Schools have become high pressure environments. The constant demands to raise test
scores (despite the widely held belief that test scores have little genuine value outside of the institution that generates them)
and the expectation that schools will cope with society’s inequalities
and the resultant behavioural issues that go hand in hand with that mean there
is little time to enjoy the process.
But surely this is simply unacceptable – self-evidently wrong
in fact. Going to school, learning and
becoming educated should be an enjoyable experience. Fortunately there are some schools brave
enough to go well beyond the norm who continue to teach what is important.
“Random acts of kindness” is a simple yet powerful method of learning about social contribution, tolerance, and simply being a decent individual. Call it “citizenship” and you can even squeeze it into the curriculum. In essence it is simply doing something positive for someone else with no thought of return or personal benefit … or even recognition. And it turns out that helping others is probably the best way of helping ourselves.
“Random acts of kindness” is a simple yet powerful method of learning about social contribution, tolerance, and simply being a decent individual. Call it “citizenship” and you can even squeeze it into the curriculum. In essence it is simply doing something positive for someone else with no thought of return or personal benefit … or even recognition. And it turns out that helping others is probably the best way of helping ourselves.
Have a look at the what happened at one school in the USA. Pitt River’s ”Breakfast Club” provides a powerful insight into what can be
achieved.
The only question I have about the whole process is the
name. Kindness in our schools should not be random. Along with the essential subject skills contained within the
testable curriculum let us continue to teach what is really important – how to
live meaningful lives.
Credits:
Pitt River Random Acts of Kindness video via youtube
Random Acts of Kindness graphic via Google Images here.
Greater Good & RAK support site links both go to original sources.
I read your post and i really like it,Thanks for sharing useful information.
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Glad you liked the post. It can be really rewarding to see this type of work being done in the classroom.
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