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UPenn Monk Class: Teaches Students How To Live The Ascetic Life

Justin Mcdaniel

By KATHY MATHESON   02/11/12 12:45 PM ET  AP

PHILADELPHIA -- Looking for a wild-and-crazy time at college? Don't sign up for Justin McDaniel's religious studies class.

The associate professor's course on monastic life and asceticism gives students at the University of Pennsylvania a firsthand experience of what it's like to be a monk.

At various periods during the semester, students must forego technology, coffee, physical human contact and certain foods. They'll also have to wake up at 5 a.m. – without an alarm clock.

That's just a sample of the restrictions McDaniel imposes in an effort to help students become more observant, aware and disciplined. Each constraint represents an actual taboo observed by a monastic religious order.

"I've found in the past that students take this extremely seriously," said McDaniel, who has taught the class twice before. "I've had very few people who try to get away with things, and you can always tell when they are."

The discipline starts with a dress code for class: White shirts for the men, black shirts for women, and they must sit on opposite sides of the class. No makeup, jewelry or hair products. Laptops are prohibited; notes can be taken only with paper and pen. And don't even think of checking your cellphone for texts or email.

The course, which focuses primarily on Catholic and Buddhist monastic traditions, stems in part from McDaniel's own history. An expert on Asian religions, he spent a portion of his post-undergraduate life nearly 20 years ago as a Buddhist monk in Thailand and Laos and says he's both a practicing Buddhist and a practicing Catholic.

Restrictions outside class are introduced gradually: Students sacrifice caffeine and alcohol during one week, then swear off vegetables that grow underground in another. The latter rule stems from an extremely non-violent sect that eschews such produce because uprooting the food could kill insects, McDaniel said.

The real test is a full month of restrictions that begins in mid-March. Students can only eat food in its natural form; nothing processed. They can't eat when it's dark, nor speak to anyone while they eat. They must be celibate, foregoing even hugs, handshakes and extended eye contact. No technology except for electric light. They can read for other classes, but news from the outside world is forbidden.

So why would anyone sign up? It could be because McDaniel requires no term papers or exams. But sophomore Madelyn Keyser, 20, of Castro Valley, Calif., said that's misleading.

"In reality, it's much harder because your grade is based entirely on your participation and your integrity," said Keyser.

As a nursing major at the Ivy League school in Philadelphia, Keyser said she hopes the class will help her become more observant and a better listener to her patients.

Students also have to write in a journal every 30 minutes during their waking hours. And required course research cannot be done online – students must consult books and librarians, or have conversations with religious leaders.

Freshman Rachel Eisenberg said she enrolled because it's important "to figure out yourself before you can really help other people."

"It would give me a chance to really listen to myself and focus on my needs and feelings," said Eisenberg, 18, of Miami.

Keyser and Eisenberg are among 17 students in the class, a group carefully chosen from among nearly 100 applicants. McDaniel said he winnowed the list by contacting each student to make sure they understood what they were in for.

The numbers thinned quickly. One cited an inability to be without Facebook, McDaniel said, while another said she couldn't go a day without talking to her mother on the phone.

There are some exceptions to the rules, such as if another class requires students to watch a film. But any other infractions require confessions and acknowledgement in their journals.

In one recent class, three students were disciplined for the minor slip of having the labels of their T-shirts exposed, violating the dress code designed to enforce conformity. As a punishment, McDaniel made them compile a list of the countries where every one of their shirts was made.

McDaniel stresses he's not advocating for a total lifestyle change. He uses technology as much as the next person and is now married with children.

But if someone is forced to just listen for a month, he is more aware of how he speaks, McDaniel said. If someone can't talk while she's eating and has to count each chew, she'll think more about her food, he said.

"It's not about individual restrictions," said McDaniel. "It's about building hyperawareness of yourself and others."

___

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06:52 AM on 02/14/2012
I wake up at 5:00 (or earlier) every morning without an alarm clock and I don't drink coffee. Does that make me a monk? LOL It actually sounds like an interesting class.
08:10 PM on 02/13/2012
I absolutely love this - the usual predictable American reactions of fear to something unkown and different. You can always peg the baggers that way - if it's not familiar, A. ridicule it (albeit with limited vocabulary & imagination thereby essentially creating a reverse parody) and, B. blame it somehow on Obama. And I totally understand. I really do. A course like this - almost certainly not sanctioned by Rush Limbaugh - is intended to stimulate reflection on inner strength and integrity. Alien concepts to people permanently disfigured by hate, fear and a sense (totally correct) of being inferior. Of course, Penn is an incredible school, possibly the best in the US.
02:35 PM on 02/14/2012
You've Pegged the Baggers?? Huh?? I'm a bagger and I think this course is great!

It's Progressives who have put Legal restrictions on Religion in our High Schools, K-6, Jr. High, and College plus the Workplace. You've used a lot of Projection here my friend, zero fact, all Projection ... "baggers, blame it on Obama .. ridicule the unknown, sanctioned by Rush Limbaugh, disguised by hate/fear, inferior .. "... laughable dude, really laughable .. you speak such harsh words without any knowledge of your political opposition's views ..and from deep within the bowels of the Huff Po .. a safety net or Progressive Group Think.

"Integrity" and "discipline" are words the Tea Party and would approve of .. not Progressives .. (see OWS).
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Paige Keith
I'll get you my pretty, and your little dog too!
08:02 PM on 02/13/2012
I think this is a good thing, it's only for a month, not the whole entire semester. Also, the article said there would be allowances made for other class requirements. If the student "cheats" and does something against the rules and doesn't report it, they are just cheating themselves anyway. As far as running up the cost of higher education, it is, after all, an elective, and I would hope that if parents are paying for the tuition, they have some kind of an idea of what classes their kid is taking.
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Awilda VelezRodriguez
07:56 PM on 02/13/2012
"In reality, it's much harder because your grade is based entirely on your participation and your integrity," said Keyser. I thought all classes required participation and integrity? This courses sounds a like a great thing for people who wants to find themselves.
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Kirk Allen
Ron Paul 2012
09:11 PM on 02/13/2012
wrong, most classes only require evidence of mastery in the form of a test to achieve a passing grade.
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leftylori
10:03 PM on 02/13/2012
I have always wanted to know what it means to "find yourself". I have heard that term since the 60's and still don't get it.
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KarmaPatrol
Fair and balanced and sugar-free
07:40 PM on 02/13/2012
Or they could take my new course. How to live like a Trappist monk and fast on dark beer (the original carbohydrate) at zero-beer-thirty. Hallelujah
07:36 PM on 02/13/2012
I would actually be interested in trying this -- though I wonder how Professor would handle disabled-adaptive needs. Wheelchairs, adaptive reading technologies, etc. Things like that.

All in all though, I think this would be quite the enlightening study and I like the application of practise. It gives one a chance to really practise what s/he hears during lecture. Reminds me of a proverb said by Kun Fu Tze (Confucius):

"I hear and I forget. I see and I remember. I do and I understand."
07:45 PM on 02/13/2012
Definitely interesting. No doubt they will learn far more by actually living it than by merely listening about it.
09:03 PM on 02/13/2012
I hear you. Although I quote again, this time I repeat a line said in "Ip Man" -- "Quit reciting theory and show me." I believe the line went.

If schools could adopt such a thing, methinks learning would be made that much easier all around.
07:17 PM on 02/13/2012
At least, this is one class where students get both the practice and the theory - at least, when they talk about monastic life and asceticism, they'll have a clue what it actually feels like. It sounds kinda cool, although personally, I think I'd go into withdrawal after a couple of days without the news! And after a week without the internet... Guess that makes me a news junkie :)
07:05 PM on 02/13/2012
Typical course taken by liberal art Obama voters. Goes right along with mantra singing, woman studies, and how to get dead people to vote.
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RosieRetro
Military Retiree/Veteran non-aligned Independent
07:29 PM on 02/13/2012
Lots of college students don't bother getting an absentee ballot or going back home to vote in their own districts.
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safehaven5
08:23 PM on 02/13/2012
I re-read the article because I thought I missed something, but I still fail to see where liberal, Obama, voting or any political idea is mentioned. How is it that Obama haters can read something political into everything? Are all monks liberal? I would bet that most monks would lien toward more conservative views.

I think that many people could benefit from the principals of monastic life. I promise it will not turn everyone liberal.
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12:10 AM on 02/14/2012
You are right. Not one of those things were mentioned. You usually see these remarks coming from someone that really doesn't have anything to say usually because they simply don't understand what the article was even about and they just want to start something.
07:00 PM on 02/13/2012
This is a course to prepare people to survive if the socialist demos get another 4 years. You should also take a few courses in Islamic law and Arab languages
wclark3350
Grammar Cop
06:08 PM on 02/13/2012
While I was struggling with calculus and thermodynamics on my way to an Engineering degree, I watched students getting college credits for campfire building. Take something difficult!
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safehaven5
08:28 PM on 02/13/2012
I am sure that monks do not earn as much as an engineer....LOL But seriously, for many majors, this probably fits in well as an elective and is something that one can benefit from and use to help advise other if they work in social work , counseling etc (having been a counselor myself). Don't worry, your engineering degree will be more financially rewarding (and hopefully personally rewarding too).
wclark3350
Grammar Cop
11:12 PM on 02/13/2012
I agree. I would like to have taken a few more Liberal Arts courses, such as Art or Music Appreciation...but never enough time. It did bug me, though, that they were getting three college credits for this activity, when I had to take Vector and Tensor Analysis (three units) which required for more study. I did goet eight job offers on graduation, while my BusAd buddy got zero.
05:40 PM on 02/13/2012
Whoops I thought it was a class on the TV show. Me bad.
06:14 PM on 02/13/2012
I too though they were teaching a class on how the be OCD...LOL
06:45 PM on 02/13/2012
me also
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jonpaul65
retired teacher-turned-writer
05:38 PM on 02/13/2012
As a member of the Secular Order of Discalced Carmelites, I can assure you that there are many of us world-wide ~ men and women who have embraced a life of asceticism while still living an active life in the world. I could wax eloquent on the wonderful life of peace and serenity it has given me.
07:38 PM on 02/13/2012
You, Sir/Madam, have me very curious now. If I may ask, firstly, what is the Secular Order of Discalced Carmelites? Secondly, under what religious (if any) affiliation is it? I am doing an independent study on world religions and much of my research stems into immersion-style study.

I apologise if I overstep any bounds -- I am merely an insatiably curious student.
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jonpaul65
retired teacher-turned-writer
05:25 AM on 02/14/2012
The Order is Roman Catholic and you can find all the information you need simply by doing a search on Google where much is listed. There is also a page on Facebook: Carmelites Unite!
To get an idea of what the Divine Office is, you can log on to www.DivineOffice.org. This is the mainstay of our prayer life.
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12:25 AM on 02/14/2012
I think this would be an interesting class to take although there is no way I could ever get up at 5AM by myself. Heck I can't even get up with 3 alarm clocks set. I failed already.
05:18 PM on 02/13/2012
This would be a great course for Repubs. They would have to learn to just focus on what their meaning in life is really about, and not trying to change others to meet their needs.
06:33 PM on 02/13/2012
Actually it is more often Democrat politications who try to change orhers to meet their (the politications wants), usually using the force of law. While some Republicatian politications do this too, Conservatives want to make their own decisions and to let others make their own decisions.
08:34 PM on 02/13/2012
Technically absolutely correct. And thanks because ya got me in the mood here...it's a perfect night to sit back, a fire roaring in the fireplace, the dogs sprawled on the rug, a mug of coffee at hand...and I'm reminiscing about some of the more notable conservative "accomplishments" in American history - like you said, where people were allowed to make their own decisions; lets see now...there's slavery, a magnificent conservative triumph in which millions of African men and women were kidnapped from their homelands and forced into bondage (those that didn't die horribly on the voyage to America) over hundreds of years until the terrible govt in the form of that horrible man, Abe Lincoln, interfered. You've got conservative William Randoplh Hearst's invention of a war - a real war! - in Cuba (Spanish American War) to sell his conservative newspapers, Even earlier you've got conservative religious fanatics in Massachussetts who burned women to death for - I LOVE this one - "witchcraft"!!! In that same vein, there's the attempt, still ongoing - sadly unsuccessful in recent years but ya'll are working hard at it - to keep women in a permanent, inferior role beneath men. Ya gotta take your slaves where you find em I guess. Ahh, the memories. Makes an American proud.
12:39 AM on 02/14/2012
Democrats for the people, Repubs for themselves, just like you said Don.
05:11 PM on 02/13/2012
HMMMM When I first read the heading I immediately thought it meant the TV show Monk about someone with OCD. Thought that would be an odd course. Silly me.
buckeye3118
Less Government, More Freedom
04:04 PM on 02/13/2012
If their grades are based on participation and integrity, then these students can rule out becoming liberal/progressive politicians.
05:20 PM on 02/13/2012
I think you mistyped. Of course you were meaning Repubs, right? They have no integrity or ethics.
06:25 PM on 02/13/2012
How do you spell Kennedy, one filanderer, another a killer, Monica & Bill etc.