Can we teach moral reasoning? - RSA

Can we teach moral reasoning?

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  • Behaviour change
  • Health & wellbeing

There is currently another curriculum review underway in the UK. Emma Worley asks whether lessons in morality be considered within the review and if schools should 'build character and virtue', how should this be done?

"Over the last two decades, many would agree that our educational philosophy at every level has been more and more dominated by an instrumentalist model; less and less concerned with a building of virtue, character and citizenship - 'civic excellence' as we might say. And a good educational system in a healthy society is one that builds character, that builds virtue.”

This was said in the House of Lords by Dr Rowan Williams, the Archbishop of Canterbury, following the recall to parliament last week.

The BBC ran a series of lectures by Harvard University professor Michael Sandel during its Justice season earlier this year. The programmes were recordings of his moral and political philosophy course, Justice: A Journey in Moral Reasoning. The course covers a range of political, ethical and moral issues from utilitarianism to surrogate motherhood and military service. Sandel’s classes are not lectures in the traditional sense. He does not stand in front of his packed audience (up to 1000 students at a time) and tell them about philosophers and arguments whilst they take notes. Instead, he facilitates philosophical enquiries, asks questions, and seeks reasons why students think what they think, he links ideas around the room, seeks tension in the dialogue and creates debate so that the participants are engaged in an interactive discussion.

These are lessons in moral reasoning, where the students think about decisions they might make, and then think further about why they might make them, the impact of their decisions on wider society and how this might affect everyone universally. This kind of enquiry can be fertile ground for re-thinking and re-evaluating students preconceived and sometimes knee-jerk reactions to moral dilemmas. It enables people to ‘practice’ moral decision making in a safe environment.

Why would lessons in moral reasoning be better than, for instance, learning about ethics, or considering different religions or lessons in citizenship? The answer perhaps lies in Dr Williams’ comment about the growing instrumenalism of our education system. Too much emphasis has been placed on passing exams, getting the right answer and moving up to the next level or shipping out as quickly as possible. Education is seen as a way to get a job, rather than a way to live in a community or for the sake of the flourishing individual. Utility has become king and as a result teaching seems to be focused on answers rather than on exploring questions; this is not down to teachers alone, but more on the pressure placed upon them to get children to recite the ‘facts’ in order to pass their exams.

Learning moral behaviour as a set of propositional facts to be churned out in exams, may have its role but there are limitations to this approach as stated by Aristotle, some two and a half thousand years ago. He noticed that people who are unrestrained in their actions (they act immorally or have a ‘weakness of the will’) resemble those asleep, drunk or mad. They may be able to reel off the moral verses of Empedocles yet they do not know what they mean, and therefore fail to act upon Empedocles' advice. They are like an actor speaking a part who does not have any understanding of the words spoken. Knowledge and moral behaviour takes time, Aristotle says, for it "to become part of the tissue of the mind".

In the classroom if you ask young children how they should behave they will generally respond with lists of moral behaviour taught to them by the school: ‘listen to each other, respect each other, don’t laugh at people’ and so on. But they do not necessarily act upon these well rehearsed lines. Though children tell teachers and parents what they want to hear they often act upon another set of principles. These principles are ‘operational beliefs’; the beliefs they implicitly hold and act upon, in contrast to ‘received beliefs’ which are those received from parents, teachers and society (and to be found on any classroom wall as ‘School Rules’).

It could be that moral education should begin in a received belief way, something Aristotle may assent to, but there is a point at which one must move beyond this so that the value of the good behaviour is recognised as such. The question then is how do we help children make the journey from received to operational beliefs? How do we make good, virtuous behaviour, part of what Aristotle called 'the tissue of the mind', so that good behaviour is internalised or naturalised? So that virtuous behaviour is part of what one is disposed to do rather than merely a list of principles on which one should act but doesn’t?

This is where moral reasoning as philosophical enquiry could help. By engaging students in a moral dialogue they have to think about why it is good to do one thing over another. They have to go beyond their immediate wants and consider other peoples opinions, beliefs and feelings, then take it further and apply these thoughts universally. Moral reasoning and enquiry are not just an exercise in rational thought, in premises and conclusions, but an engagement with the topic under debate, others in the room, and society at large; a way to listen to others and to creatively rethink and reflect upon our own thoughts and beliefs.

It is reflection that is perhaps crucial in moral development. It is by reflecting on our actions and thoughts and relating these to others and the wider world that we can consider whether what we do is right, or wrong.


Emma Worley is co-founder of educational charity The Philosophy Foundation. For more on philosophical enquiry see 'The If Machine: Philosophical Enquiry in the Classroom' available from the Philosophy Foundation.

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  • Interesting ideas Jason, thank you. Indeed there is a big difference between schooling and the work environment. In the work environment now we are expected to collaborate, whereas collaboration just isn't the focus of the end product of schooling (exams). Collaboration in schools is called cheating! 

    Read an interesting article in the TES on Friday (August 19th) by Robin Alexander about the curriculum review and 'Reinvesting in the Arts' a new US Report about the importance of creativity within 21st Century education.

  • One of the broader issues about the expectation that there should be a response from schools to the rioting is that schools are expected to operate with a traditional, authoritarian model to which wider society is no longer committed. 

    this is a very broad generalisation, but the impression I get is that 70 years ago, hierarchy, deference, "Sir", obedience, unquestioned rules, surnames must have been a relatively small step from similarly organised workplaces and homes. Compare the pace of change in relationships within workplaces and homes during that period with the pace of change in schools. In both cases, there is a shift from a controlling, authoritarian norm towards one which is more dialogic, or at least superficially more egalitarian (even oppressive employers use first names these days).

    I'm not suggesting that this is a bad transition, but it is a disconcerting one and the media often give voice to a desire for regression to what is seen as the old equilibrium. Whenever some crisis occasions a panic of nostalgia, it is schools that are blamed for loosening old strictures and are expected to reimpose them.

    I simply can't see that in the hundred years time schools will still be full of children wearing uniforms and calling teachers by their surnames. It already seems archaic given the informality with which the rest of society's business is conducted. Society wants schools to "do as I say, not as I do," which is slowing the transition towards a new equilibrium which moral values are the result of reflection, not imposition.

  • It's easy to sympathise with Sir Ken, but I think he junks the Enlightenment too readily.  I prefer to discuss moral and intellectual issues, in passing, on a local Forum - it's a discipline I impose to stay connected, and clear.  Here's what I wrote a few days ago in response to a deeply felt "Take on the riots"

    Normally I like to be rude about economists, because I work alongside them in the City, and they never seem to think about the insights of other social sciences such as anthropology, sociology and psychology. Notoriously, it was a social anthopologist, Gillian Tett, who was the stand out journalist in the run up to the crash of 2008 who was able to predict what would happen. I also have a bit of a down on social sciences in general, because they all tend to factor out the moral element - human beings are looked at as automata who respond to various pressures, whether economic incentives, peer pressure, or purely individual factors such as the need for self-esteem. For me, we should all be responsible, and we all have some ability to choose between right and wrong, regardless of how little elbow room is given us by our social situation.

    And I hope you pick up in this an oblique reference to Dennett's "Elbow Room" - who I discover on Googling is an instrumentalist.  In fact, I discover that most of the philosophers I have read and generally agreed with are described as instrumentalists of one kind or another, so I guess that makes me one too.

    On the subject of education, I've also find myself recently thinking about, and rereading Ivan Illich's "Deschooling Society" - partly in response to another regular on this local Forum who described the boredom of school in a way Sir Ken would recognise, and also describes later putting himself through a level 3 NVQ in a couple of months, following which he has been permanently employable - and clearly with lots of creativity left in him.  I'm not dissimilar - I was only ever intermittently bothered by what I was supposed to learn at school.

    I don't think we are that unusual - and we illustrate a challenge, namely that people can get all the education they need with only a tiny fraction of the time spent on current schooling , But this can be understood and analysed within the standard Enlightenment paradigm that lies behind economics, and social sciences like sociology, at least such as Marx, Spencer, Weber would have understood them.  Sure, many in this dominant tradition will fail to think creatively within it, but that can happen with any paradigm.

    I very much like the idea of engaging pupils in moral debate, and at all levels, but I think it is as likely to stimulate thinking about the various pressures they are under, and dare I say it instrumentalist thinking about them, as more purely moral reasoning.  Since - I think - there would always be an element of moral reasoning in such discussions, I don't suppose you'd object - but you might have to tool up with some of the key concepts of Enlightenment disciplines such as economics.

  • Hi Tim, did reply earlier, but because I put a link on it is going through the 'checking' process. I take what Dr Williams to mean as schools are concentrating on results and exams rather than developing the whole child. Our schools are built on a factory system and do not have room on the whole for creativity, divergent thinking or dialogue. See Sir Ken Robinson's talk on 'Changing Education Paradigms' for more on this.