Reconsidering Confucian understanding of human person and its implications for whole person education

Author(s):  
Pan Chiu Lai
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (11) ◽  
pp. 5769
Author(s):  
Yi Lian ◽  
Kwok-Kuen Tsang ◽  
Ying Zhang

STEM education is an important approach for preparing students for a competitive workforce with essential skills in the 21st century. However, successfully implementing STEM education in primary and secondary schools presents a variety of challenges. The study suggests that a neglected challenge in the literature is how to sustain teachers’ positive emotions toward STEM educational work, which may cause teachers to be more engaged in, motived by, and committed to STEM education. Therefore, the study aims to contribute to the literature by investigating the mechanism of the construction and suitability of teachers’ emotions toward STEM educational work based on a single case study conducted in Hong Kong from the social constructionist perspective. The major findings of the study indicate that (1) positive emotions toward STEM educational work may be constructed by the teacher’s positive interpretation of the work, i.e., STEM educational work as the facilitator of students’ overall development and that (2) positive emotions toward STEM educational work may be sustained by enabling school institutions to have the elements of shared power, administrative support, and the value of a whole-person education.


2018 ◽  
Vol 19 (10) ◽  
pp. 27-38
Author(s):  
Agustinus Supriyadi

The first and primary educator for the child is the parents. As first and foremost educators, parents reveal the fundamental authority to educate their children. Educate children they should do, because they are parents. The task and the call of parents in educating their children is a task and a call that should not be replaced by anyone. No matter how great the other party in educating but will not be able to channel life to the child fully and intrinsically. They are unlikely to be able to fill the heart and soul of the child in building a complete relationship between the child and the parent and vice versa. The education that is the responsibility of the parent is an education that reflects a purpose. The purpose of education is essentially: the fostering of the human person as a whole, as both personal and social beings, within the framework of his final destiny. By looking at the purpose of education, it is not enough for parents to only form a child to be smart/clever, but also need to form a child's person to be a whole person. Laws that require parents to educate children, need to get support from the government well so that parents are able to carry out these obligations well too.


2018 ◽  
Vol 59 ◽  
pp. 01030
Author(s):  
Wai Ching Angela Wong

This paper traces the history of United Board‘s engagement with service-learning through higher education in Asia and reflects on the recent discussion about the relevancy of service-learning activities to today‘s higher education system. Through a close review of the experience shared in recent projects sponsored and organized by United Board in the last five years, service learners from colleges and universities around Asia all testified an process that deepens both cognitive and affective learning, generating in service-learning actors-faculty, students and community members-a connection that could inspire and sustain their vision and passion for life. Despite the seemingly still marginalized status of service learning programs and faculty in most higher education institutions, educators believing in whole person education only find service-learning ever more important in the face of higher education that has been increasingly trapped by the ranking race.


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