WOW!

you /are/ a Courageous Leader! (not to be confused with a N k0rea title :-)

which reminds me of an excerpt from Krishnamurti that I have had doing the rounds, precisely on how younger people have an easier time collaborating than so-called adults. Because of its potential OT nature, I am copying it below the fold to mitigate offense - I put in bold the relevant part, to make the load lighter... :-)

BTW, reading in between the lines, it turns out it was not that /you/ were reluctant, but rather your teachers? Nice of you to take up the blame. I feel so encouraged by your attitude, and much honored to learn from you

Yama

On 01/21/2011 10:04 AM, Dr. Gerald Ardito wrote:
Yama,

Your response actually gave me an idea.
In the various situations in which I have worked, I have been able to develop students (even at ages 9 and 10) to be real leaders. Perhaps they are the way in to this dilemma.
I will find a way to add them to this community.
Perhaps, just as in the classroom, when teachers (and others) find the students participating so actively and responsibly, they will be called to join in?

What do you think.
Gerald


one of my favorite blogs, framablog.org, had recently a version of this text by Krishnamurti. Since great friends Padmanabha and Rama Rao run the Krishnamurti school in India, it all came together to make me wish to share this with y'all - the subject matter is something we all wonder a lot about: *the purpose of education, cooperation...*

   "
   One of the basic problems confronting the world is the problem of
   cooperation. What does the word "cooperation" mean? To cooperate is
   to do things together, to build together, to feel together, to have
   something in common so that we can freely work together.

   But people generally don't feel inclined to work together naturally,
   easily, happily; and so they are compelled to work together through
   various inducements: threat, fear, punishment, reward. This is the
   common practice throughout the world. Under tyrannical governments
   you are brutally forced to work together; if you don't "cooperate"
   you are liquidated or sent to a concentration camp. In the so-called
   civilized nations you are induced to work together through the
   concept of "my country," or for an ideology which has been very
   carefully worked out and widely propagated so that you accept it; or
   you work together to carry out a plan which somebody has drawn up, a
   blueprint for Utopia.

   So, it is the plan, the idea, the authority which induces people to
   work together. This is generally called cooperation, and in it there
   is always the implication of reward or punishment, which means that
   behind such "cooperation" there is fear. You are always working for
   something--for the country, for the king, for the party, for God or
   the Master, for peace, or to bring about this or that reform. Your
   idea of cooperation is to work together for a particular result. You
   have an ideal--to build a perfect school, or what you will--towards
   which you are working, therefore you say cooperation is necessary.
   All this implies authority, does it not? There is always someone who
   is supposed to know what is the right thing to do, and therefore you
   say, "We must cooperate in carrying it out."

   Now, I don't call that cooperation at all. That is not cooperation,
   it is a form of greed, a form of fear, compulsion. Behind it there
   is the threat that if you don't "cooperate" the government won't
   recognize you, or the Five Year Plan will fail, or you will be sent
   to a concentration camp, or your country will lose the war, or you
   may not go to heaven. There is always some form of inducement, and
   where there is inducement there cannot be real cooperation.

   Nor is it cooperation when you and I work together merely because we
   have mutually agreed to do something. In any such agreement what is
   important is the doing of that particular thing, not working
   together. You and I may agree to build a bridge, or construct a
   road, or plant some trees together, but in that agreement there is
   always the fear of disagreement, the fear that I may not do my share
   and let you do the whole thing.

   So it is not cooperation when we work together through any form of
   inducement, or by mere agreement, because behind all such effort
   there is the implication of gaining or avoiding something.

   To me, cooperation is entirely different. Cooperation is the fun of
   being and doing together--not necessarily doing something in
   particular. Do you understand? *Young children normally have a
   feeling for being and doing together. Haven't you noticed this? They
   will cooperate in anything. There is no question of agreement or
   disagreement, reward or punishment; they just want to help. They
   cooperate instinctively, for the fun of being and doing together.*
   But grown-up people destroy this natural, spontaneous spirit of
   cooperation in children by saying, "If you do this I will give you
   that; if you don't do this I won't let you go to the cinema," which
   introduces the corruptive element.

   So, real cooperation comes, not through merely agreeing to carry out
   some project together, but with the joy, the feeling of
   togetherness, if one may use that word; because in that feeling
   there is not the obstinacy of personal ideation, personal opinion.

   When you know such cooperation, you will also know when not to
   cooperate, which is equally important. Do you understand? It is
   necessary for all of us to awaken in ourselves this spirit of
   cooperation, for then it will not be a mere plan or agreement which
   causes us to work together, but an extraordinary feeling of
   togetherness, the sense of joy in being and doing together without
   any thought of reward or punishment. That is very important. But it
   is equally important to know when not to cooperate; because if we
   are not wise we may cooperate with the unwise, with ambitious
   leaders who have grandiose schemes, fantastic ideas, like Hitler and
   other tyrants down through the ages. So we must know when not to
   cooperate; and we can know this only when we know the joy of real
   cooperation.

   This is a very important question to talk over, because when it is
   suggested that we work together, your immediate response is likely
   to be, "What for? What shall we do together?" In other words, the
   thing to be done becomes more important than the feeling of being
   and doing together; and when the thing to be done--the plan, the
   concept, the ideological Utopia--assumes primary importance, then
   there is no real cooperation. Then it is only the idea that is
   binding us together; and if one idea can bind us together, another
   idea can divide us. So, what matters is to awaken in ourselves this
   spirit of cooperation, this feeling of joy in being and doing
   together, without any thought of reward or punishment. Most young
   people have it spontaneously, freely, if it is not corrupted by
   their elders.
   "


_______________________________________________
IAEP -- It's An Education Project (not a laptop project!)
[email protected]
http://lists.sugarlabs.org/listinfo/iaep

Reply via email to