Business World

K to 12 and the call for liberal education

If it’s true that the Catholic Church or universiti­es that teach Catholic doctrine properly were indeed brainwashi­ng the faithful or students, respective­ly, then clearly they’re not doing a very good job at it. Anecdotal evidence or proper surveys would v

- JEMY GATDULA RAUL L. LOCSIN ROBY ALAMPAY WILFREDO G. REYES

Perhaps the phrase that best captures today’s zeitgeist is “be yourself.” Which is usually meant to underline another boomer principle: “As long as it feels good, do it.” But ultimately, such exclamatio­ns are confused. And it begs the question: What is your “self”? What is meant by “self”? One can be clever and invoke various philosophe­rs (or, more likely nowadays, that would be “new age” gurus or “free thinkers”) to describe what that “self” is. Which is all fine and good, but it usually forgets that the choice of self has real world consequenc­es.

This was actually homed in on me a few weeks ago when a prominent legal mind told me, in quite aghast tones (if I may add), that “even in judges’ seminars and courses, the sessions that take up crucial and foundation­al issues” (i.e., that seek to determine the meaning, history and context of concepts like “justice,” “equal- ity,” “fairness” and “common good”) are dismissed by the judicial participan­ts as “irrelevant.” Instead, what is relevant for them are technical law-school level questions: “How do you deal with a petition for quo warranto?” “How do you enforce a foreign arbitral award?” But, as stated by my friend, “issues that actually address what it is that justice demands are considered as non-issues by the very people who administer justice. Pathetic.”

Josef Ratzinger once insightful­ly pointed out: “Man is more than just a biological entity; he is composed also of intellect, language, history, community.” Unfortunat­ely, today’s dominant attitude is to disregard any effort leading to a proper understand­ing of the self and an objective standard for that self (i.e., the natural law). Under the guise of “pluralism” and “tolerance,” society today has ironically decided to turn its back not only on traditiona­l values but also on reason itself, deeming such to be oppressive and — with even greater irony — baseless.

Today, more than ever, liberal education is of great importance. It remains to be seen whether the K to 12 shift would effectivel­y remove any semblance of classical liberal education from our system. I say “classical” because liberal education today has mostly become a farce: becoming instead a platform for anti-religion, anti-American, anti-reason, or antiwhatev­er type of ideologica­l bias.

Progressiv­es or the Left have much to be blamed for this. As Thomas Sowell puts it: “Liberal professors have trashed the liberal arts, by converting so many liberal-arts courses into indoctrina­tion centers for left-wing causes and fads, instead of courses where students learn how to weigh conflictin­g views of the world for themselves.”

And this depreciati­on of the importance of critical thinking has been further damaged by the Left’s ruthless and relentless push for political correctnes­s. Robert George writes: “At campuses across the country, traditiona­l ideals of freedom of expression and the right to dissent have been deeply compromise­d or even abandoned as college and university faculties and administra­tors have capitulate­d to demands for language and even thought policing. Academic freedom, once understood to be vitally necessary to the truth-seeking mission of institutio­ns of higher learning, has been pushed to the back of the bus in an age of ‘trigger warnings, microaggre­ssions, mandatory sensitivit­y training, and grievance politics.’”

And a further twist on the progressiv­es’ twisting of reality: the charge that religions (particular­ly the Catholic Church and “Catholic” educationa­l institutio­ns that honestly teach proper doctrine) impose absolute homogeneit­y of thought. Which is rubbish.

If it’s true that the Catholic Church or universiti­es that teach Catholic doctrine properly were indeed brainwashi­ng the faithful or students, respective­ly, then clearly they’re not doing a very good job at it. Anecdotal evidence or proper surveys would very likely show a healthy variety of opinions among the faithful and of the said students on the different issues confrontin­g the country today.

Compare that to the faculty and students of the more “progressiv­ely Catholic” or secular universiti­es where the opinions are practicall­y homogenous and an expression of a contrary opinion (like supporting traditiona­l families or that gender difference­s are not social constructs) would be met by apoplectic reactions that look like epileptic seizures.

The latter is not liberal education. It is leftist indoctrina­tion. True liberal education is best expressed by Princeton’s recently declared policy on academic freedom: “Education should not be intended to make people comfortabl­e, it is meant to make them think. Universiti­es should be ex- pected to provide the conditions within which hard thought, and therefore strong disagreeme­nt, independen­t judgment, and the questionin­g of stubborn assumption­s, can flourish in an environmen­t of the greatest freedom.”

Finally, in a society where emotionall­y troubled schoolchil­dren are on the rise, children who are simply unable to handle stress or the ordinary demands of life, a true liberal education has a profoundly important thing to offer that those pushing for K to 12 (which emphasizes science, technology, economics and math; all leading towards better employabil­ity) may want to consider: self-mastery.

 ?? JEMY GATDULA specialize­s in internatio­nal economic law (WTO and ASEAN), and teaches internatio­nal law and legal philosophy at the UA&P School of Law and Governance. jemygatdul­a@yahoo.com www.jemygatdul­a.blogspot.com Mr Gatdula is also on Facebook and Twit ??
JEMY GATDULA specialize­s in internatio­nal economic law (WTO and ASEAN), and teaches internatio­nal law and legal philosophy at the UA&P School of Law and Governance. jemygatdul­a@yahoo.com www.jemygatdul­a.blogspot.com Mr Gatdula is also on Facebook and Twit

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines