Insights into Education presents the educational philosophy of J. Krishnamurti in an easy to use, topic-based format. It is a practical handbook that comes alive when used as an introduction to group investigation and dialogue. What it offers to teachers everywhere is an inroad into the many matters of concern with which they are faced on a daily basis. That we cannot continue as we have been doing, with rote-learning, fact-finding, and a modicum of analysis as the building blocks of education, is obvious to anyone who is at all concerned with teaching and learning in a world with accelerating technological advancement, alienation, and despair. It is these very issues that are tackled here, sometimes implicitly but always at depth. What Krishnamurti proposes, and here discloses, is a different approach to learning altogether, one that distinguishes itself radically from what we normally understand by that term: the accumulation of knowledge, with its application and testing. By narrowing down our understanding to the pragmatic and the measurable, we forfeit the opportunity to probe deeply and to awaken intelligence in our students and in ourselves. What is meant by intelligence in this context is not the capacity to memorize and measure, but that subtler ability to see the whole which comes alive in a human being when he/she sees the limits of the measurable. To awaken this intelligence is the goal of education.O›Insights into Education presents the educational philosophy of J. Krishnamurti in an easy to use, topic-based format. It is a practical handbook that comes alive when used as an introduction to group investigation and dialogue. What it offers to teachers everywhere is an inroad into the many matters of concern with which they are faced on a daily basis. That we cannot continue as we have been doing, with rote-learning, fact-finding, and a modicum of analysis as the building blocks of education, is obvious to anyone who is at all concerned with teaching and learning in a world with accelerating technological advancement, alienation, and despair. It is these very issues that are tackled here, sometimes implicitly but always at depth. What Krishnamurti proposes, and here discloses, is a different approach to learning altogether, one that distinguishes itself radically from what we normally understand by that term: the accumulation of knowledge, with its application and testing. By narrowing down our understanding to the pragmatic and the measurable, we forfeit the opportunity to probe deeply and to awaken intelligence in our students and in ourselves. What is meant by intelligence in this context is not the capacity to memorize and measure, but that subtler ability to see the whole which comes alive in a human being when he/she sees the limits of the measurable. To awaken this intelligence is the goal of education.
Meeting Life
J Krishnamurti
bookThe New Mind : The Collected Works of J Krishnamurti 1963 - 1964
J Krishnamurti
bookUnconditioning and Education 2 : The Need for a radical approach
J Krishnamurti
bookWhat Are You Seeking ? : The Collected Works of J Krishnamurti 1934 - 1935
J Krishnamurti
bookThe Answer Is in the Problem : The Collected Works of J Krishnamurti 1955 - 1956
J Krishnamurti
bookWhat Are You Seeking ? : The Collected Works of J Krishnamurti 1934 - 1935
J Krishnamurti
bookPerennial Questions : The Collected Works of J Krishnamurti 1966 - 1967
J Krishnamurti
bookThe Years of Awakening
J Krishnamurti
bookInsights Into Education : Bringing about A Totally New Mind
J Krishnamurti
bookA Light to Yourself : The Collected Works of J Krishnamurti 1956 - 1957
J Krishnamurti
bookThe World Within; You Are The Story of Humanity
J Krishnamurti
bookThere is No Thinker Only Thought : The Collected Works of J Krishnamurti 1961
J Krishnamurti
book