From our overstocked archives
Sam Smith, 1986 - This
spring I graduate again from high school, this time vicariously, and
one of the major lessons of this return trip has been a deepened
appreciation of the role that sports and other extra curricular
activities play In education. I no longer think of them, in fact, as
extra-curricular at all. The category seems oddly discriminatory and,
despite the skill with which academia bedizens its petty prejudices in
the cloak of wisdom, it is anti-intellectual as well. To suggest that
sports, drama, art, politics or community service are external to the
curriculum of an educated person borders on yahooism. Absent these
elements, education becomes a brutish parody of what it says it is, a
motley collection of facts without context, without integration either
with one's own body and soul or with any human community.
I
suspect, in fact, that some of the less appealing characteristics
ascribed to the stereotypical yuppie are the result of a failure of this
integration. The roots, in part, may be found in an education that, at
best, did not value extra-curricular activities highly enough to see
them other than as the first in an endless series of performances
separating the successful from the not so.
For, in truth,
extra-curricular activities can be a bad form of education.
Micro-Lombardis of high school football have perverted the learning of
discipline, cooperation and effort into a tool of self-aggrandizement.
Arts programs have modeled themselves on Hollywood or Broadway. And
there are campus politicians who have mainly learned the worst that politics have to offer.
Such
problems, however, are not addressed by "no pass, no play." Rather they
reflect, in their own way, the fact that extra-curricular activities
have been assigned to the slums of education instead of given the place
they deserve as part of the basic curriculum.
If school
activities were not so arbitrarily divided, if the relationship between
what goes on in and out of the classroom was considered and respected,
we might not find so many dichotomies. Academics might be enticed to
face the issue, for example, of why schools teach the evils of
totalitarianism in history classes and venerate it on the football
field. Or why students in English class are made to read poets and
novelists who lived and died in penury while encouraging show business
values on the school stage.
Of course, "no pass, no play" is not
new. I encountered it myself in college two weeks after I had been
elected station manager of the campus radio station. I was informed that
since I had also been selected for probation I was barred from any
extra-curricular activities. Although I had to give up my administrative
position, the invisible nature of radio permitted me (as with a good
many of my similarly distressed colleagues) to continue full tilt on the
air -- under a pseudonym. I spent just as much time at the station, but
I got my grades up as well. The main lesson I learned from no "pass, no
play" was how to buck the system.
It was not a bad lesson, but
it certainly was not the one that the academic community had intended,
just as I suspect that the lessons learned from the current crop of "no
pass, no play" laws will not be the ones intended.
Among the
lessons that may be learned will be how society discriminates against
those who do not fit its mold - either because of ethnic background,
economics, physical or mental idiosyncrasies, or inclination. And since
extra-curricular activities are too often used as early imprimaturs of
success, the very student who is failing in the classroom will be forced
to fail a second time outside the classroom as well.
If, on the
other hand, one views these activities as part of the core of
education, then barring participation becomes as stupid and futile an
act as banning students from English because they are flunking math.
Further, one begins to see the connections between these activities and
the conventional academic subjects, connections that can be exploited to
make both more valuable. Perhaps the most striking characteristic of
extra-curricular activities is that they provide a rare course in
applied knowledge. The student in the classroom is tested primarily
against a single criterion: the judgment of the teacher. Despite the
enormous utility of this, it is hardly a typical example of how
knowledge is used in adult life.
To take a simple case: consider a
problem that you as a parent perceive at a school. Now think,
truthfully, how you would describe and argue your feelings about that
problem with the principal, a teacher, your child, another student, your
spouse, a friend who has a student at the school, a friend who has a
student at another school, a friend without children. The same knowledge
you possess, the same feelings, must be translated in a variety of
different ways to have either meaning or effect.
It is in the
extra-curricular activities more than in the classroom that this
sophisticated use of knowledge occurs. In the classroom, knowledge is
organized according to a curriculum and in this sense the term
extra-curricular is quite right. For in out-of-class activities,
knowledge is acquired or transmitted much as in adult life -- in a
random, unorganized fashion that provides both excitement and
frustration to that life. Learning to deal with this disorderly flow is
an important part of becoming an educated adult. Further,
extra-curricular activities provide training in what some psychologists
have come to call social intelligence, which can include not only
understanding the information that words give us, but the enormous
variety of non-verbal data available to us ranging from interpreting the
mood of a group to comprehending the meaning of a turn of the lip. To
train students to only understand words and printed symbols is to cheat
their education.
For the parent, there is a special virtue of
extra-curricular activities: they permit the parent to enter the school
life of the student in a manner no academic course offers. The parent
relies on report cards, an occasional term paper and teacher conferences
for some feeling of the what happens in the classroom. If my experience
is at all typical, further investigation into the academic environment
tends to produce curt, glib or over-generalized responses. But with
extra-curricular activities, the interest of the parent is actively
sought, whole dinner-table discussions can actually occur, and feelings
can be truly expressed. Thus the extra-curricular activity becomes a
rare experience that both parent and student can share, especially at a
time when words on other subjects may be hard to come by. To a school
administration this virtue may not seem a high priority; to parents, and
even students, it can be priceless.
Further, I think many
parents presume a broader and less rigid limit to education than some
educators do -- certainly more so than do many school boards and system
administrators. Parents often define education in a non-curricular way
-- blending academic, social and cultural goals and values. It may sound
vague to a professional but it is really only an amateur's holistic
vision. And it is a form of fraud for professional educators to suggest
that these goals can be met without the aid of extra-curricular
activities.
My own experience of late has been with drama and
sports. I have found in them advantages that are either absent or weak
in my childrens' classroom learning or which have supplemented or
strengthened what has occurred in the classroom; advantages that have
led me to regard these activities not just as a source of sharing or
pride, but as evidence that my sons' schools are doing what they claim.
As in the classroom, not always has the the lesson been learned, or
learned well, but at least it has been taught.
In sports, my sons
have learned to work in a group, to cooperate, and to understand and
value their peers for a variety of reasons. In some cases this
appreciation may come from their peers' skill, in other cases their
determination, helpfulness, or supportiveness. They have learned that in
real life the penalty for failure of effort may not merely be a bad
grade and annoyed parents and teachers, but the disappointment of a
whole group whose respect and friendship you seek.
While learning
to try harder, they have simultaneous learned how to fail. I watch my
sons' teams go down to defeat and think back to Little League years when
a bad loss could cast a pall on the house for a whole day. No longer.
They have also learned that success may not be an individual triumph at
all, but a joint mystery, as with a soccer team that won its league
championship not because it was blessed with stars but because this
highly individualistic group of players developed a remarkable ability
to make each other do better than they normally would and to become one
for a common goal. It was more than a championship; it was a priceless
lesson in the power of a community. to raise itself up collectively.
Sports
also teach the importance of concentration; they require the absorption
and use of a wealth of small data under extreme stress and time limits.
They teach respect and understanding of the human body. And at a
critical time of learning about one's self, they can provide a
confidence that may not be so easy to come by in other arenas.
Drama,
like sports, requires a concentration equal to anything in the
classroom. Like sports, functioning within a group is critical. Like
sports, the lessons learned are not only applicable to traditional
academic courses, but to becoming an educated adult.
One of these
lessons is the ability to memorize. It is remarkable that, given the
repeated need to memorize in school, so little time is spent developing
the skill. One of the few places in school where one can learn how to
memorize is during the production of a play.
Further, good drama
teachers can introduce their students to sophisticated forms of
character analysis that one would find in professional theater schools.
One of my sons was given an exercise that involved figuring out what the
characters were really thinking while they were saying their written
lines. This sort of study not only produces better actors and actresses
but better English students. Once you have seriously acted a part in a
play, whole new understandings await in your reading of other
literature.
Drama also requires a level of perfection that can
only come after one understands the importance of failing over and over
again until you get it right. Even the brightest student, used to
skimming material and spewing out the correct answer, can be brought to
earth by this requirement. A good drama teacher will make even the best
try to be better.
Finally, drama encourages the development of
self-confidence at an especially timely moment. For both psychological
and practical reasons, being able to "perform" may be one of the most
useful things one learns in school.
Of course, extra-curricular
activities can be abused by both students and school. But often this is
because of a tendency to use them as a form of star-shopping, a tendency
that "no pass, no play" only accentuates. If one is conscious of the
danger, however, it is not hard to avoid. At my high school, there was
not one spring play but a whole series of them. Every senior who wanted a
significant part in a play got one, indeed was urged to take one. Every
year, there would be surprises, as someone not considered a "drama
type" turned in an especially good performance. I think many of us who
were not "drama types" are glad today that someone pushed us into tryng
it at least once.
As I await another high school graduation, I
think back about the teachers who were the real influences of the last
twelve years. And the names that come to mind include, far out of
proportion, coaches and drama and music teachers. I can't conceive of
those 12 years without them, nor without them would I have considered
that my son had received a decent education. Those school boards around
the country that think otherwise are not raising educational standards,
but lowering them by removing a part of what should be the basic
curriculum of any student whatever their grade in math or English.
No comments:
Post a Comment