(Re)Inserting charity in education

Background: Recently, charity (re)appears in cultural discourse. It is no longer confined to (moral) theology.   Objectives: The aim of this article is to defend the acceptance of charity as a major and fundamental category in the formulation of professional learning goals and in the transformatio...

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Main Author: Erik Meganck
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2018-08-01
Series:Transformation in Higher Education
Subjects:
Online Access:https://thejournal.org.za/index.php/thejournal/article/view/38
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spelling doaj-8cc787e565ea4d739f0466ddf32160e62020-11-25T01:37:07ZengAOSISTransformation in Higher Education2415-09912519-56382018-08-0130e1e1010.4102/the.v3i0.3820(Re)Inserting charity in educationErik Meganck0Department of Spirituality and the Social Doctrine of the Church, International Institute Canon TriestBackground: Recently, charity (re)appears in cultural discourse. It is no longer confined to (moral) theology.   Objectives: The aim of this article is to defend the acceptance of charity as a major and fundamental category in the formulation of professional learning goals and in the transformation and development of curricula in higher education, using historical and philosophical arguments.   Methods: I first offer a philosophical survey of modernity as instrumentalisation and of late modernity as where charity (re)appears. Then I translate this analysis into an educational challenge and its promising effects. The transition from a culture that hinges on strict instrumentalisation into one that opens up to charity has not yet been integrated in official pedagogical and didactical directives.   Results: The philosophical exploration of the cultural field shows the possibility as well as a desirability of integrating charity in (not only) higher education. Though the effects of this integration can only be considered forthcoming, a promise without any evidence, this philosophical reflection argues the probability of positive pedagogical results.   Conclusion: The reappearance of charity in culture urges education to also look beyond its modern formats. One possible initiative is the ‘insertion’ of charity. Reflection on a care experience is a pedagogically justifiable form of this insertion. What was deemed irrelevant, private and optional before becomes core educational challenges now. The new meaning of the world, without changing the world, is precisely this: let us keep teaching economy, engineering, law, medicine, etc., but always against the backdrop of charity.https://thejournal.org.za/index.php/thejournal/article/view/38charityvolunteer
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Erik Meganck
spellingShingle Erik Meganck
(Re)Inserting charity in education
Transformation in Higher Education
charity
volunteer
author_facet Erik Meganck
author_sort Erik Meganck
title (Re)Inserting charity in education
title_short (Re)Inserting charity in education
title_full (Re)Inserting charity in education
title_fullStr (Re)Inserting charity in education
title_full_unstemmed (Re)Inserting charity in education
title_sort (re)inserting charity in education
publisher AOSIS
series Transformation in Higher Education
issn 2415-0991
2519-5638
publishDate 2018-08-01
description Background: Recently, charity (re)appears in cultural discourse. It is no longer confined to (moral) theology.   Objectives: The aim of this article is to defend the acceptance of charity as a major and fundamental category in the formulation of professional learning goals and in the transformation and development of curricula in higher education, using historical and philosophical arguments.   Methods: I first offer a philosophical survey of modernity as instrumentalisation and of late modernity as where charity (re)appears. Then I translate this analysis into an educational challenge and its promising effects. The transition from a culture that hinges on strict instrumentalisation into one that opens up to charity has not yet been integrated in official pedagogical and didactical directives.   Results: The philosophical exploration of the cultural field shows the possibility as well as a desirability of integrating charity in (not only) higher education. Though the effects of this integration can only be considered forthcoming, a promise without any evidence, this philosophical reflection argues the probability of positive pedagogical results.   Conclusion: The reappearance of charity in culture urges education to also look beyond its modern formats. One possible initiative is the ‘insertion’ of charity. Reflection on a care experience is a pedagogically justifiable form of this insertion. What was deemed irrelevant, private and optional before becomes core educational challenges now. The new meaning of the world, without changing the world, is precisely this: let us keep teaching economy, engineering, law, medicine, etc., but always against the backdrop of charity.
topic charity
volunteer
url https://thejournal.org.za/index.php/thejournal/article/view/38
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