Opinion
International Opinion

Global Education Is Patriotic. Nationalist Rhetoric Does Not Benefit Our Students

By Homa S. Tavangar — October 24, 2018 2 min read
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Editor’s Intro: President Trump recently railed against “globalism” and proudly labeled himself to be a “nationalist”. How do you continue developing thoughtful, empathetic global citizens in your classroom when the leader of the United States seems to deride what you’re trying to do? Today, Homa S. Tavangar, author of “Growing Up Global” and “The Global Education Toolkit for Elementary Learners," argues that educators can move beyond rhetoric and focus on what’s important in educating their students.

This isn’t the easiest time to be a global educator. Words like empathy, global, and inclusion are becoming politicized, and some feel that more challenging topics, like race, religion, borders, and refugees are nearly untouchable. But we cannot afford avoiding these important ideas for fear of being too political. If we do, our children (and our country) lose.

The recent rhetoric around globalism and nationalism reinforces a false dichotomy that so many of us have been working hard to dispel. When Donald Trump told supporters at a rally in Houston on October 22 that “A globalist is a person who wants the globe to do well, frankly, not caring about our country so much,” it felt like a kick in the gut.

Nothing could be farther from the truth. Why frame this as an ‘either-or’? Can’t we love our world and our country at the same time? Gaining a global mindset based on intellectual, social, and psychological capital, not being ruled by fear, is a privilege every child deserves. It makes our country stronger.

I take a stand for global citizenship, global engagement, global good, global caring, global competence, global know-how, global markets, global travel, global jobs, global friendships, global technology, global diplomacy, and global peace. No corporation or billionaire has ever swayed me to think this way; indeed, when students in marginalized communities embrace global and abundant thinking and skills, such as learning a second language, analyzing from various perspectives, or being comfortable working in diverse environments with diverse people, their prospects for college and career skyrocket.

In my definition of global citizenship, what some might call globalism, this also means that I care deeply, pay attention to, get engaged with, enjoy serving, am proud of and love: my country, my town, my community, and my neighbors. I remember the old Girl Scout song: “Make new friends, but keep the old, one is silver and the other gold,” and I apply this idea in my thinking and teaching: it’s not ‘either-or'; it’s ‘both-and'—inclusive, welcoming, and abundant. This also is the sort of mindset leaders are looking for to fill jobs in the new economy, to solve problems we’ve never faced before, using technologies that have yet to be invented.

I subscribe to a big idea that might help illustrate this approach: “Let your vision be world-embracing, rather than confined to your own self.” This inherently means I care about my country and community, and strive to think bigger than myself. Going bigger than my ego and fears releases me to make a difference and find joy. Doesn’t every American deserve that?

Connect with Homa and Heather on Twitter.

Quote image created on Pablo.

Photo courtesy of Asia Society.

The opinions expressed in Global Learning are strictly those of the author(s) and do not reflect the opinions or endorsement of Editorial Projects in Education, or any of its publications.

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