Stephen Law  blog
 
 
 
Wednesday, 27 February 2008
 
 
   
EXTRACT: from chpt 3, The War  For Children's Minds 
 


The positive  side to Liberal education

Let’s now look in more detail at the  Liberal alternative to 
Authority-based moral and religious education.

One  way of being Liberal-with-a-capital-L would of course be to ignore 
morality  altogether, to abandon each child to invent his or her own morality 
from  scratch, within a moral vacuum. That’s not the method advocated here. 
This book  recommends a much more specific sort of approach, an approach that 
involves a  training in and the fostering of what might broadly be termed “
thinking skills  and virtues”. Children should be encouraged to scrutinize 
their own beliefs and  explore other points of view. While not wanting to be 
overly prescriptive, I  would suggest that skills to be cultivated should at 
least include the ability  to:



• reveal and questioning underlying  assumptions
• figure out the perhaps unforeseen consequences of a moral  decision or 
point of view
• spot and diagnose faulty reasoning
• weigh up  evidence fairly and impartially
• make a point clearly and concisely
•  take turns in a debate, and listen attentively without interrupting
• argue  without personalizing a dispute
• look at issues from the point of view of  others
• question the appropriateness, or the appropriateness of acting on,  ones 
own feelings

Acquiring these skills involves developing, not just a  level of 
intellectual maturity, but a fair degree of emotional maturity too. For  
example, 
turn-taking requires patience and self-control. Judging impartially  involves 
identifying and taking account of your own emotional biases. By  thinking 
critically and carefully about your own beliefs and attitudes, you may  develop 
insights into your own character. By stepping outside of your own  viewpoint 
and looking at issues from the standpoint of another, you can develop  a 
greater empathy with and understanding of others. So by engaging in this kind  
of philosophical, critical activity, you are likely to develop, not only 
the  ability to reason cogently, but also what now tends to be called “
emotional  intelligence” (which is why the Director of Antidote – a British 
organization  that works with schools to help develop emotional literacy 
–recently 
endorsed  this kind of philosophical activity as an effective tool in 
aiding emotional  development). Although I have emphasized the importance of 
reason, I don’t wish  top downplay the importance of emotional development too. 
They are deeply  intertwined.

Notice that many of these skills can only be developed, or  at least are 
most effectively developed, by engaging in group activities, by  getting 
children collectively to discuss and debate issues together. These are  skills 
and virtues that are best taught and mastered, not in isolation, but  through 
interaction within a “community of inquiry”. For that reason, many  
philosophy for children programmes are based around structured, open-ended 
group  
discussion. So the kind of Liberal approach recommended here certainly  
acknowledges the importance of a shared, social dimension to moral education.  
It’
s not about severing all social ties and abandoning each individual child 
to  “think up” their own morality within their own hermetically sealed-off 
universe.  Quite the reverse. Exploring issues together may help foster 
interpersonal  skills and a sense of community and belonging.

The approach described  above might loosely be termed “philosophical”, 
though I should stress that  doesn’t mean children should be given an academic 
course on the history of  philosophy. What it means is that they should be 
trained and encouraged to  approach questions in a particular kind of way. We 
should get them into the  habit of thinking in an open, reflective, 
critical way, so that these  intellectual, emotional and social skills and 
virtues 
are developed.
Clearly,  the sort of philosophical approach to moral education recommended 
here is  anti-Authoritarian. Those who favour Authority-based moral and 
religious  education will reject it. Encouraging pupils to think for 
themselves, to debate  freely and openly different moral and religious points 
of view, 
and so on, is  precisely what those who think children should be taught to 
defer more or less  uncritically to Authority on moral and religious matters 
are  against.

Can children be  philosophical?

Of course, all this presupposes that thinking  philosophically is something 
children can do. But can they?

There’s good  empirical evidence that they can. There have been a number of 
studies and  programs involving philosophy with children in several 
countries. The results  are impressive.
One notable example is the Buranda State School, a small  Australian 
primary school near Brisbane, which in 1997 introduced into all its  classes a 
philosophy program along much the lines outlined above. Children  collectively 
engaged in structured debates addressing philosophical questions  that they 
themselves had come up with, following a Philosophy in Schools  programme 
using materials developed by the philosopher Philip Cam and others.  The 
effects were dramatic. The school showed marked academic improvement across  
the 
curriculum. A report on the success of the program says,

[f]or the last four years, students at Buranda have  achieved outstanding 
academic results. This had not been the case prior to the  teaching of 
Philosophy. In the systemic Year 3/5/7 tests (previously Yr 6 Test),  our 
students 
performed below the state mean in most areas in 1996. Following the  
introduction of Philosophy in 1997, the results of our students improved  
significantly and have been maintained or improved upon since that time. 

There were substantial payoffs in terms of behaviour too. The  report 
indicates “significantly improved outcomes” occurred in the social  behaviour 
of 
the students:

The respect  for others and the increase in individual self esteem 
generated in the community  of inquiry have permeated all aspects of school 
life. We 
now have few behaviour  problems at our school (and we do have some 
difficult students). Students are  less impatient with each other, they are 
more 
willing to accept their own  mistakes as a normal part of learning and they 
discuss problems as they occur.  As one Yr 5 child said, ‘Philosophy is a good 
example of how you should behave  in the playground with your friends’… 
Bullying behaviour is rare at Buranda,  with there being no reported incidence 
of bullying this year to date. A visiting  academic commented, ‘Your 
children don’t fight, they negotiate’… Visitors to the  school are constantly 
making reference to the 'feel' or 'spirit' of the place.  We believe it's the 
way our children treat each other. The respect for others  generated in the 
community of inquiry has permeated all aspects of school  life.
Of course this is a single example – hardly conclusive evidence  by itself. 
But it’s not the only example. In 2001-2, Professor Keith Topping, a  
senior psychologist, in conjunction with the University of Dundee studied the  
effects on introducing one hour per week of philosophy (using a Thinking 
Through  Philosophy programme developed by Paul Cleghorn) at a number of upper 
primary  schools in Clackmannanshire, including schools in deprived areas. 
Teachers were  given two days of training. The study involved a whole range of 
tests, and also  a control group of schools with no philosophy programme. 
The children involved  were aged 11-12. This study found that after one year,

• The incidence of  children supporting opinion with evidence doubled, but ‘
control’ classes  remained unchanged.
• There was evidence that children’s self-esteem and  confidence rose 
markedly.
• The incidence of teachers asking open-ended  questions (to better develop 
enquiry) doubled.
• There was evidence that  class ethos and discipline improved noticeably.
• The ratio of teacher/pupil  talk halved for teachers and doubled for 
pupils. Controls remained the  same.
• All classes improved significantly (statistically) in verbal,  
non-verbal, and quantitative reasoning. No control class changed. This means  
children 
were more intelligent (av. 6.5 IQ points) after one year on the  programme.

These benefits were retained. When the children were tested  again at 14, 
after two years at secondary school without a philosophy programme,  their 
CAT scores were exactly the same (that’s to say, the improvements that had  
previously been gained were retained), while the control group scores actually 
 went down during those two years. Three secondary schools were involved 
and the  results replicated themselves over each school. Again, this is only 
one study.  No doubt such results should treated with caution. But, they do 
lend  considerable weight to the claim that not only can children of this age 
think  philosophically, it’s also highly beneficial. A recent study 
strongly supports  the view that philosophy for children provides measurable 
educational benefits  for children even in their first year of school.

To sum up: there’s good  evidence that children, even fairly young 
children, can think philosophically.  And, while more research needs to be 
done, 
there’s a growing body of evidence  that it’s good for them academically, 
socially and emotionally. The kinds of  skills such philosophy programmes 
foster 
are, surely, just the sort of skills we  need new citizens to develop. Or 
so I’ll now argue.

>From The War For Children's Minds, Routledge 2005. 



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