Contemplative Practice and the Education of the Whole Person

Similar documents
Mindfulness as a Basis for Psychotherapeutic Rapport. Professional Identity. Being present 7/15/2010

Community Dialogue Participant s Guide. Lessons from Islamic Spain for Today s World

B y T o d d C. R e a m

Religious education. Programme of study (non-statutory) for key stage 4. (This is an extract from The National Curriculum 2007)

Schneps, Leila; Colmez, Coralie. Math on Trial : How Numbers Get Used and Abused in the Courtroom. New York, NY, USA: Basic Books, p i.

Religious education. Programme of study (non-statutory) for key stage 3. (This is an extract from The National Curriculum 2007)

Schooled in the Moment Introducing Mindfulness to High School Students and Teachers

Leadership for Sustainable Change Certificate Personal to Planetary Transformation based on the principles of the Earth Charter

Guidelines for Integrative Core Curriculum Themes and Perspectives Designations

The Spirituality of the Catechist

The Roman Catholic Bishops Conference of the Netherlands

Preparation for Teaching in Catholic Schools

Teaching, Learning, & Spirituality. By Peter Laurence, Ed.D.

2011 Regional Grant Application

In Brief: The Teaching of the Humanities at Harvard College: Mapping the Future

The Case for Contemplative Psychology By Han F. de Wit

YOUR MYSTICAL CONNECTION TO THE ANIMAL KINGDOM An Interspecies Communication Virtual Intensive August 17 September 11, 2011

What a Writer Does: Online Learning and the Professional Writing Classroom Sandra M. Hordis

LiberalArtsOnline. Contemplative Modes of Inquiry in Liberal Arts Education. June 2007

Principles to Guide the Design and Implementation of Doctoral Programs in Mathematics Education

Dean of the School of Adult Learning North Park University Chicago, IL

Conceptual Framework for the Master of Arts in Teaching at Earlham College:

SETTING THE PACE FOR THE NEXT GENERATION OF BUSINESS SCHOOLS

PASTORAL PLAN FOR HOLY TRINITY CATHOLIC HIGH SCHOOL Ut Omnes Unum Sint That All May Be One

Michelle Chatman, Ph.D. Assistant Professor, Department of Justice Studies. University of the District of Columbia. ACMHE Webinar February 26, 2014

Values Go to School. Exploring Ethics with Children. Booklet prepared by The Child Development Institute, Sarah Lawrence College, Bronxville, NY 10708

Building the Heart of Successful Schools Conference Mindfulness Practices: MindUP & Learn to Breathe by Carol Nickles & Heidi Mancusi December 3, 2015

Noga Zerubavel, PhD 10/26/2015

Formal Learning. HANDOUT B Being a Lifelong Learner Chapter 12 of Growing Toward Spiritual Maturity

1 Eileen Crowley, A Moving Word, Eileen Crowley, A Moving Word (Minneapolis, Augsburg Fortress, 2006), 6. 3 Ibid., 33.

diploma of transformative meditation teaching, facilitator s certificate + certificate in transformative meditation

Running head: PROGRAM DESCRIPTION 1. Program Description. Bachelor of Science and Master of Science Degree Programs in Nursing

Designing Learning for All Learners

Good Stewards Ministry Teacher Training Workshop. Workbook Written & Complied By: Pastor Earnest & Sis.

Benchmark 5: Develop Core Values for Your Ministry

CREDIT TRANSFER: GUIDELINES FOR STUDENT TRANSFER AND ARTICULATION AMONG MISSOURI COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES

Holistic education: An interpretation for teachers in the IB programmes

Transitioning to College Writing Script

Enrich Your Marriage. Kelli B. Trujillo. Indianapolis, Indiana

Devon Agreed Syllabus for Religious Education 2014

2012 VISUAL ART STANDARDS GRADES K-1-2

How to Analyze a Bible Passage

A. The master of arts, educational studies program will allow students to do the following.

Notes for panel presentation on the biblical vision of abundant life as telos for practical

A Guide to Writing A D.Min. Project Prospectus Louisville Presbyterian Theological Seminary

A CLOSER WALK. (name of your church & times of services) Journal

THE POSSIBILITIES OF ACADEMIC ENTREPRENEURSHIP

A religious education unit for ages 9 to 11 Beliefs and actions in the world: Can Christian Aid and Islamic Relief change the world?

Westminster Campus Nursing Program Curriculum Organizing Framework

The General Education Program at Sweet Briar College

Reflections From Our Graduates

Integrating Entrepreneurship with the Liberal Arts: Theology for Entrepreneurship Students

Leader s Instructions Handbook

The American College of Greece: Academic Vision. David G. Horner, Ph.D. President The American College of Greece April 14, 2011 (Edited July 2013)

Beliefs and actions in the world: Can Christian Aid and Islamic Relief change the world? Year 5 / 6. Title:

Rick Elgendy Ph.D. Candidate, Theology Curriculum Vitae

ONE PrOgrams. Contact. First Year Learning Options. U of T St. George, Faculty of Arts & Science U of T Mississauga U of T Scarborough

Constitutional Musing Misrepresentations about the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.)

DEPARTMENT OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION Program Learning Outcomes (PLOs) MBA

THEOLOGY COURSE DESCRIPTIONS

Values in NSW public schools

Doctor of Ministry Program in the Renewal of Church and Community Ministries Bangor Theological Seminary,

Introduction. Dear Leader,

Storycatcher Sermon Series at First Parish June 14 Sept. 13. Using the book Storycatcher

How To Be A Successful Writer

The Way of the Child

Julie Sexeny and Christine Dinkins, Wofford College AAC&U Conference, Portland, Requirements for reading responses

SPENDING TIME IN GOD S PRESENCE

BIBLICAL REASONS FOR SENDING CHILDREN TO A CHRISTIAN SCHOOL

entrust to you the true riches? And if you have not been faithful with what belongs to another, who will give you what is your own?

Five Steps to Mindfulness By Thich Nhat Hanh

About Hostmanship. the art of making people feel welcome

Is the General Education program purpose congruent with the overall mission of the institution?

Creating an Exceptional Adjunct Faculty Experience


Everyone can be great because everyone can serve, it only takes a heart full of grace, a soul full of love. ---Martin Luther King, Jr.

Formation 1 FORMATION / ONGOING. Continuing Education 2. Ecclesial Lay Ministry Degree Procedures 6. Spiritual Direction 8. Catechist Certification 12

Cornerstone Christian University School of Theology Orlando, FL. Doctor of Theology Program

MINDFULNESS for BEGINNERS

PRINCIPLES OF GOOD PRACTICE FOR STUDENT AFFAIRS AT CATHOLIC COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES

A CROSS-CULTURAL INTERDISCIPLINARY STUDY OF THE HEALING POWER OF SINGING. A dissertation submitted by WENDY MAUDE MCCLURE PACIFICA GRADUATE INSTITUTE

Guide to the Contemplative Outreach Resource Materials

B. H. Carroll Theological Institute 301 S. Center St., Ste 100, Arlington, TX (817)

A Guide to Writing a D.Min Project Report. Louisville Presbyterian Theological Seminary

One way to generalize the nature of the creative social movements in America today is to view them as part of a threefold development that involves:

Characteristics and Attitudes of Instructional Faculty and Staff in the Humanities

How To Teach With Your Mind In Mind

Leadership and Restorative Justice DPLS 708 & ORGL Spring 2013

Executive Summary Principles and Standards for School Mathematics

Syllabus DM 6461 Doctor of Ministry Seminar I Theology of Ministry the Minister in Context

Degree requirements

Clinical Psychology. PsyD in Clinical Psychology. School of Professional Psychology and Health.

Theological Schools in. Sustaining Pastoral Ministry. Council on Theological Education. The Role of. Council on Theological Education

VOCATION AND SERVICE LEARNING: FOSTERING REFLECTION AND CITIZENSHIP IN AN INFORMATICS CURRICULUM

A Framework for Sustainable Leadership in Broken Bay Catholic Schools Br Tony Whelan, Dr Michael Slattery, Dr Helen Cannon

Task Force on Undergraduate Education Across the University. What the University Should Do Fall 2010

How Psychology Needs to Change

Valuing Diversity for Young Children. Three Diversity Principles for the Early Childhood Educator

Biblical Exegesis for Preaching

PH.D. PROGRAM IN PSYCHOLOGY: CONSCIOUSNESS & SOCIETY

Transcription:

Contemplative Practice and the Education of the Whole Person by Deborah J. Haynes 1 On the surface, this column may be read as a series of musings about a conference I attended recently on contemplative education at Columbia University. i But my intention extends beyond simple reportage: it concerns why I now integrate contemplative practices into courses on art and religion in a secular state university. For readers within seminaries and other religious institutions, I also discuss briefly the relationship of religious and theological education to contemplative inquiry. What follows is focused around three major questions. First, what is contemplative practice? Second, how are these practices integrated into contemplative pedagogy? Third, what is contemplative inquiry or contemplation as a way of knowing? Since 1997 the Center for Contemplative Mind in Society, in collaboration with the American Council of Learned Societies, has awarded approximately 100 fellowships to professors in 79 institutions in order to develop curricula that integrate contemplative practices into classroom teaching. ii From small private colleges such as Bowdoin, Bryn Mawr, and Holy Cross to larger universities such as the University of Arkansas, University of Colorado, and University of Michigan, faculty in the arts and humanities, sciences, and social sciences have been offered support to develop courses that integrate traditional disciplinary methodologies with newer contemplative pedagogies. I received one of these fellowships in 2002, and my teaching has subsequently been transformed through ongoing experiments with contemplative practice.

2 Contemplative Practice. There is no single way to describe or engage in contemplative practice. The Latin contemplari means to observe, consider, or gaze attentively. This definition gives clues about the varied forms of contemplative practice, which include sitting, standing, walking, and lying down; using attitudes of not doing; deep listening, pondering, and radical questioning; guided imagery and active imagination; exercises with the body; focusing techniques such as those developed by Eugene Gendlin; concentrated language experiments with freewriting, poetry, and journals; beholding; and creation of visual images to represent such experiences. iii The word mindfulness is often used to describe contemplative practice. In its most basic form, it means moment-bymoment present awareness, which is available to everyone, regardless of religious or spiritual orientation. Broadly understood as methods to develop concentration, deepen understanding and insight, and to cultivate awareness and compassion, these practices can have a profound impact on a student s experience both in college and beyond. Specifically, teaching students techniques of awareness, concentration, and means of disciplining their attention is absolutely essential in our era of fragmentation, ever-increasing speed, multitasking, and continuously interrupted attention. While contemplative practices are rooted in the world s religious traditions, I often tell parents and students that the application of these practices in a secular educational context can enhance the educational experience in unique ways. Students develop new techniques of awareness; they learn to refine their perceptual and observational skills; and they are encouraged to take chances and to foster attitudes such as curiosity and wonder rather than cynicism about the world in which we

3 live. Some students have also reported closer connections to their professors and less anxiety about their studies. Contemplative Pedagogy. Introducing contemplative practices into the classroom results in new educational practices and pedagogy. The root of education is educare, to draw forth, both in the sense of drawing forth from the student what is already present, and bringing forth new awareness and fostering new knowledge. For example, in a class titled The Dialogue of Art and Religion students learn about Russian Orthodox icons, Himalayan Buddhist thangkas, and Navaho sandpaintings through studying cultural and social history, religion, formal visual analysis, and creative processes. I define this interdisciplinary teaching as a form of comparative visual studies. Students also learn about the practices of prayer and meditation that are central to such traditions through sustained reading and discussion. They read accessible books about contemplative practice such as Thich Nhat Hanh s The Miracle of Mindfulness. In each class, we practice simple techniques such as bowing, sitting in silence, breath awareness, and daily writing exercises. My students over the past two years have talked about the way these mindfulness exercises help to foster an atmosphere of respect. They often note how these practices have effectively brought the class together as a whole. When courses actively create a respectful environment, students learn to listen, write, and argue persuasively from a position of civility, which helps them to become principled citizens. Perhaps most significantly, contemplative practice fosters development of what Martin Buber called I-Thou relationships, where other people, events, and things are treated as subjects and not merely

4 as objects for use or enjoyment. Jon Kabat-Zinn remarked during the conference that most of us live, most of the time, in a narrow band of being where we are surrounded by I, me, and mine. We suffer from this narrow focus. How, he asked, can we get more real? As teachers, how can we ignite passion in our students for this kind of presence, this being in their own lives? This is precisely the work of contemplative pedagogy: it is about waking up and being present to our lives here and now. In an often-quoted excerpt from Principles of Psychology, William James wrote that The faculty of voluntarily bringing back a wandering attention over and over again, is the very root of judgment, character, and will.... An education which should improve this faculty would be the education par excellence. But it is easier to define this ideal than to give practical instructions for bringing it about. iv Yet this is precisely what contemplative pedagogies seek to do: to describe how to improve the faculty of bringing the wandering attention back to the moment, again and again. Mirabai Bush, Director of the Center for Contemplative Mind, identified the goal of such practices and pedagogies as creating noble woke-up big-heart beings. v Such persons become capable of greater compassion and kindness. They learn how to listen to themselves and others and to observe the world. Contemplative Inquiry. Contemplation can also be described as a way of knowing, an epistemology that is distinct from rationalist-empiricist thought. Psychologist Tobin Hart has written that an epistemology of contemplation includes the natural human capacity for knowing through silence, looking inward, pondering deeply, beholding, witnessing the contents of our consciousness, and so forth. vi With other art historians I have begun to practice and teach beholding, experiencing works of art face-to-face, as

5 Susan Wegner put it. You stand in front of [artworks], hold them in your hands, look them in the eye, awed by the scale of them, or drawn in by the intimacy of their tinyness. vii Beholding is a counter both to the usual two-second walk-by experience that characterizes much museum looking and to the analytical dissection of a work of art. I suggest to students that these other methods of viewing art are not intrinsically wrong, but that thoughtful beholding often leads to another kind of encounter. My own love of Islamic manuscripts and calligraphy, for example, has grown from this kind of sustained beholding. Given the challenges of our world, including pervasive violence, suffering, and serious ecological disasters or problems on every continent and in virtually every community, the idea of inviting students to bear witness, to leave words and to be in silence, can be a salve, as Arthur Zajonc observed. viii In a world beset by conflict, to cultivate only critical thinking and analysis leads to partial knowing. Contemplation is a common human activity that, when brought into academic contexts, offers students a new relationship with themselves, others, and the world. It offers an epistemology based not on data, information, and the separation of subject and object, but on knowledge, wisdom, and insight about the interconnectedness of all things. Such contemplative inquiry can lead to an education that transforms the student. Though I continue to work in a secular university context, I believe that these ideals and values of respect, participation, and interconnectedness are relevant to theological education as well. Contemplative inquiry is itself respectful. Through contemplative practices, students learn to recognize the individuality of others, yet to resist

6 the distancing that characterizes so much of our lives. Such inquiry is participatory, as the characteristics of the world invite us to come closer to one another and the physical world. Like the best of theological and ministerial education, it is not about losing one s own consciousness and identity, but about entering into the experience of the other, insofar as this is possible. The roots of this kind of education lie not only in Asian philosophies and Christian mysticism, but also in the Greek aspiration toward insight. Contemplation is at the heart of knowledge, for to contemplate deeply is to see. ix Finally, can we become comfortable with uncertainty, to paraphrase Buddhist teacher Pema Chodron, x comfortable with not knowing? Can we learn to see dissimilar things and processes as linked? A contemplative epistemology is based on developing this ability to live with uncertainty and to sustain contradictory views. Such education is what artist and teacher M. C. Richards called an education of the whole person. xi I would suggest that this approach is sorely needed at our historical moment. i Titled Contemplative Practices and Education: Making Peace in Ourselves and in the World, the conference took place at Teachers College in mid-february 2005. Keynote speakers included author and medical researcher Jon Kabat-Zinn, poet laureate of Connecticut Marilyn Nelson, and physicist Arthur Zajonc, among others. Participatory workshops dealt with pedagogical practices in a variety of school settings, peace studies and peace education; and poster sessions introduced and described programs in the United States and Canada. I am especially indebted to the comments of Mirabai Bush, Barbara Dilley, Tobin Hart, Jon Kabat-Zinn, Marilyn Nelson, Susan Wegner, and Arthur Zajonc for helping to shape my reflections here. ii See www.contemplativemind.org/ for more information on the programs of the Center for Contemplative Mind in Society. iii An outline of many of these techniques can be found in Tobin Hart, Opening the Contemplative Mind in the Classroom, Journal of Transformative Education 2 (January

7 2004): 28-46. See also www.contemplativemind.org/practices/tree.html for a compelling visualization of the interrelationships of various forms of contemplative practice. iv William James, Principles of Psychology (New York: H. Holt and Company, 1890). v This phrase comes from Gary Snyder s latest book Danger On Peaks (Washington, DC: Shoemaker & Hoard, 2004). vi Hart, Opening the Contemplative Mind, pp. 29-30. vii Susan Wegner, on page 4 of www.contemplativemind.org/ resources/pubs/case_studies.pdf. viii These comments on contemplative epistemology owe much to Arthur Zajonc s keynote during the Contemplative Practices and Education conference. He has also published other articles on ways of knowing. See, for instance, his Spirituality in Higher Education, available online at http://www.amherst.edu/magazine/issues/04spring/eros_insight/. ix This understanding of the relationship of Asian and Greek philosophies to Christian mysticism was articulated by Arthur Zajonc during his conference keynote address. x See Pema Chodron, Comfortable with Uncertainty: 108 Teachings (Boston: Shambhala, 2002). xi M. C. Richards, The Public School and the Education of the Whole Person, in Opening Our Moral Eye, ed. Deborah J. Haynes (Hudson, NY: Lindisfarne, 1996).