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Quakers
believe in strong encouragement of the individual. Each person has the
capacity to be good, the ability to see the Light of God, and the ability
to put that truth to good use. Thus, Quakers provide an exceptional and
unique learning environment. Students who graduate from a Quaker school
walk away with a strong sense of social understanding, skills to deal with
adversity, tolerance and respect for others, and a strong sense of
self-worth so that they have the power needed to succeed.
-
Graduate of a Friends School, 1994
Friends
schools hope to create an environment within which students and staff
alike can continue to mature as companions in a wide range of experiences.
These experiences, both outward and inward in nature, may bring forth in
each a deepening awareness of the presence of God.
The
Quaker belief in the "Inner Light" leads to faith in the ability
of every member of the school community to reach his or her full
potential. Children are expected to grow and change in an environment that
nurtures their spirits and challenges them to develop inner resources for
discipline and achievement. A variety of gifts and talents are honored.
Students
learn to respect and practice truth and to know the various ways it can be
found - through scientific investigation, through creative expression,
through conversation, through worship, through service within the school
community and beyond. They are encouraged by word and example to respect
the talents and perspectives of others, and include them in a cooperative,
rather than competitive search for knowledge.
A basic
tenet of Quakerism is that truth is continuously revealed and is
accessible to the seeker. At Friends schools, this belief is reflected in
an open-minded approach to curriculum and teaching, in an emphasis on
critical thinking skills, and in a developmental approach to children and
learning. Work on individual skills and knowledge is balanced with group
learning, in which each person's unique insights contribute to a
collective understanding.
Aims
of Quaker Education
A
Friends school hopes to offer a community that cares deeply about what
kind of persons its members, young and old, are becoming, what goals and
motives are effective in their lives, what their response is to the high
calling of being human. They hope to be communities of those who have, not
only techniques and knowledge, but also a vivid relationship to reality, a
hunger for worship, a passion for truth, and the experience of growth in
the Light.
Quaker
education does not seek to inculcate a particular set of beliefs or
doctrines; it seeks to nurture a particular sort of personhood - a person
who knows deep down that sight, taste, touch, smell, and hearing are not
all there are to life; a person who, in an age of rampant materialism, has
first-hand experience of the reality and importance of the Spirit in life;
a person rooted as much in the unseen as in the seen, as much in the
spiritual as in the physical; a person who has capacity for reverence, and
who is as well equipped to experience the Spirit as to do work in the
world.
This is
a person who has learned that truth, beauty, goodness, and love are
evidences of the transforming power of the Spirit and everywhere imbued
with meaning; a person who is optimistic about the ability of love and
good will to mend the affairs of humanity; a person who has begun to
develop the courage to testify outwardly to what he or she knows inwardly;
a person who has the courage to follow the inward argument where it leads.
Quaker
education represents a unique combination of academic excellence and
spiritual depth.
Meeting
for Worship
Each
week a Friends school community gathers for meeting for worship. The form
of worship is simple - believing that each person has within him or her
the ability, with God's help, to discern the truth, Friends worship
silently, waiting upon the Spirit. Students and teachers are encouraged to
speak from their hearts, if so moved.
The
unstructured nature of meeting for worship, with its focus on the power of
the gathered group, gives children of all faiths a powerful tool for
spiritual growth. They are asked to turn to their Inner Light for guidance
in living their lives. Meeting for worship makes explicit the connection
between the inward and outward life that is unique in Quaker education.
Social
Action
Friends
education strives to be socially responsible. Peace and war, racism and
brotherhood, ignorance and poverty, injustice and law, violence and
nonviolence - all these are both subjects for study and issues for
commitment for students as they seek to become effective citizens.
Because
Friends believe that faith requires action in the world, the schools
emphasize the development of a caring community, peaceful resolution of
conflict, and service to others, especially those less fortunate. Friends
have a long tradition of putting love into action, and the Quaker
testimonies of equality, community, harmony, and simplicity are reflected
in the life of the school. Students grow into compassionate and
responsible adults who recognize their interconnectedness with the larger
human family.
[Excerpted
from What Does a Friends School Have to Offer? with permission from the Friends Council on Education]
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information on The Religious Society of Friends |