Friday, November 23, 2012

The Dangers of Childhood

A happy childhood is poor preparation for human contacts.
            Colette, 19th-century French writer

A happy childhood has spoiled many a promising life.
            Robertson Davies, 20th-century Canadian writer

About seven years ago, I worked with my mentor and friend at my previous school to learn more about the history of the community.  To do so, we flipped through and studied past senior yearbooks, which thankfully stretched back to the 1910s.  For anyone who has done so, one is struck by a single observation – the fact that the teenagers appear to be adults.  I think, in comparison and by every definition, students today appear and act younger.  Over the last five years, I’ve assisted a good friend and colleague in taking students to Germany and hosting German students in the U.S.  Once more, I’m struck by the maturity (both in appearance and actions) of the Germans.  Between these two experiences and over an 18-year teaching career, it is apparent that the way we treat and handle children and teenagers is ultimately doing them a disservice.   

One of the refrains I hear the most, particularly within my capacity as a teacher, is the concern that issue “A” is too much stress and responsibility upon younger people.  I have heard administrators and teachers alike mention high school students as children.  It is the culmination of our attitude towards them and what we expect from them.  We see them as helpless, as someone to be coddled and protected.  Therefore, we protect them from bad grades, failing grades and being held back a year.  The infantilization of our students is realized in the students’ perception of their own abilities.   

As has often been cited in international studies, American students have high opinions of themselves and their potential but produce very little.  It is the end result of our coddling.  We pump students up with praise at the drop of a hat, take away all possibility of failure and in the end, we get a gaggle of cocky ne’er-do-wells.  Everything the education system does is designed to create immediate results and little to no thought is given to the long-range impact of these decisions.   

The second feature of this condition is the child-centric approach to parenting, marketing and the like.  Modern family psychologists talk of the importance of praise and finding worth in everything the child says and does.  The fear of damaging self-esteem has created, in some cases, some intolerable people to be around.  It is not the students’ fault but it is a problem that we adults have created.  The question is what should be done?  Unfortunately, many people don’t see the problem.  If we cannot show people the problem, there is no hope of reaching a better path.   

Compounding the problem of officials, teachers and parents not recognizing the problem is the fact that they try to demonize those who object to their education philosophy.  Over my career, I and others like me have tried to make the point that we need to take a different approach to students.  What we receive is the criticism that we don’t like children, we want them to fail, etc.  They have no argument to back up their philosophy so the only thing left is to create a moral argument with reformers playing the role of the boogeyman.  They attempt to invalidate our position, not with a cogent argument of their own but with demagoguery.  It is frustrating and irritating.  It is one thing to have a discussion or debate and to fail to convince or convert others.  It is another thing to be discounted altogether and to be characterized as antithetical to your true beliefs.  I care for my students and want what is best for them.  The current environment is not it.   

Martin Buber, the German philosopher and writer, once said that teachers must focus on teaching the adult the child will become.  Even pop-psychologists like the late Steven Covey preached the idea of keeping the end in mind.  We as teachers and administrators cannot make decisions with regards to students based on what is best for them now.  Rather, we must consider the impact on the adult they will become.  The more we infantilize our students/children, the greater challenges we place before them as adults.

 

2 comments:

  1. Self esteem is exactly that .. SELF esteem. If one does something worthy of self praise for its quality, then one's self esteem is bolstered. If one is given praise for an action that should not be praised because it lacked merit, then the child becomes arrogant and self centered. You are right one with this post Ross.

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  2. I hesitated to reply at first because each paragraph could be addressed separately by an essay! Briefly, there is something wrong with this generation of parents in how they parent. Next, many parents are reverting to previous ways of homemaking and child rearing by making intentional choices, so maybe that trend will spread and turn out a better group of youngsters. Also, there are some great schools of though on childhood and education (Waldorf and Charlotte Mason) that find ways to cultivate self-esteem withough coddling. That is just one of the reasons I homeschool... I give my children resonsiblities and useful ways to contribute to our family. Depriving kids from real work leads to trouble. I don't tie shoelaces.

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