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Home arrow The Blogs arrow Guest Columnists arrow To teach morality is neither to preach nor to indoctrinate; it is to explain.' -- Emile Durkheim

To teach morality is neither to preach nor to indoctrinate; it is to explain.' -- Emile Durkheim PDF Print E-mail
Posted by St Low   
Sunday, 12 October 2008 12:30

THINGS do not always work out the way we want them to. Take the case of moral education in schools.

Moral education was introduced to create a society of well-behaved and principled people, with the hope of reducing crime and corruption in society, and indiscipline in schools.

While non-Muslims attended moral education lessons, their Muslim classmates went for Islamic religious classes.

With so many religious rules and moral values poured into youngsters over the years, we should, logically, not be living in fear of snatch thefts, robberies, rape and violence.

The reality, however, is different. Indiscipline is swelling in schools, while crime and corruption continue to climb.

There are, of course, many factors, including economic inequities, lack of employment opportunities, police efficiency and the influx of foreigners, that impact on the crime rate.

But I can't help feeling that if more young people had indeed become upright, the rise in crime and corruption might not be so steep.

Isn't this evidence that all those religious and moral lessons have failed?

My generation, and those before me, did not trudge through moral education classes. But we did not turn out too badly.

Certainly, there were muggings and robberies in the earlier days, but people in housing estates then did not employ their own security guards or turn their houses into fortresses like they do today.

Also, if values such as tolerance, justice, fairness, courtesy and responsibility had been imbibed by those who were taught these religious and moral lessons, we should have greater racial understanding and a more equitable society today. Do we?

So what went wrong?

The fault, so far as education is concerned, appears to lie in the way religious and moral lessons are being taught.

Some of those who had gone through the lessons, including younger office colleagues, cannot remember what was taught.

If they are good citizens today, one of them said, it is despite the lessons, not because of them.

My son, who finished Form Five last year, said they were required to learn the values and definitions by heart, and so they did. To pass the exam, they had to regurgitate the values and definitions, which they did.

The student has to write the definitions exactly -- word for word -- as in the text. If the text, for instance, says "ahli keluarga" (member of the family) and he writes "anggota keluarga (which means the same thing), he will be failed. Ridiculous? Certainly.

Is it any wonder then that this drilling hardly ever produces a lasting commitment to any of the values taught?

I have heard parents say the education authorities are so dull, they don't realise this is not the way to teach morality.

That might be rather harsh, but I wonder if the education authorities have ever done follow-up studies to test the efficacy of the teaching methods?

I wonder, too, if they have seen the frightening correlation between the teaching of moral and religious lessons and the rise in crime, corruption and indiscipline?

Children should be taught virtues and moral habits so that they can lead good lives, both as individuals and as part of a cohesive society.

In fact, apart from attending to the intellectual development of the child, it is incumbent upon the school to help shape his or her character.

Such education needs to be both overt and covert: overt as in formal lessons and covert as in the school culture. Students pick up much from the behaviour of their teachers and peers; school traditions and rules also serve to nurture character.

During my time, character building was covert. But, it worked.

Today, with changed situations, I am inclined to think that a combination of both processes will work better. But not rote learning, no. One does not teach moral values as one does the mathematical tables.

There should be discussions, role-playing and also getting pupils to actually do virtuous deeds. The latter could include helping out at orphanages and older pupils giving tuition to the younger ones.

The lessons should be so designed as to help them reflect on what morality means, and to reason through moral problems. Interaction is indispensable.

The trouble is, our education authorities are treating children like computers to be programmed. Sure, they may give you the correct answer. But it defeats the purpose of having moral lessons if they do not internalise the values.

Any teaching approach that does not give students a reason, or motivation, to practise the values they have learnt, is, indubitably, a failure.

Students must also be exposed to the value systems of the various races. If the government is serious about nurturing unity, if it is serious about moulding responsible, thinking citizens, it should introduce programmes that enhance knowledge of each other's cultural mores and values.

For, you only fear what you don't understand. If our children are exposed to each other's cultures, including rituals and customs, then they will learn that there is nothing to fear.

- unnamed author, nst

Comments (6)Add Comment
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written by onnetline, October 12, 2008 12:39:01
Truly, what good or sound morality does our Prime Minister in waiting has, as leadership by example ?

Heard that he's a murder suspect and a womaniser too.
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written by avj, October 12, 2008 12:54:22
The only morality that many have learnt is the legacy of,"kepimpinan melalui teladan" by TDM. That is to break all the rules and justify it with an iron fist. So that he stays in power to continue his havok.
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written by Kuro Sun, October 12, 2008 14:01:51
I agree completely with you, especially as a student who went through this particular form of ‘teaching values’ when it was first implemented in secondary schools. Even we students at the time thought it was the stupidest thing ever thought of- how does memorizing moral values help a person to become more well-behaved, principled and human? Wouldn’t discussing the values and why they were brought forth, showing us living local examples who have shown these values, conducting mini-talks by students on values they have seen and heard everyday and etc. be far more productive? How does the exact replica of statements show a student what moral values actually are? Has the subject become a class to improve memorization?

Not to mention the teachers we have in school these days. Whatever happened to bright, enthusiastic, intelligent teachers who enticed their students to study with the beauty and magnificence of their subjects? Examinations show nothing if memorization is the only way students are getting their straight ‘A’s. And considering the graph they use to ensure high passes, it’s no wonder that local students do poorly in the job market.

What does the Education Ministry say to this? Or are they too busy pampering their children in international schools or schools overseas?
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written by AsamLaksa, October 12, 2008 16:15:45
I always thought that Pendidikan Moral is a complete waste of time thus I am truly immoral only scoring P5 in SPM. I didn't even bother to revise it.

Anyway, it's nonsensical to teach moral in the way it is taught. There is no overriding motive to enforce the teachings of Moral in class. For example you may teach morals in a religious class because the overriding motive is the fear of God. Thus they do not want to incur the wrath of God and burn in the afterlife.

What was the reason for Pendidikan Moral anyway? The real reason is not so much to teach morals as to allow uninterrupted Agama classes in school. The education ministry could not care less of the effectiveness of the Moral syllabus. When it first appeared the teachers themselves do not know how to teach it nor know what was expected in the exams. After a few years they got the hang of it and came up with memorising terms to score points. Is that really Moral teaching?

Basically the Education Ministry wants Muslim students to undergo Agama classes. When I was in primary school I thought I had the option either to join the Agama class or the Moral class. I was wrong. Moral lessons were mostly play lessons and some of the Muslim primary students were envious of our 'free' period then.

I have no trouble with Agama classes for Muslim students though I would prefer it, like all other religious lessons, be carried out outside of school hours. That way you have an extra time slot for let's say improving English.

The missionary school I was at would get their Catholic students to attend Catechism classes during Pendidikan Moral too. This enforces my opinion that the Ministry doesn't care about Pendidikan Moral. It just wants to fill in the time for non-Muslims and non-Catholics. Tell you what, why not dump the Pendidikan Moral and get religious teachers from various religions to come teach, preferably after school. This may turn out to be a more effective moral education. The fear of an all powerful, all merciful God does wonders to peoples' behaviour unless you are a politician that is.

Anyway, I have an idea which has been in my head for about 2 years now of replacing Pendidikan Moral with an un-examinable class for ethical and critical thinking lessons. This would be preferably a no holds barred session in school. May require moderation. Participation is voluntary. The aim is to teach the students about outside society and to think outside the box.

Example of topics would be crime, drugs, smoking, alcohol, the poor, pre-marital sex, teen pregnancy, safe sex, the pillars of government, constitution, personal finance, personal safety, latest scientific discoveries, mass media, etc.. Depending on topic, some may require a short lecture but all sessions should be about discussion, not preachings. It may teach the students many things which are not covered in the current syllabus. Get the students talking about stuff like above and you will impress educators all over the world. Of course the above would need further polishing.
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written by arazak, October 12, 2008 16:19:01
How can you ask those people in the Ministry of Education, who are mainly UMNO members that have minimal morale standing (and maybe none at all), to design implement "morale education".

The Malay says it is like "the mother crab asking it's offspring to walk straight and not sideways" ("ketam menyuruh anaknya berjalan betul")!

Maybe they should introduce and teach these subjects instead:

"Bribing for beginers"
"Looting the Public Funds without qualms"
"Pendidikan rasuah"
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written by Dongra Dude, October 12, 2008 18:03:38
Well said bro arazak. The subject mentioned essential especially for our youngters oral subject looking at declining moral values especially our leaders of the Nation who suppose to be impeccable and be examplary to future generation. Corruption and Misuse of Public Fund are of great concern now.
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