Dr Gary Small is in charge of the Memory and Aging Research Center at UCLA—the University of California, Los Angeles. He is concerned by the fact that, on average, young people spend nine hours daily with technology: email, the web, mp3s, TV, and gaming. Teen brains are not fully developed, so the effect of this activity will profoundly affect the brain’s integration of 60% of the synaptic connections that are fine-tuned during adolescence.
He wonders how much, 20 to 30 years from now, young people will be different from those in later life today. What other skills will they develop and will they have an overall view of life—will they see the “big picture” or just focus on life narrowly within their dominant activity? Some anxious commentators have even suggested that the nerd, beloved of Hollywood’s “growing up” teen movies, will become the dominant social type.
The easy availability of a music stream is affecting the upcoming generations. People were able to communicate with each other over the radio and television. But now music comes directly into the ear and has an hypnotic effect so that the words of songs, often repeated, take on the role of a post-hypnotic suggestion. Marc Pensky, the author of Don’t bother me Mom—I’m Learning, believes that music is taking over as the new silence for teens. Will they ever learn to communicate in such an environment?
Then we have the old fear (old, but not forgotten) that all this electrical stuff in the ether will damage the brains of the young. This is not the same fear first expressed when heavy metal came into vogue, that everyone would go deaf listening to such noise. That is still true, and borne out by the fact that a lot of aging loud-music devotees are now suffering from above-average hearing loss. This new fear is medical—will the electrical currents in the atmosphere and, especially, in cell phones cause cancer? It seems likely that some people will suffer as a result of over-use.
Then there is the Wiki-syndrome (my phrase). Increasingly students, especially college students, rely on the Internet’s pre-packaged answers to questions. There is no real difference between searching for answers in books and looking things up online in Wikipedia and a zillion other sites. Using either method, students still have to deal with questions of bias, inadequacy, and mistakes. But never before was plagiarism so easy—or so prevalent. Now we can copy passages directly without understanding what has been said at all.
WODEN SAYS: This is evolution in action!
In my discussion with the soul of Charles Darwin (in Talking with Leaders of the Past) he told me that “evolution can occur in a single generation,” and that “human beings have an awareness whereby they can consciously effect changes within themselves by their powers of divine manifestation.” When our souls come down to Earth, and each incarnates in a human body, it is with foreknowledge of all the important issues we will be facing, including this assault on our brains. There are no surprises, though we do forget where we came from and what we knew before.
Life-lessons are not only about meeting negative challenges; they also concern dealing with change. We live in a time of multifaceted industrial revolution. The computer is changing where and how we work. Whoever dreamed before today that so many of us would be working at home, which was what weavers did before the Spinning Jenny revolutionized the weaving trade. Sailing ships gave way to steam, and then came the airplane, and big distances were no longer a major hurdle to communication. And so on…you know the list…industrial revolution never seems to stop. Human beings change and evolve as a result.
As we get ready to climb into electric cars; as we heat and cool our double-insulated homes with solar, wind, or geothermal power; and as we work on the computer at home, our lives will change. That’s for sure. But some things remain the same:
- We will still have to deal with our aloneness and our fears about living.
- We will still have to deal with our relationships with people generally.
- We will still have to deal with our health and our sexuality.
- We will still have to deal with our understanding of the purpose of life.
- We will still have to deal with our death and our times of grieving.
For these things, and many more daily challenges, we need to understand more fully the journey of the soul. There truly are solid answers to the questions “Why am I here?” and “What is the purpose of life?” and “Why do bad things happen to good people?” It is a study that takes a little time, but is worth the effort. Start with www.mastersofthespiritworld.com and take it from there. Remember to look at the books being offered, especially the booklet The Masters’ Reincarnation Handbook. Have a little gentle music coming through those ear buds and enjoy!
School
Wednesday, November 25th, 2009We’ve all been to some sort of school, otherwise we wouldn’t be reading this blog!
Maybe you went to a state school. Basic literacy is taught all over the world, although boys are more likely to get an education than girls in some countries. Many children are taught at home. Such training is often focused on the scriptures of the family’s own religious tradition. Girls in the developing world are more likely to be given training in the domestic arts, while boys are trained by their fathers in farming methods or the practice of the family business.
In the West, home schooling is growing in popularity among secular parents who seek higher standards of excellence than are provided by state-run schools. The wealthy have traditionally hired tutors for their children, but this is a very small section of private education.
Private schools are often linked to religious traditions, such as the Madrasah didiyyah and the Madrasah Islamiyyah in Arabic-speaking countries. Jews, Catholics, Methodists, Quakers, and many more sects have their own religious schools, and there is an organized movement among evangelical Protestant Christians in America to marry Bible-based programmed home schooling with church-school academic and sporting activities.
Non-religious foundations also exist. The private Ethical Culture Fieldston School in New York is one of many. It was founded by a Jewish rationalist, Felix Adler (1851-1933), and holds as its ideal “to develop individuals who will be competent to change their environment to greater conformity with moral ideals.” Its courses include ethics, moral philosophy, and community service.
In higher education, Shimer College, Chicago, helps its liberal arts students in small classes to “develop their capacity for critical thought and interpersonal communication” through careful reading and discussion of a wide selection of Great Books—from Homer and Plato to Freud and Darwin—which sustain a life-long passion for learning.” Senior students are encouraged to design their own curricula.
Powerful and widely admired among educationalists are schools that have adopted the method of the Italian physician/educator Dr. Maria Montessori (1870-1952). She focused on teaching children to develop their own skills at their own pace. Her principle of “spontaneous self-development” saw children “as they really were” and created an environment which fostered the fulfillment of their highest potential—spiritual, emotional, physical, and intellectual—as members of a family, the world community, and the universe.
While Montessori schools are best known for work among small children, they are highly successful at every age. Solid learning is fostered by the supportive environment of the schools, which use a mixed-age group approach.
WODEN SAYS: “The Child is father of the Man.” (Wordsworth)
It doesn’t really matter if your children go to this school or that, or are educated in the home. What matters is the quality of their educational experience.
Here is one school’s mission statement: “The program addresses the physical, emotional, and intellectual capacities of the developing child through an age-appropriate curriculum that integrates the disciplines of movement, fine arts, and practical arts into the study of humanities, science, math, and technology. Through the development of these capacities, we strive to educate the whole human being in a healthy and balanced manner.”
Not surprisingly, the school is the New York-based Rudolph Steiner School that uses the Waldorf method. No doubt many other educators would want to express their own mission in similar terms. So why pick on that particular statement? Well, it is a good statement because it looks forward to the end product, a healthy and well-balanced person who has been educated in a healthy and well-balanced manner.
It won’t help children to be filled with judgmental doctrine of any kind, sacred or secular.
It won’t help children if they only have their eyes on the prize, developing above all else an unhealthy competitive spirit. The goal of the human soul is to learn to exercise its freedom of choice and not to live in conformity to the narrow rules and aspirations of society.
That does not mean the child should not master the arts of reading, spelling, counting, and behaving in a sociable manner. At a young age our sons and daughters need to be given guidance in such respects. It takes years for patterns in the mind to develop into a unique personality. But that uniqueness depends on being taught to think for oneself, not to conform to the letter of the law—and, not least, what may be regarded as the “holy” law.
The greatest people and the finest souls have always had that spark of self-reliance when it came to thinking about things. If we cultivate young minds that know how to think for themselves, we will harvest a thoughtful, understanding, and caring society of men and women. A crop of which we may be happily proud.
Tags: Education
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