‘When is the next Blog, Sir?’ a boy asked me at school last
week.
‘Don’t put me under pressure,’ I replied. ‘It is usually when the mood takes me. Perhaps if you do an Afrikaans or English
essay every week, I will do a blog every week as well.’
He didn’t think that was a good idea.
Since I have acquired a fancy mobile phone, I have developed
the habit of reading News24 on my phone in bed before tackling the new
day. On reading the news this morning
(Friday 27 April), I felt a definite blog coming on….
I was motivated by a report by a DA spokesmen, Helen
Lamoela, who commenting on the recent rape of a pre-teen girl, said: We need
to interrogate the concept of masculinity and re-frame the role of boys and men
so that they can become model men, fathers, husbands, brothers and uncles.
One of the (understandable) tragedies of our current South
African education system is the fixation on Matric Results and the resultant
judging of schools by a once-off set of exams.
In an endeavour to ‘raise standards’ in schools, the pressure from above
to conform to this charade is immense.
Schools’ reputations can be made or broken by their ability to insist on
their pupils being able to memorise – or to regurgitate a syllabus. So now we have about 65% of the pupils (that
is, of those who actually write the
matric exam) who have mastered - to some degree - the art of answering exam
questions.
Some years ago, I taught James Taylor in my 1995 matric
Latin class. He was one of the more able
academic students I have taught in my career.
To my intense displeasure at the time – as he was clearly an A++ student
– he insisted on not learning his setwork which we had spent an inordinate
amount of time dissecting in our classes.
‘I want to treat it as unseen
in the final exam,’ he explained to my intense incredulity, ‘it is more of a
challenge that way…’
If I remember correctly, he just missed his Subject
Distinction for Latin, but no matter, as he went on to soar at UCT and I have
no doubt that he is soaring in whatever area of life has the privilege of his
acute and perceptive mind.
Are we in schools, as Helen Lamoela implies above, producing
enquiring minds, curious individuals, caring people? Is the system not forcing teachers to
concentrate on right brain activities?
Or is the education system, as Steve Jobs is reported as saying in his
superb biography, producing accomplished users of apps, but not enough
designers and inventors of apps?
Now that is a
challenge for those of us in education.
All of us involved in the education of boys know the challenges which those walnut-like amygdalae play in
the development of young men. That
prefrontal cortex controlling the emotions plays havoc with the decision making
of adolescent boys. Current studies of the brain show that the connections
between the amygdala and the cognitive brain are not fully developed until the
age of 23 in men…..How many parents of teenage boys over the ages have not
prayed for that process to be accelerated?
The Saturday Evening Post: April 1911 |
There is not a teacher anywhere who has not had some version
of this situation where two boys end up in front of them with tear-stained
faces and bruised and bloody cheeks.
‘And now?’ you say.
‘He tripped me,’ one of them will say eventually, ‘so I hit
him.’
‘Why?’ you ask. ‘Aren’t you two meant to be friends?’
‘Oh, yes,’ they both hasten to assure you with alacrity.
Experienced teachers
will then know better than to ask why the fight occurred. Those undeveloped communication wires
connecting the brain with the amygdala will take the blame.... And so begins the long process of counselling
with these two boys.
The location of the Amygdalae |
Aren’t principals of girls’ schools lucky, Mrs Harding? According to the experts, you don’t have
amygdala problems at WGHS. That is why I
continue to maintain vociferously that Headmasters of Boys’ Schools deserve to
be paid more!
Research is showing that it IS possible to hasten that
process of developing the communication wiring.
Reading; debating; learning a
music instrument; travel; different and varied experiences; undertaking service
activities - all of these promote the type of sensitive
and empathetic men that Helen Lamoela is so keen that this country turns out.
Of course, research is also showing that development of the
adolescent male brain is retarded by alcohol, nicotine, drug usage etc - but
that is the subject of a separate blog.
However, could that explain the actions of those men who raped a
pre-teen girl?
Where better to enhance these skills than in schools? And so, Mr President, why is it not a key
feature of government policy to ensure quality teachers are coming into the
system? Teachers who realise that there
is more to a successful school than regurgitating syllabi? Teachers who realise the Big Picture in that
they are helping to develop those ‘model men’ mentioned above which are so
badly wanted? Teachers who understand
that they have the potential to forge a genuine Rainbow Nation? Teachers who who instinctively know that ongoing
threats do not work and understand that the amygdalae of teenage boys are
easily fired up by emotional situations?
Let’s get our priorities right in this country. Make no mistake about it – there will be more
Malema’s, more corruption, more rapes of pre-teen girls until the realisation
hits home that producing ‘model men’ begins firstly in the home. After that, we at schools, with quality teachers, can build on that
foundation so that we can play our role in taking this new democracy of ours,
18 years old today, to claim its place proudly among the community of nations.
What parent of a teenage
boy does not recognise this statement from a medical journal: Teenage boys possess a notoriously short
fuse in their amygdala activation: they
tend to activate a primal stress response in social situations that would
probably be more satisfactorily resolved if they counted to 10 before
responding….
Perhaps every male in this
country should carry that note around with them!
In the meantime, my advice to parents regarding their
teenage sons? That 23rd
birthday is not that far away… Keep up that flailing sense of humour - and
blame his behaviour on his amygdalae!