Dear all,
I hope that all of you who managed to attend the International Festival yesterday enjoyed it. I think it was a special day for our international community to share their cultures and enjoy each others company. Perhaps next year we need to make it a little longer so that all the different tastes and flavours have time to be digested. A special thanks to all those who helped the PTO make the day such a great success.
This week's Food for Thought centers around the ideas of Will Richardson who speaks a great deal about the need for schools to transform. Thankfully as with many of these talks you should be able to see what you are doing in the classroom as being aligned in some way with his thoughts and suggestions. The word 'disruption' has been used consistently around school this year for activities and workshops and here it emerges again. I too am often confused by the need for education to transform. I see it nearly everyday at home with Kenneth who now uses the iPad more as a platform to connect and learn from Minecraft teachers on youtube, rather than actually playing the game. For him it seems so natural to connect via the internet with others to find solutions to the problems that he faces in his game world. Will Richardson talks about this world that exists and how much of education is lagging behind with computers and connectivity.
Have a relaxing Sunday,
Yours
Adrian
The following excerpt is from the book “Freedom to Learn” by Will Richardson. Tradition and Nostalgia
Without
question, the biggest barrier to rethinking schooling in response to the
changing worldscape is our own experience in schools. It’s what we know, and as
educators or parents, the familiar feels safe to us and for our kids.
Intellectually, we may be able to make sense of the argument laid out in this
book, that the world has changed, that being a learner is more important than
being learned, and that for our kids to have the best chance of success in the
world, they have to be able to flourish in freedom. In DIY U (as in “Do It
Yourself University”), author Anya Kamenetz (2010) explores the many new
potential paths to becoming educated in the abundantly connected world and
interviews a number of parents who expressed just those sentiments but were unable
to “sanction” any different type of school experience for their kids. Read the
comments on any article about progressive ideas in education in the New York
Times or elsewhere, and you get the sense that most are still in the business
of doubling down on doing better on traditional outcomes rather than rethinking
the whole concept.
To be
brutally honest, I’ve struggled with this myself. In fact, looking back on it,
given the chance to do it over with my own children, I’m pretty sure I would
have done it much differently when it came to their schooling. Don’t get me
wrong—my kids weren’t seriously harmed by school, and their teachers, for the
most part, were good, caring people who were doing their best given the
pressures of policy and parents and tradition. But it could have been so very
much better than it was when it came to giving them an environment that honored
their own learning and developed them as curious, creative, passionate learners
in the world. I’ll admit, on some level, to feeling a great deal of sadness
about that. I’ve been asked on numerous occasions why we didn’t pull our kids
out of school or find more progressive schooling alternatives for them. I’ve
been called a hypocrite, in fact. And I totally understand why.
It’s no
excuse, but my enlightenment around these issues came very late in my life. By
the time I fully understood learning in both the traditional and modern sense,
my kids were too entrenched in their social circles and activities to consider
pulling them out. Instead, we’ve tried to “co-school” them, encourage them to
pursue their passions and learning outside school, and limit the deleterious
effects of standardization and control as much as possible. This has not been
easy.
So how do
educators move to help teachers and parents and community members to a place
where they have modern convictions about schooling and the courage to advocate
for them? In a word, we work to educate them. If we are convinced that learning
environments that give students more agency and freedom over their own learning
are what our students need and we are committed to bringing those environments
into our schools, then we have to make that case to all members of the school
community. I’ve seen superintendents do this by engaging in book studies with
parent groups, sharing curated readings with them through newsletters and
websites, and actively engaging community members in discussions about the
future and our efforts to ready our kids for it.
Will Richardson is a parent, former
educator and author of “Why School?: How
Education Must Change When Learning and Information Are Everywhere.”
This excerpt is from his latest book, “Freedom to Learn.”
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