Thursday, May 29, 2014

Kurt Hahn, “The Seven Laws of Salem”, and the Founding Principals of Outward Bound. Part 1




Over the next 7 weeks or so I will post an exploration of each of  Kurt Hahn’s “Seven Laws of Salem”.  While these were written as founding principals for a German boarding school in 1930, their relevance to our own continuing education as adults in today’s post-industrial society should not be dismissed.  Though they can certainly inform our modern education system, our journey will be looking at each as it relates to challenges that arise in our daily lives as adults.

Kurt Hahn was an educator and vocal anti-Nazi in the early days of their rise to power. The principals he called “The Seven Laws of Salem” (the basis for the school he founded in Salem, Germany between the world wars) became the founding principals of the Outward Bound programs now offered at independent schools around the world.

Hahn was focused on developing social change through education of the younger generation. He placed the natural world, our earth, in a position of great importance to the heath and development of a human being at a time when industrialization and modernism was beginning to over take more traditional life styles.


The Seven Laws of Salem

1. Give the children opportunities for self-discovery.
2. Make the children meet with triumph and defeat.
3. Give the children the opportunity of self-effacement inthe common cause.
4. Provide periods of silence.
5. Train the imagination.
6. Make games important but not predominant.
7. Free the sons of the wealthy and powerful from the enervating sense of privilege.


“Give the children opportunities for self-discovery”

I don’t know about you, but my education was focused mainly on learning facts and developing tools to solve abstract problems. Self-discovery happened, I suppose. There were occasionally teachers who encouraged these types of things, however this was not the way the system was suppose to work. For many of us I believe, our adolescent years, where we develop our own sense of self, begins with the realization that there is a system. We then need to figure out how we can maintain our individuality within or against such a system.

What typically happens as we develop our sense of self is that we are usually creating it in relation to what is happening around us. For some of us it is rebellion, taking on an outsider role, for others it is in conforming . Yes, there are extremes, but most of us have some areas of conformity and others where we take on more of an outsider role.

Little time is made for going inward, especially being guided there – toward what makes us, well, us – our sense of purpose, our passions and dreams.

Hahn’s own statement on this principal begins:

 “Every girl and boy has a ‘grande passion,’ often hidden and unrealized to the end of life. The Educator cannot hope and may not try to find it out by psycho-analytical methods. It can and will be reviled by a child coming into close touch with a number of different activities. these activities must not be added as a super structure to an exhausting program of lessons. They will have no chance of absorbing and brining out the child unless they form a a vital part of the work day.

Dodge ball anyone? Its gym class today. So here, at the start of this exploration we hit upon one of biggest challenges faced by so many people today. Something that is at the root of so much of our unhappiness, whether it is the “mid-life crisis” or the “drifting, purposeless” 20 somethings.

Hahn goes on to correlate this lack of exploration of what truly attracts us in our early development to our spiritual health – the joy and happiness we experience in life.

“(The) undiscovered… boy rarely maintains his vitality unbroken and undiluted from 11 to 15. We do not hesitate to say: often the spiritual difference in age between a boy of 15 and a boy of 11 is greater than that of a man of 50 and a boy of 15.

In our society these ages may vary, but think of the vitality of a young woman or man at 24 and another at 34?

How can we know our passion or purpose in life if we have never take time to explore it? & as life goes on and our responsibilities and the roles we play add up quite often we move further and further from that passion, we cease any effort at self-discovery and begin to define our selves by the circumstances of our life.

The great gift is it is never too late to begin this journey. There are many paths to this, many ways of making time and space to explore and nurture that source of vitality – on your own, in groups or workshops, with a coach or guide. The world is around us. Vitality sure sound good me.

Try taking time every day, whatever time you can afford – an hour, 15 minutes, less? Write down your agenda, the infinite list of what needs to be done. Next to each item consider why it is there. Is it because of some responsibility you took on? Something that is part of someone else’s agenda? Something you chose because it makes you feel more alive?

I’m not advocating ditching all your responsibilities to find your passion. What I can help with is finding a path to (or back to) that connection to something that gives your life meaning and vitality. Finding it in a way that enhances your life – as it is, as it can be.


Part 2. Part 3. Part 4. Part 5.
___________________
Kurt Hahn's School's and Legacy by Martin Flavin was the primary source for these posts.