Social scientists across their different disciplines have shared an enduring observation. They have found that the
people who apply methods in real settings to understand social life find more elucidation of the inquiry process than
those who seriously analyze the same but without adequate field application.
We learn best by engaging people in the locations that embody our questions - communities on the ground - to not only
glean information from our subjects but also to address people’s needs. Learning by doing provides the context to
achieve our educational potential as well as humanity’s growth.
Recognizing this also means that there are defeating practices, commonly rooted in stunted expectations for the outcomes
of research, skewed designs resulting in vacuous experiences. This can lead to superficial or misleading explanations of
social phenomena’s causes, and even worse, detached remedies.
Unfortunately, this limitation informs the mainstream structure of research and higher education and is also fixed in
learning’s infrastructure. After all, interactive engagement with local communities to gain awareness through experience
is a pedagogical orientation that is antithetical to classrooms with bolted down chairs facing one direction,
positioning participants to not sufficiently interface and engage.
Way beyond a credible doubt, evidence also shows that our ability to integrate knowledge based on experience is
basically always there with us and literally has no minimum age. Academic disciplines, considered in the aggregate, have
incrementally reformed toward what was realized again during the West’s Enlightenment: students need to co-inquire with
communities, with a seamlessness between data gathering and actions to enhance well-being. We see growing appreciation
at universities and education centers for all ages - with their commensurate and increasingly dedicated administrations
and resources - of providing students with a practical approach to meaningfully internalize the range of life’s insights
by honing professional and citizenship abilities.
As we experientially learn about the roots of social challenges, poverty, social stratification, and
persistently-generational unrealized potential, we uncover shared basic features. It involves members of local
communities discussing these very patterns and identifying local projects for change, livelihood, and justice. It
involves investigation, and rolling responses and reactions, which with persistence penetrate the intertwined forces
that lead to socio-economic and environmental struggles and solutions. It involves someone assisting the communication
among the many and diverse who express themselves, and whose information needs to be retained, organized, and acted upon
as the primary basis for decision-making. And, it also involves the reconciliation of past pain, with apologies and
regrets conveyed, and the determination to achieve consensus and create the personal and common benefits that are
collectively sought by the people.
We know progress, large and small, never seems to be linear. Every context is its own. Global stratifications in
unbearable forms find their way into school rooms. And all of this, this ride through the frailties and hope, ignites a
lifelong pursuit among the learning youth to help implement community initiatives that seem so right, so fair, needed,
and inexplicably long-delayed. This experience in young people can be so compelling that their life’s trajectory becomes
new, unanticipated, and invigorated.
I consider myself lucky to have had this kind of essential education in my mid-twenties as a U.S. Peace Corps Volunteer
in Morocco, followed by action-study, and now leading the High Atlas Foundation in Marrakech 27 years later. I am struck
when young student-interns have visited and are immersed in their analyses, observation, participation, and support of
the practice of people’s movements for development. These gap-year, late-teen students are astute to the work’s
difficult contradictions and transformative potential of what happens when community members work through what can be
uneasy discussions toward finding consensus and advancing ahead.
As we celebrate 2021 International Education Day this week, I express a wish, which I suppose is customary for
anniversaries: that classrooms are designed as community centers where middle and high schoolers, elementary students,
and toddlers, draw their community maps for participatory planning, including in gender groups to reveal outlooks,
depicting their visions, places they like and feel to enhance, and ideas for their future. It is a hope we extend for
youth and pre-teens to weigh together their priorities they would like to see unfold in their surroundings, localities,
and classrooms. It is that old dream when education becomes ever more about the awakening heart, of one’s feelings for
others’ feelings, of the communities’ data filled with relativity that guides to sustainability, and the pursuit of not
just understanding but to intently improve every day the days of living.
If, indeed, we can know and affect more by doing more in communities than we would by conceptualizing about it, as
revered social scientists have so said, then it begins at the onset of education - or even before - when those bolts for
the chairs are thrown away.
Dr. Yossef Ben-Meir is president of the High Atlas Foundation in Morocco.