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Amy Ferguson
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Amy
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Ferguson
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I am part of a web of writers, editors, videographers, communicators, and ambassadors who help shine a light on how we can all contribute to a loving world. For me this comes through in three simple words: reveal, serve, and inspire. It means researching, listening, sleuthing, writing, connecting, and conspiring for good. 

Our teachers in this work are numerous. I have learned so much from others' fine "translations" of the need for love in our world--epidemiologists, neuroscientists, and public health specialists, artists, clergy, and various lifelong practitioners of compassion--who carry this work into realms of our social life like schools, prisons, and law enforcement circles.

My background is deep in the humanities, and my family tree is of full Catholics (faithful and lapsed), skeptics, and librarians. I have a master's degree in literature and am drawn to volunteer with arts-related organizations and projects. 


 

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“We are all born with 200 bad poems in us.”  —Billy Collins

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Selections from the We the People Book Club.
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“What I love about this research is that it is framing up outcomes that are relevant to kids now. Usually, it’s what are the outcomes to be successful down the road as opposed to what is meaningful to kids right now, no matter how old they are,” says Education Reimagined President and Founder Kelly Young reflecting on the recent UNICEF report, “What Makes Me? Core Capacities for Living and Learning.” 

Young is among the roughly 1,000 education stakeholders who participated in the US launch of the report, a meta-analysis of published research that shares the efficacy of a whole-child framework for education.  

Fetzer Senior Program Officer Xiaoan Li notes, “Teachers and students are working so hard and are so stressed. The launch events helped highlight what is emerging in education that is both addressing a deep need and helping reinvigorate and renew education.”

Here is a sampling of insights from launch events that have deepened the conversation about whole child education and the promise it holds for young learners, their families, and society.

  • Children’s well-being is the ultimate goal of education. Or as UNICEF’s Dominic Richardson, author of “What Makes Me?” put it, “Well-being is not about well doing or well becoming, well-being is who we are right now.”  
  • We need to allow children to awaken to their unique human potential. To achieve this, our educational system needs to shift from everyone receiving the same education and expecting the same outcomes to an educational environment that recognizes the vast landscape of individuality and human potential. 
  • Education develops capabilities and competencies in young people; we also need to nurture their innate capacities, such as listening, reflection, and discerning.
  • Building meaningful relationships among all education stakeholders and seeing each other as unique and committed partners in the work of education is essential. How can our approach to education better include children (as students of all ages) as partners in their own educational experience?  

“What Makes Me,” has also importantly revealed a lack of research on the spiritual dimension of learning. A second phase of research will assess what has been published since COVID related to the spiritual aspects of childhood spiritual development.

“This body of work is so important because it is foundational, timely, and relevant,” says Xiaoan Li. “In the past three years, COVID-19 has resulted in extraordinary disruptions to the education landscape and everyone in it has been impacted, students and teachers particularly. I believe time is ripe to bring love into the work of whole child education. Our lived experience, along with a growing number of research studies, have all helped us realize that love heals, and that love- and compassion-based social interactions promote health, healing, and well-being.”

Learn more about the Fetzer Institute’s work in education in this video.

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