The Joko “Jokowi” Widodo-Basuki “Ahok”
Tjahaja Purnama victory in the Jakarta gubernatorial election last year
demonstrates that Indonesia’s democracy has progressed to a higher level.
The rigid notion about how a particular group
should lead the government has started fading. The tough “ethnicity” wall also
appears to be crumbling.
But is it true that intolerance has
disappeared altogether? Or is the Jokowi-Ahok phenomenon just a superficially
attractive delusion for what we call multicultural tolerance?
Probably we should contemplate more on what
has been happening. Some examples, like the inter-village clash in Maluku that
claimed five lives just before New Year’s Eve and the warning by a particular
group against Muslims wishing Christians a merry Christmas, do not follow the
same path as our previous euphoria. Indeed, our multicultural tolerance still
has a long way to go.
Some aspects might cause intolerance. They
might be personal experiences, parental issues, environmental or educational.
The latter, especially formal education, plays a significant role in shaping
the understanding of multiculturalism. Therefore, we should pay attention to
the school element, particularly the teachers. Teachers must be able to prepare
students as part of a multicultural society.
Teachers hold a responsibility to create
teaching and learning environments that promote a democratic exchange of ideas.
By doing this, there will be strong multicultural education in our education
system. According to Bannet et al, multicultural education is a democratic
approach to teaching and learning that seeks to foster cultural pluralism
within culturally diverse societies and an interdependent world. In the US,
more than 63 percent of American universities require multicultural diversity
in their core course for teachers’ education.
Multicultural education focuses on students’
performance, both academically and socially. Nowadays, often as educators,
teachers perceive teaching and learning as processes that solely concern the
academic achievement of their students. In Indonesia, for example, most schools
employ the results of academic tests as the primary measurement of being a
“successful student”. This must change since it focuses more on cognition than
preparing students to be responsible citizens of a multicultural world.
Helping students to develop positive attitudes
and become responsible individuals is extremely essential in a classroom.
Teachers should encourage students to be active learners.
To do this, teachers must lead students to
know each other as individuals, regard each other as equals and be able to work
together on common interests and goals in a safe and supportive classroom
environment. Creating such a classroom climate that promotes the
internalization of these shared values through multicultural education will
help students actively develop as learners, as people and as citizens.
Multicultural education will prepare students
to be responsible members of society. Students must be aware that they are a
part of society.
As Pacino eloquently says, teaching and
learning in the context of community is truly a moral, spiritual and ethical
journey. The concept of ethical and moral values and actions in society should
be integrated in their classroom.
Hence, educators should acknowledge and
address students’ need to carry on the real experience of being part of a
community, not only of individual academic achievement at school.
In addition, in multicultural and democratic
countries, teachers should educate students how to actively participate and
contribute to their society. By acquiring moral and ethical values from school,
students will understand the dos and don’ts within a participatory democratic
society. In order to achieve this, teachers should place themselves as the
facilitators of information, not as dictators of information. This kind of
active classroom setting enables students to experience the feelings of respect
and self-autonomy.
There are specific methods that teachers can
implement to achieve multicultural education. One example is implementing
activities and discussions that focus on the positive aspects of cultural
identity, heritage and differences, such as involving students in developing
personally relevant multicultural stories, books or even autobiographies.
Teachers can ask students to actively present and discuss their own story.
One of the purposes of inviting students to
share their stories is to better understand how the students can use their
background knowledge to gain access to curricular content. This will also
include an understanding of cross-cultural differences and social challenges.
Teachers can reinforce the importance of
multicultural education by involving students in community service/learning
activities. This gives students the opportunity to be more responsible,
knowledgeable and sensitive to their own
surroundings.
This sensitivity is essential for the
students’ personal moral development, their sense of community and increased
tolerance, acceptance and respect for others.
To realize multicultural education, a
Herculean effort from all education stakeholders is mandatory. As Mahatma
Gandhi once said, anger and intolerance are the enemies of correct
understanding. Hence, let’s keep up the spirit of multicultural tolerance in
Indonesia once and for all.
Kunto
Nurcahyoko ;
The
writer is pursuing a PhD degree
at
the Ohio State University, in the US
JAKARTA
POST, 05 Januari 2013
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