| No.41 June 2004 |
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(Note: An expanded version of this discussion
appears as an on-line lecture on the web site of the Olympic Studies
Centre at Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona)
Introduction
In the article titled Olympic education: Challenges
for theory and practice in the 21st century (Binder, 2001), two challenges
were identified. One challenge focused on fundamental questions of modern
pedagogics (Mueller, 1994). It was suggested that “a pedagogy
of Olympism be defined as teaching the values of Olympism, rather than
teaching about the values of Olympism” (p. 17).
“We have only just begun to understand the
role of emotion and affect in the learning and teaching of values. We
have only just begun to understand the role of imagination in helping
children, youth and athletes to visualize a better performance, hope
for a brighter and healthier future and a “better and more peaceful
world”.” (p. 17)
This discussion explores current thinking with respect to pedagogical
strategies that are necessary to or seem to facilitate the development
of and the reinforcement of positive values and behaviours related to
the teaching of Olympism. Reference will be made to current curriculum
literature in the general field of values education, and also to literature
on the topic of values development within sport education and physical
education programs.
Fundamental to the understanding of Olympism is its emphasis on an
educational mandate. In fact, the “Olympic idea cannot be understood
without an understanding of its educational mission” (Gessman,
1992, p. 33). This educational mandate is outlined in several of the
Fundamental Principles of the Olympic Charter (2000).
Fundamental
Principle #2 – Olympism is a philosophy of life; exalting and
combining in a balanced whole the qualities of body, will and mind.
Blending sport with culture and education, Olympism seeks to create
a way of life based on the joy found in effort, the educational value
of good example and respect for universal fundamental ethical principles.
Fundamental Principle #3 – The goal of Olympism
is to place everywhere sport at the service of the harmonious development
of man, with a view to encouraging the establishment of a peaceful society
concerned with the preservation of human dignity.
This is a values education mandate. Some of the specific positive values
referred to in these principles include a respect for balance in the
human character between aspects of mind, body and spirit, an understanding
of the joy found in effort, an emphasis on peaceful behaviour, and respect
for others (here described as preservation of human dignity). The principles,
while somewhat awkward in their English wording, also include direction
for an Olympic pedagogy. That is, the fundamental principles seem to
suggest components of a possible teaching and learning strategy. Note
the references to such strategies as “blending sport with culture
and education,” setting “good examples,” and encouraging
participation in sport as an educational situation in which these values
can be developed. Orientation for the Reader
It is hoped that this paper will inaugurate a worldwide discussion on
the topic of Olympic pedagogy. In a post-modern milieu is it even thinkable
to speak about “universal fundamental ethical principles”
as the Olympic Charter does? It is true that ethical issues such as
fair play, violence, cheating, abuse of performance enhancing drugs,
commercialism, equity, etc. receive much media attention and are frequently
addressed in papers and presentations at Olympic sport and physical
education conferences. They seem to have worldwide relevance. Unfortunately
the pedagogy of these issues is rarely addressed. How are fair play/ethical
behaviours learned? How can they be taught, and how can this teaching
be supported? The literature also appears silent on the cross-cultural
issues. How, for example, is fair play understood and experienced by
people in different cultural contexts?
Educators, like all people, are products of their own cultural, political
and educational milieaux. They see the world through the filters of
their particular educational and systemic orientations. Hans Georg Gadamer
(1989) describes this filter as a “horizon” defining the
boundaries of understanding between people. Thus, for example, this
paper is somewhat defined or boundaried by its dependence on Euro-American
understandings (literature) available in English. It is also somewhat
boundaried by the North-American, specifically Canadian, orientation
of its author to schools, educational systems and curriculum.
Hopefully, this does not mean that the understanding and insights of
the author of this paper do not have meaning and relevance for people
in other educational circumstances. Rather, it means that readers (each
with his or her own “horizon”) should approach this paper
with a reflective orientation, engaging the author in a silent dialogue,
and reflecting on questions such as:
Hopefully, in the not too distant future, a silent dialogue, such as
the one recommended for a reading of this paper, could become an international
exchange of ideas through internet discussions, a conference or a series
of workshops. Teaching Olympic Values
Values development or values/moral education is a complex process that
takes place in all aspects of the lifeworld of children and youth. In
traditional cultures, influences such as the family, the immediate community
and religion were the key factors in this process. These factors continue
to have a significant influence. In most countries today, however, the
responsibility for developing values is also assigned to schools in
formal teaching settings Global influences such as TV, the internet,
population displacement because of war and migration, and the living
together of people from many different cultures further complicate the
processes of helping children and youth develop positive values.
Since the 1960s curriculum development related to
values education in North America has been dominated by the moral development
theory of Lawrence Kohlberg.
In a study to test the “effects on the moral development of children
in physical education using educational activities selected from Fair
Play for Kids (Binder, 1995),” Gibbons, et.al. (1995) reported
the following:
“Results supported the main hypothesis that implementation of
a specially designed educational program can effect changes in several
facets of moral development…These results support theory and empirical
research that enhancing moral growth is not an automatic consequence
of participation in physical activity, but rather that systematic and
organized delivery of theoretically grounded curricula is necessary
to make a difference.” (p. 253)
Gibbons et. al’s study, used empirical measures to test before
and after responses in the areas of moral judgment, moral reason, moral
intention, and prosocial behaviour. These measure were either based
on or correlated closely with the stages of moral development model
developed by Rest (1986). The researchers note that, “Although
the products of this study (i.e., changes in quantitative scores) were
highly visible, the processes by which these changes occurred were less
discernible” (p. 254). It is the “less discernible”
processes and the pedagogical decision-making that contributes to these
processes that have now become the focus for curriculum theory related
to ethics and moral education.
Models of moral development still provide a platform for research on
isolated aspects of moral judgment, but moral development theory no
longer dominates the discussions in moral and ethical education. A profound
shift in perspective has taken place, exemplified in the transition
within the writing of Lawrence Walker one of Canada’s well-known
researchers in the field of moral education. In 1994 in an article titled
“Whither moral psychology?” Walker writes:
“…it has become apparent that this pervasive influence [Kohlberg’s]
has imparted a rather constricted view of moral functioning, which we
must now strive to overcome. This constricted view of moral functioning
arose from Kohlberg’s a priori and consequently restricted notion
of morality (following in the Platonic and Kantian traditions in moral
philosophy which emphasize justice and individualism) and from his impoverished
description of the moral agent… “(p. 1)
In exploring this shift in perspective and its implications for Olympic
education, I want to highlight the works of four scholars: Martha Nussbaum
(1986) - a philosopher, Carol Gilligan (1982) - a psychologist, and
Nel Noddings (1984) and Maxine Greene (1995) - both educational philosophers
and curriculum theorists. Their work provides a critique of cognitive-based,
moral development models¾in particular the tendency of these
models to simplify complex human interactions, and also to discount
groups of people that don’t fit the model. Their work also offers
helpful direction for curriculum development in ethical/moral education
in the new century. Thus their work has profound implications for Olympic
educators.
Martha Nussbaum
In The fragility of goodness (1986), Nussbaum refers to ancient Greek
literature as she explores questions such as: In what ways is the good
human life dependent on things that human beings do not control? What
are the limits of “reason” in the search for the good life?
How do human beings deal with the contingent conflict among values in
their lives? Nussbaum is clearly uncomfortable with abstract discussions
of moral dilemmas, and emphasizes the importance of emotion.
“Our Anglo-American philosophical tradition has tended to assume
that the ethical text should, in the process of inquiry, converse with
the intellect alone; it should not make its appeal to the emotions,
feelings, and sensory responses. Plato explicitly argues that ethical
learning must proceed by separating the intellect from our other merely
human parts... The conversation we have with a work of tragic poetry
is not like this. Our cognitive activity, as we explore the ethical
conception embodied in the text, centrally involves emotional response.
We discover what we think about these events partly by noticing how
we feel; our investigation of our emotional geography is a major part
of our search for self-knowledge.” (p. 15-16)
There are two aspects of Nussbaum’s work that may have implications
for teaching Olympic values. She argues in support of an approach to
ethics that focuses on the lived experiences and moral conflicts of
real people in real situations, as opposed to intellectual discussions
of abstract moral dilemmas. She also emphasizes narrative¾drama,
poetry, story¾as important tools for ethical education.
“Our pupil must learn to appreciate the diversity
of circumstances in which human beings struggle for flourishing; this
means not just learning some facts about classes, races, nationalities,
and sexual orientations other than her own, but being drawn into those
lives through the imagination, becoming a participant in those struggles.”
(p. 51)
Carol Gilligan
In A Different Voice: Psychological Theory
and Women’s Development by Carol Gilligan (1982), a former
student of Lawrence Kohlberg, questioned the conclusions that Kohlberg
reached about the moral reasoning of women and girls based on his model
of the “hierarchical stages of moral reasoning.” She points
out that Kohlberg’s (and Piaget’s) studies, carried out
to develop the model and its descriptors, were based on sample populations
of boys and men. She also notes that Kohlberg, like Freud and Piaget
before him, all observe that somehow girls do not fit their models.
When women do not conform to the standards of psychological expectation,
she says, the conclusion has generally been that something is wrong
with the women (p. 14).
For example, she describes a 1976 study on the organization and structure
of the playtime activities of 181 fifth-grade, white middle-class children,
aged ten and eleven, which reported sex differences:
“…boys play out of doors more often than girls do; boys
play more often in large and age-heterogeneous groups; they play competitive
games more often, and their games last longer than girls’ games…Boys’
games appeared to last longer not only because they required a higher
level of skill and were thus less likely to become boring, but also
because, when disputes arose in the course of a game, boys were able
to resolve the disputes more effectively than girls…In fact, it
seemed that the boys enjoyed the legal debates as much as they did the
game itself, and even marginal players of lesser size or skill participated
equally in these recurrent squabbles. In contrast, the eruption of disputes
among girls tended to end the game.” (p. 10)
In this study, the researcher’s conclusion (Lever, 1976) was
the same as Piaget’s: that the legal sense, which Piaget considers
essential to moral development, is “far less developed in little
girls than in boys” (Piaget, 1965, p. 77).
These gender differences that are noted in early childhood with respect
to children’s games are even more obvious, Gilligan notes, at
puberty. According to Piaget, she says, “children learn the respect
for rules necessary for moral development by playing rule-bound games
and Lawrence Kohlberg adds that these lessons are most effectively learned
through the opportunities for role-taking that arise in the course of
resolving disputes” (p. 10). Gilligan suggests that “rather
than elaborating a system of rules for resolving disputes, girls subordinated
the continuation of the game to the continuation of relationships”
(p. 10). Gilligan argues that:
“Sensitivity to the needs of others and the assumption of responsibility
for taking care lead women to attend to voices other than their own
and to include in their judgment other points of view. Women’s
moral weakness, manifest in an apparent diffusion and confusion of judgment,
is thus inseparable from women’s moral strength, an overriding
concern with relationships and responsibilities.” (pp. 16-17)
“The reluctance to judge, “she suggests, “may itself be indicative of the care and concern for others that infuse the psychology of women’s development and are responsible for what is generally seen as problematic in its nature” (pp. 16-17). Nel Noddings
In Caring: A Feminine Approach to Ethics and
Moral Education, Noddings (1984) proposes an ethics based on caring,
and grounded in receptivity, relatedness, and responsiveness. In her
book Noddings comments on moral development.
“Many of us in education are keenly aware of the distortion that
results from undue emphasis on moral judgments and justification. Lawrence
Kohlberg’s theory, for example is widely held to be a model for
moral education, but is actually only a hierarchical description of
moral reasoning. It is well known, further, that the description may
not be accurate. In particular, the fact that women seem often to be
“stuck” at stage three might call the accuracy of the description
into question…”
“Women, perhaps a majority of women, prefer to discuss moral problems in terms of concrete situations. They approach moral problems not as intellectual problems to be solved by abstract reasoning but as concrete human problems to be lived and to be solved in living…Faced with a hypothetical moral dilemma, women often ask for more information.” (p. 96) Noddings recommends that schools should be “deliberately redesigned
to support caring and caring individuals” (p.182). She describes
four fundamental strategies for nurturing the ethical ideal: dialogue,
practice, confirmation and modeling. Most sport and physical educators
would argue that sport played in the spirit of the Olympic ideals offers
a context within which all of these strategies can be applied and practiced.
With respect to confirmation, Noddings highlights the importance of
the teacher’s special relationship with a student.
“A teacher cannot “talk” this ethic. She must live
it, and that implies establishing a relation with the student. Besides
talking to him and showing him how one cares, she engages in cooperative
practice with him. He is learning not just mathematics or social studies;
he is also learning how to be one-caring. By conducting education morally,
the teacher hopes to induce an enhanced moral sense in the student…Everything
we do, then, as teachers, has moral overtones. Through dialogue, modeling,
the provision of practice, and the attribution of best motive, the one-caring
as teacher nurtures the ethical ideal.” (p. 179)
“Teachers model caring,” she suggests, “when they steadfastly encourage responsible self-affirmation in their students” (Noddings, 1988, p. 222). Such a statement could be made with equal conviction for a coach’s special relationship with his/her athletes. Highlighting the critical role of teachers as “one-caring”
in their relationships with students and as models of ethical action
should be a prominent component of future Olympic educational initiatives.
Every teaching/coaching day is filled with hundreds of instant pedagogical
moments. In each moment, teachers and coaches have to make an appropriate
response. It is in those important instant pedagogical moments, when
a teacher or a coach makes a response that inspires, or affirms or encourages
or corrects a student or athlete, that they have the opportunity to
gently nudge them along the route to fair and ethical living.
The ideas and conclusions of Nussbaum, Gilligan and Noddings point
Olympic educators away from learning values through a teaching and learning
process based on resolving ethical dilemmas through cognitive and well-reasoned
application of universal concepts and principles, and towards a teaching
and learning process that is much more complex, that helps young people
to explore their emotional as well as their intellectual responses to
ethical issues; and that emphasizes care and compassion for others.
Olympic educators need to move away from the safety and certainty of
teaching rules, penalties and universally applicable principles, and
move towards an imaginative, holistic, diverse but inclusive vision
for teaching Olympic values.
Maxine Greene
To try and understand what this “move towards” a new vision
for the pedagogy of Olympic education means, I am drawn to the work
of Maxine Greene. In Releasing the Imagination, Greene emphasizes that
teaching and learning – in schools as well as in sport - are matters
of “breaking through barriers¾of expectation, of boredom,
of predefinition” (p. 14). “It is imagination,” she
says, “that opens our eyes to worlds beyond our experience¾enabling
us to create, care for others, and envision social change” (book
jacket). Imagination has to be part of all good teaching and good coaching.
Simply lecturing about basketball will not develop a basketball player.
Somehow teachers and coaches communicate ways of doing things that allow
learners to put into practice in their own way what they are seeing,
hearing and experiencing. “To teach, at least in one dimension,
is to provide persons with the knacks and know-how they need in order
to teach themselves” (p. 14). This is a form of inventiveness,
a use of imagination.
It is imagination - “with its capacity to both make order out
of chaos and open experience to the mysterious and the strange”
(p. 23) that moves teachers and coaches, students and athletes to journey
where they have never been. The role of imagination, she says, “is
not to resolve, not to point the way, not to improve. It is to awaken,
to disclose the ordinarily unseen, unheard, and unexpected” (p.
28).
Greene celebrates the arts in this process. “Encounters with
the arts have a unique power to release imagination. Stories, poems,
dance performances, concerts, paintings, films, plays¾all have
the potential to provide remarkable pleasure for those willing to move
out toward them and engage with them.” (p. 27). I would argue
that this “imaginative” journey also takes place in physical
and sports education as students link mind and spirit in the development
of their physical capabilities and in the “agon” with an
opponent.
Maxine Greene suggests that it is through the stimulation of the imagination
that children come to see themselves and the possibilities of their
world in a different way. She emphasizes the fine arts as the place
where children’s imaginations can be best stimulated. Images from
the VISA “Olympics of the Imagination” program for the Sydney
Olympic Games demonstrate the power of an imaginative and exciting event
like an Olympic Games to bring the ideals of sport, peace, friendship
and fair play together in artistic representations. Conclusion
Pierre de Coubertin seemed to understand the importance of emotion and
imagination as pedagogical tools. In his planning for the promotion
and staging of Olympic Games, he integrated symbols, ceremonies, music,
pageantry and culture. And ever since the first of the modern Olympic
Games, the world has been inspired every four years with emotional stories
of athletic triumph and disappointment. These stories act as models
and as confirmation for future generations of potential high achievers.
An imaginative approach to the teaching of Olympic values is necessary
in order to help all of us break through the barriers of tradition and
prejudice that sometimes wrap us up in despair over doping, violence
and cheating. Olympic educators need to help their students and their
athletes see the world in a different way, see each other in a different
way, and change behaviours so that they act in a different way. If we
are not part of the solution, we are part of the problem.
Furthermore, as de Coubertin suggests, this stimulation of imagination
also takes place in the striving for physical excellence. Engagement
of the whole body in the physical domain engages not only the physical,
mental and intellectual domains, but also the emotional and imaginative
(e.g., positive visualization), and, according to the traditional teachings
of our First Nations people, the spiritual domain as well (Ghostkeeper).
Mind, body, spirit (and emotion) come together in a sublime performance
of any kind – athletic or artistic. De Coubertin suggests that
whether you are climbing a mountain or playing rugby, the effect is
the same.
I would argue that imagination must be an organizing principle for
all future Olympic education educational initiatives. The reason the
Olympic Movement brings sport and culture together is because together
they stimulate the imagination and motivate all of us to strive for
“a better and more peaceful world.” When master teachers
are engaged in Olympic education initiatives, this principle is clearly
evident in the work that they do with students. They engage their students
in art, music, storytelling and role-playing.
Today, every city bidding for an Olympic Games is required to outline
its plans for an Olympic education initiative. The challenge for all
who believe that sport and physical activity provide a context for learning
about life is how to realize these aims. As de Coubertin himself writes,
it is not enough to talk about them; they must be practiced. The legacy
of Olympic education, particularly at the elementary and middle school
age level could serve as a ‘bridge’ between the striving
for excellence by elite athletes and the reaching for dreams by a young
child jumping over a school bench. What greater legacy could there be? References
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Moral Education Forum, 20(1), 1-8. Dr. Deanna L. Binder, PhD
Director Institute for Olympic Education 845 Education South - University of Alberta Edmonton, AB T6G 2G5 Telephone: +1 780 4923178 Fax: +1 780 4920236 Web: www.olympiceducation.org http://www.icsspe.org/portal/bulletin-June2004.htm |