Malama
Learning Facility
Malama
is the inspiring online "learning facility" designed
by physicist, inventor, educator, musician, and writer Duen Hsi
Yen of Hawaii. His fascinating and engaging essays bring to mind
an observation by Nobel Prize-winning physicist Richard Feynman:
"Human beings should treat human beings like human
beings." Like Feynman and other humanitarian writers and
philosophers, Yen has a clear understanding of the simple yet
profound truth that we should all treat each other with dignity
and respect. What makes his work of special significance is that
he has taken the further step of examining all the various ways
in which we can - and must - learn to do this.
The "Noogenesis" web site, which includes the
Malama section, covers a wealth of material on contemporary
thought, including psychology, sociology, philosophy, physics,
and linguistics, on subjects ranging from the invention of
pencils to mending our society and our relationships with each
other.
The "wordmap" at the beginning of the Malama
section provides links to many intriguing essays. Because the
site is a work in progress, there are still some unlinked words
that give an indication of treasures to come.
The Malama Learning Facility is described as an
"embryonic idea for using hypertext to teach academic
disciplines, social skills and moral values holistically, with a
constant awareness and attention to the meaning of malama."
This beautiful word has many definitions, including nurturing,
caring for, protecting, watching over, preserving, serving,
honoring, and supporting.
Of special interest to families are the essays "Johari
Window" (a model for interpersonal communication),
"Listening" (attending with validation and respect),
"My Rights" (a list of six basic human rights – a
"must read"), "Fairness", "Encouraging
Words", and an Alice Miller page. The link on
"Coercion" leads to a description of the gentle,
aboriginal Semai people of the Malay peninsula, who teach their
children the concept of "bood": the "right to say
no". Within the larger Noogenesis site are the unique and
useful "Invention Page for Kids", and the articles and
children’s stories at the "Pineapple Middle School"
page. For those considering homeschooling and all those with an
interest in educational issues, there is an exceptionally
well-presented overview of John Taylor Gatto’s essays. (See
links below.)
Yen extends this invitation to his site visitors: "I
created this site on the World Wide Web to facilitate the
development of a collective conscious caring world wide mind.
Right now, this site is just a seedling, sprouting its first
leaves. I need all of you others there in cyberspace to bring
sunshine, water and nutrients, to keep this idea growing."