries, fearless and unencumbered to change a world that is on
the verge of self-destruction? We need visionaries, not robots.
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