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Singapore Management University’s Distinguished Education Lecture Singapore Management University’s Distinguished Education Lecture

Singapore Management University’s Distinguished Education Lecture - PowerPoint Presentation

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Singapore Management University’s Distinguished Education Lecture - PPT Presentation

March 2015 Education for Citizenship Professor Lord Alton of Liverpool wwwdavidaltonnet How can you expect the birds to sing when their groves are cut down Thoreau Singapore is renowned for its meritocracy but meritocracies must always guard against leaders becoming a detached eli ID: 815673

education respect citizenship people respect education people citizenship order life ruler society civic million world rights give children cultivate

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Slide1

Singapore Management University’s Distinguished Education Lecture March 2015

Education for Citizenship

Professor Lord Alton of Liverpool

www.davidalton.net

Slide2

How can you expect the birds to sing when their groves are cut

down -

Thoreau

Slide3

Singapore is renowned for its meritocracy – but meritocracies must always guard against leaders becoming a detached elite.

Slide4

Civic education is about a preparation for life

, not just for

work. 

Slide5

Sir William Curtis,

at the end of the eighteenth century, used the phrase

“the three Rs” – reading, writing and arithmetic

Slide6

Augustine’s “Confessions”

noted that

For

those first lessons, reading, writing and arithmetic, I thought as great a burden and penalty as any Greek

.

Slide7

Charles Dickens: Hard Times

Slide8

“Now, what I want is Facts. Teach these boys and girls nothing but Facts. Facts alone are wanted in life. Plant nothing else, and root out everything else. You can only form the minds of reasoning animals upon Facts; nothing else will ever be of any service to them.”

 

Slide9

Gradgrind creates a world devoid of humanity, compassion, or gentle intellectual inquiry and fails both as a teacher and as a father - seeing his own son becoming a thief.

Slide10

Confucius: “The Great

Learning”:

The way of great learning consists in manifesting one’s bright virtue, consists in loving the people, consists in stopping in perfect goodness.”

 

Slide11

John Henry Newman’s university would be:

“…

a seat of wisdom, a light of the world, a minister of the faith, an alma mater of the rising generation. It is this and a great deal more.”

Newman

listed the intellectual virtues as

“good sense, sobriety of thought, reasonableness, candour, self-command and steadfastness of view.”

Slide12

Education for citizenship would enable young people, in particular, to reach beyond academic attainment alone - to think, enquire, debate and understand how decisions will affect their lives and the future of their nation and the world.

Slide13

Slide14

In making “

make men without chests”

, educators have become the

“conditioners”.

“The task of modern education is not to cut down jungles but to irrigate deserts. The right defence against false sentiments is to inculcate just sentiments. By starving the sensibility of our pupils we only make them easier prey to the propagandist when he comes.”

Slide15

Matthew Arnold

"The aim and office of instruction… is to enable a man to know himself and the world… To know himself, a man must know the capabilities and performances of the human spirit… [which is] the value of the humanities… but it is also a vital and formative knowledge to know the world, the laws which govern nature, and man as a part of nature."

Slide16

“Education is the most powerful weapon which you can use to change the world”.

Slide17

Boko Haram

Slide18

Slide19

if you want to plant for one season, you should plant a seed; if you want to plant for ten years, you should plant a tree; but if you want to plant for life, you should give a young man or woman an education.

Slide20

An alternative three Rs:

Respect

, Rights and Responsibilities.

Slide21

The most important thing is that you have to respect an individual, whether he’s got six Cs or six As and whether he’s a brain surgeon or a dustman. I think we should give him the same respect. If you don’t give respect to your own citizens, I think you condemn them forever.”

 

Chiam

See Tong

Slide22

In 1644 John Milton, in the

Areopagitica

wrote:

“Give me the liberty to know, to utter, and to argue freely according to conscience.”

But free speech also requires respect.

Slide23

All freedoms must be tempered by mutual respect – which is why the ridiculing, for instance, of deeply held religious beliefs is disrespectful and invariably becomes inflammatory and offensive. Whipping up hated against minorities or against people who are simply different from you will inevitably disrupt the harmony and good order of society. Equally, imprisoning a young man for expressing on his

Facebook

site that he does not believe in God is disrespectful and wholly disproportionate.

Slide24

“where ignorant armies clash by night” – Matthew Arnold: “Dover Beach”

Slide25

“order that keeps things fast in their place” – Edmund Burke.

Slide26

“to educate a child you need the whole tribe”

Slide27

Slide28

Do we respect one another; do we respect our parents and families; do we respect our civic institutions; do we respect those who are different – perhaps for reasons of race, religion, class, gender or orientation?

 

How do we ensure that vulnerable groups are not made more vulnerable or stigmatised – especially engendering respect for people with disabilities or the elderly?

 

Do we respect the finite resources entrusted to us?

 

Do we use them in a sustainable way?

 

Do we respect our environment – from the streets and neighbourhoods where we live to respect for the natural world?

 

Do we ask what creates respectful and good communities?

 

Slide29

Do we understand the importance of respectful relationships in sustaining society? 

 

How can we strengthen the local and unleash the power of creative citizenship?  

 

How can we use the markets and our economies to re-order priorities, to reduce the sense of alienation, to encourage mutual respect?

 

Are we going to turn our fire on the weapons of mass consumption, our addiction to hedonism, materialism and affluent barbarism?  

Slide30

Dr.Seet

I

Mee

:

“Life is not just about shoes and mobile phones.”

Slide31

Do we appreciate the privileges and liberties which we enjoy and how do we create a tolerant, inclusive and respectful civil society.

 

Edmund

Burke once observed:

“It is easy to give power, but difficult to give wisdom.”

How, then, can a civic education help in cultivating wisdom and virtue?

Slide32

Rights

Slide33

1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights

Slide34

The 1948 Declaration was born in the in the criminality of twentieth century totalitarianism and the gas chambers of Bergen-Belsen and

Auschwitz

and atrocities committed here in the East

.

Slide35

“Everyone has the right to freedom of thought, conscience and religion;

this right includes freedom to change his religion or belief, and freedom,

either alone or in community with others and in public or private,

to manifest his religion or belief in teaching, practice, worship and observance.”

Article 18 - An Orphaned Right

Slide36

The Charter of the United Nations “

reaffirmed faith in fundamental human rights, and dignity and worth of the human person.”

The Charter required its signatories to promote

“universal respect for, and observance of, human rights and fundamental freedoms for all without distinction as to race, sex, language or religion.”

Slide37

Dag Hammarskjold said “The UN wasn’t founded to take mankind to paradise but rather to save humanity from hell.”

Slide38

“The health and strength of a community depends on every citizen’s felling of solidarity with other citizens and on their willingness in the name of this solidarity to shoulder their part of the burdens and responsibilities of the community. The same is, of course, true of humanity as a whole.”

 

Slide39

Responsibilities

Aristotle said we are “social

animals”

– and interdependent:

“not solitary pieces in a game of chequers”.

Slide40

“the whole glory of virtue is in activity” - Cicero, in

“On Duty”

Slide41

Mary Ann Glendon: Traditions In Turmoil

Slide42

If we are to

educate for citizenship,

we need a richer language of responsibilities, duties and obligations – a language which comes with the privilege of sharing in the common life of a nation or community

Slide43

Slide44

Slide45

“by those who are thoroughly imbued with the aspiration toward truth and understanding. …I cannot conceive of a genuine scientist without that profound

faith”

- Albert Einstein

Slide46

H. G. Wells, understood what would happen if we fail to appreciate the role of education in fostering a civilised society, where personal civic responsibility is cultivated in each person, insisting that

“Maintaining civilisation is a constant race between education and catastrophe”.

Slide47

A

civic education

would encourage us to consider the role of individual and corporate philanthropy, the duty to support the widow, the orphan, the disadvantaged. It would encourage us to develop and examine our conscience.

Slide48

If we were to

educate for citizenship

we would enshrine the duties of each person: to live peaceably; to participate in civic institutions and the processes of local and national government; to contribute to the resourcing of commonly beneficial institutions; to acquire knowledge and to encourage the pursuit of knowledge in children; to learn respect for the needs of others; to behave ethically; and to appreciate how legitimate rights have been acquired, and to cherish them.

 

Slide49

We would cultivate a respect for customs, laws and institutions which serve the common good and harmony of society; we would cultivate a belief in the supreme importance of the rule of law; we would share our stories and shared histories and memorialise the lives which bequeathed our liberties; and we would cultivate a reverence for the impulses and altruistic outpouring which can accompany the religious faiths which animate billions of people throughout the world.

Slide50

What are some of the origins of these ideas?

Justice

Wisdom

Temperance

Courage

Magnanimity

Tolerance

Munificence

Prudence; and

Gentleness

Slide51

These ideas, along with Judaeo-Christian ideals – faith hope and charity

- are captured by Thomas Aquinas and continue to inform both religious and secular discourse.

Slide52

The Golden Rule:  

“What you do not wish for yourself, do not do to

others”

 

“Since you yourself desire standing then help others achieve it; since you yourself desire success then help others attain it.”

Slide53

“To put the world right in order, we must first put the nation in order; to put the nation in order, we must first put the family in order; to put the family in order, we must first cultivate our personal life; we must first set our hearts right.”

Slide54

“You must be the change you want to see in the world”

Slide55

An “upright society” begins with

the

individual – the Holy Quran

Slide56

1. Dana: liberality, generosity or charity. The giving away of alms to the needy. It is the duty of the king (government) to look after the welfare of his needy subjects. The ideal ruler should give away wealth and property wisely without giving in-to craving and attachment. In other words he should not try to be rich making use of his position.

2.

Sila

: morality - a high moral character. He must observe at least the Five Precepts, and conduct himself both in private and in public life as to be a shining example to his subjects. This virtue is very important, because, if the ruler adheres to it, strictly, then bribery and corruption, violence and indiscipline would be automatically wiped out in the country.

3. Comfort

Pariccaga

: Making sacrifices if they are for the good of the people - personal name and fame; even the life if need be. By the grant of gifts etc. the ruler spurs the subjects on to more efficient and more loyal service.

4.

Ajjava

: Honesty and integrity. He must be absolutely straightforward and must never take recourse to any crooked or doubtful means to achieve his ends. He must be free from fear or favour in the discharge of his duties. At this point, a stanza from ‘

Sigalovada

Sutta

. (

Digha-Nikaya

), a relevant declaration by the Buddha comes to my mind:

"

Canda

, dose,

bhaya

,

moha

-

Yo

dhammam

nativattati

.

Apurati

tassa

yaso

-

Sukkha

pakkheva

candima

")Meaning: If a person maintains justice without being subjected to

favoritism

, hatred, fear or ignorance, his popularity grows like the waxing moon.

5.

Maddava

: Kindness or gentleness. A ruler’s uprightness may sometimes require firmness. But this should be tempered with kindness and gentleness. In other words a ruler should not be over - harsh or cruel.

D

asa

-Raja-

Dhamma

The ‘Ten Royal Virtues’

Slide57

6. Tapa: Restraint of senses and austerity in habits. Shunning indulgence in sensual pleasures, an ideal monarch keeps his five senses under control. Some rulers may, using their position, flout moral conduct - this is not becoming of a good monarch.

7.

Akkodha

: Non-hatred. The ruler should bear no grudge against anybody. Without harbouring grievances he must act with forbearance and love. At this instance, I am reminded of how a certain royal pupil, an heir to the throne, who had been punished by the teacher for an offence, took revenge by punishing the teacher after he become King! (

Jataka

Text). Political victimization is also not conducive to proper administration.

8.

Avihimsa

: non-violence. Not only should he refrain from harming anybody but he should also try to promote peace and prevent war, when necessary. He must practice non-violence to the highest possible extent so long as it does not interfere with the firmness expected of an ideal ruler.

9.

Khanti

: Patience and tolerance. Without losing his temper, the ruler should be able to bear up hardships and insults. In any occasion he should be able to conduct himself without giving in-to emotions. He should be able to receive both bouquets and brickbats in the same spirit and with equanimity.

10.

Avirodha

: Non - opposition and non-enmity. The ruler should not oppose the will of the people. He must cultivate the spirit of amity among his subjects. In other words he should rule in harmony with his people.

D

asa-Raja-Dhamma: 

The ‘Ten Royal Virtues’

Slide58

Conclusion

If such indispensable civic virtues – which united East and West – are not passed from generation to generation, civic sinews will begin to deteriorate and atrophy. Let me remind you of a few manifestations of our disaggregated and dysfunctional society in the West.

Slide59

During the height of the 2011 riots in Britain it was sickening to see a bleeding boy, attacked and robbed by those who first appeared to have come to his aid; or the 67-year-old killed because he tried to prevent arson; or the 11-year-old brought before the courts and convicted because, along with thousands of other looters, he exploited the breakdown in law and order.

Slide60

Three-quarters of a million British children have no contact with their fathers following the breakdown of their parents’ relationships.

In 2014 the

Relationships Foundation

estimated the economic cost of family breakdown at £46 billion

Slide61

In 2014 there were 68,840

“looked after”

children in care. One in ten children is severely neglected in childhood. In 2013 934,600 youngsters – aged 10-17 – were convicted of a crime.

 

According to the

Children’s Society

, 100,000 children run away from home every year. In 2012/13 14,863 children called

Childline

about suicide. Since it was founded in 1986, it has counselled more than a million children.

 

More than 140,000 people try to commit suicide every year – many of them young. Suicide accounts for 20 per cent of all deaths among young people aged 15 to 24.

Slide62

Last year,

Samaritans

answered 4.6 million calls from people in despair, which is one call every seven seconds. Also last year, 29.4 million anti-depressants were dispensed, which is a 334 % increase since 1985 at a cost to the National Health Service of £338 million.  

Slide63

An estimated 1 million elderly people do not see a friend or neighbour during an average week; 7 million people are now living alone in Great Britain – entirely unprecedented in our history. 26% of households comprising just one and on present trends by 2016 36% of all homes will be inhabited by a single person.

Slide64

Many families and communities face indebtedness on an unparalleled scale. Total personal debt in the UK has reached £1.43 trillion – not far short of the level of national debt ($1.47 trillion). Indebtedness on this scale is

“intergenerational theft”

and is unsustainable. It is also a reflection of our failure to

educate for citizenship

– both in terms of individual as well as collective responsibility.

 

Slide65

“We are not in politics to ignore people’s worries: we are in politics to deal with them”

Slide66

Slide67

Education is not the filling a bucket but the lighting of a fire

Educating for citizenship is not a spectator sport or the preserve of a few well-meaning academics or specialists.

Slide68

Citizenship awards, “service learning”, community endeavour all have their part to

play.

Slide69

The story of Bian and the precious Jade

Slide70

A failure to cultivate what I have called the three Rs of

Respect, Rights and Responsibilities

will disfigure our society, just as

Bian

, in this tale, was disfigured. By contrast, if we commit ourselves to

educate for citizenship

we, too, will be rewarded with a beautiful jade. We simply need to commit ourselves to do it.

Slide71

Singapore Management University’s Distinguished Education Lecture March 2015

Education for Citizenship

Professor Lord Alton of Liverpool

www.davidalton.net