Question
Everything
There are many places for
improvement in the K-12 curriculum. The
most important change would be in the area of critical thinking. If we were to teach
our students to be critical in their thinking in respect to the subjects they
are already learning, they would have the ability to utilize this skill outside
of the classroom as well. This important skill is necessary well beyond
the K-12 years. To increase critical
thinking for students, more discussion in the classroom should be instituted.
Why do we not question everything? It is common for children to constantly ask
the questions “Why?” and “Why not?” and not have their questions taken
seriously. Most of the time, their
questions are dismissed and they never truly get real answers. It stifles their curiosity and makes them
reluctant to think beyond the forced fed facts.
Children should feel as if they have the freedom to be themselves.
As former teacher John
Taylor Gatto states in his article, Against School, “School trains children to
obey reflexively.” Gatto
elaborates, “We
could encourage the best qualities of youthfulness - curiosity, adventure,
resilience, the capacity for surprising insight -…by introducing kids to truly
competent adults, and by giving each student what autonomy he or she needs in
order to take a risk every now and then.” and he also states that “School
trains children to be employees and consumers; teach your own to be leaders and
adventurers…teach your own to think critically and independently.”
It may be argued that the current
education process has worked for many generations. School is a place to teach information and that
by adding any extra time for thoughtfulness to the subjects taught in the
classroom would take away from the needed time to teach factual
information. On the contrary, giving the
extra time for students to ponder and think about the information will give
deeper meaning to the material and push towards the desire for them to seek
further knowledge on their own time. The
interactive process will flow beyond the classroom. They will then come to future classes more
prepared to ingest new information as the concepts become more complicated.
In the article “A Real
Education” from the Shambala Sun, Barry Boyce writes, “’Kindness, caring,
empathy, being able to de-center from your own point of view and listen deeply
to others—these are values that should be cultivated in our classrooms,’ says
Mark Greenberg, director of the Prevention Research Center for the Promotion of
Human Development at Penn State University. These are the social and emotional
skills that a person who experienced ‘optimal nurturing conditions’ would
develop during childhood and adolescence and bring with them into adulthood.”
The educational system
waits until students are at the university level before it takes the topic of
critical thinking more seriously. Most
students are unprepared to get the most out of their college education if they
are only just learning this skill as they take these higher education
courses. Wouldn’t it make more sense for
them to have already started the process in the K-12 curriculum?
Children can be taught to
be responsible by thinking for themselves and about the consequences that come
with the actions they choose. If we all
would take our actions and reactions more seriously, it would open up a
different perspective to the world around us.
It would be a better world if society gained more people who could
effectively manage themselves.
In
bell hooks’ book, Teaching Critical
Thinking, “The most exciting aspect of critical thinking in the classroom
is that it calls for initiative from everyone, actively inviting all students
to think passionately and to share ideas in a passionate, open matter. When everyone in the classroom, teacher and
students, recognizes that they are responsible for creating a learning
community together, learning is at its most meaningful and useful. In such a community of learning there is no
failure. Everyone is participating and
sharing whatever resource is needed at a given moment in time to ensure that we
leave the classroom knowing that critical thinking empowers us.” (11) hooks writes much about the process of
intellectual thinking. As children, we
are born with the curiosity to understand how life works. Somewhere between our childhood and by the
time we enter the college classroom, students have come to dread thinking.
We are in need of more than
just reading, writing, and arithmetic.
We need an atmosphere where critical thinking, problem solving and
diversity are embraced and encouraged. We
need to encourage youth to be independent and strong. We need to teach skills so
our children are not able to be easily manipulated. Instead we are teaching children to conform
and accept what they are told instead of learning for themselves. Remembering and repeating is only one of the lower levels of
thinking. We need children to evaluate
and analyze material themselves. Through
their personal experience, adults can help children be better able to figure
things out for themselves with some guidance.
They need to connect to the lessons that they are taught and choose what
is pertinent to them and learn from it what they can. In the educational process, we need to
encourage intellectual independence. Expansion
of the mind could be exercised by referring to the thoughts and ideas of others
in formulating the individual’s personal judgment. There needs to be a place
for new ideas. It is an interactive
process.
The courses students are
“forced” to take can have a large impact on where they are heading in
life. As students, it is important to
take specific classes of interest that play towards the student’s
strengths. A child is far more inclined
to excel when taking courses that are interesting to them. It makes learning more meaningful and useful.
It creates a path towards a brighter future in a field that is of interest to the
individual.
Columnist for The Seattle
Times, Jerry Large wrote an article, stating that grit is an important lesson
to teach children. “Perseverance and passion for long-term goals” are the
underlying reasons why and how a person can accomplish goals. Jerry Large's article "Gift of grit,
curiosity help Kids succeed" talks about a book from another author,
"Tough also has a new book about what it takes for a child to make it:
"How children succeed: Grit, Curiosity, and the Hidden Power of
Character". Large writes, "As the title says, if you want
success, build character and the rest will follow." It is an
important lesson. “A big part of building character is overcoming
failure. Too much adversity is bad, but so is too little, which doesn't
allow a child to build grit."
It may be said that
guidance should come from within the home.
Proper guidance, whether it comes from home or a trusted adult at
school, is an important thing that is needed for every child. Life would be easier if we could all help each other. Everyone has had life experiences that they
have learned from and the advice they can share could save others from making
the same major mistakes. The more
information you have, the more choices you can choose from for making better
decisions.
In The Answer Sheet: Mike Roses’s Resolutions
on Education, he wants “To have more young people get an engaging and
challenging education.” This is the
basis for trying to make the world of education a better place. It is not just
about the education children are receiving by itself, but the ability to teach
our young people how to make the most of the education they are receiving in
the classroom. To have the ability to
ask why and have their questions answered by discussion of their peers is
important. The opportunity of sharing
many different views and opinions can help a person make informed decisions for
themselves.
There are
many places for improvement in the K-12 curriculum; the most important change
would be in the area of critical thinking.
If we were critical in our thinking, our world would be a much different
place. We should question everything and not just try to fit into the world
around us. If
we were to institute more discussion in the classroom, it would increase the
opportunity for critical thinking.
Works Cited
Boyce, Barry. "A Real Education." Shambala Sun. The Mindful Society. (75) Web.
May 2012
Harper's Magazine. Web. September
2003.
hooks, bell.
"Teaching Critical Thinking: Practical Wisdom." New York.
Routledge. 16
September
2009. Print.
Large, Jerry.
"Gift of Grit, Curiosity Help Kids Succeed." Seattle Times. Seattle Times.
Web. 23 September 2012.
Washington
Post. Web. 5 January 2011.
Tough, Paul. "How Children Succeed:
Grit, Curiosity, and the Hidden Power of
Character." Houghton
Mifflin Harcort Publishing Company. 2012. Print.