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Hmmmm...okay. In my country ( New Zealand ) meditation has never been a part of the school curriculum...
Well it was never part of the curriculum while I was in school either. It was an unofficial after school activity, so just a couple students chilling in a classroom after school with a teacher popping in every now and then to make sure nothing is destroyed.
Yes well..that's what my question meant I suppose....why mediation not taught at school as part of a school subject...
I'm just wondering why is mediation not a some small part ( at least ) of school learning in most western countries...yet in places like India it is very prevalent..
I am thinking it would be hard to get a room full of kids to stay quiet and take it seriously if it were part of the curriculum. Also we have a lot of dumb kids that need to use that time to study things like math and grammar. It would be great if they offered an after school club for such a thing though.
We had Yoga as a sports choice and at the end there was some little meditation. But meditation taught like this is not really meditation. It is just a relaxation method where most people just fall asleep.
Why is meditation not taught in schools ?
Meditation is in no way shape or form mainstream enough to be accepted into the education system here. I agree that it is beneficial though. There are many beneficial things out there, if we included them all we'd be in school til we were 300... Meditation does not always get called meditation either. I find sports a meditative practise. Given our national predisposition to athletic endeavours (read rugby), I'd say we get our meditation in different more culturally and socially traditional ways like exercise.Hmmmm...okay. In my country ( New Zealand ) meditation has never been a part of the school curriculum...
I think this is a great post. A rare Chrisp frubal for you zenzero. It's so easy to TALK about doing things, instead of just doing them.Friend joea,
Whatever may be the reasons; discussing may not be of much help BUT surely if you practice it yourself it will help you and others around you and maybe someday you could bring about a change in school curriculum to add *meditation* as a period or daily schedule like prayer.
Love & rgds
Thanks ZenZero....actually my thoughts goes deeper than the question itself...but that would otherwise becomes another question...so thanks to all..Friend joea,
Whatever may be the reasons; discussing may not be of much help BUT surely if you practice it yourself it will help you and others around you and maybe someday you could bring about a change in school curriculum to add *meditation* as a period or daily schedule like prayer.
Love & rgds
I went to John Paul in Rotorua - there it was required that you do a religious education class, and one term of it did involve other religions and did include meditation.Hmmmm...okay. In my country ( New Zealand ) meditation has never been a part of the school curriculum...
I went to John Paul in Rotorua - there it was required that you do a religious education class, and one term of it did involve other religions and did include meditation.
Sadly, I think meditation is not in schools, even as a brief activity or elective, due to the controversy it would cause. One of my dance instructors that owns a studio here couldn't even go through with teaching Yoga because parents pulled their kids out thinking she was buddhist or atheist. The masses can be spectacularly dumb.
What the net offers:John Paul...is that a church college or state school ?.
Best Wishes.John Paul College is the leading Catholic co-educational school based in the heart of the tourist capital of Rotorua. It educates and shapes the lives of young people from Year 7 (11 years) to Year 13 (17 years). The school was founded in 1987 under the Principalship of Mr Jack Griffith with the amalgamation of Edmund Rice College and McKillop College.
The College has a track record of academic excellence, sporting achievement and producing young men and women who are academically well qualified, confident and effective citizens. John Paul College is proud of the large number of alumni who occupy leadership positions in politics, business, medicine, law, the Arts, engineering and the Church.