MENTAL HEALTH IN SCHOOLS PART FIVE: MENTAL HEALTH AND HYGIENE

Chapter 23

MENTAL HEALTH IN SCHOOLS


PART FIVE: MENTAL HEALTH AND HYGIENE
Ø Mental Health in Schools.
Ø Helping Maladjusted Children.

The Chapter at a Glance
The mentally healthy child.
Mental health and school education.
Symptoms and causes of maladjustment.
Causes specific to school environment.
Multiple causation of maladjustment.

            Mental health refers to that condition of an individual which results from the normal organization and functioning of his mind. A mentally healthy person is mentally at ease. Con­versely, a mentally unhealthy person is not at ease mentally. He is rather mentally diseased.
            Mental hygiene is the science which lays down principles, methods and techniques for the promotion of mental health. It performs two functions:—
(1) The prevention of mental disease, and
(2)             The treatment of mental disease.

The Mentally Healthy Child
            A mentally healthy child is one who is adjusted to persons, objects and situations around him. Some of the fundamental signs indicating the mental health of a child are as follows: —
            (1) An all-round good and desirable behavior.
            (2) Feeling of being liked by other children and adults.
            (3) Feeling of being trusted by children, parents and others.
            (4) Feeling of security.
            (5) Absence of unnecessary fears.
            (6) Optimism, cheerfulness and a smiling attitude.
            (7) Contentment with own age level, with no wish to regress to baby-hood again.
            (8) Sense of identification with the group.
            (9) Eagerness for and enjoyment of group games.
            (10) Interests, hobbies and recreations.
            (11) Forgiveness and forgetfulness of "wrongs" done by others.
            (12) Kindness and sympathy towards associates.
            (13) Sense of independence and initiative.
            (14) Enjoyment of home life and association with parents and siblings.
            (15) Normal vigor and vitality.
            (16) Good appetite.
            (17) Good sleep, etc., etc.


Mental Health and School Education
            Even a casual glance at the picture of the healthy child which emerges in the foregoing pages indicates that the develop­ment of these same healthy qualities is the precise aim of school education as well. Indeed it would be no exaggeration to say that helping children to develop into mentally healthy persons is the major aim of education.

Identity of Aims
            Many authoritative writers have also maintained the same position, namely, that the aims of modern education are identical with those of mental hygiene. Thus says Harmon:

“The aims of educational and mental hygiene should be the same, the development and training of the individual for effective living in a social environment. Both are concerned in leading the child toward habits and attitudes that make the individual better able to attack his life problems. The child comes to the school as a whole, and it is impossible to separate his intellectual function from his motives, emotions, and social adjustments.  Teachers and schools cannot ignore these facts and shirk their responsibilities.   They must accept   the mental-hygiene viewpoint and free their methods   of practices that might cause pupil mal-development and mal-adjustment."

Identity of Principles
       Even with regard to the matter of principles, the two scien­ces of education and of mental hygiene seem to be identical.

"The principles of modern education are identical with the principles of mental hygiene," Winslow tells us. "Both are directed toward cultivating self-confidence, self-respect, self-management, courage, the ability to take responsibility, the ability to overcome difficulties and to carry things through to completion, friendliness, sympathy and co-operation with others, the development and expression of affection, tolerance of differences, the sharing of experience, the freer expression of initiative and creative abilities and interests, freedom from the stigma of guilt and shame, the ability to acknowledge an oc­casional defect frankly, the honest facing of unpleasant realities, and a capacity for assuming and submitting to authority in a spirit of good will."

Violation of Mental Health Principles at Schools
            If, then, as it appears from these observations, these two sciences –education and mental health-- are absolutely identical, the educational implication is that the teachers should endeavor their utmost to turn the schools into such congenial places as actually promote the mental health and well-being of the children.
            Do contemporary schools come up to this expectation? Talking about American schools Frank* says:
            "Here we see the child entering school at five or six, to face the demand for standardized academic achievement, for rigid conformity and for adjustment to his contemporaries, bringing to these encounters all the perplexities and anxieties of his family background and train­ing. It is evident that much of what is now done in the schools is inimical to mental health, since the child is confronted with more anxieties and exposed to frequent and devastating humiliations. Thus many of the attitudes and feelings he brings from his family training are crystallized and intensified by the school program and discipline.”

Unhealthy Conditions in Our Schools
Needless to point out, the conditions in our schools are even worse on the whole than those operating in most of the western schools. The quality of thought and behavior of our school children is a clear indication of the fact that we have failed to inculcate in them healthy outlooks and attitudes to­wards life.
            Most of our schools still emphasize the finishing of the prescribed courses, attending of lengthy periods, learning by rote, cramming for examinations, etc. No particular care is being taken to put adequate emphasis on the development of the human qualities and virtues which our society needs so badly. This is only possible if our entire educational system is completely remodeled so as to provide adequate opportunities for the promotion of mental health and efficiency rather than book­ish knowledge and superficial ability.

Symptoms and Causes of Maladjustment

            An adjusted individual is one who is able to meet adequately the personal, social and vocational requirements of every-day life. Such a person is mentally healthy. A maladjusted person, on the other hand, is one who fails to fulfill the demands of self and society adequately. Such a person is mentally unhealthy. A maladjusted child is obviously a serious liability to his family, his school and the nation. He must be helped. In order to help him one must know the symptoms and causes of his maladjust­ment.

Symptoms of Maladjustment
            Various kinds of symptoms are associated with various kinds of maladjustment. Some common symptoms in serious maladjustments are as follows.
            Such symptoms as exclusiveness and introversion characterize such personality maladjustments as shyness and over sensitivity. On the other hand, pugnacity, hyperactivity, excit­ability, destructiveness and extreme extroversion characterize children with self-assertive, aggressive, and domineering types of personality disorder.
            Personality disorders are the most frequent maladjustments occurring among children. Other serious maladjustments in­clude psychoneurosis* and psychosis. The main symptoms of the former are fear, obsessions, repressions and indecisive actions; and of the latter, indulgence in fantasies of regression to an infantile level of existence, death, rebirth, displacing and re­placing of a parent, wealth, power, etc.

Causes of Maladjustment
            A number of causes might be responsible for the malad­justed behavior of a school child. The various causes can be classified under two main heads as follows:—
A.        General Causes present in the environment and the person of the child.
B.        Specific causes present in school situations.
            The general group of causes of maladjustment could be further sub-classified as follows:
            (1) Environmental causes, and
            (2) Personal causes.

The Environmental Causes
            The main environmental causes which usually become responsible for maladjustment are as follows:—
            (1) Poverty.
            (2) Over-crowding at home.
            (3) Bad companions.
            (4) Lack of recreation or unsupervised recreation.
            (5) Poor heredity.
            (6) Parental discord.
            (7) Broken homes.
            (8) Mentally or physically diseased, defective or handi­capped parents.
            (9) Criminal or immoral parents.
            (10) Over-ambitious parents.
            (11) Parental over-protection or rejection.
            (12) Death of one or both of the parents.
            (13) Lack of preparation by the parents for adequate education or vocational training.
            (14) Lack of adequate schooling facilities.
            (15) Educational backwardness and ignorance.

The Personal Causes
            The personal causes of maladjustment, again, can be sub­divided into two main categories as follows:—
            (1) Physical causes, and
            (2) Mental causes.

(1) Physical Causes: The physical causes of maladjustment are those personal factors which are present in the physique of the child. A child with defective biological heritage or a physical handicap is liable to develop inferiority feelings. Such an adverse development might make him bitter and anti-social. Similarly, a physical disease might become responsible for mal­adjustment. The common physical diseases which usually lead to maladjusted behavior are, toxemias, post-encephalitic states, various types of infectious diseases, including severe infections of the central nervous system, various kinds of traumata, etc., etc.
(2) Mental Causes: The mental causes of maladjustment, on the other hand, are those personal factors which pertain to the mind of the child. Thus mental conditions such as feelings of inferiority insecurity, anxiety, strain, stress, fear, worry, tension, conflict, frustration, etc. may cause maladjustment.

Causes Specific to the School Environment
            Some specific factors associated with the class-room at­mosphere, activities and personnel are also causally related to maladjustment among children. Some of the specific causative factors falling under this group are as follows:—
            (1) Uninspiring curriculum.
            (2) Inadequate teaching methods.
            (3) Rigid class-discipline.
            (4) Unfavorable class-room atmosphere.
            (5) Adverse reports.
            (6) Lack of adequate guidance.
            (7) A maladjusted teacher.

(1) Uninspiring Curriculum: A curriculum which is un-stimulating, dull and lifeless affects the mental health of the child very adversely. Boring books and difficult academic work may make a child antagonistic to the school and, in fact, to-all education whatsoever.
            Rigid and difficult syllabi make all the more severe demands on children with low I. Qs. They find the books and the class work rather very taxing. Says Prescott:

            "A child who has found continuous difficulty in learning the things which he saw other children learn in school ......... a child who has been confused over and over again by the complexity of the material and energy factors met in earlier experience can hardly be expected to mobilize his knowledge and integrate his energy output into effective behavior patens. Children need to feel adequate in capacity and skill to meet a fair proportion of the situations which they are called upon to face. They need to obtain a fair balance between success and failure in their realization of their hopes and desires."

       Need for Curriculum Research: Such factors deserve the special attention of our education­ists. No planned and methodical research has so far been conducted in our country on curriculum planning. Most of our school syllabi and text-books appear to be utterly out of tune with the hopes and fears of children. They are also largely responsible for the growing tide of failures and maladjustments at our schools.
            Recently this neglected field has attracted a great deal of official and public attention. The Implementation Unit of the Education Commission had set up a Curriculum Committee com­prising top-ranking educationists. The Committee surveyed the situation and made extremely constructive recommendations to effect improvements. Steps are now being taken to implement these recommendations.
(2) Inadequate Teaching Methods: Unsuitable teaching methods, betraying utter lack of knowledge and understanding of the child and the psychology of learning, may cause maladjustment among school children.
            Some of the prominent characteristics of inadequate methods are: emphasis on recitation and cramming; a complete lack of effort on the part of the teacher to make the lesson interesting and stimulating by giving illustrations, concrete examples, eliciting class participation by group discussions; ig­norance of or indifference towards the modern teaching tech­niques, devices and opportunities, e.g., audio-visual aids, edu­cational films, etc.
(3) Rigid Class-Discipline: Imposing undue bans and rigid restrictions on the thought and behavior of children in the class is the traditional way of maintaining discipline. Such stern measures' usually fail to achieve their purpose. Restricting the freedom and liberty of young students is very unnatural as well as unwise. It incites them all the more to revolt against all discipline and adopt aggressive attitudes. Some sensitive types of children might even retreat to excessive brooding and introversion as a reaction against too strict class discipline.
            Another serious defect in our class discipline is the rigidly uniform and inadequate handling of disciplinary cases. Most of our teachers display a complete ignorance of knowledge of the child mind when handling cases of mischief, indiscipline, truancy, etc. Maintaining of rigid, uniform and punitive atti­tudes towards all types of children in the class, regardless of their individual differences, is an unwise policy and a very com­mon cause of maladjustment.
(4) Unfavorable Class-room Atmosphere: Unfavorable class-room atmosphere could be of the fol­lowing four categories:—
            (a) Educationally unfavorable atmosphere.
            (b) Emotionally inadequate atmosphere.
            (c) Environmentally unsuitable atmosphere.
            (d) Socially unhealthy atmosphere.
    (a) Educationally Unfavorable Atmosphere: An educationally unfavorable class-room atmosphere is one which places undue emphasis on memory, marks, examinations, prizes, academic achievement, and the pass percentage. Negatively, it provides no specialized facilities for the gifted and the backward and other varieties of exceptional children. Consequently, all those children who feel helpless to cope with such an uncongenial atmosphere are most liable to develop maladjustments.
    (b) Emotionally Inadequate Atmosphere: A class-room atmos­phere is emotionally inadequate wherein anxiety, fear and frus­tration constantly dominate the minds of the pupils. Maladjust­ments are the inevitable outcomes in such an emotionally un­congenial class-room.
    (c) Environmentally Unsuitable Atmosphere: Similarly, a dirty, stinking, and unventilated class-room, depriving the children of legitimate physical comforts, is the most unsuitable type of atmosphere from the environmental point of view. Such an inadequate atmosphere provides no incentive either for studies or for good behavior. It might rather induce children to various types of maladjustments.
     (d) Socially Unhealthy Atmosphere: In a socially unhealthy class-room atmosphere, quarrels, disputes, noisy talk and other forms of indiscipline are the order of the day. Such an un­desirable atmosphere is mostly favorable for the development of delinquent and immoral types of maladjustment among the students.
(5) Adverse Reports: In many schools, teachers keep Students' Progress Reports. Such adverse remarks made by the teachers on some students' reports as: "class conduct unsatisfactory", "a nuisance in the class", "dirty and untidy", "dull", "careless in class work", "home work irregular", etc., is liable to make them feel that the teacher is bent upon pointing out the darker aspects of their personality.
            These adverse reports are usually sent to the headmaster and the parents. Imagine the frustration of a child who finds that his teacher not only penned those unfriendly and derogatory remarks on his Progress Report but also publicized them amongst his class-mates, other school teachers and parents. This hurts his ego rather severely. When a child's self-respect is bluntly hammered like that serious maladjustment is but the natural outcome.
 (6) Lack of Adequate Guidance: Most of our teachers feel puzzled over such problems as understanding children's complicated problems and difficulties, helping them to choose the right subjects, providing further incentive to the bright child and bringing the backward up to the standard of the class, judging the aptitudes and providing the necessary incentives for appropriate vocational training, etc.
            A teacher must possess the necessary knowledge and tech­nique needed to guide children in these and various other prob­lems. Lack of adequate knowledge of child guidance on the part of the teacher can lead many children to maladjustments.


(7) The Maladjusted Teacher: It is a matter of common observation that adjusted teachers produce adjusted pupils. Maladjusted teachers, on the contrary, infect their classes with their own undesirable traits and trends.
            In a study conducted by Hart*, children were asked to describe the desirable and undesirable personality traits in their class teachers.
The traits which the children appreciated most in their teachers were:
         +  helpfulness in school work,
         + cheerfulness,
         + friendly attitude,
         + interest in and understanding of pupils,
         + patience and fairness.
The traits in the teachers which they considered undesirable were:
         _ unhelpfulness in school work,
         _ nagging,
         _ over-criticism,
         _ partiality,
         _ unreasonable attitude,
         _ unfairness, etc.

            Baxter observed a close resemblance between the emotional health of the teacher and that of the students. He found that a class where the teacher was maladjusted was composed of pupils who were mostly nervous and irritable. On the other hand, an atmosphere of friendliness, cheerfulness, calm and relaxation prevailed in a class where the teacher had an adjusted per­sonality.

Multiple Causation of Maladjustment

            These are some of the main causative factors which are usually responsible for maladjusted behavior among children.
            It may, however, be remembered that maladjustment seldom results from a single factor. Usually a number of unfavorable factors combine in leading to this undesirable development. Thus, for instance, when a child from a mentally unhealthy home faces inadequate situations in the school as well, there is more likelihood that he may develop maladjustment as compared with a child in the same school whose home conditions are relatively better.

Role of the Home and the School:
            According to the experience of the author if the general conditions at home are favorable on the whole to the develop­ment of adjusted behavior, there is usually less chance for undesirable factors outside the home to drag a child into mal­adjusted behavior.
            The school atmosphere figures next in importance. At the school, the personality of the teacher and the association of class-mates make quite a lot of difference. In any case, what­ever the source of maladjustment it is never caused by a solitary factor working in isolation from a number of other adverse factors. Maladjustment, therefore, is a phenomenon of multiple causation.


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