nice article, useful life skill to develop in students (and in us :-)  )

It can be done through actual practice - by encouraging formal debating in
the classroom on issues and helping students to acknowledge their errors
(as inevitable part of learning) openly ... this will support development
of capabilities for self learning and peer learning, two critical aims of
school education...

regards,
Guru


The value of intellectual humility
Usha Raman

source -
http://www.thehindu.com/features/education/the-value-of-intellectual-humility/article8772958.ece

It is a much appreciated quality at the workplace. Why not try to develop
it in the classroom?

Every year, dozens of books are written about how to succeed in the
workplace or how to get hired by the top corporations, and many of these
books race their way into the non-fiction bestseller lists. These books
feed our anxieties about our own success, our doubts about which routes to
take and what we need to do as we move along a chosen path. Most juggle the
same themes and present them in different combinations, and we take the
formula that seems to work for us at a particular time. They talk about
domain knowledge (a good grasp of our subject), problem-solving and
analytical abilities, communication skills, and leadership qualities, among
other things. But the book Work Rules! by Laszlo Bock, Google’s head of
People Operations (Google-speak for Human Resources), mentions one other
factor that makes one a promising candidate — intellectual humility.

We all know what humility is — the acceptance of human limitations, the
sense that we are not, and can never be, perfect. Intellectual humility,
similarly, is about the acceptance of the limitations of one’s own
knowledge, and the willingness to learn from others. To paraphrase Bock, it
is also about not attributing success solely to one’s own brilliance, and
failure to others’ stupidity. Many scholars who have studied this
characteristic say that someone who is intellectually humble is a better
learner, because she/he is always curious and willing to ask questions and
seek further explanation. In other words, being intellectually humble means
you are conscious that there is so much more to learn than you may have
been exposed to so far.

Willingness to change
We are generally taught that it is good to be sure about something, to have
firm ideas about work, life and ourselves. Intellectual humility, on the
other hand, makes us less certain. Drawing from Socrates, scholar Richard
Paul suggests that there are two things that make up intellectual humility:
the first is the acceptance of the limits of one’s knowledge and the second
is the awareness of one’s own biases, prejudices and mental habits. Those
who have the trait will be more likely to accept mistakes and learn from
them. So, instead of sticking to a particular point or belief, if they are
presented with evidence to the contrary, they are willing to change their
minds. Those who are intellectually humble will have no problem accepting
they were wrong, or that they have changed their mind about something,
because they begin with the assumption that they don’t always have to be
right.

At the same time, it does not mean that you are uncertain or doubtful about
everything. Paul and others say that it is about holding on to a belief or
an idea with “as much firmness as the thing demands.” There are certain
things that you can be very firm about — such as the number of vertebrae in
the spinal column, or the name of the editor of a particular newspaper. But
there are other things for which knowledge is constantly evolving through a
process of questioning, answering, examining the answer, and then
questioning again. And there are others where perspective or viewpoint
makes all the difference — someone who has experienced something would have
insights that another person may not.

The value of intellectual humility is best seen in team work, or in
addressing problems that demand complex and multi-disciplinary solutions.
It allows you to listen to different points of view, respect others’
expertise and knowledge, and recognise the gaps in your own, so that you
can work together to arrive at that solution.

How do we cultivate intellectual humility? Is it at all possible? In a
culture that places a premium on “being right,” how do we get comfortable
with the idea that we can be wrong, or, more appropriately, that being
right draws on more knowledge than it is possible for one person to have at
any given point? Clearly, it is not easy, particularly because of the
competitive nature of so much of our education — we are constantly focused
on proving that we know more and know it better than our peers. Instead,
what if we told ourselves that it is really about understanding concepts
rather than performing to a certain standard? That would remove the
competitive pressure and allow us instead to focus on learning rather than
doing. Suppose we told ourselves that it is about addressing the problem
rather than proving we are correct? Then we focus on the solution rather
than our contribution to it. Of course, if we have examples of such an
attitude, it makes all the difference — so a teacher who is not afraid of
making mistakes, in fact one who acknowledges the mistake and discusses it,
is a good example of intellectual humility.

It is a challenge to try to develop a characteristic that is valued in the
workplace but not really in the classroom. But then, so much of our journey
outside school and college ends up being a process of unlearning the
attitudes we have unconsciously acquired. Knowing this, maybe we can start
that process a little earlier?

The author teaches at the University of Hyderabad and edits Teacher Plus.
Email: [email protected]


IT for Change, Bengaluru
www.ITforChange.net

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