Jesuit Education and Ignatian Pedagogy in Schools Today
Jesuit Education and Ignatian Pedagogy in Schools Today
Jesuit Education and Ignatian Pedagogy in Schools Today
Abstract
Through centuries of tradition and moral principles, Jesuit educational institutions have
developed a unique curriculum that is founded on religious and humanistic beliefs. This
paper aims to provide a holistic view of Jesuit curriculum and education by studying and
discussing the different facets of Jesuit educational philosophies, learning approaches,
and curricular paradigm. The paper also aims to provide a general view of the current
status of Jesuit educational pedagogy, and how traditional principles are applied to the
circumstances of modern-day education. An in-depth look of the foundations of Jesuit
pedagogy could provide a better understanding of their current educational principles,
and how these principles are incorporated in various educational settings, especially the
school curriculum.
Objective: To describe the foundation of Ignatian education and identify the factors
considered in the designing of their curriculum
Jesuit Education and Ignatian Pedagogy in Schools Today 3
Review of Literature
A carefully nurtured institution such as the Jesuit education is one that has sticked to its
roots and foundation even if it evolves and adapts to the adjustments of time. Like an
old tree that has grown to shelter many things, the 400 years of tradition and experience
has made the institution mature enough to cater to the needs of various learners as well
as educators.
In the 1540s, Jesuit schools started as seminaries with Jesuit priests as teachers. After
some time, they started employing non-Jesuit faculties and had schools beside their
parishes. Despite many hindrances, like the suppression of Clement XIV in 1773 or the
confiscation of their resources by the government of Catholic nations like Spain, France,
Portugal, Poland and Austria, they continued their work in the education field. (Jesuit
Education, p. 4)
An extensive historiography of Jesuit education and the educational archives that the
Society of Jesus has generated in the 1540s. In 1599, the Ratio Studiorum emerged, a
key educational document drawing on earlier traditions, and a source of later
reformulations and scholarship in many parts of the world. St. Ignatius was largely
responsible in the benchmarking of the Ratio, a regulation for school officials and
teachers. He insisted on careful school planning and he set the “master ideal before the
members of the society that is, to be sure, simply the full register of the Christian ideal
but to a considerable extent each Jesuit was formed to this Christian pattern by making
the Ignatian Spiritual Exercises and by his daily life in that distinctive social milieu, the
Society of Jesus, whose Constitutions were also substantially the work of Ignatius.
Those Constitutions make it very clear that the Society of Jesus is impelled to the work
Jesuit Education and Ignatian Pedagogy in Schools Today 4
of education from an Apostolic motive since it believes that sound schooling can help
conduct men to salvation” (Jesuit Education, p. 8)
a. Mission-Vision
A group of Jesuits from the British Province established the Jesuit Institute and
wrote about the characteristics of Jesuit education. In the abridged version,
“Jesuit education affirms the radical goodness of the world ‘charged with the
grandeur of God’, and it regards every element of creation as worthy of study and
contemplation, capable of endless exploration” (The Jesuit Institute, 1986, p. 1).
They believe that the ultimate goal a person should be to become like Jesus. And
who or how was Jesus in his days, he was a man who made many sacrifices for
other people. And this does not only apply to the learners, but the educators as
well. Jesus taught well and that was one of the ways he was able to be a man for
others. Jesuits believe that all the things students learn from their Jesuit
education should eventually be used not just or the benefit of oneself but for
others. “Jesuit education is also concerned with the ways in which students will
make use of their formation in the service of others” (The Jesuit Institute, 1986, p.
2).
integrity and accuracy. At the same time, it judges slip-shod or superficial ways of
thinking unworthy of the individual and, more important, dangerous to the world
he or she is called to serve.
The mission of the Society of Jesus today as a religious order in the Catholic
Church is the service of faith of which the promotion of justice is an essential
element. It is a mission rooted in the belief that a new world community of justice,
love and peace needs educated persons of competence, conscience and
compassion, men and women who are ready to embrace and promote all that is
fully human, who are committed to working for the freedom and dignity of all
peoples, and who are willing to do so in cooperation with others equally
dedicated to the reform of society and its structures. Renewal of our social,
economic and political systems so that they nourish and preserve our common
humanity and free people to be generous in their love and care for others
requires resilient and resourceful persons. It calls for persons, educated in faith
and justice, who have a powerful and ever growing sense of how they can be
effective advocates, agents and models of God's justice, love and peace within
as well as beyond the ordinary opportunities of daily life and work.
“St. Ignatius of Loyola habitually insisted on the Magis. Latin for the more, the
concept of the magis was originally understood by St. Ignatius as a call to be of
increasingly greater service to God and closer imitation of Jesus. Chicago
Jesuit Academy understands the magis as a call to fully develop each person’s
individual capacities at each stage of life in the service of others.
Excellence—like all Ignatian criteria—is determined by “circumstances of place
and persons”… To seek the magis, therefore, is to provide the type and level of
Jesuit Education and Ignatian Pedagogy in Schools Today 6
education for the type and age-group of students that best responds to the needs
of the community in which a school is located.” Seeking the magis is yet towards
honing a person in the example of Christ.
b. Learning Theories
Fr. Arrupe wrote that “today our prime educational objective must be to form
men-for-others; men who will live not for themselves but for God and his Christ”
(Men for Others, Valencia, 1973). “Men and women for others and with others is
considered a contemporary expression of the humanism that Jesuit education has
embraced from the beginnings. It captures, in a nutshell, the ultimate goal of our
educational efforts and our current emphasis in a faith that does justice” (Secretariat
for Education of the Society of Jesus, 2015, p. 1). From the mission-vision, comes
the approach of the whole Jesuit educational system.
Father Ross Jones, S.J., a rector of St. Ignatius College wrote in their college
newsletter about the Jesuit education being a humanistic education. In that article he
Jesuit Education and Ignatian Pedagogy in Schools Today 7
stated that “early Jesuit educators readily included in their curriculum the Greek and
Roman classics as well (of course) as Scripture. We were criticised by some for
using such ‘pagan’ texts. But it was because those so-called ‘pagan’ histories,
speeches and poetry invariably treated the perennial human issues of morality, of
choices, the nature of good and evil, and so on. Students were learning what it was
to be human, what is expected of one, how to lead the best life. What is our duty to
others, to our family, to our nation? For what reasons, if any, should I be willing to
die? Why is there suffering? Is there a God, and, if so, how can I know him? These
are ‘the big questions’ in life.
Long before such things as school mottos came into being, those early Jesuits
universally put before their charges in the colleges, a line from the great orator,
Cicero, non nobis solum nati sumus (‘we do not exist for ourselves alone’). Yes, he
was yet another pagan. But already we can observe here something universal: a
sense of social responsibility, of duty and outreach, being inculcated. It is a fostering
a sense of urgency, of agency — what we call today the moral imperative” (Jones,
The humanistic tradition in Jesuit Education, p. 1)
Jesuits think that the true value of education shouldn’t be solely focused on financial
success as it can lead to competitiveness and selfishness. “This can easily obscure
the true values and aims of humanistic education. To avoid such distortion, teachers
in Jesuit schools present academic subjects out of a human centeredness, with
stress on uncovering and exploring the patterns, relationships, facts, questions,
insights, conclusions, problems, solutions, and implications which a particular
discipline brings to light about what it means to be a human being” (Duminuco,
Ignation Pedagogy, p. 4).
allows for someone to recall and make sense of experiences. This approach is a
way of analyzing one’s own experiences and deepening one’s understandings.
(Jesuit Higher Education, 2016, p. 74)
Jesuit educational institutions had developed a method of learning and teaching that
follows the reflective principles of the spiritual exercises of St. Ignatius of Loyola.
Since the goal of Jesuit schools is to transform how the youth perceive themselves
and other human beings, social systems, societal structures, humankind and the
whole of natural creation, they aim for a “radical transformation” of the way students
from the institution habitually think and act. Hence, the Ignatian Pedagogical
Paradigm emphasizes an individual’s purpose and existence as men and women of
competence, conscience, and compassion, who seeks the greater good in terms of
what can be done out of a faithful commitment to justice and to serving God's poor,
oppressed and neglected (Korth, 2008).
Early Jesuits were aware of the limits of the humanistic approach, hence, many
efforts were focused on incorporating professional training and service into student
experiences. In 1599, Jesuit educators published the Ratio Studorium in an attempt
to articulate the practice and principles of Jesuit education. This guide outlined all
Jesuit Education and Ignatian Pedagogy in Schools Today 9
aspects of instructional methods and regulations for teachers and school officials,
and to this day, the guideline remains to be an important guide to modern-day
educational institutions. (O’Malley, 2000)
Action refers to the choices that students make after they have reflected on
their experiences. Action may be taken through the form of a final or
“capstone” project that allows students to meet learning outcomes while
addressing real world problems. Taking action is an opportunity for students
to use their knowledge to promote social justice or workplace change.”
In his 1973 address, Fr. Pedro Arrupe calls educators to reinforce learning for justice
and service so students could develop values as agents for change. He emphasizes
the need for a “resonance of an imperious call of the living God asking his Church
Jesuit Education and Ignatian Pedagogy in Schools Today 11
and all men of good to adopt certain attitudes and undertake certain types of action
which will enable them effectively to come to the aid of mankind oppressed and in
agony.” This includes respect for all people, not profiting from a position of privilege,
and working to dismantle unjust social structures (Arrupe, 1973).
b. Implemented Curriculum
Social media is one factor that rapidly influences today’s learning. Former Superior
General Adolfo Nicolas asserts “the nature of social media has a numbing effect on
our students that makes it easy to “slip in to the lazy superficiality of relativism or
mere tolerance of others and their views, rather than engaging in the hard work of
facing communities of dialogue in the search of truth and understanding.” This then
poses limitations to the “fullness of [students] flourishing as human persons and
limiting their responses to a world in need of healing intellectually, morally, and
spiritually.”
“Results indicate the majority of administrators are very familiar with, and
offer programs on, Ignatian pedagogy. They unanimously care for the
Jesuit mission and nearly all believe in providing pedagogical resources
that foster the Jesuit mission. The literature review identified connections
between Ignatian pedagogy and several pedagogical approaches while
administrators’ made the majority of connections between Ignatian
pedagogy and Service-Learning and Adult Learning. More than
three-fourths administrators promote three Ignatian teaching
methodological elements, Context, Experience, and Reflection, while more
than one half promote the element Action. Greater than two-thirds provide
programs that foster the development of the whole person, service to
others, and social justice--core Jesuit values. Further, more than
three-fourths of Center administrators believe Ignatian pedagogy is viable
for higher education.”
Jesuit institutions also now incorporate various learning practices and principles in
order to accommodate the unique learning needs of the youth today. In a study done
by Robert Pampel, he incorporated L. Dee Fink’s principles of Significant Learning to
measure how Jesuit pedagogy can enrich a learning honors program in various
Jesuit Education and Ignatian Pedagogy in Schools Today 13
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