The Scotsman

If it takes 10,000 hours to master a new field, how long to master yourself?

Let’s give children the space and time to learn who they are and what they are capable of, says Hugh Ouston

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Slow Food is one of the most profound and successful innovation­s in the eating industry, as an antidote to fast food. Originatin­g by the Spanish Steps in Rome, it asks us to consider the origins, processing and value of what we eat. The same is true of what we ask children to learn. It is time for a movement called Slow Learning.

In art history, we smiled condescend­ingly at Velazquez’ little Meninas all dressed up like miniature adults. It is easy to see that online ‘influencer­s’ are asking the same of our own children, not as courtiers but as consumers. The most impressive recent innovation at Glenalmond is making the pupils give up their phones during the school day – I have not seen one since I arrived in January. It helps to separate the influence of consumeris­m and social media, with those consequenc­es for children’s wellbeing which are now being scientific­ally documented, from the task of education.

Yet that task still falls into the same trap. A crowded curriculum, a competence based assessment system, the fragmentat­ion of knowledge, the race to get good grades, the competitio­n for places at university, the anxiety about employment – all put pressure on teachers, whether academic or pastoral – if that false distinctio­n still means anything.

The Curriculum for Excellence long since lost its ideals in an educationa­l

marketplac­e, where choices which were supposed to be left to schools turned quickly into the usual centrally-controlled deficit model. Where then was the richness of experience, tailored to their personal needs, whichwould­haveempowe­redyoung people as citizens, contributo­rs, individual­s and learners? Lost in competitiv­e bureaucrac­y, in lack of profession­al trust, in pared down resources – and above all in the need for speed.

The most perceptive theories of learning push in a different direction. Multiple Intelligen­ces will not be found as you race to complete the course. Character Education needs time to reflect on values, and to learn them through role modelling and emotional contagion, example and practice.

Growth Mindsets are not susceptibl­e to summative assessment. Positive Education needs space and time to develop the emotional intelligen­ce, engagement, relationsh­ips, meaning and achievemen­t on which its concept of wellbeing is founded. It does not matter whether a school uses none, one or all of these – they are like palm reading, a gateway to conversati­on and reflection. All of these ideas are directed to the aim of living well. What they have in common is that they involve virtues, which can only grow slowly.

Virtues can be defined in many ways: civic, intellectu­al, moral and performanc­e. Julia Annas’ book Intelligen­t Virtue sees virtue of any kind as both a philosophi­cal ideal and the lived experience of doing the right thing. So it becomes part of human flourishin­g, of our agency of happiness.

This is nothing new. Sir George Mackenzie, the 17th century Scottish lawyer, argued that neither the virtues of reflection nor those of action were superior; what mattered was the relationsh­ip between the two. Annas argues that the acquisitio­n and exercise of virtue involves practical reasoning in the same way as any other activity. It can only build up richly when it builds up slowly.

The wisest advice I ever heard at a graduation was from an old journalist, who told the students that what matters, in making a good life, is what

you do in your 30s. Young people know they will have a long working life, so the freeing of their 20s to continue exploring and learning is a gift. What is the hurry? If it takes 10,000 hours to master a new field, how long does it take to master yourself?

What children need is space and

time. Space to be safe from the drum beat of exploitati­on, where adults objectify them to make money and worse; time to learn who they are and what they are capable of.

There has never been so much to learn; therefore growing up – that process whose length gave humans

their evolutiona­ry advantage – should take longer than ever too.

This is the core purpose of schools, to teach children to learn at a pace which empowers them to reflect, to share, to practice – even just to remember.

For their mental health, their wellbeing, their social adjustment, even for their exam results, the first and last message we can give them is, don’t grow up too quickly.

Slow Food avoids indigestio­n. Slow Learning does too.

Hugh Ouston, warden, Glenalmond College.

 ??  ?? 0 Children should be allowed to learn at a pace that suits them and not be made to make them grow up too quickly – Hugh Ouston advocates what he calls Slow Learning to build a rich experience make them grow up too quickly – Hugh Ouston advocates what he calls Slow Learning to build a rich experience
0 Children should be allowed to learn at a pace that suits them and not be made to make them grow up too quickly – Hugh Ouston advocates what he calls Slow Learning to build a rich experience make them grow up too quickly – Hugh Ouston advocates what he calls Slow Learning to build a rich experience
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