What's the Point of School?
eBook - ePub

What's the Point of School?

Rediscovering the Heart of Education

Guy Claxton

  1. 224 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (adapté aux mobiles)
  4. Disponible sur iOS et Android
eBook - ePub

What's the Point of School?

Rediscovering the Heart of Education

Guy Claxton

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À propos de ce livre

Why the education system is failing our kids and how we can start the revolution that will save our schools With their emphasis on regurgitated knowledge and stressful exams, today's schools actually do more harm than good. Guiding readers past the sterile debates about City Academies and dumbed-down exams, Claxton proves that education's key responsibility should be to create enthusiastic learners who will go on to thrive as adults in a swiftly-changing, dynamic world. Students must be encouraged to sharpen their wits, ask questions, and think for themselves - all without chucking out Shakespeare or the Periodic Table. Blending down-to-earth examples with the latest advances in brain science, and written with passion, wit, and authority, this brilliant book will inspire teachers, parents, and readers of all backgrounds to join a practical revolution and foster in the next generation a natural curiosity and the spirit of adventure.

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Informations

Année
2013
ISBN
9781780744728

1

Stress: the children’s epidemic?

There is a crisis at the heart of our society 
 Children represent the future of our country, and from the findings of this report they 
 feel unsafe and insecure, have low aspirations and put themselves at risk.
Sir Al Aynsley Green, Children’s Commissioner for England
Before schools can genuinely begin to meet the needs of young people we need to understand what those needs are. We must understand what their world is like, how they are coping, what the key stresses are, what their futures hold and what tools and resources they require to live successfully in the world beyond the school gates. Gaining some clarity about these questions is what this chapter is about.
Many young people live happy lives, and relish their schooldays. They like their teachers, enjoy at least some of their subjects, are good enough at the things school values to feel good about themselves, and feel they have a reasonable chance of doing well enough in their exams to get where they want to go. But many are not so fortunate. And while many of those who are struggling come from poor and unstable families and communities, a good many of them come from homes that are apparently stable and well-off. You may know, as I do, loving families in which the parents feel that their teenaged child has ‘gone off the rails’ or ‘got in with a bad crowd’. Many young people run away from home, get drunk or take drugs, get pregnant, fail their exams, develop eating disorders or self-harm. These are clearly situations of degrees of seriousness – exams can be retaken for example while self-harm or drug addiction can require years of recovery – but the central issue is that we need to recognise that there are deep currents with which all young people, no matter what their family background, are having to cope.

Young people’s mental health

The surveys and statistics show that, for more and more young people every year, fearfulness, self-doubt, self-consciousness and insecurity are constant themes. In 2004 the prestigious Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry reported the results of an extensive and rigorous study comparing teenagers’ mental health in 1974, 1986 and 1999. The report begins:
The mental health of teenagers has sharply declined in the last twenty-five years, and the chances that fifteen-year-olds will have behavioural problems such as lying, stealing and being disobedient have more than doubled. The rate of emotional problems such as anxiety and depression has increased by 70% in adolescents.
The researchers found that boys are more likely to exhibit behavioural problems, while girls are more likely to experience emotional problems – as many as one in five fifteen-year-old girls, in fact.5
A 2005 survey of their readers by girls’ teen magazine Bliss corroborated this picture. Teenage girls feel stressed on all fronts – at home, at school and with friends. They feel under pressure to look good, act cool, behave responsibly and succeed academically. Nine out of ten have felt depressed, 42% ‘feel low’ regularly, and 6% think ‘life is not worth living’. One in three fourteen-year-old girls say they drink alcohol every week. Two out of every three say they have been bullied. 37% say they ‘suffer from obsessive compulsive disorder’(feeling bound to carry out a range of superstitious rituals or repetitive actions in order to ward off trouble or make themselves feel safe).6 Another survey in 2006 found that teenage drinking has almost doubled in the last four years alone. More than a third of fifteen-year-old girls describe themselves as regular drinkers, and it is middle-class girls from traditional, so-called stable homes, who are drinking the most. Over half of all sixteen-year-olds have tried illegal drugs.7
In 2007 a Unicef report on the well-being of children and adolescents ranked the UK worst overall out of twenty-one wealthy nations on a range of indicators. British children are more likely to have got drunk or had sex than those of any other developed country. One of the indicators on which the UK was right at the bottom was peer relationships. Only 40% of British children over eleven described their peers as ‘kind and helpful’ compared, with over 80% in Switzerland. (Holland and Scandinavia came out top overall; the USA was next to last, only slightly better than the UK.)
Commenting on the report, Dr Andrew McCulloch of the UK’s Mental Health Foundation said, ‘The mental health of our young people is a critical issue: cases of anxiety and depression have risen by 70% over the past twenty-five years, and up to 60% of adolescents with a mental health problem will carry that through into adulthood.’8
As I suggested earlier, these issues cut right across family, class and ethnic backgrounds. They can’t be explained by families in poverty; nor by the rise in divorce and single-parenthood; nor by a small number of teenagers whose problem behaviour is getting worse; nor by an increase in the rate of reporting such problems. The Deputy Director of the Nuffield Foundation, who funded the 2004 research on adolescents’ mental health, said: ‘It’s not a small tail pulling down the average, but a more widespread malaise.’9
The Nuffield study focused on the general experience of adolescents, and did not look specifically at more extreme concerns such as the incidence of self-harm and suicide. But these dramatic symptoms of teenage insecurity are also on the rise. A 2006 report by the Mental Health Foundation called Truth Hurts finds that self-harm ‘is a hidden epidemic of horrific proportions, and we know virtually nothing about why it happens or how to stop it’.10 The young people interviewed for the report describe a range of factors that trigger their behaviour: being bullied, not getting on with parents, academic pressure and general stress. ‘Adolescents who self-harmed were rare thirty years ago. Today, self-harming is a dramatic, addictive behaviour, a maladaptive way for growing numbers of youngsters to relieve their psychological distress,’ says adolescent psychiatrist Dr Dylan Griffiths. Of the 160,000 people treated for self-inflicted injuries in hospital emergency departments in England in 2005–6, 24,000 – 15% – were aged between fifteen and nineteen. South Staffordshire NHS Trust has run a pilot scheme that allows self-harmers to cut themselves under the supervision of nurses.
That our children are behaving in such self-destructive ways calls out for explanation. Experts suggest that self-inflicting pain is a short-term, desperate way of over-riding other feelings that seem confused and irresolvable. For some people sharp pain can drag them into the present, and force all other nagging anxieties out of the loop of consciousness – for a while. One teenage boy described his self-harming like this:
It was a way to get rid of the hurt and anger. But the rush it gave, the sense of feeling better, was so short-lived that I had to do it many times 
 I don’t know how to release my feelings in any other way.
A teenage girl said:
I was twelve years old when I began, and pretty depressed, angry and isolated. One day I accidentally hit my hand really hard against my bed, and experienced this sudden feeling of relief. Then I decided to cut myself, to see if I could make the good feelings last longer. I began cutting myself once a week on average 
 It became the only way I could keep going.11
The summer of 2007 saw an outbreak of ‘tombstoning’ across the UK. Tombstoning involves jumping off high rocks into the sea, or off bridges into rivers. It is most popular amongst teenage boys. It is very dangerous – that is the point – and several hundred have been injured and the first fatalities have already occurred. Why do they do it? sixteen-year-old Jez explained, ‘You spend the whole day in school doing boring stuff and [wanting] to do something that will give you a rush. Jumping does that. Just for a second you forget all the boring bits of your day and feel free.’ Eighteen-year-old Steve said, ‘It’s a way of getting out of your mind for a moment or two without taking drugs or drinking alcohol. When you’re out there in midair you don’t think of anything – your head goes clear. And then you hit the sea and you feel so alive.’12 Having a bit of fun is one thing. Needing to risk your life in a desperate attempt to find a few seconds’ peace of mind is quite another.
Another 2005 report, based both on interviews with 1,000 12–19-year-olds and an analysis of national statistics, claims that 900,000 adolescents have been so miserable they have contemplated suicide. Childline, the children’s charity and helpline, report a 27% increase in calls from suicidal youngsters from 2005 to 2006.

What is making young people so insecure?

Family life for many young people, regardless of race or class, is often complex and unstable. Only the lucky ones now have a supportive extended family, and many have experienced family break-ups. Step-parents and half-siblings may have to be accommodated. Children of divorced parents shuttle between Mum and Dad, involving repeated adjustment to their different life-styles and values. Kids act up or may seem to take things in their stride; either way, it’s hard work, requiring levels of sophisticated emotional intelligence that the bland work on self-esteem in their PSHE (personal, social and health education) lessons may not even begin to touch.
As a result, friendship groups have become more central to identity. Social life outside the home begins earlier, and access to drink, drugs and sex becomes correspondingly easier. These cross-currents create frequent opportunities for conflict, as neither parents, teachers nor the young people themselves quite know where the boundaries should be drawn. Ann Hagen, editor of the Journal of Adolescence, sums it up: ‘At fifteen or sixteen there is a real struggle ahead [about] how you are going to succeed and get settled. We have high expectations of responsibility, independence and academic achievement of our teenagers without the other side of the equation: giving them the means to achieve that.’13
Young people live in a world of fierce yet fragile allegiances, in which consumer products are the ephemeral badges. In liking, choosing, buying, possessing and displaying, they fill in precious details of who they are, and where their allegiances lie. Which football club to support? Which band to listen to? What clothes to wear? Whether to have sex (or pretend to have done) and who with? All such choices can be a matter of social life and death. Many teenagers’ days are filled with a series of choices and potential pitfalls in which their every utterance can be fraught with the possibility of Getting It Wrong.
Risk-taking is often one of the prices of admission to a social group. To be deemed daring, to damn the consequences, not to mind about possible hurt to yourself or others can lead to being in with the right group. Young people have always wanted to take risks: to defy the dull, sensible advice of their elders. In the good old days young men were sent off to war, to get it out of their system, or to die. Now we see the risk-taking every weekend on an epidemic scale: drink, drugs, unprotected sex, fighting, racing stolen cars. The idea that it’s cool not to care, not to be touched or affected, can be tested and displayed through collective risk-taking, or even by your vicarious reactions to increasingly extreme horror movies or porn. The trick is to keep joking and laughing, whatever atrocity or obscenity is on the screen.
Best friends are absolutely vital, but the shadowy threat of falling out, or of a breach of trust, deliberate or inadvertent, can constantly hover in the background. And moving between different groups and contexts demands constant readjustments of personality, in order to fit in. Many young people even keep a stock of subtly different accents for different social contexts. And despite their best efforts there is a continual risk of a collision between the different compartments of their social worlds.14
A safer – but still exciting – kind of intimacy, and test-bed of identity experimentation, is instantly available online. Chat-rooms allow young people to experiment with their identity in ways that can become both thrilling and addictive. The chat-room vastly expands the opportunity to shed unwanted aspects of their real, burdensome bodies and personalities – the nose they don’t like; the self-consciousness they hate – and invent alternative identities that, so young people say, can feel very real.
To be a teenager today, is to be a shape-shifter and a quick-change artist, and there is pleasure and risk, but also stress, in that freedom. Behind all this sophisticated semi-conscious role-play, nags the question ‘But who am I really?’
The culture of celebrity in which we are all immersed invites young people, as it does the rest of us, to gossip and judge, rather than think and learn. Teenagers are continually buttressing allegiances and identities by expressing choices, judgements and preferences about people in the news and on television. The fascination with celebrity invites naĂŻve dreams of easy success, and facile judgement without consequence. Adolescents need (and want) people to admire, to look up to. They want people to be like. If they are lucky, they will find relatives, family friends or teachers who embody positive values well enough to inspire their respect. If not, and they turn to the media for their role models, they will see people winning money by chance or through the accumulation of trivial facts, foul-mouthed footballers and rock stars earning huge sums of money, Page Three girls notorious for their drug habits or plastic surgery featured in newspapers, models with eating disorders gracing the front of magazines, dishonest politicians lying to the people who elected them. What can we hope they will learn from the examples being elevated in the press and on television? While some of the activities of these celebrities may be condemned it certainly does not stop them being stars. Adrift in this moral maelstrom it is not surprising that young people seem to flip between apathy and passionate idealism.
Religion in all its forms responds t...

Table des matiĂšres

Normes de citation pour What's the Point of School?

APA 6 Citation

Claxton, G. (2013). What’s the Point of School? ([edition unavailable]). Oneworld Publications. Retrieved from https://www.perlego.com/book/950149/whats-the-point-of-school-rediscovering-the-heart-of-education-pdf (Original work published 2013)

Chicago Citation

Claxton, Guy. (2013) 2013. What’s the Point of School? [Edition unavailable]. Oneworld Publications. https://www.perlego.com/book/950149/whats-the-point-of-school-rediscovering-the-heart-of-education-pdf.

Harvard Citation

Claxton, G. (2013) What’s the Point of School? [edition unavailable]. Oneworld Publications. Available at: https://www.perlego.com/book/950149/whats-the-point-of-school-rediscovering-the-heart-of-education-pdf (Accessed: 14 October 2022).

MLA 7 Citation

Claxton, Guy. What’s the Point of School? [edition unavailable]. Oneworld Publications, 2013. Web. 14 Oct. 2022.