The Multi-Cultural
Challenge to the Future of Education
by Sohail Inayatullah
In the West, multi-culturalism has come to
mean better representation of minorities in
public and private sector positions of authority
and equal opportunity in hiring practices.
"Tolerance" for other racial, linguistic,
and national groups has been the catch-phrase
in the swing toward multi-culturalism, in
the search for a rainbow culture. But among
others, Speaker of the House of Representative
of the USA, Newt Gingrich is suspicious. He
has argued that multi-culturalism will destroy
the idea of the American nation, indeed any
nation. Multi-culturalism, particularly, multi-cultural
education, is evil.
While it is easy to dismiss Gingrich
as merely representing a type of fascism,
in fact, multi-culturalism does threaten the
nation-state. Bounded by the ideals of liberalism--individuality,
one version of God, in the context of an efficient
marketplace-- the nation-state, if it were
to yield to the demands of other cultures
and civilizations, would find its very mono-cultural
existence threatened.
Gingrich is right. Multi-culturalism is evil
but only in the context of the nation- state
(or indeed any other exclusive collective
representation). For those committed to creating
and participating in pedagogy that allows
for the authentic voices of other civilizations--that
overcome the limitations of the ego-bounded
rationality of the Enlightenment--multi-cultural
education is about transcending the text of
nationalism and creating a new type of globalism.
This then is a plea for the recognition of
the differences that are part of the postmodern
thrust but not its conclusion; a climax neither
in capitalist homogeneity nor postmodern nihilism
but in life-embracing unity--what philosopher
Shrii P.R. Sarkar has called a universal renaissance.
But what worries Gingrich (and many
others in North and South alike) is that a
pedagogy of difference will eliminate the
nation-state developmentalist project, will
undo the hard fought gains of the Enlightenment,
of progress. For the West, multi- culturalism
means that the Other--for example, as Woman,
as Muslim, as Taoist, as Aboriginal--will
have categories of self, community and God,
represented as part of normal day-to-day pedagogy.
For Third World nations, this means that dissent
must become part of the curriculum; that the
views of religious and cultural minorities
should not be seen as threatening to the dominant
religion or State ideology but as part of
national richness; that opposition can only
strengthen the post-colonial self, not damage
it.
Beyond Shallow Liberalism
But a universal renaissance is not about a
simple plea to pluralism. Pluralism in democratic
society is about many voices vying for attention.
The best ideas win out. The role of the teacher
is to fairly present differing perspectives.
However, pluralism remains contextualised
by liberalism. Thus pluralism as currently
valorized is shallow. A deeper pluralism would
ask: how do differing civilizations articulate
the rights of the Other and what are the points
of unity in these differences?
For example, while in liberal pluralism
all values are open to individual choice,
in Hawaiian civilization one does not choose
aina (land not real estate) or one's genealogical
relationships with ancestors. They are deep
givens. In Islamic civilization as well there
are certain fundamentals that bound what is
possible. In Tantra, as exemplified by Shrii
P.R. Sarkar, before pedagogy begins there
are moments of meditation. This permits for
the intellectual mind to become pointed allowing
the intuitive self greater understanding of
the topic at hand. Certainly daily Tantric
(or any other type) meditation sessions are
not what most modernist educators have in
mind when arguing for "multi-cultural
education". Most either prefer a secular
model where the day begins with the national
anthem or a religious model where prayer towards
a particular deity announces one's allegiances.
Multi-cultural education is about creating
structures and processes that allow for the
expression of the many civilizations, communities
and individuals that we are. To begin this
enormous task, we must first contest the value
neutrality of current institutions such as
the library. For example, merely including
texts from other civilizations does not constitute
a multi-cultural library. Ensuring that the
contents of texts are not ethnocentric is
an important step but this does not begin
to problematize the definitional categories
used in conventional libraries. We need to
ask what a library would look like if it used
the knowledge paradigms of other civilizations?
How would knowledge be rearranged? What would
the library floors look like? In Hawaiian
culture, for example, there might be floors
for the Gods, for the aina and genealogy.
In Tantra, empirical science would exist alongside
intuitional science. Floor and shelve space
would privilege the superconscious and unconscious
layers of reality instead of only focusing
on empirical levels of the real. In Islam,
since knowledge is considered tawhidic (based
on the unity of God), philosophy, science
and religion would no longer occupy the discrete
spaces they currently do. Of course, the spatiality
of "floors" must also be deconstructed.
Information systems from other civilizations
might not privilege book-knowledge, focusing
instead on story-telling and dreamtime as
well as wisdom received from elders and perhaps
even "angels" (either metaphorically
or ontologically). A multi-cultural library
might look like the emerging world wide web
but include other alternative ways of knowing
and being. Most certainly knowledge from different
civilizations in this alternative vision of
the "library" would not be relegated
to a minor site or constituted as exotic field
of inquiry such as Asian, Ethnic or Feminist
studies, as are the practices of current libraries.
The homogeneity of the library as an organizing
information system must be reconstructed if
we are to begin to develop the conceptual
framework of multi-cultural education. To
do, we must further articulate the differences
that define us.
Metaphors of Difference
The metaphors we use about ourselves is one
indicator of this difference. For example,
while the image of the unbounded ocean might
represent total choice to American culture--for
Muslims, the image of the ocean is absurd.
It is direction, toward Mecca, that is more
important. Choice is bounded by tradition
and the collectivity of the Ummah (the global
community). For those within the Tantric worldview,
it is the image of Shiva dancing between life
(knowledge) and death (ignorance) that is
the defining metaphor. Shiva represents simultaneous
destruction and creation--the cosmos and self
in purposeful process. Within modernity, it
is the dice representing randomness that holds
sway on most. Things in themselves have no
meaning or purpose. It is what humans choose
to signify that is critical for moderns and
postmoderns.
Differences in metaphors not only represent
deep structures in terms of how civilizations
view self, other, nature but also how we language
the world. Language is not neutral but a carrier
of civilizational values, actively constituting
the real. Language has become a verb, an interactive
practice in the creation of new worlds. For
example, it is not so much that many of us
now speak English but rather that we "english"
the world in our knowing and learning efforts.
Multi-cultural education is thus not only
about learning and teaching more than one
language but also about seeing how languages
construct worldviews. Committed to avoiding
the pitfalls of cultural relativism, a critical
pedagogy would also investigate the social
and cultural costs associated with any particular
language, civilization, asking which perspectives
are enriched, which impoverished? We thus
argue for a pedagogy of deep difference, not
a shallow interest focused on advertisements
that create a mythology of "we are the
world".
These differences are critical not only
at the civilizational level but at national
and individual levels. How we constitute knowledge
is not neutral but based on the structures
of various knowledge cultures. American knowledge
culture is far more focused on issues of empirical
operationalization than in Indic culture,
where theory a la spiritual knowledge is,
in general, more important. The traditional
vertical relationship between guru and disciple
is central. German intellectual culture, while
equally hierarchical, is more concerned with
the great philosophies, with the thoughts
of the Masters--Hegel, Kant, Marx, for example.
True knowledge is about understanding these
schools of thought.
How individuals search for information
and truth within these cultures also differ.
In one the search is for the best university,
in another for the best guru, in the third
for the best thinker. Of course, modernity
has been about eliminating different styles
and universalizing them in the university:
where knowledge and non-knowledge have come
to be defined by technocratic specialists;
where dissent is manufactured by hierarchical
experts; and, where all differences must be
scrutinized by knowledge specialists. However,
the structure of the past does not so easily
disappear. For example, in modern secular
Indian culture, the traditional structure
remains with the State and elite academic
institutions now playing the role of guru.
Even eschewing or controlling for civilizational
and cultural differences, individuals learn
differently. We know that some learn best
from doing; others from theoretical lectures;
and still others through visual media. Some
prefer professorial lectures; others small
groups, and some one-to-one interaction. Some
are analytic, others are synthetic. Some are
intuitive; others sense-based; others reason-based;
and still others learn through authority.
Some focus on scientia (thinking), others
on praxis (transformative action), others
on techne (doing) and still others on gnosis
(or contemplative seeing). Genders also know
and learn differently. In contrast to the
individualistic style of men, research seems
to support that women prefer learning in groups,
working in win-win situations to achieve desirable
outcomes.
However, we are not arguing from an essentialist
position either with respect to civilization,
ways of knowing, or individual styles. Differences
in how we teach and learn are structural,
based on our varied evolutions. Holistic pedagogy,
even while it aspires for a unity of discourse,
must first unravel these differences. Teaching
multi- culturalism then is far more than ensuring
that one's educational faculty is from diverse
backgrounds. Civilization, language, cultural-national
knowing styles, ways of knowing, and gender
all confront univocal pedagogy. Pedagogical
differences call for a deep pluralism in how
we know and learn, for a critical political
ecology of interpretation. Are we ready for
such efforts? Most of us are not. It is far
easier to teach by rote or to assume that
one's audience is of one mind then to teach
and learn in the context of deep variation.
Teaching across civilization and ways of knowing
involves constant interaction with self (problematizing
one's teaching style) and with students (discerning
what is happening within their worldview,
in how they create meaning) as well as the
categories of "self" and "student".
Dynamic cultural interaction, far more than
liberalism can ever hope to aspire towards,
is required.
Shared Basics
But to only teach differences does not suffice
either. The issue is that given the Many that
we are today, is there a One that can be learned
about? Shrii P.R. Sarkar, I believe, gives
us some hints here. For him, teaching/learning
should be based on Neo- Humanism. We must
learn about the struggles humans have confronted
in their history and how they have overcome
these enormous challenges. But we should not
only reflect on our own human history but
as well include our interaction with Nature
and the Divine. Our knowing of nature should
not be as an Other to us, but as a living
and breathing process that exists for itself.
The divine should be constructed not as a
entity that can be owned but as the ineffable,
as the inspiration that leads to ever greater
love, to ever greater understanding of others.
The divine pulls history forward creating
a progressive thrust that does not acede to
narrow culturisms, genderisms or nationalisms
or other exclusive forms of identity.
There are some basics that must be taught
irrespective of difference. These are issues
of how we treat one another, how we treat
nature, how we treat those weaker than ourselves,
and what our relationships with the Unknowable
are. Each civilization has basic ethical guidelines.
While new technologies such as gene therapy
and artificial intelligence confront how we
think and learn, they do not stop the more
important process of asking what it means
to be human. They do not stop the wondering
and knowing process. Even as postmodernism
relativism undoes the rationality of progress,
Sarkar and others call us to new more inclusive
levels of rationality. The true, the good,
and the beautiful, or sat (truth as benevolence),
chit (existence) and ananda (endless bliss)
in multi-cultural education are not lost sight
of. The routes to them, the meanings we give
to them, the frames we know and learn from,
however, are broadened. It is this wisdom
culture that multi-cultural education seeks
to recover and, indeed, reinvent. Deep multi-cultural
education envisions a future where the multiplicities
that we are, unite in the common neo-humanity
that we can be.
Selected References
•
Sohail Inayatullah and Paul Wildman, ""Ways
of Knowing and the Pedagogy of the Future,"
Paper presented at the Future Generations
Forum Workshop on "Teaching and Learning
About Future Generations," held at the
University of Toronto, OISE, October 26, 1995.
•
Johan Galtung, "Structure, Culture and
Intellectual Styles," Social Science
Information (Vol. 20, No. 6, 1981), 817-856.
•
Ashis Nandy, "Shamans, Savages and the
Wilderness: On the Audibility of Dissent and
the Future of Civilization," Alternatives
(Vol. 15, No. 2, July 1989), 263-278.
•
P.R. Sarkar, The Liberation of Intellect,
Neo-Humanism. Calcutta, Ananda Marga Publications,
1982.
Religious model
Education should be about teaching the Truth
of God as defined by "our" tradition.
Discipline is a prerequisite to Godliness.
The teacher must be obeyed and honored. There
is a central text that must be memorized.
Other texts and perspectives are rarely important
except as anthropology.
National/Social Control Model
Education is about keeping children and young
adults off the streets. Education helps prepare
individuals to be responsible members of the
community and nation. Education helps create
a productive labor force so that one's nation
can better compete in the world economy.
Bureaucratic Model
This is based on the industrial factory model:
"Ship them in and ship them out".
Efficiency, effectiveness and accountability
are the code words. Strategic plans often
focus on reorganization.
Market Model
Universities must meet the changing needs
of the customer and the customer is always
right. Students should be trained for the
capitalist market. Technical skills for the
real world is the guiding mission.
Humanistic Model
The university is about the enlightenment
ideas of progress and reason. Teachers should
bring out the best and noblest qualities (reason)
in students. The ancient classics of all cultures,
but especially Greek culture, should be taught.
Schools can be improved by improving the teacher/student
ratio.
Electronic Information model
Pedagogy should be individually-tailored and
delivered through the new technologies such
as the Web. Interaction should be between
student-student; student-author, and student-teacher.
Teachers are primarily guides. Education is
life-long based and placeless. Information
can rid us of our narrow minds. Technology
can and will liberate us.
Spiritual model
Education is about remembering who we really
are, our deeper most selves. Teachers should
not only be facilitators but moral, inspiring
examples as well. They must nurture students'
idealism and help them discover their true
mission in life. Education is about learning
about the inner self so as to transform society;
inner and outer transformation. Technical,
classical and spiritual knowledge are important
in helping create the balanced person.
Sohail Inayatullah is a frequent contributor
to New Renaissance and Global Times. He is
on the editorial board of Futures and Journal
of Futures Studies and is co-editor of the
WFSF Futures Bulletin. He is the author/editor
of numerous books and over a 100 book chapters,
journal articles, and magazine pieces. He
recently completed a Reader in Futures Studies,
a multicultural "book" available
on the Web through Southern Cross University
(URL: http://www.scu.edu.au/lists.futures-l).
The author would like to thank Anne Elliott
of the Communication Centre for her editorial
assistance.
Contact information:
Dr. Sohail Inayatullah
The Communication Centre
Queensland University of Technology
Box 2434, Brisbane Q, 4001, Australia
Email: S.Inayatullah@qut.edu.au |