Thursday 29 January 2015

China's super-rich communist Buddhists

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-30983402

China's super-rich communist Buddhists


Could China be bringing Tibetan Buddhism in from the cold? There are new signs that while a crackdown on Tibetan nationalism continues, the atheist state may be softening its position towards the religion - and even the Dalai Lama.

That a former senior Communist Party official would invite the BBC into his home might, to most foreign journalists in China, seem an unlikely prospect.

Wednesday 28 January 2015

How the Teaching of Buddhism in Primary and Secondary Education could be improved



How the Teaching of Buddhism in Primary and Secondary Education could be improved

Contents

 Introduction


Background


In autumn 2014 the author (Mariano) was asked to write an article for the London RE Hub blog, on the topic on "How could the teaching of Buddhism be improved in schools?".
What follows is the result of discussions, some research and meetings by a number of people involved in supporting the teaching of Buddhism in schools in the London area. We are from different schools and traditions (e.g. Network of Buddhist Organisations, Buddhist Society, Jamyang, Various Zen/Chan groups,  various Theravada groups and temples, etc.), all loosely associated, each contributing to various degrees and in different manners. To name just a few, I should acknowledge the contributions made by Jo above all, and then Keith, Frank, Patcharin, Isabel, Kitty, Nalin and others , but I will also have to take personal responsibility for this article and its conclusions, as well as its shortcomings, wishful thinking, naiveties, etc.,  as the working arrangements are pretty loose among us.
I myself sit on the Southwark SACRE, help out with RE support at the Buddhist Society, and maintain the
 https://sites.google.com/site/dharmapeoplere/ website and related blogs providing an index to interesting online material.

Intended Audience


This article is aimed primarily at SACRE Buddhist Reps, B. Groups and Temples , RE Teachers, RE Advisors and individuals with an interest or stake in the teaching of Buddhism in schools, in the London and surrounding area.
No limitation or restriction is placed on the range of groups or individuals invited to participate, as the intended purpose is to improve dialogue, consultation and the quality of communication among the different stake-holders. In the light of past experience and current realities, no attempt is made to invite different groups and traditions to operate in close cooperation or produce shared resources, even though some of them will definitely want to.

While we are focussing on issues and opportunities in our geographical area, and we do think that local coordination groups revolving around local RE Hubs are the ideal choice, we are open to contributions from other parts of the Country, especially where such opportunities are absent and similar initiatives are struggling to come into their own.

Current Situation in Schools


From fact finding exercises and information gathered by various means in the course of the last few years (e.g. contact with RE Teachers around school visits), there is circumstantial evidence to support to a lesser or fuller extent the following statements:

Primary Education:


The Locally Agreed Syllabus still plays a central role in the delivery of the Curriculum.

Teaching and learning are mainly structured around Key Stages, the development of Thinking Skills and ‘Assessment of, for and as Learning’.

Timewise, coverage of Buddhism takes place mostly at Key Stage 2, and may involve units of work over several weeks,  and/or the odd day visit to a temple or school visitors from the faith community.
As for the manner in which it is delivered, the most common approaches are :
·         Systematic and traditional , addressing the usual main topics :  The Three Jewels, (i.e. Buddha, Dharma, Sangha), the Four Noble Truths, the Noble Eight Fold Path, etc.
·         Thematic : e.g. Exploration of religious founders, rites of passage and festivals, specific virtues and ethical values such as forgiveness, selfless and charitable behaviour, etc
·         Comparative approach : i.e. Buddhism taught alongside another faith such as Christianity.

The driving principles include an endeavour to make the curriculum relevant and engaging for the pupils; and to help them appreciate Buddhism as a world religion and a ‘viable option of faith’.
This is achieved through  :
·         The use of Artefacts , and texts
·         Exploration of non-denominational websites (particularly  CLEO, BBC Learning Clips, etc) and to a lesser extent Buddhist ones : e.g. Buddhanet and Clear Vision).
·         Visitors from the faith community engaging with pupils.
·         Temple visits (becoming less frequent due to cost involved)
·         Meditation and/or mindfulness exercises, and similar.

Children are likely to get exposure to a variety of traditions and schools : Thai Theravada (Traditional, Forest Sangha, Dhammakaya);  Sri Lankan Theravada ; Burmese Theravada; Japanese or Korean Zen; Chinese Chan; Tibetan, Triratna, Pure Land, NKT.

Few RE Teachers seem to know who their Buddhist representative is on SACRE, let alone having regular contact with them.

RE specialists either as subject-leads or otherwise are becoming a scarce resource.

Re Teachers gain/improve their knowledge of Buddhism and keep it up to date through :
·         Personal study consisting of the reading of Texts and
·         The exploration of topical websites,
·         Visits to Buddhist communities and participation to specific cultural events
·         More rarely training events organized by Buddhist organizations or monasteries (e.g. Amaravati). 

Secondary Education


Academies and new types of schools are difficult to provide for, support or monitor,  as they enjoy a fair amount of freedom in discharging their duties. For the same reason, the SACRE’s Local Agreed Syllabus might not be used extensively in these settings.

It is important to achieve more continuity and progression in the delivery of the Curriculum, be it via the local Agreed Syllabuses or National frameworks, both between Key Stages and between Primary and Secondary schools.
That would require more cooperation/coordination between Secondary and Primary teachers around development work, or even just ensuring that the provision of RE in Primary education does take place and covers the fundamentals, to ensure continuity and progression. However it is difficult to see how this can be facilitated outside a proper framework.

Aspects of Buddhism which are most likely to have been covered by the time students enter secondary school include :
·         Basics: Life of Buddha, Four Noble Truths, The Noble Eight Fold Path, The Three Jewels ( Buddha, Dharma, Sangha); 
·         Liturgy: Buddhist festivals, Buddhist special/sacred places, Symbols and Iconographic Representations;  specific Rituals such as chanting, meditation, bowing, taking Refuge, etc
·         Ethics: Buddhist responses to good and evil;  sins vs unskilful actions; retribution vs karma
·         Cultural context and influences on Buddhism, e.g. in China :Taoism, Confucianism; in Japan: Shintoism; in the Indian subcontinent : Vedas, Tantra, etc.
Obviously this will be dependent upon time provision at KS1/2.

In the main, resources used to structure learning include:
·         ‘Thinking skills’ (see http://www.brainboxx.co.uk/a3_aspects/pages/ThinkingSkills.htm)
·         To a lesser degree Blair’s Face to Faith Foundation: https://www.facetofaithonline.org/

Other approaches derived from Buddhist roots are used only by a few, and the most widespread would be : ‘Mindfulness in the classroom’ (e.g. http://www.mindfulschools.org/training/curriculum-training/?gclid=COSWnPTkn8MCFXQatAodp0cAYA)

Engaging quality support materials and resources are always needed, and in short supply.

For Guidance and Resources, Teachers of RE are likely to rely on :
·         Websites (e.g. Clear Vision, Buddhanet, BBC, etc.),
·         LEA Agreed Syllabuses,
·         Academic and other literature about Buddhism;

The delivery methods and media include Video/DVD/Audio, Story Telling/Music/Poetry, Text Books, Websites resources, Artefacts.

Year 8 in Key Stage 3 is when the teaching of Buddhism is likely to be at its peak, being spread across a wide range of time slots during the three years.
However we get the impression that in some schools the teaching of Buddhism is paid lip service to, if not ignored altogether.

Different approaches to teaching may appear at different stages, be they :
·         an Introduction to Buddhism inclusive of aspects of contemporary practice in different Buddhist communities, 
·         or a more systematic theme based exploration,
·         or in comparative study with other traditions.

Strategies used for teaching are extensive and initially may include: 
Reading/Writing, Whole class teaching, Discussion and debate, Group Work, Linking to pupil experience, Written Assignments, Teacher Exposition, Peer Assessment, Self-Assessment, Research Investigation, Tasks intended to develop subject specific language/technical terms, Tests/Exam, Drama/role play.

Later we might see an increased usage of Presentations, OCR (Oxford, Cambridge and RSA) Examination Syllabus, AQA (Assessment and Qualifications Alliance) exam questions, and visits to Buddhist centres

Teachers Training:
·         There is a need for more qualified specialists in the secondary field.
·         And teachers would prefer to attend training events during daytime and term time

RE Teachers’ contact with the Buddhist Community and Representatives


Generally speaking, delivery of the Curriculum benefits from closer cooperation with the Buddhist community.  
However most RE teachers do not seem to know who their Buddhist rep is, and this could suggest that very few secondary RE teachers enjoy a constructive relationship with their SACRE overall,  or even that many SACREs do not have a Buddhist representative to advise them.

Ideas for improving the teaching of Buddhism  from the Teachers’ perspective


·         More interaction with the local Buddhist community for both teachers and school children, both in the classroom and out on a day trip

·         Good quality multimedia and interactive material targeted at the appropriate level;
The material should be affordable or free; existing material is patchy (e.g.’ GCSE bitesize’ does not cover Buddhism)

·         Method and practice of teaching : the Agreed Syllabus could include and outline methods and practices for teaching Buddhism, more in line with its view of the world and
approach to life, not just lists of contents, or topics taken in isolation and shoe-horned into an ill-fitting RE teaching model.  To put it bluntly:
-       Buddhism is a non-theistic religion to start with, and boldly puts the Four Noble Truths at the heart of its teachings, laying out a path to be walked, rather than preaching salvation through the Mercy and/or Revelation by a (personal) Godhead;
-       Secondly it does not place as much emphasis on social engagement as a practice, though it recognizes its value in healing the artificial divide between me and other, but rather encourages introspective examination and development of awareness;
-       nor is it overly concerned with the dynamics and rituals surrounding sexuality, as some other traditions are; etc.

Interesting article here, for whoever might want to investigate further : http://www.uni.edu/coe/jrae/New_Folder/Jarow_Peripatetic.pdf
            Quoting:
Content-focus, as the all-in-all of an instructional scenario, only touches certain aspects of experience, usually verbal/analytic ones. This is particularly problematic in the teaching of Buddhist traditions, since so much of the “material” is dependent upon psycho-physical awareness: how one sits, breathes, and moves.’

The Buddhist Community and Religious Education in Schools


The current situation


Generally speaking the Buddhist community at large is not fully aware of recent developments in the teaching of RE in schools, and the consequent need for the faith communities to step in and fill the gaps.
In the last few years Religious Education in Schools has been run down, and the net result is that:
·         RE Resources have drastically been cut back at all levels, from SACREs to Schools
·         RE Teachers do not receive sufficient training, and  non-specialist staff is being used to fill in the gaps even though they might lack the skills, knowledge and confidence to teach RE
·         Teaching hours have been cannibalized by ‘more important’ subjects
·         Schools cannot afford buying quality RE material anymore
·         Online resources are patchy, non-comprehensive, mostly do not conform to the requirements and formats dictated by the syllabuses, and a few of those are of poor quality.
·         RE Advisors have been made redundant, and invaluable skills and depth of knowledge have been lost, that cannot be easily or readily replaced.
·         Providers of resources and training facilities for CPD (Continuous Professional Training) have been reducing their involvement and withdrawing altogether from the field, as not viable any longer, commercially speaking.

Generally speaking Buddhist groups or networks are only marginally engaging with Religious Education in schools, and those involved in publishing and distributing educational material and resources are struggling to survive.

The NASACRE recruitment drive to fill in SACRE rep vacancies where required has come to a halt. The suspicion is that as many as a third of the Local Authorities do not have an active Buddhist Rep, across the UK (not as bad in London).  It is difficult to state with any certainty as in general relevant information is not made available by the SACRE to the public, and no central unambiguous guidelines have been issued concerning the procedures for the notifications of vacancies, selection criteria and enlisting/onboarding procedures.

The fact that no official Buddhist Endorsing Authorities for these matters have being identified/appointed, only compounds the issue.

Besides no training programme exist within the Buddhist community to prepare prospective candidates for representational duties vis-à-vis the whole faith community in their Local Authority.

Our list of SACRE Buddhist Reps is patchy and out of date.

There is rather poor intrafaith collaboration among the Buddhist Groups on these matters, save for the odd communication aimed at providing schools with visitors whenever requested.

As a Buddhist community, we are only partially able to provide comprehensive online resources tailored to the educational requirements, either free or at an affordable cost.  And that is even more the case if we only consider non-tradition specific resources.

No nationwide provision is made for the training of new and/or existing SACRE Reps; however some local SACRE provide bespoke training in this area.
As a mitigating factor we are in possession of training material for SACRE Reps produced by  NASACRE a few years ago. However no regular enlisting/training event is held by the Buddhist community.

The list of School visitors from a Buddhist background is limited both numerically and in regard to geographical reach. They are mostly volunteers, some of them in full-time jobs, and most of them do not receive any financial help from their own organizations; and so they are only able/willing to help on a saltuary basis.

No provision is made for the training of new and/or existing school visitors/speakers

We have got no means of monitoring and evaluating the school work generated around Buddhism;  nor do we facilitate the process whereby older schoolchildren  can interact and request advice from representatives of the Buddhist community : at the moment it happens only occasionally and through the investigative work of their teachers.

We lack skills for the revision of the local Syllabuses, normally carried out in the context of an Agreed Syllabus Conference

Our database of Local Buddhist groups and contacts in the South of England is out of date

We have only occasional contact with RE Teachers, and the same goes for RE Advisors: the result is that we are unaware of their needs and issues, and they of ours.

For the last few years and until recently, representation to the National bodies (Religious Education Council and NASACRE mainly) has been rather passive or even non-existent at times.

What needs to be done


The Buddhist Community in general, and the various organizations representing it, need to step into the frame and develop a long term strategy for a sustained Buddhist involvement in the delivery of Religious Education in schools. Ideally an Endorsing Authority and/or Clearing House should be established (but given the state of intra-faith affairs, more likely 2 or 3 of them is a more realistic target), with the following remit:

·         As a partner to Local Authorities and Central Government in planning and delivering RE
·         As a provider of quality and comprehensive Buddhist educational resources both online and as publications, tailored to the requirements and formats demanded by the Local Agreed Syllabuses and national directives, covering all key stages, from pre-school to Higher Education.
·         To kick-start a recruitment drive for both SACRE Buddhist reps and speakers/visitors to schools, and keep the initiative going for the long term.
·         To organize a long-term programme of training for SACRE Reps, Speakers and even RE Teachers with regular events to be held in central London, at least once or twice a year
·         To establish formal communication channels and maintain contacts with the RE professional bodies, mainly:  NATRE, RE Teachers , www.natre.org.uk ; AERIAC,  RE Advisors, RE Advisers,Inspectors and Consultants:  http://www.areiac.org.uk/ ; NASACRE : http://www.nasacre.org.uk/ ; REC, Religious Education Council: http://religiouseducationcouncil.org.uk/ ; AULRE, Association of University RE Lecturesrs : www.aulre.org.uk
·         To establish communication channels and maintain contacts with Local SACREs , and become their initial point of reference whenever in need for advice on Buddhist matters or for the filling in of vacancies
·         To establish contacts with schools  and develop a strategy around school visitors, and school visits to temple.
·         To develop communication channels for facilitating interaction between Secondary schoolchildren and Buddhist Representatives via Social Media and the like , for the valorisation of the work produced by them, and to offer advice where required; that will also facilitate interaction and resource sharing among students of RE across schools, authorities and age-groups.
·         To provide guidance for our volunteers with regards to :
-       participation in Collective Worship;
-       how to teach Buddhism to children of different ages;
-       protocols for school visits and days out to temples;
-       to encourage speakers to promote the ‘Many traditions, One Way’ inclusive approach;
-       provide them with regularly updated lists of best of breed online resources etc.  


How do we make it happen


Given the state of relations between Buddhist Organisations and the past history of collaborative ventures, enthusiasm needs to be tempered by realism here.
What is clear is that a lot of the leg-work can be done in collaboration with other groups and organisations , e.g. training programmes, revision of syllabuses, House Clearing for School visits and SACRE vacancies, etc. 
And so the Kalyana Mitra (Buddhist Chaplaincy support) modus operandi, inclusive but independent of any organisation and yet supported by many, could provide a good model, and ideally we should try and involve stake-holders and interested people from a variety different traditions, and even just sympathizers.

It is also important that we work in close collaboration with at least a few sympathetic and experienced Teachers of RE and/or RE Advisors, to ensure that the effort is well targeted and effective.

We need to become technically smart: we need to device suitable mechanisms for enabling/facilitating communications and conference calls across a wide area: Volunteers could be located as far as Cornwall, or Yorkshire.  We also need Wi-Fi at the Buddhist Society and other hosting venues  to enable multimedia presentations of online content during events or meetings, as well as for conference calls (e.g. via Skype or Hangouts).
As for the provision of comprehensive educational resources, the different groups, organisations and networks will want to come up with their own.
Hopefully in this way the Buddhist RE Support Group (RE.Bu.S ?) will attract support from the wider Buddhist community while mindfully steering away from the usual pitfalls and political minefields.

Thank you for your attention.
Feedback can be sent to mmarcigaglia[at]gmail.com, as well as provided as a comment to this blog entry.