“We empower each [community member] to be a compassionate,
responsible, and active global citizen.”
--The High Meadows Mission Statement
It’s easy to read such words as platitude. They certainly
sound noble. But how does an elementary school make these words really reach
students? Aren’t the elementary years about teaching reading, writing, and ‘rithmetic?
Or do we have a greater calling to use tragic events such as the recent terror
in Charlottesville as touchstones to teach our children how to overcome hatred
and injustice?
![]() |
Photo Credit: The Boston Globe |
When I was a kid, school was lockstep-simple. I had no idea
that the economy was tanking, that the Vietnam War had left an indelible scar
on society, that the Cold War was simmering and creating fear all around me. That
racial strife and social injustice were alive and well, despite how I was taught
that Abraham Lincoln and Martin Luther King had fixed all of that.
Things are different today. News is inescapable. It’s delivered in a flow that is constant, ugly, and sound-bitten, and in social media venues that didn’t exist in the late ‘70s. All but our youngest kids (hopefully) are exposed to the realities of the world. Our instinct is to protect them, just as we were protected, but we really can’t. And even if we could, would that be the right way to raise them today—in blissful ignorance?
The answer is yes…and no.
Five-year-olds are amazingly perceptive. They may not know
about the world’s injustices, but they certainly feel them. Nine-year-olds are built
to see life in a binary, right-and-wrong way. Thirteen-year-olds are savvy with
at least cursory knowledge of and opinions about truths, half-truths, and
alternative truths, but can’t naturally distinguish one from the other.
These days, we need to meet children where they are.
Kindergarten teachers and parents know that these children
need nurturing above all else. They need reassurance and comfort and should be
shielded from terrible facts they cannot possibly understand. They can learn to
be compassionate, responsible, and active global citizens by creating and
maintaining strong friendships. They can learn that there is a place called
“the world,” where there are people just like them who are looking for the same
things in life that they are. They can be empowered to be kind to everyone at
all times, no matter what.
Third graders are entering the age of reason, and parents
and teachers know that their children’s questions cannot be brushed aside.
Though adults might not initiate a conversation about events such as the horrors
in Charlottesville, they should be prepared to field a child’s questions
honestly. They should invite children to reflect on why people hate and guide
them to create ideas about how hate can be eliminated in this world. They
should empower children to take action on those ideas with the promise that
their action can really make a difference.
The adults in the lives of seventh graders should be
truthful and direct with them. It’s reasonable to be open, even provocative. It
is right to initiate a conversation about facts and morality. About what white
supremacists believe, what they did in places like Charlottesville, and why
they are wrong. To distinguish between empty rhetoric and words that inspire
moral action. Most importantly, adults can help activate their innate
propensity to be compassionate, responsible global citizens by encouraging them
to take action to ensure that the evils of bigotry and hatred don’t take root
in their own world.
Children of all ages today feel and know much more than we
think, certainly more than we did in our day. We need to honor where they are
developmentally and to take them seriously. Most importantly, we need to model
for them—in our words and actions--what it means to be good and just.
May I share to Facebook? This is excellent advice.
ReplyDeleteYes, please do!
ReplyDeleteSomehow this appeared in my Facebook feed and I am so glad that it did. Insightful and user friendly. Thank you for this.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Karen.
ReplyDeleteExcellent post, Jay.
ReplyDeleteThanks, CJ.
ReplyDeleteWell said, Jay! Thanks for sharing this.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Mark!
ReplyDelete