Whole Person Education
Nurturing the compassionate genius in each of us
by Linda MacRae-Campbell
One of the articles in Transforming Education (IC#18) Winter 1988, Page 16
Copyright (c)1988, 1997 by Context Institute
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Linda MacRae-Campbell is one of the Guest Editors for this issue. She
has taught from pre-school through university levels for 15 years developing
wholistic, integrative curriculums for pre-natal through adult learners.
She is currently a consultant to several public schools working in the area
of comprehensive public school reform and a member of the Board of Directors
of New Horizons for Learning. She can be reached at LearningWorks, 19614
Soundview Dr, Stanwood, WA 98292 or 206/652-9502.
- Robert Gilman
Abraham Maslow, the world-renowned humanist psychologist, once addressed
a college class and inquired if anyone in the room had expectations of achieving
greatness. No one responded. He asked, "Who else then?"
Most of us harbor the belief that a few, fortunate others can achieve
brilliance, giftedness or demonstrate great talent. For years, we have heard
testimonies to the vastness of human potential, but ways to waken our slumbering
genius have remained a mystery. Our absorbent memories, our infinite learning
capacities, the sensitivity of our brains and our bodies, the desire to
live meaningful lives are all dampened by mediocre learning and performance.
Fortunately, we now have the clues, thanks to research from diverse fields
of the last twenty or so years, for transmuting mediocrity into virtuosity
for each of us.
Scientific research in neurology, psychology and education has etched
expanded images of what it means to be human. Breakthroughs in these three
fields have also provided insights into the necessary components of new
learning and instructional practices. We are likely still in the infancy
of understanding how to activate our latent gifts, but at least we have
begun to understand. Some of the significant contributions from contemporary
research are briefly summarized in the following chart:
| Topic Studied |
Key Learnings |
NEUROLOGICAL : |
| Brain's physiology |
Unlimited capacity for lifelong learning |
| Right & left brain specialization |
Validation of a variety of mental processes & functions |
| Triune brain |
Emotions inhibit or facilitate learning |
| Effects of environment on learning and intelligence |
A stimulating & loving environment enhances learning |
PSYCHOLOGICAL: |
| New definitions & theories of human human intelligence |
Expanded view of intelligence including kinesthetic, visual, musical
and intra- & interpersonal elements |
| Overcoming mental retardation |
Everyone can learn at any ability level |
EDUCATIONAL: |
| Learning styles |
Everyone learns differently |
| Cooperative learning |
Performance increases with cooperation, not competition |
| Andragogy versus pedagogy |
Adults and children learn what has personal relevancy |
THE EMERGING COMPONENTS OF NEW INSTRUCTIONAL MODELS:
What can we glean from these various areas of research as they apply
to learning and teaching? What are the emerging components of new instructional
models? Several items become immediately apparent.
To develop our human capacities we must use our capacities. This
may sound painfully obvious, but such opportunities are rarely offered in
traditional academic settings. We now know that it is mandatory to incorporate
the body, the mind, the feelings, the social and intuitive dimensions of
the individual in the learning process and in every topic area.
Incorporating the body * It is not enough to offer
PE as a subject and expect that doing so satisfies the physical component
of an educational program. The body and the senses need to be engaged in
the learning of all subjects. Manipulatives, hands-on activities, multi-sensory
experiences, creative dramatics, movement activities that support the topic
being taught are necessary components of instruction for students of all
ages. It is learning by doing that facilitates knowing and remembering.
Incorporating the mind * There is so much we can
and need to do to improve academic instruction. Eighty per cent of all teaching
is currently conducted in a teacher-lecture/student-listen format, the least
effective teaching strategy of all. Approximately twenty per cent of our
students learn best in that style leaving another eighty percent who have
other learning needs that demand concrete, experiential, self-initiated,
and real-world learning opportunities. What this means is that information
must be presented in a variety of ways to elicit a myriad of successes from
all learners.
Another consideration for the improvement of instruction is the necessity
of incorporating the wide array of mental processes of both hemispheres
of the brain. It is not enough to analyze and learn fragmented information.
It is equally important to understand the context, the meaning, the gestalt
of a topic as well. Education must cease its lean offerings and prepare
a glorious feast for all who come to partake.
Incorporating feelings * An area of sore neglect
and urgent need in schooling is that of acknowledging feelings. The objective,
sterile environment prevalent in many schools actually inhibits learning.
Learning and remembering are also unlikely to occur when students harbor
negative feelings about an instructor, peers, class work, or personal issues.
Time and attention need to be devoted to students' feelings about class
activities or personal experiences. The humanization of the classroom facilitates
both learning and long term retention of information. The willingness to
confront emotional issues not only benefits learning, it also influences
self-image, the single most important factor in determining an individual's
success in any endeavor in life. Classrooms devoid of feeling must be resuscitated
with rich, stimulating, accepting and loving environments.
Incorporating the social nature * The social climate in
many academic settings is one fraught with competition and isolation. When
collaborative, cooperative learning opportunities are implemented, achievement
scores are increased and students respect the contributions each person
is capable of offering. Instead of fearing the differences in one another,
uniqueness and individual areas of strength can be tapped for the benefit
of all. The old adage "Two heads are better than one" applies
to the classroom as well.
Incorporating intuition * Intuition is a different
way of knowing that allows one to understand something in its totality without
necessarily understanding HOW one arrived at that awareness. Intuition yields
sudden "aha" kinds of insights and results from higher level thinking
and synthesizing processes. Students deserve (and our planetary survival
depends on!) learning opportunities to explore, imagine, create, surmise,
play, and invent ideas, solutions, and innovative possibilities.
Even though it may be (or at least seem) arduous to make the needed changes,
there is no justification for doing "business as usual" in the
classroom. Teaching which incorporates the above strategies benefits students
and teachers alike. Research has underscored the necessity of claiming the
totality of our being through the use of the entire brain/mind/body system
in the educational process. When we bring ourselves more fully to the learning
task, we begin to open the storehouses of human potential and the resultant
learning increases geometrically.
THE MORE WHICH IS LESS
Instructional practices can and are being improved. Other limiting aspects
of education are also undergoing transformation. Just as teachers are finding
new ways to teach, schools themselves must be freed to find new ways to
conduct schooling. Mary Hatwood Futrell, the President of the National Education
Association, recently delivered a speech entitled, "The Demise of the
2 by 4 by 6 Classroom." She wipes clean our current images of schooling
as taking place between the two covers of a textbook within the four walls
of the classroom and in a six period day. She and many other leaders in
education are asking us to rethink what we take for granted with education
as we know it today.
Rethinking curriculum * One of the areas of "rethinking"
is curriculum in schools. Over the last 50 years our educational offerings
have grown more specialized and compartmentalized. More and more subjects
are being taught, often with declining effectiveness. Students are asked
to take class after class in isolation from every other with no personal
context or relevancy. These problems are confounded with the fact that information
grows obsolete every seven years.
Such meaningless practices must stop and in some public and private schools
they are stopping. Curriculum is being drastically reduced and redefined.
The basic literacies in math, reading and writing and computer usage are
retained while new interdisciplinary curriculums are emerging and learning-to-learn
skills are implemented. Questions about what is truly essential are being
asked while recognition is given to the fact that students need not learn
everything within the confines of the school building. Apprenticeships,
mentor programs and other real life educational opportunities are becoming
available while learning as a life-long process is acknowledged as well.
In some schools, a hefty portion of the curriculum is determined by the
students and their interests. New feelings of trust between student and
teacher are emerging as children select their own areas of study. Students
are beginning to have opportunities to rely upon their own inner authority,
gain autonomy and seek meaning for themselves. Such freedom of choice prevents
children from spending the majority of their school years in learning to
guess and appropriately respond to what each teacher wants. Those students
who are unleashed to pursue their own interests are enabled to develop their
unique talents and gifts. School, then, is meaningful, relevant and worthwhile.
Such educational practices do justice to the original Latin meaning of "educare"
which was "to draw forth from within."
Less bureaucracy * School communities are often
entrenched and stifled with bureaucratic constraints. Curriculum, student
achievement tests and educational policies are frequently generated by those
far removed from schools and their programs. Many school reform networks
and others are trying to loosen the hold of educational bureaucracy and
are advocates of decentralization. This empowers the local school community
to determine the nature of its program and to tap its own resources and
talents. Each school would ultimately be distinct from every other. It would
mirror the community it was a part of and reflect the uniqueness of its
teachers, students and administrators.
IT'S UP TO US
The issues confronting us today in education are systemic ones, involving
teaching methods, teacher preparation, school curricula, bureaucratic strangleholds,
shifting cultural values and shattering global concerns. The task at hand
is not piecemeal reform programs, but rather dynamic educational innovations.
One hundred years ago, schools were established to teach basic literacy.
We have a far greater purpose today. With basic research as a powerful ally,
we see new images of what it means to be human. We are learning how to cultivate
the vast regions of potential of all people at every age and every ability
level. Individual school communities are being freed to create and conduct
programs unique to those within its locality. The unfettering of potential
at all levels of education comes at a time when global issues demand a new
purpose of education. Our new goal can be no less than to nurture the compassionate
genius within each of us.
And who will spearhead the major educational transformations on the horizon?
Perhaps it will be all of us, the countless adults who can trace our impoverished
and limited self-fulfilling prophecies back to our own early schooling.
Now, confronted with breakthroughs in many fields, we know our expectations
can be realistically higher. We will be the generators of change because
we still wish to raise our hands in response to the question, "Who
of you expect to achieve greatness?"
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