Elliot's book Nobody Left to Hate: Teaching Compassion after Columbia brings in social psychology in its treatment of the contemporary school system. Arguing that we would never allow any workplace environment to become as rotten and insidious as the school environment has become, Aronson brings in social psychology to show the effect that the environment can have on any mile. He also leads us through possible interventions that we can use to improve the school setting.
Aaronson points out that cruelty, bullying, humiliation, cliquishness, competition are aspects that occur on a regular routine in many of our schools across the country. More so, educators and parents often fail to stress the need for empathy, cooperation, and the nurturing of "social intelligence." The result is that in an increasing amount of schools, students from dysfunctional homes are buttressed by images of violence form outside society and from the media to transport that violence to school setting and to perpetrate that violence there.
What can we do?
Using psychological principles, Aaronson correlates the case to the steps that British 19th century scientists took when faced with a cholera epidemic. They simply removed the pump handle of a particular contaminated well so that no more water could be drawn from it. After that, they addressed the root of the epidemic which was the closeness of latrines to water supply. In a similar way, Aaronson urges that we curb media violence, enact more stringent gun-control measures, and in some school even impose gun-metal detectors (although he is chary with...
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