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MacKenzie, Alison (2013) Emotions and education PDF

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MacKenzie, Alison (2013) Emotions and education: cultivating compassionate minds. PhD thesis. http://theses.gla.ac.uk/3844/ Copyright and moral rights for this thesis are retained by the author A copy can be downloaded for personal non-commercial research or study, without prior permission or charge This thesis cannot be reproduced or quoted extensively from without first obtaining permission in writing from the Author The content must not be changed in any way or sold commercially in any format or medium without the formal permission of the Author When referring to this work, full bibliographic details including the author, title, awarding institution and date of the thesis must be given Glasgow Theses Service http://theses.gla.ac.uk/ [email protected] Emotions and Education: Cultivating Compassionate Minds. Alison MacKenzie (MA Hons, MPhil) Submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy School of Education College of Social Sciences University of Glasgow July 2012 2 Abstract This thesis is primarily a philosophical exploration of emotions. From a feminist, liberal perspective, I focus on the cultivation of morally appropriate emotions, particularly compassion, in education. My central claim is that emotions are essential elements of human intelligence and wellbeing. They are complex responses to events of significance to us and, because emotions play a central role in our lives, they help to define who we are and why we are as we are; they are expressions of our values and what we value. Emotions can motivate us to action, and so we need, if we want just institutions, to ensure that those actions are ethical and proportionate. On the view that emotions can be rational, and that they result from eudaimonistic judgements, if we want a society of healthy human beings who have concern for others, who know how to treat others fairly and sensitively, how to take action when things go wrong, then we need to attend, I argue here, to emotional health in education. We should aim to habituate the emotional capacities of all individuals as an enduring resource of good character. At issue, is how to educate young people to have healthy emotions that are ethical, proportionate, discerning and deliberative, that have ethical action as their goals, and which do not negatively discriminate on the basis of gender. In the development of emotional wellbeing and moral character, compassion is an emotion that merits particular attention. Such is the potential ethical power of this emotion, that I propose compassion to be the arch-guardian of the moral domain and, accordingly, a prerequisite for the cultivation of moral sentiment and respect for human dignity. A consideration of emotions will raise questions about who should feel, how we should feel, when, and to what extent, emotions such as compassion, sympathy or anger in acceptable and appropriate ways. I argue, too, that we should attend to the how and why of interpreting these emotions. Whilst a number of analyses reveal how powerful emotional interpretations are in stigmatising, labeling or stereotyping men and women, rarely, if ever, are questions raised in education about the assumptions on which gendered emotions rest. I respond here by proposing that if education is to serve a role in the cultivation of morally appropriate emotions, then we must question, and should no longer accept, gendered emotions, that is emotions that belong to, or are more ‘natural’ for one sex than another. Acknowledging the importance of care for wellbeing, I question the claims of some care ethicists who would have us believe that care does not require moral theory and that it is not an issue of justice. I assert, to the contrary, that unless an ethics of care rests on sound moral and conceptual constructs, it will perpetuate a bifurcation of emotion and reason whilst sustaining stereotypically gendered emotions. In order to illuminate my argument for the cultivation of de-gendered, just emotions, I draw upon empirical research on the effects of deformed emotional attitudes towards women and children which seriously impede their wellbeing and functioning. I draw, too, on novels, both for the exemplification of my arguments and as a vehicle which, creatively and sensitively used, can help us to shape our imaginative and empathic capacities to take into the folds of our consciousness people who are both similar to and remote and different from us. I am accompanied throughout the thesis by a fictional pupil ‘Nancy’ with and through whom I exculpate complex theoretical and philosophical issues. The thesis re-affirms the importance of cultivating morally appropriate de-gendered emotions, particularly compassion, and concludes with the proposal that we should incorporate and embed an understanding of the emotions in the education curricula, for both pupils and those who teach them. I propose, too, that emotions might be regarded as an architectonic capability anchoring and influencing all other human capabilities. 3 Contents Chapter One: Emotions and Education. 1.1 Introduction. 7 1.2 Locating this Thesis. 8 1.3 Why Study Emotions? 13 1.4 Understanding Emotions - The Theoretical Approach. 19 a) Cognitivism. 19 b) Feelings. 23 c) Intelligence. 26 d) Rationality. 27 e) Emotions as Evaluative Judgements. 32 1.5 Emotions, Moral Education and Gender. 33 1.6 Organisation of the Thesis. 38 Chapter Two: What is an Emotion? 2.1 Introduction. 44 2.2 The General Structure of Emotions: Jealousy, Grief and Shame. 47 2.3 Emotions’ Characteristics, Components and Structure. 56 2.4 Intentionality. 60 2.5 Beliefs, Appraisals and Judgements. 64 2.6 Emotions’ Rationality and Intelligence. 72 2.7 Concluding Chapter Two. 83 Chapter Three: Compassion. 3.1 Introduction. 85 3.1a Dark Souls in a Heart of Darkness. 89 3.1b The Road. 92 3.2 Kantian Dignity, Compassionate Individuals. 95 3.3 Morphology of Compassion. 96 3.4 Other Regarding Emotions. 103 3.5 Just Institutions. 109 3.6 Concluding Chapter Three. 113 Chapter Four: Why an Ethic of Care Needs Moral Theory. 4.1 Introduction. 115 4.2 Care, Moral Reasoning and Universal Principles. 119 4.3 In Defence of Liberal Ideals. 124 4.4 The Importance of Care. 129 4.5 The Intrinsic Worth of the Individual. 131 4.6 Metaphors of Reason and Justice. 137 4.7 Rawls’ Moral Theory: Emotions and Moral Development. 139 4.8 Gendered Morality. 140 4.9 Concluding Chapter Four. 142 Chapter Five: Gendered Emotions. 5.1 Introduction. 149 5.2 Autonomy and Agency. 151 5.3 The Context for Gender Differences: The Field of Science. 162 4 5.4 Gendering Emotions, Gendering Roles. 169 5.5 Concluding Chapter Five. 177 Chapter Six: Emotional Wellbeing - Threats and Capabilities. 6.1 Introduction. 178 6.2 Nancy’s Narrative: The Routes to Abuse. 181 6.3 The Emotional and Physical Effects of Intimate Partner Violence. 190 6.4 Capability Failure: The Capability Approach. 196 6.5 The Architectonic Potency of Emotions. 200 6.6 Concluding Chapter Six. 204 Chapter Seven: Moving Forward. 7.1 Introduction. 206 7.2 Summing-Up. 206 7.3 Teacher Education and Emotions in Schools. 215 7.3a The Novel as a Tool for Educating the Emotions. 217 7.4 Future Research. 233 7.5 Limitations of the Thesis. 234 7.6 Impact of the Thesis. 236 7.7 The Last Word … For the Moment. 239 References 240 5 Acknowledgements I thank: • Jonathan for his support, patience and faith throughout this intellectual journey. • My parents, Marilyn and Roddy, and my sister Ange, who wondered why I had waited so long to do this. • All my dear friends who never doubted me. • The many pupils, like Nancy, whom I have taught over a twelve year period, and who provided me with the ideas, opportunities for reflection and the inspiration to write this thesis. • Patrick Callaghan, Head Teacher of St. Andrew’s High School, Kirkcaldy, for his natural sympathy and understanding that allowed me to attend conferences and take time off to complete the PhD. • The PESGB (Philosophy of Education Society of Great Britain) for a grant that enabled me to take a month off work to complete this thesis. • Above all, Nicki Hedge, my supervisor. Without her unstinting support, faith, wisdom and guidance, above all her patience, this thesis would not be what it is. Thank you. 6 Author’s Declaration I declare, except where explicit reference is made to the contribution of others, that this dissertation is the result of my own work and has not been submitted for any other degree at the University of Glasgow or any other institution. Signature: Printed name: Alison MacKenzie Abbreviations Used in this Thesis Aristotle NE. The Nicomachean Ethics Rh. The Art of Rhetoric Pol. The Politics Conrad HD Heart of Darkness Kant DV. The Doctrine of Virtue. The Metaphysics of Morals GW. Groundwork of the Metaphysics of Morals Nussbaum CA Capability Approach Rawls OP Original Position VoI Veil of Ignorance The Scottish Government CfE Curriculum for Excellence 7 Chapter One: Emotions and Education. 1.1 Introduction. In this thesis I construct a predominantly philosophical account of emotions, and of compassion in particular, premised on the view that emotions are often rational1 and cognitive, and that they result from eudaimonistic2 judgements. Applying the study to education generally, and to schools in particular, I shall argue that educational research has not yet paid much attention to the construct of emotions, or to how an understanding of emotions can help us to produce what, in Scotland, we now refer to as ‘successful learners, responsible citizens, confident individuals and effective contributors’: the four capacities of a Curriculum for Excellence (SEED, 2004). The aim of my research is to consider how education can cultivate the emotions in ways that enable individuals to fulfill these four capacities, developing healthy emotional landscapes in which all young people can ‘use’3 their emotions with discernment and sensitivity. I shall attend, in particular, to the gendered emergence, expression and interpretation of emotions, contending that a division of emotions along gender lines that are culturally and socially constructed is damaging to, and limiting of, the potential of both sexes to flourish. I shall do so against a background of theory and research that seems scant with respect to how we might cultivate emotionally healthy individuals. It is not that emotional intelligence is not recognised, it is. There is an extensive literature on it, especially as popularised by Daniel Goleman (1996) and Howard Gardner (1983) and this is well- known in Scottish schools4. However, the aim of such writers is to show us how to use (or manage) emotions for intelligent interaction and behaviour modification rather than how to cultivate emotionally healthy individuals or to provide a philosophical analysis of the                                                                                                                 1I will shortly explain why I assert that emotions are often rational. 2I use eudaimonistic here following Nussbaum so taking it to refer to a person’s flourishing, wellbeing and the ‘good’, with a meaning ‘compatible with as many distinct conceptions of what that good is as one cares to propose’ (2001:31). 3I claim that we can ‘use’ emotions strategically to achieve our ends. We can ‘use’ anger to good effect if we want our partner to take our grievance seriously, for example, or we can feign fear to convey danger to a child. To ‘use’ here means focusing on the relevant thoughts to strategically arouse emotion or to evaluate situations appropriately. See Greenspan (2000:475) who argues that ‘[a]ttention to emotions can induce the reasons for an emotion can induce it – not with certainty but with enough regularity to provide the reasons for a strategy. …So emotions do have an instrumental role to play in day-to-day practical rationality’. See also Aristotle’s account of inducing emotional states in The Rhetoric. Aristotle’s discussion of emotion is clearly appreciative of the rationality of emotion. We might also say we ‘manage’ emotions. 4Senior teachers or Deputes who wish to become Headteachers are expected to take the Scottish Qualification for Headteachership (SQH) or the Fast Route to Head Teachership (FRH). Emotional Intelligence forms part of these courses, and Goleman and Gardner are popular. 8 emotions5. Bar-On et al. (2007) argue that emotionally intelligent people understand themselves and others, are emotionally expressive, and can establish, develop and maintain constructive relationships. Emotionally intelligent people are, further, successful: they can bring about change in their social and working environments because they can manage their emotions effectively. What is missing in such analyses is, at best, attention to how one might become emotionally adept in order to be emotionally intelligent if, indeed, emotional intelligence is a concept that has any significant value6. On the line I shall develop, emotions are essential elements of human intelligence and wellbeing. Accordingly, they deserve and demand more scrutiny and theoretical attention than populist accounts provide if we are to educate young people who can enjoy emotional wellbeing. This is the central issue the thesis seeks to address. However, before embarking on a more detailed outline of the thesis, I shall pause, briefly, to locate the thesis in my life, to explain how it came about, and to do so with an unashamedly personal, emotional account of its emergence. 1.2 Locating this Thesis. I am a girl from the Isle of Lewis, a remote island off the North West coast of Scotland, where the Gaelic culture still survives and the Presbyterian Church holds sway. I had a traditional, strict up-bringing in which belief in scripture and church attendance was the norm. Until I was in my early teens, I never questioned either the church or faith in God and, certainly, I did not question how women were supposed to behave. Women were quietly spoken, very respectful and silent in church or when men were present in the house during the Communions. While I often wore trousers, in church or when church guests were visiting us, or we them, skirts and hats were obligatory, excess jewellery or make-up was disapproved of and long hair was desirable. Men, I was brought up to believe, headed households. Women’s work was in the home, and women, because of Eve’s seduction by the serpent, had brought sin to the world, which justified our inferior status. However, for me, Eve represented reason, a woman who asked ‘what if?’. Adam simply followed her, without thought. Both had rested in a state of bliss and enchantment, feeling no fear, shame or jealousy; no compassion, pity or sympathy. As a teenager grappling with the idea of a beautiful Garden inhabited by only two people living a life of no moment until a snake slid                                                                                                                 5However, Goleman does draw on Aristotelian philosophy. 6For a discussion of such concerns, see, for example, Carr (2000, 2002); Kristjansson (2001); Roberts et al. (2001); Griffiths (2003); Rietti (2009). 9 along to hiss his seductions to Eve, Eden seemed inexpressibly dull: an Edenic stupor. ‘What’s the point of having a mind?’, I asked. ‘Why put the tree there and say don’t eat those apples?’, ‘Does God not understand the psychology of the creatures he created?’. The answers that came back made no sense. In any case, it was Eve who was punished and relegated to second class status, while Adam, who obeyed, ascended to the aristocracy. Someone had to start it? But how unfair! And how convenient! I have no brothers. I am confident, however, that were my parents to have had a son (and I am very glad they did not), he would have been under the bonnet of the car and his sisters would have been inside doing the housework. As it was, we were inside helping our mother, something I became increasingly less willing to do, as I grew older, preferring books to the kitchen sink. I am also confident that a brother would have been encouraged to be a boy: boisterous, active, loud, into rock music and football. We girls were encouraged to feel bad about being ‘angry’ and for not being ‘caring’ enough; in both cases I failed to conform to what was expected. The division of emotional and intellectual labour was also visible in school. The girls did ‘Home Economics’, as it was then called, and the boys did Woodwork. It was no surprise when boys did well in Maths and Physics, but surprising indeed if one of them was good at Languages or Literature. A girl was really bright if she did well in Maths and a Science, and even more bright if she was good in all Science and Mathematics subjects. I was ‘rubbish’7 at Maths, Chemistry and Physics, I hated Home Economics, but I got along well with Biology and in most other subjects I conformed to the gendered stereotype. No-one, anywhere, challenged the view that women were different from men. I asked my Dad why he did not stay at home and look after us while Mum went out to work and he replied with the only reason he could: ‘That’s women’s work’. My mum thought my question stupid, retorting: ‘I thought you were supposed to be intelligent?’. That was a frequent response when I exasperated my parents with ‘all those blinking questions!’. My concern grew about difference as it became apparent that double standards operated when it came to what men and women could do in the realm of sexual expression. Why could the boys get what they wanted, while the girls were labelled ‘sluts’ if they did? Because ‘boys can’, is all I received in reply. ‘But why?’                                                                                                                 7‘Rubbish’ is an informal and widely used expression that indicates how badly one fares in a subject or the poor state of a skill. Pupils will very often say they are ‘rubbish at’ Maths, or Art or French.

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PhD thesis. This thesis is primarily a philosophical exploration of emotions education generally, and to schools in particular, I shall argue that . It was no surprise when boys did well in Maths and Physics, a deeply loved person now many years dead whose perfume can still assail our olfactory.
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