The power of pondering. (Reuters/Kim Kyung) |
DEEP THOUGHTS
Teaching kids philosophy makes them smarter in math and English
Quartz | 9 March 2016
Schools
face relentless pressure to up their offerings in the STEM fields—science,
technology, engineering, and math. Few are making the case for philosophy.
Maybe
they should.
Nine-
and 10-year-old children in England who participated in a philosophy class once
a week over the course of a year significantly boosted their math and literacy
skills, with disadvantaged students showing the most significant gains,
according to a large
and well-designed study (pdf).
More
than 3,000 kids in 48 schools across England participated
in weekly discussions about concepts such as truth, justice, friendship,
and knowledge, with time carved out for silent reflection, question making,
question airing, and building on one another’s thoughts and ideas.
Kids
who took the course increased math and reading scores by the equivalent of two
extra months of teaching, even though the course was not designed to improve
literacy or numeracy. Children from disadvantaged backgrounds saw an even
bigger leap in performance: reading skills increased by four months, math by
three months, and writing by two months. Teachers also reported a beneficial
impact on students’ confidence and ability to listen to others.
The study was conducted by the Education Endowment Foundation (EEF), a non-profit group that wants to close the gap between family income and educational attainment. The EEF tested the effectiveness of the philosophy intervention through a randomized controlled trial, similar to the way many drugs are tested.
Twenty-two
schools acted as a control group, while students at the other 26 took the
philosophy class (which met once a week for 40 minutes). The researchers tried
to control for school quality: in each one, at least a quarter of students
received free lunch and many had significant populations performing below grade
level.
The
beneficial effects of philosophy lasted for two years, with the intervention
group continuing to outperform the control group long after the classes had
finished. “They had been given new ways of thinking and expressing
themselves,”said Kevan Collins, chief executive of the EEF. “They had been
thinking with more logic and more connected ideas.”
England
is not the first country to experiment with teaching kids philosophy. The
program the EEF used, called P4C (philosophy for children), was designed by
professor Matthew Lippman in New Jersey in the 1970s to teach
thinking skills through philosophical dialog. In 1992, the Society for the
Advancement of Philosophical Enquiry and Reflection in Education (SAPERE) was set up in the UK to emulate
that work. P4C has been adopted by schools in 60 countries.
SAPERE’s
program does not focus on reading the texts of Plato and Kant, but rather
stories, poems, or film clips that prompt discussions about philosophical
issues. The goal is to help children reason, formulate and ask questions,
engage in constructive conversation, and develop arguments.
Collins
hopes the latest evidence will convince heads of schools, who have
significantly more power in the UK than in the US, to make room for philosophy
in their budgets. The program costs schools £16 ($23) per student to run.
Programs
like this “push you toward teaching up, not down, to disadvantaged children,”
Collins told Quartz. “It’s not a reductionist, narrow curriculum, but an
expansionist broad curriculum.”
According
to the EEF, 63% of British 15-year-olds achieve good results on exams, compared
with 37% of disadvantaged students. The group hopes that by using
evidence-based research and randomized controlled trials, schools will adopt
the most effective policies to address the disparity.
Socrates
said that “true knowledge exists in knowing that you know nothing.” But to
close the gap in education outcomes, some teachers seem to believe that philosophy
has an important role to play.
Among other things, Descartes said that -
ReplyDelete"c'est proprement avoir les yeux fermés sans tâcher jamais de les ouvrir que de vivre sans philosopher..." [or unofficially translated] - Live without philosophying is having the eyes properly closed without even trying to open them...រស់នៅំមឹនប្រតិបត្តិទស្សនវិជ្ជា ដូចជាបិទភ្នែកទាំងពីរ ដោយមឹនសាកល្បង បើកវាវិញឡើយ៕
What would happen when one tries to tell that to the kids? What would be their reactions? Will Khmer's kids even have a chance to hear that sort of philosophy while they have been taught to be thankful and grateful eternally to the Viet/YUON as addressed in the ETHNOCIDE excerpt here on T2P? អនិច្ចាកូនខ្មែរ!!!
Chuck,
DeleteThat's why 7 January is Khmer's thanksgiving day according to Hun Sen. Roast dog is the preferred meat for the occasion. Don't you know that by now, you idiot?