When young people spend countless hours, days, and weeks on activities that they find meaningless, there are psychological and social costs.

William Damon “Education and the Path to Purpose”

Damon believes that the most pressing problem in education today is student disengagement. And I think he is right. It’s an epidemic of disengagement, boredom and stress – a deadly combination that leads to drop-out rates on the one hand a sense of entitlement on the other. (“I worked hard and suffered in school so I am entitled to ….name that unearned privilege.”)

Damon makes his comments in his open letter to the next president. It’s a problem that he says it not confined to impoverished schools but rather one that is endemic across the academic spectrum including at some of the more prestigious and highly regarded institutions..

The cure he says resides in helping students address the “why” question about everything they do. “Why do people study math and science? Why is it important to read and write? To spell words correctly? Why do we expect you, and your fellow students, to excel in the work that we assign to you? The answer to such questions must be more substantial and more stirring than the generic response, “You need to do well in school in order to graduate and get a job.’”

Beyond those central academic questions about every aspect of the curriculum lies the broader purpose of education. We want students to develop a passion for learning and living as educated citizens and to contribute to their communities with civic purpose and a global awareness. For that to happen students need schools to be more than mere test prep training grounds. They need the opportunity to take on the bigger questions and consider the why and why not questions. In short they need the chance to engage meaningfully in the great conversation about meaning and morality, and set about the tasks of life with a sense of purpose and possibility

At PDS we could not agree more. And one thing is for sure – at PDS we don’t need to find the cure for student disengagement.

We don’t have the disease.

 

Josie Holford

Recent Posts

The Affair of the Chocolate Teapot

Midge Hazelbrow, the indomitable co-head of Wayward St. Etheldreda's Academy, took herself for a brisk…

2 months ago

Best Practices, Reading Wars, and Eruption at Wayward

Before the eruption, it was a typical senior leadership meeting at Wayward. Head of School,…

2 months ago

Words Matter

When I taught fourth and fifth grade at a school that didn't assign grades, the…

2 months ago

The Culinary Capers and Comic Catastrophes of Gerald Samper

It was the Gert Loveday review of Rancid Pansies (it’s an anagram) that set me…

2 months ago

Working and Not Working

A post on LinkedIn caught my attention this week.  It's had over 11,000 views so…

3 months ago

Gall, Nerve, Courage, and The Party of Women

 Women's rights campaigner Kellie-Jay Keen of Let Women Speak had a big announcement last week.…

3 months ago