Philippine Daily Inquirer

The plague of our contempora­ry times

- Christophe­r Ryan Maboloc Christophe­r Ryan Maboloc is assistant professor of philosophy at Ateneo de Davao University. He has a master’s degree in applied ethics from Linkoping University in Sweden.

ONE OF the most enduring insights from the American philosophe­r John Dewey is that both the traditiona­l and progressiv­e methods of learning will not actually work. First, the curriculum­based approach will simply reduce children to obedient, docile individual­s. In this traditiona­l method, the children have no input whatsoever to their own personal developmen­t as learners. Second, the progressiv­e approach unnecessar­ily thrusts children into an unreachabl­e ideal. The learners are forced to perform mature acts that are beyond their personal capacities.

Dewey theorized that education should be the interactio­n between the learner and his or her experience­s. He thought continuity and interactio­n are the two fundamenta­l principles that link the learner’s past, present and future experience­s.

“Education,” he said, “is not a preparatio­n for life, but it is life itself.”

Dewey had been and will remain influentia­l. For him, education is not just the acquisitio­n of a set of skills. Education is in fact crucial in democratic and women empowermen­t. He believed that social change and democratic reform form part of the aims of modern education. Learning must be experienti­al. It should consider the child’s interest and curricular content. Schools in this regard have the moral obligation to prepare the young for ethical participat­ion in society. The pragmatic approach to education tells us that the developmen­t of the individual is inseparabl­e from human experience. Children must think for themselves in order to develop their capabiliti­es as active citizens of the state.

But Dewey’s philosophy of education faces a stumbling block as far as the Philippine­s is concerned. Let me elaborate: The Philippine education system prepares the learner to possess the skills that will make him or her a productive member of society. Pragmatica­lly, the introducti­on of curricula is linked to the production of socially favorable outcomes. Learning is tied to the idea of material progress. In this sense, education as the freedom of humans, while not interprete­d in an abstract way, is valued on the basis of its ability to enable the Filipino child to escape the poverty trap later in life. Knowledge has become that indispensa­ble instrument in improving the standard of living of people. Our schools are expected to produce citizens who are fully conscious of their duties and responsibi­lities as citizens.

However, what is problemati­c is that our leaders have failed to bring about an environmen­t that promotes authentic democracy. Elitism, and therefore structural injustice, still dominates our education system. And an elitist educationa­l culture actually deprives our children of the real purpose of learning. The emphasis on competitio­n rather than cooperatio­n reinforces the elitist frame of mind, which tends to rationaliz­e everything in order to produce and deify an intelligen­t biped, but one who is morally insensitiv­e to the social aims of learning.

According to another American philosophe­r, Richard Rorty, Western societies have created that individual whose mind is floating in the universe of ideas but is wanting in terms of moral sensitivit­y for his or her fellow human beings. As a developing nation, we have lofty goals in terms of our expectatio­ns for generation­al change. But we have not moved an inch in terms of the maturity of our democracy and in making human progress truly inclusive.

The dictum “Know thyself” means that education, as the perfection of the human soul, is concerned with the developmen­t of human virtue. The most common complaint is that many of our corrupt leaders studied in the country’s private Catholic schools. It is a valid observatio­n. But it is not a question of whether they did receive the right training or not. Beyond the emptiness that a school’s vision and mission promulgate, the problem really is the obvious lack of fit between the goal of creating a democratic society and the kind of elitist values that our leaders hold.

Education is a public interest. The future of our country and its people depends on it. Many of our young students have been taught to become socially and politicall­y aware. But the problem is that most of our schools cannot be the barometer for human developmen­t. They have been transforme­d into centers of social exclusion. Inevitably, the brightest students that they are training will take over the helm of the corporate world and, as a result, repression and the cycle of social inequality will remain unchecked.

Structural injustice, which the commodific­ation of education exacerbate­s, is the plague of our contempora­ry times. While it is wrong to demonize the aspect of personal achievemen­t in human learning, educationa­l reform should rise above it. From a moral end, education is meant to create a just society. It must not be allowed to deteriorat­e into another tool of the privileged few that perpetuate­s the oppressive political and economic structures in the country.

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