Learning for the Future: Twenty-first Century Schools

The following are excerpts from an opening presentation by Louise at our recent seminar in St. Louis: Myth Busters: Challenge Assumptions and Learn for the Future. Leading author, Ken Robinson says, "We are living in a time of revolution, we have important work to do and we are eager to be a part of it."

The revolution goes beyond school. In fact it is global, cultural, broad and deep.  It is a revolution in thinking and action about how we live, learn and act in the world and it has its own trajectory in schools.

The global revolution is born out of an awakening that we are all responsible to learn and lead together in creating a just, sustainable and vibrant future, now.

The revolution also grows from sense that we are called to nurture the human spirit, to value beauty and the natural environment and to celebrate the joy of creating together… the joy of creating and inventing the futures we imagine.

Author, David Orr writes “the crisis we face is first and foremost a crisis of mind, perceptions and values: hence, it is a challenge to those institutions presuming to shape minds, perceptions and values. It is an educational challenge.”

These are among the old myths about schools that we challenge.

These myths could also be called mental models, frames of mind, the way we have always done things….

 • Independent and public schools do not collaborate

• Students don’t do real work in school

• Students are not yet citizens

• Teachers deliver curricula, students receive it

• Tests are the best measure of achievement

During our two days together during this seminar hosted by The College School and Maplewood Richmond Heights School District, we will live a new story.  We are beginning two days of dynamic collaboration and professional growth together with you who represent all kinds of schools, public, independent, charter, pre-grade 12.  We will engage with high achieving students doing work that matters, that has a real audience and that makes a contribution to the world.  We will see teachers and students learning and leading together; and we will witness tremendous student growth and achievement in many domains through many lenses.

The kind of learning that we will both witness and engage in has its foundation in of all the best thinking and practice in experiential, constructivist learning since John Dewey, or for that matter, Socrates who is probably one of the earliest constructivists.

Both Socrates and Dewey appreciated the complex process of learning and realized that the construction of understanding is the core element in this complex process. Constructivist, meaningful, purposeful, life-long learning now includes much of what are called 21st Century Skills…the skills that we all need, students and adults, to thrive and to invent a positive hopeful future.

The way I understand it is that everything that I ever believed about education has taken on the most compelling purpose there could ever be: time in school is for learning and using concepts and skills that will serve us, serve others and serve the planet in creating a positive, hopeful, vibrant future.

Twenty-first Century Skills can inspire and transform our views and the curricula that we teach.  Myth Busting is compelling: take a stand; join the revolution; create schools where young people and adults live these ideals, and learn for the future together every day.

Myth Busters, Challenged Assumptions and Learned for the Future

 

On April 19 and 20 0ver 60 educators gathered in St. Louis for our second annual sustainability education seminar.  This year we set the challenge to "bust several the predominant myths" of education, mental models of reality that are not actually true, and preconceptions that get in the way of meeting the needs of our students and communities.

We explored five myths:

  • Independent and public schools do not collaborate
  • Students don't do real work in school
  • Students are not yet citizens
  • Teachers deliver curricula, students receive it
  • Tests are the best measure of achievement

From the very outset we experienced that not only can independent and public schools collaborate, but that when they do, their different perspectives and cultures are fertile ingredients for new ideas, like rich organic matter for new seeds.  The faculties at The College School and Maplewood Richmond Heights Middle School worked together for four months, sharing their projects.  The extent of their discoveries became clear during the presentation workshops, each of the six representing a different area of cross-fertilization:

  • Making a Difference through Experiential Learning
  • Systems Thinking: A Fresh Lens for All Learning
  • The Joy of Play-Based Learning
  • Water, Water Everywhere
  • Dirty Hands, Connected Hearts: Native Plants and Gardening
  • Urban Sustainability: Chickenology and Bees

One participant observed: These were great breakout sessions; applicable to all types of educators.

The classroom observations in both schools revealed students doing REAL work in school; taking part in projects that benefited their immediate communities; and collaborating with their teachers, working together to create effective results.  Here is a list of the different classroom observations:

  • Education for sustainability through poetry
  • Groovin' in the greenhouse
  • Exploring rich materials and ideas in the Atelier
  • Critical and mathematical thinking with trail mix
  • Expedition reflections: How do unique perspectives influence how people see the world?
  • Perspectives on Dred Scott - as shared conversation
  • Embedding math into problem-based learning: the MRH Bee Business
  • Digital storytelling: defining moments

As one participant wrote: the free time to observe both schools was wonderful.  I got many, many ideas and lots of inspiration!

Another wrote: Meeting and listening to the 4th graders articulate their connections between their experiences and their learning in the greenhouse was wonderful.

And another: [One experience especially meaningful to me] is the realization that children are citizens NOW, and that they can play an ACTIVE role in society; and that their actions can change the world!

And one more: Observing a teacher and students and then [after the class] having time to talk with her and the other teachers who were attending with me was practical and meaningful.  The joy in the environment and in the teachers and children was overwhelmingly amazing!!

Throughout the seminar there was much evidence of substantive assessment of student achievement: exemplary student work on the walls of the classrooms and in the hallways, electronic portfolios, and student reflections on progress over time.

One participant wrote: Experiencing the high level of respect for students and their work was amazing.

The generosity of both schools was underscored by their liberal photography policy...cameras were VERY busy.

There was lots of time for interchange among the educators.  As one participant reflected:

It was especially meaningful to me to gather the pearls of wisdom shared by presenters and others attending and share them with my colleagues. At school I never get to talk with my colleagues and here we had time to have meaningful conversations.

Oh, and then there was the FOOD!!!!

The food was fantastic.  I loved the food.

The food was fresh and local...served on REAL dishes!

In the end, the calm community and positive, relaxed atmosphere (created by Bob, Kevin, Louise and Ashley) gave us a sense of passion and enthusiasm.

 

 

A new generation: Welcome Asher Adams Cadwell!

On April 23rd at 10:30 p.m. Ashley and Louise became grandparents of Asher Adams Cadwell.  Asher is a  9 pound, 12 ounce, baby boy born to son, Alden and daughter-in-law, Caroline.  What a miracle!  We feel blessed to be in Boston this week with the new family to help out and to be fully present to this new, beautiful baby who, by some amazing cycle of life, is related to us. All the genes of knowing how to be with and care for babies, and fully enjoy babies are blooming in Alden, our own first born, handed down to Alden from his father, Ashley, to Ashley from his mother and grandparents.  It is clear and marvelous to behold.  Nurture and nature coming full circle.

When I was at a baby shower for Caroline last January, one of the people there who is like an aunt to Caroline wrote on a card, "If I were a child again, I would want you two for parents."  That is how I feel now, watching all of this unfold.  What a secure, happy, well researched, and instinctive response to a new born baby.  How I wish this could be the case for every baby born.

Now...all of our work toward creating conditions in schools for students, teachers and families to thrive and grow, to tap the best of their abilities, to create and offer beautiful, meaningful work to the world, and to share responsibility for bringing a healthy, hopeful and vibrant future into being...all this takes on a whole new meaning.  Now our family's future stretches much farther out in time.  And our love for youth and the beauty of our world is deepened.  Praise be.  And love to all.  Louise and Ashley

Make Way for Ducklings

Chapter 1

A few weeks ago I was getting into my car to drive out of a mall parking lot in St. Louis when I noticed a female mallard step off the curb a few car rows away from me and start across the street with several, well actually,… ten ducklings following her!  I could see that the ducklings were having a hard time getting up the curb on the other side and I sped over, making a U turn and stopping my car right in front of the scene of the duckling crossing.  Meanwhile, cars were swerving to miss them and other passers by began to make comments and or stop to watch or try to help.

When I got close enough I realized that there was a wide grate across the road with gaping openings and oh, my gosh, five of the ducklings had fallen through the grate!  Peeping away and running underneath the road. Oh my, oh my.

By now, we were three women to the rescue: Pam, a young mother with baby Arthur on her hip, on her cell phone trying to reach the Wildlife Rescue Center and Salma, a professor at St. Louis University.

We were all shouting instructions to each other…“Get the mother. She will be mad. We need to put the ducklings in the box…Throw my jacket over the mom, and try to calm her down…”

Salma and I agreed to take the mother and the five ducklings to water, and the pool and waterfall in the middle of the swirling traffic did not seem like an alternative.  We put the ducklings in the back of my car in the box that Pam had donated to the cause and Salma held mother duck in her lap covered with my jacket, stoking her.

We drove to Forest Park, built in 1876, a beautiful stretch of about 1300 acres with lakes and lagoons throughout.  When we put the mother in the water, the ducklings jumped in behind her and they high tailed it across the lake, mother duck throwing water across her back with her beak. They seemed thrilled to be free and swimming to safety.

Salma looked at me and said, “We did a good job.”

Chapter 2

When we arrived back at the parking lot, there were two police cars, Pam and Arthur and one woman who had stayed to see what would happen. “I couldn’t leave,” she said.

Salma was excitedly telling the relocation story to the policemen out the car window.  “Keep moving ma’am, we have a fire truck on the way.” And sure enough, the Brentwood Fire Department arrived just then.  Three firemen emerged from the truck, and one, David, was 6' 3” I would say.  The firemen removed the round cement storm drain lid and Fireman David disappeared down the sewer with that same rescue box and climbed back out a few minutes later with all five ducklings! What a hero. The other firemen were smiling and snapping photos.  And then, the Sewer Department truck pulled up.

“Where are those ducklings? We want to see them, “ they inquired.

Chapter 3

We decided to take the five ducklings to the lake where we had released the others in hopes of finding their family, and this time, Pam and Arthur followed us.  We circled the lake, asking people if they had seen ducklings.  Pam was on the phone with a Wildlife Rescue Center.   They said all the lagoons were connected and it was unlikely that we would find the mother.  “She is probably long gone, and trying to protect her babies somewhere else by now.”  So, after an hour of looking, Pam volunteered to drive the ducklings to the Wildlife Rescue Center in Ballwin, about 40 minutes from Forest Park, with Arthur, who is the most agreeable companion.  This adventure started around 4:00 and by now, it was 7:00.

Chapter 4

April 9, 8:28 p.m. Text from Pam:

"Hi Louise. They are checking ducklings in now at MO Wildlife Rescue Center in Ballwin.  They are their first mallards of the season they said.

April 11, 2:28 p.m. Text from Pam:

“Hi there.  Just received very nice call from Vol. coordinator at Wildlife Rescue Center. Ducklings are doing great. Very complimentary of everyone. She is going to call Brentwood police/fire/MSD.

This week I will take a copy of Make Way for Ducklings to the Brentwood Fire Department. They had not heard of the book. If you have not read it, get it. It is a heartwarming, true story. And now, there are two versions, at least.

 

 

 

 

What’s Bubba Got to Do with It? Attention Deficit Disorder SUCCESS.

This is sequel to last week’s blog on What’s Golf Got to Do with It?Bubba Watson won The Masters Championship on Sunday and a whole nation of Attention Deficit Disorder citizens should stand up and take notice.  Why?  Because here’s a young man who knows he has attention deficit issues and has grown to understand his learning style, or, knows how he learns best, and he lives his life accordingly...and, I might add, to the fullest...the MAX.  Here he is describing his approach to golf to David Letterman.

He fully embraces his own learning style.  Bubba himself described his winning shot, a miracle shot to everyone except himself as follows: I got in these trees and hit a crazy shot and I saw it in my head and somehow I’m here talking to you with a green jacket on.  [If you need more validation of his ADD, note the sequence of his explanation...it’s out of order.  Of course he saw it in his head, first, THEN, he hit a crazy shot, that earned him the triumph.  Cognitively, it's difficult for him, especially in front the hot TV lights, to recall the proper sequence.]

To give you a better idea of what Bubba envisioned and then actually pulled off, here's an overhead view of his shot.

I doubt that Bubba would use these words, but as an educator and golf couch potato, watching him over the last three years, and reading about him, I’d declare quite securely that he is a kinesthetic visual learner.  And, as such, I’ll bet there was little room in his educational environment to work with him...he’s 33 years old, that puts him in elementary school 25 years ago.  So, best to declare him “attention deficit.”

It’s easy to imagine Bubba in his elementary school, if it was typical of what we saw and now see all across this educationally challanged land today,...and his teachers’ responses to his behavior.

    Bubba, sit down.    Bubba, did you fall out of your chair again?!!    Bubba, could you please go back to your seat, and not get up to talk with your friends again.  Just sit down and do your worksheet.    Bubba, can’t you understand the directions on the page?  It’s right in front of you.    Oh, Bubba!  That’s it!  You’re outta here.  Go sit in the hall until you can behave!

Somewhere in his young life Bubba found an advocate, and from the scene on the final playoff hole, after he won, the first person in his arms after his caddie, I think I know who it was/is: his Mom.

I’ll bet she recognized that this boy needed an outlet for all his physical energy, and if the school wasn’t going to give him enough recess time and Physical Education to allow him to express his physical (kinesthetic) gifts, then she would help him find places outside of school.  And, if the school wasn’t going to integrate hands-on experiences in art, performing arts, science, and math, then somehow, she would organize outlets for these.

Now, it’s entirely possible, and I pray it’s true, that Bubba went to a school like The St. Michael School, or The College School, or Maplewood Richmond Heights, where the scenario played out above, instead, sounded like this:

    Bubba, how about you try this desk.  Yeah, it's taller than the others.  You can stand at it, or you can sit on the stool.  You’re welcome to move around.  You’ll also see that the desk is big enough room for your buddies to work with you during our team projects.

    Hey, Bubba, before we do this math assignment, come over to this group table. With three of your buddies we’re going to work with some blocks that I think might help you get to the bottom of this idea of fractions. Oh, and Missy here is going to help, too.  [Missy's a 6th grader, who's empathy reading is off the scale and for whom each of the "buddies" would do ANYTHING.]

    Yo, Bubba, what are you doing in here now?  Remember, we’ve arranged that first thing in the morning you can “work out” with the PE teacher for a half hour.  Remember how good that felt yesterday?  Get outta here, dude.

    Bubba, that is amazing clay sculpture you’ve made.  You’ve been at it for over an hour.  Can you tell me about it?  I’ll write while you talk.  [Later] Bubba, here’s what you told me about your clay sculpture.  Can you read it out loud to me, to check that I’ve got it right.  We can change and add whatever you want.  [Later] Yes, indeed, Bubba, we will  print this up and put it next to your sculpture in the exhibition.

I don’t know this, but I wonder how else could Bubba have gotten through elementary, high school and college without some experiences like this, either in school, or at home, or, praise the Lord, in/at BOTH.  Somehow Bubba learned how he learns best.

Bubba plays golf from a purely visual and kinesthetic point of view.  He’s never had a lesson.  He doesn’t approach golf from a cognitive point of view.  He sees shots in his head and then he imagines what he’d have to do to create the shot.  Then he tries it...over and over...until he’s got it grooved in his physical memory bank.

Karen Crouse described it this way in today’s New York Times:

Watson’s Masters triumph was a victory for creativity and feel and fun. His mind may be cluttered, but not with swing thoughts. He is the antidote to Tiger Woods, whose obsession with the nuts and bolts of his swing calls to mind an auto mechanic with his head buried under the hood.

A Vermont buddy of mine, a fellow golf nut wrote in response to last week’s blog and to this weekend’s Bubba win at Augusta,

I recall an interview with Bubba either late last season or earlier this season when Bubba opined that Tiger was thinking too much and that perhaps he should just play golf.  Very ironic.  There are a lot of pros who suggest that we all have our "own swing" and the task is to find your own swing, and then work with it.  There is an obvious translation to how we approach life and contribute to society. Then he added: Golf is such a stupid game!  Golf is such a great game!

The point is, we learn whatever we learn through the modes that work for each of us, individual learners.

Another part of this most recent experience of Bubba’s is that he, not surprisingly, was fully embraced by his best professional golf buds.  I’ve never seen what I saw on Sunday after the victory putt at Augusta.  First, the hug with the caddy.  Sure.  Always.  Then, the hug from a parent or wife.  Yes, frequently.  But next, gushing grabs and hugs by three fellow PGA’ers, Ricky Fowler, Ben Crane, and Aaron Baddeley (and their families!!!).  What?

YES.  HIS victory was in no small part THEIR victory!!!!!!  Bubba’s natural interpersonal intelligence has manifest on the PGA.  He LOVES personal contact.  Just as he did in 3rd grade.  And, even in that most buttoned down, conservative, dog-eat-dog, competitive environment on the PGA, Bubba cultivates relationships; genuine, honest friendships.  Along with his visual kinesthetic learning, these relationships are his life blood.  Why else would a champion be reduced to tears before a national audience?

Here's to all of you out there in Education who are doing your darndest to create learning environments for ALL learners.  BUBBAS AND ALL.