A Celebration of Learning

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This year I have had the privilege to work with Charlestown Nursery School in Boston. CNS is often filled with visitors who want to learn about the philosophy and practice of a Reggio inspired school.  Visitors and families recognize right away that CNS is a beautifully designed, welcoming and engaging place to learn.  This year, I was invited to work with teachers to extend and enrich their project work with children.

A fundamental part of our work as Cadwell Collaborative is to become a trusted member of a team of the faculty and staff at a school. This is the only way that we have found to create the conditions for lasting change and growth. From the beginning, the team at CNS was open and willing to focus on their engagement with project work and to consider how to travel farther and deeper with their students.

This year, each class worked to produce a book or a video as a culmination of their work with students for families to take home as a memory of the learning from the year.

What a beautiful afternoon CNS hosted on June 1st as families attended an open house called a Celebration of Learning. One of the classes for the youngest children invited parents and children to play with loose parts inside and outside and to enjoy the book of stories told with loose parts by the children. The other class invited families to make music and sing together with the many percussion instruments that they have collected and explored all year. During the afternoon, a small and joyful band marched into the commons area of the school to celebrate!

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All of the preschool classes published books about their year-long projects. One is the story of how the children decided to care for and repair broken animals and toys and to take this service to the other classes in the building. Another is the story of an extended journey studying snails (who are residents of their classroom), in many ways and with many materials...even imagining that the snails would want to be able to see the stars and building them a telescope!  The last features a broad investigation about "What's inside?" of things? ourselves? fruits and vegetables? machines? Students and teachers wondered, made predictions, made drawings and continued to wonder about the insides of things that can not be seen from the outside.

Congratulations to CNS teachers, administrators and students.  You have engaged in, composed, curated and presented beautiful, joyful learning in the form of long term, meaningful projects to your extended community. It is an honor to be a part of your team.

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A Living Building as Learning Center

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On a recent visit to St. Louis, Ashley and I took a drive out of town to visit the new LaBarque campus and Jan Phillips Learning Center of The College School. This outdoor country campus has many habitats including a wetland, a prairie, two creeks, cliffs, woodland, and now, a beautiful learning center that is one of the 11 living buildings in the world. We were so impressed with the design and the vision for this extended campus of one of the most exciting schools we know. We met Tim Wood there, an old friend and colleague. Tim explained many features of the Learning Center. The building is dedicated to Jan Phillips who taught at the school and then was Head of School, serving the College School for 35 years.  The center is designed to extend the school philosophy of experiential education, connect people with nature, and advocate a sustainability ethic for the region.

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The fire place in the building shows the strata of rock that goes down under the building for several thousand feet, ending with the foundation rocks of the house that used to be on this site. Local timber and many other local materials were used for construction.

Students designed the iron fence and will continue to add features to this campus over time.   A living building goes beyond the idea Leed certified. Every aspect of the building and the footprint is sustainable and actually creates energy rather than consuming it.  A Living Building needs a year of operation before officially becoming certified.

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What a hopeful and beautiful legacy to leave a school as Jan Phillips has done. I learned from Jan to recognize sasafras and striped maple, to listen to the sounds of the forest and name them, to lead children into the woods knowing that much would be learned there for life.

Thank you to The College School, my "home school," where I taught for 16 years.  We are so proud to be a part of your family and to watch and admire all the good work that you do in the world for children, families, sustainability, and education. Your influence and example reach far and wide.

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