Do adults have a duty to keep up? Criticism of young people as “woke” or “snowflakes” is wrong, says a top head teacher. Parents and teachers must buck up and do better.
Stop mocking children who care, says head
Do adults have a duty to keep up? Criticism of young people as "woke" or "snowflakes" is wrong, says a top head teacher. Parents and teachers must buck up and do better.
The head teachers shifted in their seats. They were used to laying down the law to their pupils - but now they were the ones being taken to task. In her address to the Girls' Schools Association yesterday, BenendenAn independent school in Kent whose former pupils include Princess Anne.'s headmistress Samantha Price did not mince her wordsDid not put things vaguely in order to spare people's feelings.. Nobody, she insisted, should be dismissive of young activists.
"The fact is that times have changed, and we simply need to keep up with them," she said. "Being 'woke' actually just means being awake to social justice... It ultimately comes down to something very simple: being kind."
It would be unforgivable, she added, for the older generation to close its mind to new ideas. If young people have woken up, "We have much to be proud of and hopeful for in this next generation, and it is our duty to listen and nurture this." Adults should teach children to campaign.
An education professor at the University of Virginia, Nancy Deutsch, agrees: "It's really a core part of humans that we need to feel that we have a sense of purpose, that we're here to do something."
She believes activism helps young people develop skills: "You need to figure out what the issue is, and how to speak it in a way that brings other people along... all change involves differences, conflict, and compromise."
But former US president Barack Obama, who admits to disagreements with his daughter MaliaShe has just graduated from Harvard University and is reported to be pursuing a career as a TV scriptwriter., believes wokeness can be unproductive:
"There is this sense sometimes of 'The way of me making change is to be as judgmental as possible about other people,'" he told youth leaders. "That's not activism; that's not bringing about change. If all you're doing is casting stones, you're probably not going to get that far. That's easy to do."
There have always been disagreements between children and parents. Ivan TurgenevOne of Russia's greatest writers, his other works include the novel Smoke and the play A Month in the Country.'s great 1880 novel Fathers and Sons focuses on a young man who returns from university with radical views.
It has been argued that the divide became more pronounced during the 20th Century. Before that, most young people did not move far from their parents.
With the arrival of cinema, they became open to influences from outside their families. The term generation gap was coined in the 1960s to describe the differences this created.
Many of today's grandparents shocked their parents by marching against nuclear weaponsA bomb or other weapon that uses nuclear energy to cause a big explosion. or the Vietnam WarA conflict in Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia from 1955 to 1975. It was the second of the Indochina Wars and a major conflict of the Cold War.. And many of today's parents shocked them by rioting against Margaret Thatcher's poll taxIn 1990 the Conservative government replaced a council tax based on the value of people's houses with a flat-rate "community charge". This proved so unpopular that its abolition was announced a year later..
Do adults have a duty to keep up?
Yes. The world has changed since they were young, and they need to admit to that. Climate change has emerged as the key issue of our time. Forms of racism that went unrecognised are in the spotlight. Women's and minorities' rights are more widely acknowledged.
No. "Keeping up" means following fashion - but any values that matter are more than fads. Progress can be made without cancelling speakers. Adults are right to insist that since life comes without trigger warnings, children need to be robust.
Keywords
Benenden - An independent school in Kent whose former pupils include Princess Anne.
Mince her words - Did not put things vaguely in order to spare people's feelings.
Malia - She has just graduated from Harvard University and is reported to be pursuing a career as a TV scriptwriter.
Ivan Turgenev - One of Russia's greatest writers, his other works include the novel Smoke and the play A Month in the Country.
Nuclear weapons - A bomb or other weapon that uses nuclear energy to cause a big explosion.
Vietnam War - A conflict in Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia from 1955 to 1975. It was the second of the Indochina Wars and a major conflict of the Cold War.
Poll tax - In 1990 the Conservative government replaced a council tax based on the value of people's houses with a flat-rate "community charge". This proved so unpopular that its abolition was announced a year later.
Stop mocking children who care, says head
Glossary
Benenden - An independent school in Kent whose former pupils include Princess Anne.
Mince her words - Did not put things vaguely in order to spare people’s feelings.
Malia - She has just graduated from Harvard University and is reported to be pursuing a career as a TV scriptwriter.
Ivan Turgenev - One of Russia’s greatest writers, his other works include the novel Smoke and the play A Month in the Country.
Nuclear weapons - A bomb or other weapon that uses nuclear energy to cause a big explosion.
Vietnam War - A conflict in Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia from 1955 to 1975. It was the second of the Indochina Wars and a major conflict of the Cold War.
Poll tax - In 1990 the Conservative government replaced a council tax based on the value of people’s houses with a flat-rate “community charge”. This proved so unpopular that its abolition was announced a year later.