Special report | Soft skills

Efforts to teach character bring promise and perils

‘Social and emotional learning’ bundles good sense with some quackery

Illustration of a person from the back with a keyhole on their blue head, wearing a green shirt, and holding a large white key against an yellow background.
Illustration: Giacomo Bagnara

Aristotle TAUGHT his students the importance of managing their emotions. John Dewey, an early 20th-century reformer, sparked the idea that teachers must educate the “whole child”. For decades wealthy parents in Britain (and a few other places) sent kids to boarding schools in the hope that they would pick up traits such as independence and resilience. It is not controversial to argue that a young child’s first years in education are as much about learning social skills and self-control as about anything else.

This article appeared in the Special report section of the print edition under the headline “Teaching the whole child”

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