We are honored to have been asked to contribute to Habitat World,
The Publication of Habitat for Humanity International. This
article appeared in the June/July 2002 issue. For more information
about Habitat for Humanity, go to www.hfhi.org or www.habitat.org.
By Victoria Kindle Hodson and Mariaemma Pelullo-Willis
Without emotional safety, there can be no learning. For
students, adequate housing ranks high on the scale of psychological security.
|
|
|
 |
|
|
For
children living in precarious housing, a place to study
may, of necessity be outdoorsas it was for Kwan Mongfoyglang
until his family moved into their Habitat house in Thailand
last year.
Photo
by Kim MacDonald
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
In
the 1950s, I (Victoria Kindle Hodson) was growing up in a neighborhood
of modest but new homes in Everett, Wash. Just two blocks away,
a father and two sons lived in a three-room shack surrounded
by the growing housing development.
A fourth
grader, the younger son was small for his age. He walked with his
hands in his pockets, his shoulders slumped, and his eyes downcast.
He wore the same ragged, soiled black pants day after day, the same
run-down shoes, and the same dusty, black leather jacket. He had
no friends and was never chosen for teams. Neighborhood kids ostracized
both of the brothers, throwing stones at them and verbally taunting
them.
During my school years, we waved to each other when he passed by my house.
Eventually, he stopped waving…about the time he quit school in
junior high.
No security, no sense of belonging and no equality led to no education
for this young man. For me, the experience affirmed an obvious link between
education and poverty.
Today, as educators and consultants, we have seen that a positive home
environment can elicit positive results. A school principal in southern
California, for example, discovered that one of his school families was
living in substandard housing. Because he saw potential in the children
and was concerned that their housing would hurt their school performance,
he helped obtain adequate housing for the family and better employment
for the father. The family began to thrive, increasing their self-confidence
and their sense of dignity. Subsequently all five of the children did
well in school, and as of this writing three are attending college.
Schooling is a primary means of stitching us into our communities, providing
a social foundation for learning that supports us as we acquire skills
and become contributing members where we live and work. However, doctors,
psychologists and educators have discovered that we cannot learn when
we don’t feel emotionally safe. Substandard housing threatens
this sense of security and becomes a liability in the academic life of
a student.
Positive, nurturing, stimulating environments lay the foundation for
learning. While an adequate house doesn’t guarantee a successful
learning experience, substandard housing guarantees that learning will
be difficult at best, because in response to a physically or emotionally
unsafe environment families must focus first on survival and can’t “waste” energy
on learning.
Inadequate housing hinders education because it undermines a student’s
ability to feel safe enough to learn. In today’s classrooms thousands
of children spend the majority of their time in heightened emotional
states, inwardly or outwardly protecting themselves due to duress over
personal situations, including housing.
According to psychologist Abraham Maslow, humans have a set of needs,
which rise in importance from personal security to a sense of belonging,
equality, capability and independence. Beyond the basic need for safe
housing, human learning depends on our feeling that we “belong” in
our respective classrooms. Housing that is precarious or inadequate underscores
how different we are from others, causing us to doubt whether we belong.
In turn, students who lack a sense of belonging cannot feel equal to
their classmates. This perception of inequality can stimulate feelings
of hostility, anger and fearall barriers to learning.
Considered functionally, a house is a platform for living, learning and
giving something back to our communities. City planners have long noted
the connection between stable households and a strong civic life. Neighborhoods
with few stable households typically record higher rates of vandalism
and more serious crime. Not surprisingly, neighborhood schools whose
surrounding housing stock is substandard also are characterized by substandard
academic performance from students.
Substandard housing not only imposes hardships on the children living
within. It can be a crippling force, causing them to miss important classroom
time because of illness or other effects of an impoverished environment,
and, ultimately, to “learn” that learning is not for them.
This only extends the cycle of low academic achievement and poverty living
conditions.
Having worked in the field
of education for a collective 50 years, Kindle Hodson and Pelullo-Willis
are the authors of Discover Your Child’s Learning Style
and the co-directors of the Learning-SuccessTM Institute in Ventura,
Calif. For more information about their work, visit their web site
at www.learningsuccesscoach.com. ©2002 Reflective Educational
Perspectives.
Making
a Difference: Habitat and Education
Julie McDonald, a Habitat homeowner in Sheboygan,
Wis., found new opportunities for education in her
Habitat house. In 1995, she wrote, “We
moved into our Habitat home in November 1993, just in time for
Christmas. ...[later] I earned a high school equivalency
diploma and went to college for one year. I hope
to return once both our children are enrolled themselves.
...Our children are the very first generation in
my family to live like this.”
Since then, McDonald has finished her degree
in business administration and marketing and
hopes to return for a master’s. Also,
her children improved their school performance
when they moved to their Habitat house from
the overcrowded, stressful conditions of inadequate
housing.
Just the Facts
- Nearly
1 billion people are illiterate. (UNICEF)
- More
than 110 million children of school age are not in
school. (UNICEF)
- If
the world were to invest an extra 30 cents of every
$100, all children would be healthy, well nourished
and in primary school. (UNICEF)
|
|