¶ … Sociology)
It doesn't take a rocket scientist to note that there have been disturbing trends in schools recently. While the spate of extreme violence appears to be waning, schools are still troubled places, with both students and teachers seemingly failing to get out of them what they expect or need, and suffering stress and trauma in the meantime. Society wants 'instant' gratification, TV is full of 'reality shows' that depend on people doing disgusting things to win a huge fortune, relatively speaking, so they can go do and buy more stuff. The most recent presidential race offered us a three-years-and-counting national discussion over who really won the presidency. And we have rushed headlong to send troops into two sovereign nations without benefit of the United Nations' sanctioning the acts, after the United Nations -- located on U.S. soil -- was founded to smooth out relationships between the world's peoples.
All this upheaval is reflected in the schools. "The subject matter curriculum with its characteristics of fragmentation, memorization, textbook orientation, teacher as controller, cognitive-based, and norm-testing is now being questioned. It is especially being questioned by those who feel that the modem, industrial efficiency paradigm is no longer relevant for today's curriculum. We seemed to be looking for something more in the curriculum." (Iannone and Obenauf, 1999)
Hypothesis
That something, according to a great many thinkers from various traditions and roles in society, might well be meditation. Meditation has been used by both eastern and western religions (yes, both Buddhist and Roman Catholic monks meditate, as do Jewish rabbis, and Indian shamans in their sweat lodges.) It is not, however, a religion, but rather a psychological means for contacting one's inner self, or spirituality, and making peace. The question is, does meditation have a place in schools, and can it change things for the better for students and teachers? How resistant are teachers and students to trying this method of achieving a more peaceful, workable learning environment? What would it take to include it?
Many have studied it in part, and have concluded a number of positive effects are possible with meditation. Some have approached it from a psychological standpoint, and others from a more spiritual one. Others have investigated where it fits in the paradigms teachers use to convey information and teach cognitive skills. And still others have investigated its effect on various populations of students.
Literature Review number of popular books have indicated that in the adult population, at least, there is a search for meaning beyond facts and the 'doingness' of modern life. Redfield's popular 1997 book, The Celestine Prophecy, indicated that there was a "mass intuition" that there was something more for mankind that buying a bigger house and a plasma TV. (Iannone and Oberauf, 1999) As Iannone and Oberauf noted, what applies to society generally applies to schools as well. And the search, they point out, is not all that recent; it simply hasn't been sufficiently explored or fulfilled. They point out that the 1970s saw a large wave of investigation of other ways to live, from the Native American to the far Eastern. Then, in the 1980s, it turned back again, with an emphasis not on 'knowing' but on racking up points. There was, simultaneously, renewed pressure for the schools to produce students who could knock out the standardized tests. And that, of course, put pressure on teachers. In fact, several studies have dealt with exactly that.
Bertoch investigated the effect of treatment on teachers experiencing the sorts of occupational stress they are under today. Among those treatments were self-care processes such as meditation. (1989)
But once again, post-2000, there is a spirit of rejection for the standardization. "It also is a concept the post-modernist paradigm, on all its variations, challenges and rejects." (William Doll, 1993, quoted by Iannone and Oberauf, 1999) Iannone and Oberauf believe the subject matter curriculum is caught up in the scientific management movement of the 1920s. "Efficiency and the assembly line model of breaking the school day into separate time units of forty to fifty-five-minute segments are the predominant models. But in spite of these models, we sense something is incongruent," Iannone and Oberauf note. (1999) They have discovered people are disoriented and uncertain, despite the fact that they have more to accomplish than at any time in U.S. history. We are feeling discomfort, uncertainty or even perhaps a sense of being disoriented. Besides this, we are being asked to do more than any time in American history. And, they add, "we are longing for something more, something that gives us meaning as teachers and also gives meaning to our students." (Iannone and...
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