Can teachers use curriculum to train your children as future pillars of the community? What other ways can you develop your children to become leaders in the future? The first thing to do is to change your own education paradigm.
"What is your education paradigm?"
The private or public schools that you attended can be compared to a manufacturing plant. The average schooler goes to this plant or education facility. It begins in kindergarten and then goes up to each level like moving up to first grade. Likened to a conveyor belt, your child takes in the same subject matter as every student in that grade level on the conveyor belt. Your kids are taught only "what to think". Even if classics are used, the way education occurs in schools is to think what others are telling you what to think.
Too often, teachers lecture and "force-feed" information to their students. Please know I do not believe lectures are bad; they have a place. But too often, teachers lecture, telling their students what to think about the readings. Later on, tests are given to determine if the student knows what the teacher thinks about the readings, not what the students discover about the readings. John Gatto says it well.
After you fall into the habit of accepting what other people tell you to think, you lose the power to think for yourself. John Taylor Gatto, A Different Teacher, 2002
If you are used to being spoon-fed by a teacher, you become reliant on someone else. So, you have a hard time solving your own problems. To become a leader who can solve their own problems and lead others, certain changes must be made in the way your children are taught.
Are you like the teacher who requires textbooks for every learning activity? That's one way of developing your child to become a follower. Everyone thinks students are not knowledgeable enough to evaluate a particular topic so they depend on the textbook to explain it. Too often, students just learn to read and master only what the textbook wants them to learn. This type of education is very limiting to the student's capability to think and learn.
Ponder for a moment. Textbooks give students questions to answer. If the student can answer the chosen questions on a test, he can move on to the next piece of information. Textbooks do not encourage students to think outside of the answers in the teacher's manual. This model has provided our society with highly trained, but poorly educated graduates.
A different method is leadership education, especially in homeschool curriculum. It teaches you "how to think" instead of just "what to think". Your children should be able to finish schooling and be able to think on their own. Changing to another educational curriculum can be a major life-changer. Here are some ways to set a good foundation for this type of leadership education approach.
As you teach your children how to think, you might see a lifestyle change for your entire family. Leadership education ultimately involves the family as a whole. Initially, it takes much effort from a parent because you must be involved in learning and growing yourself. You can not hand over some workbooks and say "go for it". Workbooks merely teach your children what to think, not how to think.
Where should you start? Begin by reading a classic. That is one way to start your learning as a parent or teacher. Find something that interests you. A young adult classics list is a good way to find one if you are not sure what to read. After reading one, get another. Continue doing this four or five times. This is a good way to begin your own education.
As your children see their parents studying and learning, they begin to have a different idea of what education is all about. You will be excited about what you are learning and want to share it with your own children.
After reading four or five classic books, incorporate a writing session. Keep a reading journal at your side when reading the sixth one. Write what you think about the classic and then share it with someone. Sharing your insights with others is vital to becoming a leader yourself, so model this for your children.
Now, it is time to start with your own students. Choose a classic to read aloud together. The first classic you read together should be purely for enjoyment. If your students have never enjoyed classics, you may need to read a few more before moving to journaling and discussing. Once you think your children are ready, ask them to journal about the story after you finish reading each day. Then, discuss what the students wrote in their journal.
Francis Bacon said, "Reading maketh a full man, conference a ready man, and writing an exact man." The foundation of good instruction which is reading, writing and discussing is a good way to develop your kids into being able to think on their own. It is absolutely essential that your children, the future leaders, be able to think by themselves and one of the best ways is to get them to read, write and discuss classics.
1 comment:
Thank you for providing insight into how to cultivate leadership in our students.
The world needs young people who know how to think, act and work together in order to be contributors toward a better world.
Another aspect to consider: involving students in social action where their efforts can have a direct and tangible impact encourages our leaders of the future. Such a project exists through development organization Amman Imman (www.waterforniger.org) with whom students around the world are partnering in order to bring water to an abandoned drought-ridden region in West Africa called the Azawak. Please go to the blog to find out about this collaborative student leadership initiative: http://montessori-amman-imman-project.blogspot.com/
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