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The point is not to abandon scholarship
but to ground it, to personalize it and to balance it with the
fundamentals of mind training, especially the practice of sitting
meditation so that inner development and outer knowledge go hand in
hand...
A balanced education cultivates abilities beyond the verbal
and conceptual to include matters of heart, character, creativity,
self-knowledge, concentration, openness and mental flexibility.
~ Judy Lief, trustee and former Naropa University president
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contemplative education
capturing the spark of east and west
in the learning mind
Isn't contemplation a part of all education?
Isn't contemplative education redundant?
The first step to understanding contemplative education is to grasp that
it doesn't mean solely self reflection, and it is not the act of
contemplation alone that makes it unique.
Contemplative education is learning infused with the experience of
awareness, insight and compassion for oneself and others, honed through
the practice of sitting meditation and other contemplative disciplines.
The rigor of these disciplined practices prepares the mind to process
information in new and perhaps unexpected ways. Contemplative practice
unlocks the power of deep inward observation, enabling the learner to
tap into a wellspring of knowledge about the nature of mind, self and
other that has been largely overlooked by traditional, Western-oriented
liberal education.
This approach to learning captures the spark of East and West working
within; it’s the meeting of two of the greatest learning philosophies in
the history of higher education, applied at Naropa University in the
context of today’s rapidly changing world.
Naropa University has offered mission-based contemplative education
to both undergraduate and graduate students for more than thirty years.
Informed by ancient Eastern educational philosophies, contemplative
education at Naropa experiments with another way of knowing through its
joining of rigorous liberal arts training and the disciplined training
of the heart. Transcending the belief that knowledge arises in the
thinking mind only, this educational philosophy invites students to
embrace the immediacy of their interior lives as a means for fully
integrating what they learn.
Contemplative education is not solely traditional education with a
course in meditation thrown in; it is an approach that offers an
entirely new way of understanding what it means to be educated in the
modern Western liberal arts tradition. At Naropa University, students
wholeheartedly engage in mindfulness awareness practices in order to
cultivate being present in the moment and to deepen their academic
study.
Woven into the fabric of the curriculum are practices that include
sitting meditation, t’ai-chi ch’uan, aikido, yoga, Chinese brushstroke
and ikebana. The depth of insight and concentration reached through
students’ disciplined engagement with contemplative practices alters the
very landscape of learning and teaching at Naropa.
Through such a focused self-exploration, students and faculty acquire
the ability to be present in the classroom and in their lives; to engage
in active listening with an open mind; to analyze a subject; and to
integrate what has been learned with personal experience.
Other resulting qualities include the development of openness,
self-awareness and insight; enhanced speaking and listening skills; the
sharpening of insight; and an appreciation of the world’s diversity and
richness. From this self-understanding comes an ability to appreciate
the value of another’s experience.
The goal of a Naropa University education is not to nurture the solitary
contemplative only; it is also to cultivate those at the other end of
the spectrum whose interior work acts as preparation for compassionate
and transformative work in the world. More specifically, the value of
contemplative education is measured in Naropa students’ ability to put
their wisdom and insight into practice through creative, helpful and
effective action.
source:
Naropa University website
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