| Recognizing
that the world of the twenty-first century presents continuing
challenges to all who strive for a more humane world, we affirm
our commitment to preparing caring and thoughtful teachers who
will lead their own students to address our planet's most pressing
concerns. Our work lies in fostering a true community of inquiry
in which teachers and students together seek thoughtful and just
responses to the dilemmas facing the modern world.
We are supported in our mission by the rich traditions of Berea
College. These traditions suggest the development of an education
based on concerns for community supported by careful attention
to individual needs, independent learning, interdisciplinary
study, the development of critical and creative thinking, and
the respectful nurturing of the novice teachers who engage in
teaching and learning with us. We encourage our students to value
and embrace the commitments of Berea College and their significance
for our work together as learners, as teachers, and as proponents
of social justice.
Committed teaching is no novel idea at Berea College. Founders
like John G. Fee resolved to do their part in reforming a nation
whose social fabric was rent by struggle over an economic system
dependent on the enslavement of African peoples. In their eyes,
Berea College was to be no ordinary school, but an institutionalized
ferment grounded in the values of gender and racial equality
and the affirmation of human dignity that education could bring.
Those values were later codified in Berea's Great
Commitments.
By attending to these commitments as we shape our special purposes
as teachers of teachers, we seek to foster an environment that
encourages the creation of a genuine community of learners.
The Great Commitments are presented below, with a brief commentary
that relates each of the commitments to the work of teacher
education at Berea College.
Commitment to provide an educational opportunity primarily for
students from Appalachia, black and white, who have great promise
and limited economic resources.
Berea College is not an elitist institution. It neither chooses
its students from among the economically privileged, nor does
it aspire to do so. This means that Berea students may not have
been beneficiaries of the academic training or the cultural exposure
often available to the economically privileged. At the same time,
the Education Studies Department acknowledges the difference
between deficient preparation and promising ability, and we welcome
to our community of inquiry students highly committed to making
their own education truly excellent. We work to guide such students
toward valuing and organizing what they have learned already,
and toward encountering new learning experiences. We believe
that learners assisted in this way will in turn be inspired similarly
to aid their own students.
Commitment to provide an education of high quality with a liberal
arts foundation and outlook.
Berea's Education Studies Department regards the liberal arts
tradition as invaluable in its preparation of future teachers.
Truly liberal education leads all concerned to value and conserve
learning from the past in the search for meaning in the present
world. Understood in this way, the liberal arts tradition becomes
truly liberating.
By honoring the liberal arts tradition, we affirm our commitment
to a core curriculum and to the critical thinking and historical
perspective that such a curriculum represents. We wish to help
our students become truly literate, capable of reading not only
the great works of the past, but equally importantly, the texts
of their own lives and time. The department encourages students
as they struggle to discover and appropriate their own voices
so they might become capable of describing the reality they have
discerned with the help of tradition. In all of this, our overarching
goal is to assist all students in formulating their own philosophies
of life and their own theories of education.
Commitment to stimulate understanding of the Christian faith
and its many expressions and to emphasize the Christian ethic
and the motive of service to others.
In the tradition of John Fee, the Education Studies Department
recognizes Christian faith as a source of inspiration, and we
affirm the centrality of values in the learning process. We reject
attempts toward construction of a "value-free" curriculum
as both undesirable and impossible to attain. We recognize as
indispensable to holistic education pedagogies that bring to
consciousness, clarification, and critique the religious and
secular values by which human beings inevitably guide their lives.
We regard teaching as a vocation, not a career. We seek to reflect
in our own teaching and to instill in our students an understanding
and appreciation of Whitehead’s words that all education
is, in essence, religious.
Commitment to provide for all students through the labor program
experiences for learning and serving in community, and to demonstrate
that labor, both mental and manual, has dignity as well as utility.
Berea College's labor program provides a unique opportunity
for all members of the College community to consider the meaning
and value of human labor in a variety of forms and settings.
The special mission of the Education Studies Department relates
to this commitment in that we believe that work must be meaningful,
that it must be seen as personally satisfying in the context
of a community effort that has relevance to students' lives.
The ways that we teach, the things that we ask students to do,
and the thinking that we share with them are designed to foster
recognition of the meaningfulness which is inherent in all worthy
labor. As students engage in their own purposeful work, whether
in the labor program, in service activities, or in the classroom,
they are empowered with the dignity of honest effort. As they
honor this dignity within themselves, they will be able to celebrate
the same quality in others, including the children who will be
in their care.
Commitment to assert the kinship of all people and to provide
interracial education with a particular emphasis on understanding
and equality among blacks and whites.
This statement represents to the Education Studies Department
a crucial commitment to our common humanity and to the valuing
of difference to deepen our understanding of what it means to
be a human being in this world. Berea's commitment to promote
community and democracy leads us to embrace multicultural perspectives
within our program. We seek especially to include African-American
voices in light of the special importance those sharing such
heritage have held in Berea's history. We strongly support Berea
College’s initiative to provide opportunities for international
study and travel so that our students may teach in their own
classrooms in ways that promote global understanding and respect
for all human beings.
Commitment to create a democratic community dedicated to education
and equality for women and men.
The Education Studies Department reflects Berea's commitment
to democratic community by embracing multiple perspectives within
our program. We seek to create genuine community among teachers
and students, and we expect students to become active participants
in their own educational processes. In a community of inquiry
all voices are welcomed and listened to with respect. We seek
especially to encourage the voices of women, who constitute the
majority of those entering the teaching profession and who often
have been silenced in traditional Appalachian culture as they
have been elsewhere in the world. We commit ourselves to the
valuing of all voices, and we seek in every encounter to see
and hear through the eyes and ears of the other.
Commitment to maintain a residential campus and to encourage
in all members of the community a way of life characterized by
plain living, pride in labor well done, zest for learning, high
personal standards, and concern for the welfare of others.
The Education Studies Department sees this commitment as calling
us to encourage students to eschew the ephemeral and the mindless
materialism that often corrupt our modern way of life. We believe
that education in this ecological era must lead students to grapple
with the fact that much in common ways of thinking and living
is harmful to the biosphere on which all life forms depend. This
way of life reflects neither simple living nor concern for others
in a world in which an increasing proportion of children live
in poverty. The pedagogical question in the face of such contradictions
is how to formulate environmental and human concerns so that
future teachers can help their students construct a better world.
Through our advocacy of this commitment we endeavor to help our
students accept the centrality of mindfulness in the construction
of a value system that incorporates love of learning, compassion
for others, an acute sense of social responsibility, and pride
in good work.
Commitment to serve the Appalachian region primarily through
education but also by other appropriate services.
As a department, we believe our efforts to serve Appalachia
through education will continue in the efforts of our graduates
to serve this region as teachers. We believe the individuals
and communities of Appalachia are wellsprings of internal strength
and immense potential, grounded in values too often lacking
in the mainstream culture: responsibility to family; love of
place; neighborliness and hospitality; sense of beauty; and
a perspective on life which takes into account both the serious
and the humorous aspects of the human condition. Without diminishing
these qualities, which must be preserved and nurtured, we see
education as the liberating force that can bring direction
to our students' potential as they seek to address the pressing
problems that beset the Appalachian region.
In responding to this commitment, as to all of the College’s
commitments, we strive to help the teachers of tomorrow gain
a deeper understanding of their own educational experiences and
an appreciation of similar situations elsewhere that arise when
education does not fulfill its promise. In this way, we hope
to foster in prospective teachers a sense of their own responsibility
for service and leadership in the region, and the understanding
that each person who seeks to know and do good can make a difference.
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