Title: Education in the Village and the World:
1Education in the Village and the World
- Rabindranath Tagores
- Educational model
- for the
- Twenty-first Century
- Chris Marsh, 2009
2Who is Rabindranath Tagore?The Poet
1861-1941 Gitanjali, 1912awarded Nobel Prize
for Literature, 1913.
3Who is Rabindranath Tagore?
- Bengali Poet and polymath,1861-1941
- managed family estates, 1890s, short stories
- founded Santiniketan school, 1901
- led campaign against partition of Bengal, 1905
- Gitanjali, 1912 Nobel Prize for Literature,
1913 - rural reconstruction project and Visva-Bharati
international university, 1920s - world celebrity (also notoriety Nationalism,
1917) 1912-1929 - conversations with Einstein, 1930
- final years in Santiniketan.
4Rabindranath Tagore,environmentalist,
world-changer
- I first heard of Tagore from Marjorie Sykes
(1905-1995), the Quaker Gandhian - (myself with Marjorie in 1990)
- Marjorie wrote this quote in my copy of her
book on Gandhi. Later I tracked down the City
and Village essay in Towards Universal Man
5Studying Rabindranath Tagore
- 2003 research on Tagore and rural
reconstruction, in the Leonard Elmhirst papers
in the Dartington Archive - 2006 MA Dissertation The Village and the
World A Political Reading of Rabindranath
Tagores Prose Fiction - 2008-9 PhD Thesis Rabindra-Radicalism
Re-reading Rabindranath Tagore for the
Twenty-first Century.
6- Rabindra-Radicalism
- Re-reading
- Rabindranath Tagore
- for the
- Twenty-first Century
- PhD Thesis title
- What is Tagores Radicalism?
7Tagores RadicalModel of the World
- The World then now
- global economy and politics (and culture?)
- nation states, top-down decision-making,
representative democracy, has power-over entire
nation due to centralised funding - cities as dominant and most vigorous units
- suburbs, including towns and villages.
- Tagores conception
- villages as dominant and most vigorous units,
locally self-reliant, rooted in local ecology,
grassroots consensus decision-making - market towns serving villages
- national and global centres of education and
culture serving villages.
8Studying Tagores Radicalismhis English
Writings, and by Topics
- philosophical anthropology, for material related
to Tagores model of alternative local and global
society - education, re Tagores ideas on what is wrong
with modern Western education and his alternative
model - feminist theory, re Tagores conception of
womens role in the kind of society he advocated - theology, re Tagores understanding of Eastern
spirituality.
9Education topicTagores ideas on what is wrong
with modern Western education and his alternative
model
- Young children today are subjected to a
standards agenda, at the expense of the arts,
the humanities and the pursuit of knowledge in
its fuller sense. - (Cambridge Primary Review, 2009)
10Efforts to improve primary schooling, May 2009
11The government recommends measures to improve
primary schoolingSir Jim Rose, Ofsted inspector
says
- all four-year-olds to have a school place in
September term after their birthday - or a funded full-time nursery place
- IT to have equal status to English and maths
- all children to learn 1 or 2 foreign languages
from age 7 - minimum of 2 periods of history.
- Will that fix it?
12Guarded approval in the media(Richard Garner,
Independent 1 May 2009)
- The major complaint is that children have become
bored, with the rigid concentration on testing,
so - good idea to have a curriculum which
concentrates more on delivery through arts and
drama, such as role playing in history and acting
out plays and books in English lesson. - good idea that dance will also be a feature
playing a dual role in making learning more
enjoyable and helping to keep pupils fit as part
of the Governments anti-obesity drive.
13But teachers urge more drastic action
14Tagores alternativederives from his painful
experiences of Western style education in India
and England
15Tagores school
- Suppose a child were to sample the meagre and
oppressive schooling which society provides, and
then refuses to go, and finds a richer source of
learning at home. - Suppose years later he establishes his own
school what would his school be like, and could
those alternative ideas on education provide the
remedy needed today?
16Rabindranath Tagores school
- was in natural surroundings, with lessons
outdoors even up in the trees - with a curriculum emphasising the spirit of
self-help, the skills of community life in a
family and in a village - the freedom and joy of their natural artistic
powers, the excitement of poetry, music and drama
in performance - and a hospitable and tolerant philosophy and
spiritual practice.
17Tagores RadicalismThe Village and the World
- Tagores village model
- villages as dominant and most vigorous units,
locally self-reliant, rooted in local ecology,
grassroots consensus decision-making - market towns serving villages
- national and global centres of education and
culture serving villages.
- village education
- local schools with curriculum and teaching
methods decided by pupils and teachers - focus on local self-reliance and culture
- wider area for special resources and cooperative
educational and cultural activities - national and global centres of education and
culture to facilitate local schools.
18Is this possible?Change what comes first?
- Cambridge Primary Review Young children today
are subjected to a standards agenda, at the
expense of the arts, the humanities and the
pursuit of knowledge in its fuller sense. - Does society need to change first, at least
aspire towards a world where such an education
makes sense? - Or does recognition of societys defects provide
an opportunity for education to lead the way?
19Tagore and Philosophical Anthropology
- Tagores conception of the nature of human
nature - The Religion of Man The Hibbert Lectures for
1930 - what kind of Religion?
- what is Man?