Teach the Children Well: Our spiritual investment

Nonfiction, Reference & Language, Education & Teaching, Teaching, Teaching Methods, Family & Relationships, Parenting
Cover of the book Teach the Children Well: Our spiritual investment by Jonathan Anstock, Jonathan Anstock
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Author: Jonathan Anstock ISBN: 9781301401390
Publisher: Jonathan Anstock Publication: January 24, 2013
Imprint: Smashwords Edition Language: English
Author: Jonathan Anstock
ISBN: 9781301401390
Publisher: Jonathan Anstock
Publication: January 24, 2013
Imprint: Smashwords Edition
Language: English

Are you interested in children? Are you interested in humanity's future and the role education can play? True education has a critical mission to play on the planet. This book illustrates some the potential pitfalls of state and religious education systems, and offers ideas to support the liberation of the individual human spirit.
True education has a critical mission to play on the planet. Formal school education has always mirrored religious and social trends. Religious life, initially, and nation building, subsequently, were, and still are, the main philosophical platforms from which many of our schools are run and operated. But what if the spiritual life of religious schools were founded on untruths and the desire to indoctrinate children's minds? What if the idea of building strong nationhood means that children are subjected to excessive pressure, inappropriate testing procedures and processes which dampen their spirit and self esteem?
What, then, is a true education? This question will be answered differently depending on our perception of what a human being really is. Religious schools might give priority to the idea that God exists and children should obey and believe him. A materialist, reductionist or behaviourist may perceive that we are a blank slate at birth and that the role of school education is to implant the knowledge a child needs to get qualifications as a rite of passage into life.
A third possibility, to which this book is dedicated, is that human consciousness itself should be the goal of true education, where individuals can grow into freedom and are neither indoctrinated by religious fervour nor conditioned to be a pawn in the game of modern nationhood.

Parents, teachers and politicians should read this insightful book.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Are you interested in children? Are you interested in humanity's future and the role education can play? True education has a critical mission to play on the planet. This book illustrates some the potential pitfalls of state and religious education systems, and offers ideas to support the liberation of the individual human spirit.
True education has a critical mission to play on the planet. Formal school education has always mirrored religious and social trends. Religious life, initially, and nation building, subsequently, were, and still are, the main philosophical platforms from which many of our schools are run and operated. But what if the spiritual life of religious schools were founded on untruths and the desire to indoctrinate children's minds? What if the idea of building strong nationhood means that children are subjected to excessive pressure, inappropriate testing procedures and processes which dampen their spirit and self esteem?
What, then, is a true education? This question will be answered differently depending on our perception of what a human being really is. Religious schools might give priority to the idea that God exists and children should obey and believe him. A materialist, reductionist or behaviourist may perceive that we are a blank slate at birth and that the role of school education is to implant the knowledge a child needs to get qualifications as a rite of passage into life.
A third possibility, to which this book is dedicated, is that human consciousness itself should be the goal of true education, where individuals can grow into freedom and are neither indoctrinated by religious fervour nor conditioned to be a pawn in the game of modern nationhood.

Parents, teachers and politicians should read this insightful book.

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