Teach children there are no winners, losers
Teach
children there are no winners, losers
By Rog Lucido
Friday, Dec. 07, 2012 | 08:41 PM
Learning is a human endeavor. Life is full of different random
events. We respond -- sometimes successfully, sometimes not. Fruitful actions
become reinforced and failures are noted to be avoided in the future.
In short, we learn from both our achievements and our
disappointments. School is a place where educators attempt to mimic the real
world. They create artificial situations that have academic, athletic, social,
artistic or political "lessons" attached to each.
Teachers hope their students see the value in what is created
and make the connection to its parallel in their lives. Learning becomes more
relevant.
Thus, the educators' world view is critical in preparing these
lessons. If they buy into the viewpoint that the world is "dog eat
dog," where conflict between humans, such as aggressive consumer behavior
on "Black Friday," is the norm, then they develop ways to mirror that
belief in our schools.
The fastest, the strongest and the smartest become the winners;
the remainder are the losers. Some state and national education laws legislate
ways to isolate and separate one group from another, whether it's students,
teachers, schools or districts. These laws compare and contrast to satisfy a
need to validate a "survival of the fittest" world view.
The high-stakes testing regime spawned by No Child Left Behind
provides invalid test scores that are then used to promote an incentive to
classify and categorize students, educators and their learning institutions.
This degrades and marginalizes what appears to be the weaker in
favor of those deceived into believing they are superior. This establishes
criteria for conflict and division, pitting one student and educator against
another and one school or district above or below others.
The truth is that this is an artificial structure not based on
the reality of the human spirit. One only has to see the ways we reach out to
each other in times of need like natural disasters to see the magnanimity of
the human heart. We reach out to help those in need. This is when we are at our
best in making our world a more peaceful place.
In the plant and animal kingdoms life is not about
"survival of the fittest" as common lore would have it, but rather
survival of those species better able to sustain the symbiotic relationships
with other organisms in the ecosystem. It is more a give-and-take proposition
where one species seeks out its needs while providing a benefit to others. This
process is mutual for the advantage of both.
I am glad "survival of the fittest" is not the
paradigm from which I base the most meaningful relationships in my life. I seek
out common ground from which deeper understanding and appreciation of
likenesses and differences can be cultivated.
We humans seek peace in our relationships. One of the main
purposes of the United Nations is to foster peace between countries: "to
practice tolerance and live together in peace with one another as good
neighbors" (from the U.N. Preamble). Here at home from the preamble of our
Constitution: "We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more
perfect Union, establish justice, insure domestic tranquility ..."
We need peace in our schools. Peace between students and
teachers, teachers and administrators and schools and the community. One of the
steps of peace is to eliminate the weapons with which we attack each other. We
can go a long way in establishing this peace by eliminating high-stakes
testing.
Students and educators come to the common ground of school
already altered by the aggressive aspects of our culture. Our schools should be
a place where a redeeming society of peace is fostered. Countries thrive with
peace. Families thrive with peace. Schools will thrive with peace. Anxiety will
be reduced and productivity will increase.
Let the symbiotic relationships between humans without the need
for winners and losers become the model for our children and a better world.
Rog Lucido of Fresno is a retired teacher and the author of “Educational Genocide — A Plague on our Children.”