The Scotsman

Kindness should have a place in the school curriculum

Education Scotland’s idea of which values our young people should embrace as life skills may be a tad off, argues Cameron Wylie

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As a strange form of masochism I have been reading a new report issued by Education Scotland.

Astonishin­gly they describe it as a “thought paper” – it’s difficult to imagine a more Orwellian term – and it’s called “Exploring the Four Capacities”. This paper was, I kid you not, produced – no doubt at some significan­t cost – by a firm called “Notosh”.

The four capacities are the foundation of Curriculum for Excellence (CFE), that vague structure under which Scottish education has laboured for the past dozen years, and which last year’s Organisati­on for Economic Co-operation and Developmen­t (OECD) report suggested wasn’t working in practice. It’s now possible to be in sixth year and have had CFE as the basis of your education for as long as you’ve been at school.

And yet, having spoken to 600 young people at various school stages, in the first five months of this year, the report finds that “the majority hadn’t heard of the four capacities. Sixty per cent hadn’t heard of them at all, and over 20 per cent more weren’t sure”. This will be a huge surprise only to Education Scotland, and not at all to those actually doing the educating in our schools, but anyway, let me refresh your memories about these four capacities because I believe it’s time to consider what it is exactly that CFE wants.

They are “Successful Learner”, “Effective Contributo­r”, “Responsibl­e Citizen” and “Confident Individual”. That, apparently, is what we want our young people to be in Scotland – successful, effective, responsibl­e, confident. I think most parents (and teachers) would agree that these are desirable characteri­stics, particular­ly for a future employee. I have no problem accepting that education has a lot to do with work, but it’s also got a lot to do with humanity, well-being and the wider world. I mean, let’s consider someone who is a confident, responsibl­e, effective, successful person. Would you want them as an employee? Yes. An employer? Maybe. Your mother? Your mother-in-law? Your teacher? Your minister? Your friend?

Would you want a confident, responsibl­e, effective, successful person holding your hand as you died? Wouldn’t you rather have someone who was kind, caring, thoughtful, compassion­ate?

Actually, in this difficult world the most important thing we should want for our children is that they be kind. This notion is not an enormous pink marshmallo­w; it is not pie in the sky – it is absolutely vital for a nation and its people to be kind. In the “United Kingdom” just now we have a Home Secretary who describes asylum seekers as “invaders”. That is a view which seems to me to be entirely without empathy… or indeed, a legal basis.

Ah, you may say, can you teach empathy? Well, I think you can, but it’s much more about creating a school and a classroom environmen­t where considerat­ion for others and showing concern for less successful, confident individual­s than yourself is cherished. Really, the current four capacities are far too focused on the individual; even “responsibl­e citizen” sounds more like the person who ensures his bin goes out at the right time than the person who checks in on their neighbour.

Our young people live complex lives, under the constant scrutiny of social media. They live in a

society where things are getting tighter and tighter financiall­y for most families, and where tensions on many topics run high. They are constantly (rightly) inundated with statistics that suggest that the world may be rushing towards an irrecovera­ble environmen­tal precipice.

All of this makes some of them focus on the big picture while others engage in cyclical self-examinatio­n. Our school curricula are crammed with all sorts of novel training – in “mindset” and “mindfulnes­s”, for example (research demonstrat­es that teaching these in schools has virtually no positive impact) – which are really very focused on the individual.

We need to concentrat­e much harder on concepts of friendship and society and community. We need schools where everyone is included and where “niceness” works. We also, I should say, need to be ready to deal sharply with unkindness, particular­ly where the law is broken.

So it’s time, given the now amply evidenced fact that most young people don’t know anything about the current four capacities, to begin – as part of the review process which is currently taking place – to once again ask what qualities we want to encourage in our schools while the most important things – learning stuff and gaining skills – are happening. Of course I want our young people to be confident and responsibl­e, but I also want them to be hardworkin­g and resilient; I want them to look inward less and outward more. I want them to embody compassion, because somewhere in this grey-haired head of mine I have come to believe that the combinatio­n of productivi­ty and kindness makes for happy young people.

The brilliant American writer George Saunders, giving a commenceme­nt address at Syracuse University a decade ago, concluded “it’s a little facile, maybe, and certainly hard to implement, but I’d say, as a goal in life, you could do worse that ‘try to be kinder’.”

I really hope, in 20 years or so, when the folks from Notosh return, a very high percentage of our young people might say: “My school wants me to be compassion­ate.”

Now I’m off to watch the John Lewis Christmas TV ad again. Cameron Wyllie writes a blog called A House in Joppa; his book, Is There A Pigeon in the Room? My Life in Schools, is published by Birlinn

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 ?? ?? ← Mindfulnes­s isn’t doing much for our kids, but empathy might help them to a better future, says Cameron Wyllie
← Mindfulnes­s isn’t doing much for our kids, but empathy might help them to a better future, says Cameron Wyllie

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