Peace Educator Finds
Ways to Better World
by Leah C. Wells*, August 18, 2002
Published in the Ventura County
Star
I grew up in a farm family where hard work, industriousness
and resourcefulness were highly valued. Our seasonally governed
lives meant more than just calendar changes. From an early age,
I internalized the planting and harvest patterns of corn and soybeans.
The Farmer's Almanac taught me to discern the stages of the crops,
as well as humans' inextricable connection to the land and to
nature.
My entire life, much of my learning took place
outside the classroom; I viewed school as a steppingstone to extracurricular
activities like Model U.N., tennis, Student Council, musicals
and classical ballet. My parents taught me to view my God-given
gifts as such, to use them for the benefit of others. They cultivated
in me a respect and love for fun education that transcends standardized
tests, encourages asking questions and seeks out wise mentors.
In college, I studied what I loved, taking classes
that interested me, like film studies, linguistics, quantum physics
and the evolution of social justice movements in the United States.
Afterward, however, I had no idea where to get a job because there
is really no urgent call for neurolinguist majors in the Help
Wanted ads. And there was no newspaper section called Careers
with a Conscience. So, I started thinking about who I admire.
My list of heroes include Elizabeth Blackwell,
the first woman doctor; Indiana Jones, the fictitious archaeologist/professor/adventurer;
Laura Ingalls Wilder; and my best friend Jill, an occupational
therapist who has begun talking to shop and metalworking classes
in high schools about how students' skills can create useful household
items for her differently-abled patients. Grace Llewellyn, one
of the pioneers of the Unschooling Movement and author of "The
Teenage Liberation Handbook: How to Quit School and Get a Real
Life and Education," also ranks high on my list.
All these people have in common the goal of freeing
education. Unconstrained by the boundaries of desks and classrooms,
they bring learning into the open. They represent creativity,
individuality, deconstructing barriers, having fun, serving others
and making the most of natural talents.
So it makes sense that I was drawn to peace education,
a holistic approach to learning. Peace education means many things:
conflict resolution, anger management, power with vs. power over,
respect for nature, love of diversity and community service. But
it is more than that; it's teaching students about the connections
between poverty, racism, technology, the environment, politics,
economics, religion and education. I have learned from my students
they most value authenticity. Tired of being fed prepackaged ideas
through mass marketing and mindless trips to the malls and movie
theaters, my students keep telling me they believe there's more
to life than Nike and Coca-Cola.
I believe it too.
Yet, these messages are not the standard priority
of pop culture that tells us to get good grades, to get into a
top school, to get the right degree so that you can get the high-paying
job, the big house, the fast car and the latest look. What we
neglect to tell students in their college counseling sessions
is that none of these things guarantees happiness.
We teach students to compartmentalize, that in
school, English is separate from science is separate from history
is separate from math. Peace education decompartmentalizes more
than that, it fosters a sense of interconnectedness where each
subject, each person, each decision is inextricably linked to
another. It demonstrates that, in life, there is much more gray
area than black and white.
So why am I a peace educator? Because it fulfills
my love of teaching, writing, learning and travel. Because it
is authentic. Because I continually meet interesting people who
challenge my beliefs and boundaries. Because it promotes consensus
and process-oriented skills that make life more functional. Because
I can work locally on issues such as peace education and PictSweet;
nationally on issues such as juvenile and restorative justice;
and internationally on issues such as Iraq and Aceh.
It feels good to do good when no one's watching.
It feels good to be a part of a larger cause. It feels good to
make even a small difference. It feels good to be in solidarity
with people struggling for their right to learn, to work, to live.
It feels good to teach peace.
*Leah C. Wells of Santa
Paula is Peace Education Coordinator for the Nuclear Age Peace
Foundation.
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