A Better Education
"Come on let's face it, a ghetto education's basic, and mosta the youths, them waste it… That's when they take the guns to replace it. Then they don't stand a chance at all" -Damien Marley
Thursday, February 13, 2014
Sunday, February 2, 2014
Tuesday, January 28, 2014
Friday, January 24, 2014
Wednesday, January 22, 2014
Benefits of Investing in Developing Emotional Intelligence
Many educators and policymakers may scoff at the thought of making room for something as “unnecessary” as emotions in the school curriculum, because it’s jam-packed as it is with standard testing and efforts to prepare for said exams. But contradictory to popular belief, our emotions aren’t irrelevant at all. In fact, emotions are the tendons that attach the facts we learn in class to our brains. Emotions govern our ability to think and learn. Emotions operate the very thought process that students use to analyze the information they’re receiving from their teachers. Emotions can also inhibit the same material from properly digesting. Our minds are driven by emotions. Emotions couldn’t be more relevant, and yet we pay no mind to them.
I think we should.
Not only should emotional intelligence be implemented into public education, I believe it should be mandated as well. The way things stand, students are taught to keep emotions to themselves, to handle feelings on their own time and not to trouble anybody with them. Emotions are to be dealt with privately. This is the implication (however unintentional) simply because we’ve been excluding the study of emotions from our schools. Are they not worthy things to learn? Are we supposed to understand them on our own? I know I don't. Was I the only one who didn’t get an owner’s manual for my own mind?
Of course not.
The trouble is that making sense of our emotions doesn’t come as naturally to us as you might think. Just look at you. You’re probably a total mess emotionally, and if not, you’re one of the lucky few. Most of us need guidance just to operate our minds without disturbing our emotions. Plus, most known effective methods of taking the reins of our emotions are entirely counter-intuitive, and often times the opposite of what we’re naturally inclined to do. We seem to have a nasty habit of aggravating our emotions rather than relieving them, which is why more and more students are cracking under the strain of the emotions they’re expected (and try desperately) to suppress. Suicide rates rise as ADHD and depression and a score of other mental maladies sweep across another sorry generation.
Rather than pump this bunch with Ritalin, perhaps instead of treating them, we ought to teach them how to deal.
For one thing, students may not even realize they’re wrestling the same emotions all their peers are also facing, and, despite appearances, we’re not alone! And if we just had one class dedicated to developing our emotions, we would finally be able to acknowledge that we’re, all of us, affected. Currently, the only resource students have to get emotional support (at school) is their appointed counselor. But seeking out a counselor comes with a stigma, singling the student out as “someone who needs help,” something he or she may be reluctant to admit or even realize. However, mandating a class to teach emotions and requiring that every student take it would indeed remove the stigma. This way, students would be open to receive the mental help they need without having to seek it out themselves.
And we all need it. Don’t act like you’re immune to your emotions. They are universal to us all, and that’s the beauty of it, really. Just imagine the camaraderie and trust that we could build if students tackled their emotions as a class instead of individually. They’d learn so many interpersonal skills that are currently woefully absent from the world—respect, compassion, understanding, empathy, acceptance, and mindfulness of everyone’s emotions, not just our own. And most importantly, implementing such a class would also redefine emotions as something we are free and open to express, and encouraged and accepted to discuss, not something to be ashamed of or suppress.
The most striking fact about this is the proven effectiveness of tuning in with our emotions and its impact on students’ academic performance. A study led by Geoff Cohen (Department of Psychology, University of Colorado) and several associates revealed some astonishing results. Four hundred seventh graders from a socioeconomically diverse school were selected and split into two groups. Both were given similar writing assignments at the beginning of the school year. Half the students were instructed to write a brief essay about a personal value they hold dearly, why it's important to them and how they express it. The other half, as a control group, were instructed to write about a personal value they themselves do NOT possess and write instead about why it might be meaningful to someone else. As it turns out, the students who were asked to write about their own values “narrowed the achievement gap between black and white students by 40 percent, and the effects lasted through the eighth grade (two years)” (Winch 211).
Now think about it. That was one single assignment, which may have taken half an hour to complete but made a lasting difference in participants’ performance across all disciplines. Developing emotional intelligence is the most cost efficient way of raising educational standards and test scores nationwide. The study I discussed specifically empowered those affected by negative stereotypes, however, exercising our emotions is generally beneficial to us all, considering they’re something everybody has in common. Just think of the depression and aggression and distress that we could save ourselves if we learned to embrace and manage our emotions. What a better education that would be. It would instill the qualities the world so desperately needs to cultivate. Students are the future, and there’s plenty of stress ahead of them, so they had better be equipped to handle it.
Fortunately, this reform is already in the works, as an increasing number of private and experimental schools are shifting their focus from strictly academia to “Social and Emotional Learning” programs (SEL). This is not enough however, for the schools who most desperately need to implement emotional intelligence don't have the resources to do so. Social and Emotional learning will have the most tremendous impact on underprivileged students attending underprivileged schools. These public schools are penalized financially because their students statistically score lowest on standard tests, and thus the schools must then cut down on necessary resources students depend on to reach their optimal performance and intellectual potential. They are reduced to outdated textbooks and badly paid professors, and an educational environment that deprives them of the opportunities that other students see in higher-scoring public schools and wealthy private institutions. This reinforces the growing achievement gap between minorities and privileged students and perpetuates the growing socioeconomic divide, which is reaching breaking point. These students see no future other than what they’re born into: gangs and drugs, ghettos and slums, prostitutes and hustlers. They don’t aspire to be CEOs or presidents of companies—these jobs are too far out of reach. No, they aspire to be pimps and gang-bangers and drug lords—positions of attainable “success.” These are the students who most desperately need to see the light at the end of their educational tunnel, and the only way to show them is through self-affirmation, and shifting the focus from strictly academia to include social and emotional intelligence as well. Likewise, these are the students who will be impacted and benefit the most from implementing SEL. This is why Emotional Intelligence must be implemented and mandated into standard education nationwide, in every public school, especially the underprivileged ones. It will be the most cost-effective avenue of actually increasing quality of education and test scores across the nation.
SOURCES
Winch, Guy, Ph.D. Emotional First Aid. New York: Hudson Street Press, 2013. Print.
G.L. Cohen, J. Garcia, V. Purdie-Vaughns, N. Apfel, and P. Brustoski, “Recursive processes in self-affirmation: Intervening to close the minority achievement gap.” Science 324 (2009): 400-403
Sunday, January 19, 2014
Book Buddies and Shared Studies
How do these two programs close
the generation gap, and in the process, open the door to a revolutionary
learning opportunity?
The purpose of this blog, “A Better Education” is to illuminate the
possibilities in store for public education, and how acutely they compare to
the reality of it, and find new resources and methods of progressing education
in the right direction. Most of these new methods and resources have been confined
to “experimental” private schools and institutions, and so far have not been
made available to the vast majority of students. We are in the midst of an
educational paradigm shift, and it certainly can’t happen overnight.
The good news is, these private schools have done the heavy lifting of
progressing education for the rest of us. They’ve taken the initiative and
risk, and now they have the evidence to show their methods are effective. Phase
one of educational reform is underway. The next step, naturally, will be to
implement new proven methods of improving education into public legislation,
thus restructuring the public school system.
This section of “A Better Education” is dedicated to discussing these
new and improved learning models and imagining how aspects of these methods
could eventually be adapted and integrated into public education. Experimental
education has been in the works for quite a while, and the results are finally
in, and they are undeniable. It’s time to analyze the facts and face the
future.
Book Buddies & Shared Studies
Grace Living Center & Jenks School District
Oklahoma
It all began in 1998, in Jenks, a suburb of Tulsa, Oklahoma. Almost as
if they were fated to unite, it just so happens that the Jenks school district
is located directly across the street from Grace Living Center, a home for the
elderly. Due to their close proximity, the two institutions arranged an
integrated program intended to benefit both parties—the students and the
elderly alike--called Book Buddies, “which pairs rotating groups of elders and
kindergarten students who read to one another for about 30 minutes several
times a week” (Morehouse - “Senior Citizens Help Young Children”).
The partnership has been so immensely beneficial I don’t even know
where to begin. The programs benefit the kids, of course, but do wonders for
the elderly as well. The vibrant company of youth eliminates their loneliness
and boredom. Not only this, but students are also more accepting of the elderly
and their physical differences and medical needs than they might otherwise have
learned to be. This setting brings the old and young together, in the process
eradicating age discrimination at the source.
But each program has its own specific purpose, on top of all of the
above.
“Book Buddies”
Book Buddies employs the elders
as the perfect audience for young new readers. They possess the necessary
patience and appreciation for the students as they tackle tricky sentences and
words that they’re still learning. The program has so far produced “remarkable
results,” according to Ken Robinson, the author of The Element, who says
that “the majority of the children at the Grace Living Center are outperforming
other children in the district on the state’s standardized reading tests. More
than 70 percent are leaving the program at age five reading at third grade
level or higher” (204-205).
“Shared Study”
This program joins small groups
of students and elderly to work together on hands-on activities, including
crafts and dramatic reenactments of events in correspondence with their
studies. These activities are educational, of course, but also highly creative,
and from the students’ point of view, constitute play.
“To promote connections between
the generations,” according to Morehouse, “teachers look at class themes
through the lens of ‘then and now.’” For instance, during the Healthy Habits
unit, the students and the elderly compare the lunch options available today to
those available to kids “back then.”
This partnership employs the elderly as mentors for the youth, helping
them read, engaging them in fun activities, and discussing the differences
between the world today and the one that they grew up in—a scarce and
invaluable perspective the next generation desperately needs to be exposed to,
considering how rapidly the times are changing. But more so than anything, this
partnership makes productive use of a highly wasted human resource: old people.
“Instead of whiling away their days waiting for the inevitable,” as Robinson
describes it, “they have a reason to get up in the morning and a renewed
excitement about what the day might bring” (205). Not only that, but
“medication levels have been plummeting” (Robinson 205).
The reason I find this so inspiring is the elderly who have so much to
offer have gone so woefully neglected. They have the better part of a century
of life experience behind them, and so much wisdom and knowledge to share, and
yet the younger generation is kept mostly separate from the old. We siphon the
elderly off into homes in the same fashion we pack up unused Christmas
decorations into cardboard boxes. We stowe them well out of the way and take
them out only on special occasions.
Why are the elderly so widely regarded as such burdens? Sure they need
some extra care physically and medically, but like I said, their minds have so
much more to offer than we give them credit for. Also, they do possess one
asset that the rest of us are desperately lacking: That is time, and as we all
know, time is money. And the elderly have oodles. They have the perfect
disposition to work with kindergartners because they’re patient, and because
they’re not scrambling to manage thirty to forty kids at once, the children
have someone to actually take the time to stumble over words with them, one on one.
“Here, we have elders,” says GLC president Don Greiner, “who our society has
parked somewhere, having that impact. This is an opportunity for them to mean
something and be something” (“Senior Citizens Help Young Children”).
The partnership between the school
and living center and the subsequent advances in the students’ academic and
social development are impressive evidence that integrating generations can be
hugely beneficial to everyone involved. Luckily, we needn’t base all
kindergarten classrooms in the middle of assisted living centers. Weekly visits
by bus would do just fine. Another possibility would be to offer programs at
boys and girls’ clubs and recreation centers and libraries that bring the
elderly together with young students in a similar fashion.
SOURCES
Morehouse, Lisa. “Senior Citizens Help Young Children with Reading and
Relationships.” Edutopia. Web. 19 January 2014. http://www.edutopia.org/grace-learning-center-prekindergarten-community
Morehouse, Lisa. “How to Build Intergenerational Opportunities for
Learning.” Edutopia. Web. 19 January 2014. http://www.edutopia.org/grace-learning-center-prekindergarten-community-how-to
Robinson,
Ken. The Element. New York: Penguin Books, 2009. Print.
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