The Soul of Education: Helping Students Find Connection, Compassion, and Character at School

"In The Soul of Education, Kessler celebrates the diversity of beliefs in our free country and does not advocate teaching dogma. But she wisely understands the spiritual emptiness of our times and knows that we ignore the souls of our children at their peril and ours. Children need encouragement and guidance in struggling with the deeper meaning and purpose of life in a society that glorifies the material over the spiritual."
- Marian Wright Edelman, President, The Children Defense Fund

"The Soul of Education offers an inspiring, hopeful, and much-needed antidote to the malaise that afflicts too many children…a practical, inclusive and sensitive guide for helping children connect with their spiritual yearnings."
- Daniel Goleman, author of Emotional Intelligence

"I wish I would have had the information found in The Soul of Education during the twenty years I served in public education. I believe Rachael Kessler has found the missing links to educational reform. Public Education does have a soul."
- Forrest L. Turpen, Executive Director, Christina Educators Association International

"The examination of the quest for meaning among today’s adolescents is both daring and needed."
- Howard Gardner, author of Intelligence Reframed: Multiple Intelligences for the 21st Century


Student Questions

  • Why am I here?
  • Does my life have a purpose?
  • How do I find it?
  • How can I NOT be a cynic?
  • I have been hurt so many times, I wonder if there is God.
  • How does one trust oneself or believe in oneself?
  • Why this emptiness in this world, in my heart?

These are a sampling of real questions posed by high school students involved in an innovative in-school program that integrates heart, spirit and community into academic learning. The Soul of Education: Helping Students Find Connection, Compassion and Character by Rachael Kessler (Published by Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development / May 2000 / traces the development of this program and addresses the many issues surrounding it. The story is told through the compelling experiences of dozens of adolescents from classrooms around the country.

The Soul of Education is also the story of Kessler's passion to understand what feeds the spirit of young people and her mission to create curriculum, methodology and teacher development that serves that need.

Does a child's soul have a place in the classroom? Educators and parents have struggled with this question for years. "We decided to exclude the spiritual dimension from education because we adults couldn't agree on what 'it' was or how to teach 'it,'" says Ms. Kessler. "Liberals fear that 'fundamentalists' will sue them as 'new agers' if they introduce a spiritual dimension into the classroom. Christians fear that secularists will paralyze their efforts to provide spiritual guidance to children in schools. Collectively, we reached a standoff, and our children have been the losers."

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The Soul of Education tells how Kessler and her colleagues successfully addressed the question of the inner life in the classroom. After listening for many years to the adolescents in her classes, Kessler began to see a pattern. She calls this pattern "The Seven Gateways to the soul of young people."

1.The yearning for deep connection.
2.The longing for silence and solitude.
3.The search for meaning and purpose.
4.The hunger for joy and delight.
5.The creative drive.
6.The urge for transcendence.
7.The need for initiation.

These are the foundations on which her principles are based.

" Just as each students spiritual path is unique," says Kessler, so is the form these gateways take." She emphasizes that these guidelines are never to be forced into a step-by-step curriculum, but can help to develop a wide range of opportunities in school life for engaging the souls of students. "All of these gateways," she stresses, "abide by the core principle of honoring young voices; creating ground rules together, reaching out cautiously and indirectly through play and metaphor, gathering and listening to their most profound questions, and telling stories from significant moments in their lives."

The Soul of Education also demonstrates how nurturing inner the life can lead to success in all areas of our children's lives -- academic, social, and civic. It will be appreciated on a number of levels:

  • For parents and educators
  • As a thoughtful, understanding guide to living with, loving and communicating with adolescents.
  • As a hopeful template of how to develop successful group interactions with teens.
  • For adolescents
  • As inspirational examples of how these young people learned to turn these experiences into triumphs.
  • For policymakers
  • As a framework for understanding that the spiritual void is one of the root causes of school problems and as a tool for developing concrete, practical solutions for school and community.

We continue to ask ourselves why our children hate school, why there is so much hopelessness, failure and violence in those institutions. With the publication of The Soul of Education, we have access to new patterns in education that may help make a difference.

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Table of Contents

FOREWORD-- PARKER J. PALMER

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

INTRODUCTION
What does "soul of education" mean?
Can we come together to address soul in schools?
Doesn't the "separation of church and state" mean leaving all this alone?
How do we nourish spiritual development appropriately in public schools?

CHAPTER ONE: HONORING YOUNG VOICES
Ground rules
Games and symbolic expression
The mysteries questions
The council process
The map emerges
FIGURE 1.1 SEVEN GATEWAYS TO THE SOUL IN EDUCATION

CHAPTER TWO: DEEP CONNECTION
Deep connection to the self
Deep connection to another
Deep connection to community
Deep connection to lineage
Deep connection to nature
Deep connection to a higher power

CHAPTER THREE: SILENCE AND STILLNESS
Rest and renewal
Silence and emotional intelligence
Introducing silence into the classroom
Encountering resistance
Silence is for teachers, too
Solitude
Common misperceptions
How to use solitude
Respect for privacy and personal timing
The benefits of solo time
Cautions and exception

CHAPTER FOUR: MEANING AND PURPOSE
Loss of meaning: how it affects learning and risk
Safely inviting the big questions
Exploring individual purpose
Service learning and the search for meaning and purpose

CHAPTER FIVE: JOY
Hiding joy
Gratitude and celebration
When joy and sorrow intersect
Joy and humility
Awe, wonder and reverence for life
Joyful release in rhythm and movement
Play

CHAPTER SIX: CREATIVITY
Creativity in exile
Definitions of creativity: product and process
The process of creativity: steps and stages
Welcoming creativity
Being open to the unknown
Bridging differences
Integrating ways of knowing
Dancing the paradox of form and freedom
Holding the tension of safety and risk
" Pandora's box": when creativity exposes suffering or danger
Other obstacles
The transforming power of creativity

CHAPTER SEVEN: TRANSCENDENCE
What is transcendence
Athletic, academic, and artistic performance
Adventure learning
Transcending prejudice and stereotypes
Transcending gender polarization
Transcendence through suffering
Transcending despair through empowerment
Optional only: On the razor's edge
Sharing the mystery

CHAPTER EIGHT: INITIATION
The need for initiation
Three passages
Contemporary models within the broader community
What is a rite of passage
School-based models
Curriculum vs. transformation: A framework for a comprehensive rite of passage

CONCLUSION: FROM FEAR TO DIALOGUE--FROM STANDOFF TO COLLABORATION
Acknowledging the risks
Teachers: risk and opportunity
Parents: from fear to dialogue
Saboteurs and kids at-risk
Words and deeds of teachers and other "elders"

REFERENCES AND BIBLIOGRAPHY

INDEX

ABOUT THE AUTHORS

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Sample Chapters

CHAPTER ONE: HONORING YOUNG VOICES
Ground rules
Games and symbolic expression
The mysteries questions
The council process
The map emerges

CONCLUSION: FROM FEAR TO DIALOGUE--FROM STANDOFF TO COLLABORATION
Acknowledging the risks
Teachers: risk and opportunity
Parents: from fear to dialogue
Saboteurs and kids at-risk
Words and deeds of teachers and other "elders"
Please view ASCD's website for other samples.

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