Wildmind Meditation News
Feb 12, 2011
From time-out to quiet time: meditation comes to SF schools
Innovative ideas are often born in California. This is the home of Silicon Valley, after all. But, that spirit of innovation isn’t limited to finding more ways to plug in to the world of high tech. Innovation also means finding ways to disconnect from it all. This kind of innovation is taking place in three San Francisco public schools that have started school-wide meditation programs. The hope is that a little quiet time and mindfulness will help facilitate learning.
It’s all paid for with private money, and one school says it’s seeing results. Natalie Jones reports on how it works.
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NATALIE JONES: Middle schools do not tend to be quiet places. For many people, middle school is hard enough in the best of circumstances. For students growing up in rough neighborhoods or dealing with difficult family issues, it can be especially stressful.
That’s why four years ago, James Dierke, principal of Visitacion Valley Middle School in San Francisco, decided to implement a meditation program for the entire school to see if it would help students and teachers deal with stress and focus on schoolwork.
JAMES DIERKE: There’s individual stresses of just being a teenager, there’s family stress, there’s…
Comments
Comment from Joe
Time: February 12, 2011, 6:17 pm
I was a Transcendental Meditation teacher for 15 years. We were *officially* taught never to tell the public our entire agenda. I describe the entire agenda here: http://www.suggestibility.org. I discuss David Lynch both on that home page and also here: http://www.suggestibility.org/DavidLynch.shtml.
This is in absolutely no way a comment on other meditation teaching organizations, nor a comment on “meditation” in general which of course is taught by many fine organizations and teachers. My position is only that the TM organization is something to avoid becoming involved with, and especially to avoid having one’s children involved with. Some of David Lynch’s schoolchildren will over the course of time end up in the cult that lies beneath the “twenty minutes twice a day” level of participation.
Comment from Bodhipaksa
Time: February 12, 2011, 6:27 pm
I’m very suspicious of the TM organization. I’ve seen too many deceptive claims by TM practitioners to overlook the self-delusion that many of them employ. For a while I shied away from posting news stories on T because they’re automatically attract spin merchants. This happened so often that I suspected an organized attempt to promote a positive image of TM.


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