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Robi Kroflic

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Title: Robi Kroflic


1
Robi Kroflic
  • RECOGNITION OF THE CHILD AS CAPABLE BEING THE
    FOUNDATION OF EDUCATION IN THE SPIRIT OF
    CHILDRENS RIGHTS

2
Aims of lecture
  • to show why it is urgent to reach an educational
    approaches, that are based on well balanced
    support of all of three clusters of childrens
    rights (for protection, provision and
    participation)
  • to prove, that especially for supporting
    childrens rights for participation, recognition
    of the child as pro-socially oriented and morally
    capable being is very important corrective of the
    concept of distributive justice
  • to describe three contemporary approaches that
    promote an image of rich child and are
    therefore educational concept that are based on
    the logic of childrens rights pedagogy of
    listening in Reggio Emilia approach, inductive
    approach to moral education in To-Gather project,
    and use of art

3
How to understand inner logic of the Convention
on the rights of the children?
  • Convention on the rights of the children is built
    on the concept of three clusters of childrens
    needs for protection, provision and
    participation
  • So the accomplishment of the central goal of
    education in the spirit of childrens rights is
    strongly connected with searching for the balance
    between the protection and participation, and
    provision of stimulative educational environment

4
How to understand inner logic of the Convention
on the rights of the children?
  • the very fact that we speak about special rights
    of children contains a FIRST DANGER, that we look
    at the children as simply more vulnerable beings
    than adult persons, which can lead to oppressive
    paternalism
  • THE OPPOSITE DANGER is connected with too big
    emphasis on childrens freedom of choices, which
    leads to lack of the sense of belonging and
    safety and changes our tendency to freedom into
    the liberal pressure toward free choices as moral
    obligations of living in the consumers society

5
How to understand inner logic of the Convention
on the rights of the children?
  • we can conclude that for a healthy development
    children need a well balanced provision of all
    three clusters of rights, because both described
    threats (of oppressive paternalism and lack of
    ontological security) are a serious danger for
    their psychological stability and the development
    of identity.

6
My personal experience on the importance of this
warning
  • An ethnographical note A change of a playing
    corner
  • Since children no longer play with dolls, we
    decided that we will change the babies corner it
    into a beauty parlour. When I told them that
    (motivation to act), Saša reacted Leave the
    babies corner as it is, Marija plays there every
    day. She loves babies, she loves them so much
    shell have nine of her own when she grows up.
    (Marija is a handicapped child!) We left the nook
    as it was, and arranged a beauty parlour
    elsewhere.

7
My personal experience on the importance of this
warning
  • I have to admit that it took me seven years of
    study to return to this peak experience with at
    least some sensible theoretical solutions. But
    what is more important, this ethnographical note
    has warn me that we should never treat a
    pre-school child as incapable, egoistic being who
    should be simply protected with formal rules and
    motivated to follow adults examples of noble
    moral acting. Saying in other words, it was a
    warning to treat children as subjects of moral
    decisions and legal rights!

8
Childrens rights and the question of justice in
education
  • Rawls concept of distributive justice is the most
    known political concept, relevant also for the
    protection of childrens rights
  • recognition of the child as socially and
    cognitively capable being is a kind of
    precondition for asserting of childrens rights
    for participation
  • as Nancy Fraser stresses out, proper recognition
    of every person should be seen as the important
    extension of rawlsean concept of distributive
    justice

9
How to understand recognition?
  • Recognition becomes a crucial moral task of
    educator when we accept the hypothesis, that our
    identities are formed in dialogue with others, in
    agreement or struggle with their recognition of
    us
  • But every form of recognition is not good for the
    development of the child, as well as every
    relation is not necessarily good, because
    domination is as relational as love.

10
How to understand recognition?
  • in education we can trace different modes of
    inappropriate recognition of the child and
    therefore also unjust educational practices
  • cultural domination (being required to
    assimilate),
  • nonrecognition (being rendered invisible),
  • and disrespect (being routinely maligned).
  • specially young children are very vulnerable for
    different modes of inappropriate recognition
    (historic images of the child - from childs
    invisibility (rejection of the child as different
    being as adult person) to our expectation that
    the child is born as incomplete being, sinful
    and egoistic being, irrational being )

11
How to understand recognition?
  • Mechanism of the projection causes that we are
    looking to the child through our subjective
    theories, so to assure a proper recognition of
    the child we need to stress out ethical and
    political consciousness of the educator
  •   When we recognize another, or when we ask for
    recognition for ourselves, we are not asking for
    an Other to see us as we are, as we already are,
    as we have always been, as we were constituted
    prior the encounter itself. Instead, in the
    asking, in the petition, we have already become
    something new, since we are constituted by virtue
    of the address, a need and desire for the
    Other... It is also to stake one's own being and
    one's own persistence in one's own being, in the
    struggle for recognition.
  • (Judith Buttler)

12
How to understand recognition?
  • two dimensions of recognition
  • as a political request for just acceptance of
    ones social status,
  • or as the ethical request for affirmation of
    individuals identity which is a necessary part
    of optimal educational encounter and human
    flourishing

13
How to understand recognition?
  • three different roles of recognition
  • a concept that emphasize our commitment for
    personal confirmation of a child (recognition as
    confirmation Martin Buber),
  • our willingness to reject oppressive modes of
    subjections (like looking at the child as
    incapable being Judith Buttler) ,
  • and finally to accept the fact that recognition
    is ongoing reciprocal encounter (Jessica
    Benjamin)

14
From different concepts of recognition we can
extrapolate further concrete duties of pedagogue
  • To be treated in a spirit of childrens rights,
    child has a right to be accepted as the worthy
    being (recognition as confirmation)
  • To enable childs potentials for active
    engagement in decision making we have to build an
    image of rich child that is possible to step into
    active relations with adult persons (recognition
    as rejection of oppressive modes of subjections)
  • Pedagogical relation is reciprocal encounter so
    as we help the child in enabling him positive
    recognition, the child is also giving us the
    opportunity for growth of our personality and
    development of professional and personal
    identity.

15
Pedagogy of listening
  • Among the goals of our approach is to reinforce
    each childs sense of identity through a
    recognition that comes from peers and adults, so
    much so that each one would feel enough sense of
    belonging and self-confidence to participate in
    activities of the school. (Loris Malaguzzi)
  • Listening is a metaphor for openness to
    others... Listening therefore means giving value
    to the other (Carlina Rinaldi)

16
  • Listening to the child is not only important
    because of our right to speak and be heard but
    also because we can know ourselves that is our
    unconscious pre-judgments, prejudices and habits
    - only if we know others different of ourselves.
    So if we really want to spread the idea of
    education through the concept of childrens
    rights, we have to step further from political
    concept of rights to philosophical concepts of
    the development of humans mind.
  • Listening is therefore the premise for any
    learning relationship, because in representing
    our theories, we re-cognize them, so
    understanding is generated through sharing and
    dialogue. The same phenomenon we can find in the
    process of artistic imagination

17
Inductive educational approach
  • Thesis on special discipline approach that can be
    called inductive approach was first elaborated
    in late sixties by Martin Hoffman
  • Hoffmans approach of empathy as a source of
    pro-social emotions enabled him to restore a
    thesis that empathy is the first source of moral
    competencies of the child in very early
    developmental period which can influence
    successfully further development of emotional,
    motivational and cognitive capacities for moral
    decision making and acting.

18
  • with this basic statement Hoffman confirmed
    Levinas thesis about the responsibility toward
    the Face of the other as pre-ethical condition of
    moral acting
  • to speak about new educational concept/paradigm
    inductive method has to be widened to different
    types of activities and theoretically expanded
    with profound anthropological ideas. For this
    purpose I have spread the idea of inductive
    approach to Levinas concept of responsibility, M.
    Klein, S. Tood, N. Eisenberg and K. Kristjansson
    concepts of pro-social emotions and my own
    concept of self-limited authority of the teacher

19
Three steps model of inductive educational
methodic
  • The child is in his or her first years capable of
    relations of love and friendship, therefore
    pedagogy supporting those relationships enables
    the child to develop relational response-ability
    and normative agency for pro-social activities in
    a most authentic way.
  • Because personal engaged relations may be as well
    harmful, the next important focus is to develop
    the sense of respect toward concrete persons or
    activities.
  • Last step of moral education is to become aware
    of ethical principles and humanistic demands,
    especially concerning human rights and ecological
    values.

20
  • the proposed model should not be understood as a
    step model of classical linear development (like
    Kohlbergs model of the development of moral
    reasoning) because every phase of the model
    remains important for morality even when the next
    developmental step is reached
  • the best way of using the inductive model of
    moral development is within an inclusive school
    environment and not only as an abstract learning
    of solving moral dilemmas in the classroom.

21
Role of art
  • as we can speak about authentic relationships
    (like love and friendship) that provoke childs
    pro-social behavior, art (as one of the most
    authentic humans activities) can foster the same
    attitude with compassioned imagination
  • art can be used in the processes of inductive
    approach in different roles, like
  • a motivational tool for opening the senses for
    moral dilemmas,
  • as a source of ethical knowledge
  • and also as a kind of cross-over a medium for
    binding cultural and emotional gaps between
    children

22
What does this widened inductive approach to
moral education mean for education in the spirit
of childrens rights?
  • it is the approach that is focused on all of
    three important dimensions of the process of
    recognition on confirmation of Other, on
    rejection of oppressive modes of subjections, and
    on acceptance of the fact that recognition is an
    ongoing reciprocal encounter
  • with an emphasis on authentic relationships and
    activities we can enable a childs sense of
    security, but also his willingness to be an
    active subject of activities that help him/her to
    build his/her personal construction of meaningful
    knowledge
  • with limiting our paternalistic tendencies to be
    the ultimate moral judges, we enable the space to
    the child to strengthen his pro-social
    motivation, but also social skills for being able
    to answer to the call of other person for help,
    or for improving the situation of moral conflict
    that was caused with his/her disrespectful act.

23
  • we promote opportunities for pro-social
    behaviour, for growing reflection of conflicts,
    and possibilities for common living on the basis
    of active tolerance, where empowerment of
    individual position of everyone and commitment to
    pro-social behaviour are the mill stones of our
    identity. We should stay inside the framework of
    human rights and enforce weaker should
    obligations to respect human rights to become
    stronger must moral imperatives.
  • (Kroflic and Kratsborn 2006, Agora Dispute)
  •  
  • This project links the tiny little things
    inside myself with the great stuff.
  • (Maria Peña, student from Lisbon, 15 years old)
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