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Who We Are |
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LREI:
A Leader in
Progressive Education
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Educating
The Whole Person | Educating for
Academic Excellence
Educating
For Democracy | The
Living Legacy of Progressive
Education
The Little
Red School House was founded
in 1921 as a joint public —private
educational experiment designed
to test the notion that the principles
of progressive education, advocated
since the turn of the century
by John Dewey — and tried
out mainly in small, private
school settings — could
be applied successfully in the
crowded, ethnically diverse,
public schools of the nation’s
largest city. Its guiding spirit
was educator, psychologist and
journalist Elisabeth Irwin.
The experiment
succeeded beyond the expectations
of its most ardent supporters.
Education reformers around the
country closely followed its
progress. Little Red’s
programs and teaching methods
were eventually adopted in hundreds
of schools across New York City.
University teaching programs
sent their student teachers to
train here, and thousands of
visitors arrived at our doors
each year to learn about the
theory and practice of progressive
education. At the time of her
death in 1942, Elisabeth Irwin
was one of the nation’s
most respected and influential
educators and the Little Red
School House had become one of
the most famous schools in the
world.
In 1932, Little
Red became an independent, or
private, institution, but in
the years ahead it would always
stay in touch with its original
spirit and public mission — to
be a vital part of the life around
it, not an exclusive refuge from
it. In 1941, a high school division
was established and LREI – the
Little Red School House and Elisabeth
Irwin High School — was
born. Miss Irwin’s successor
was Dr. Randolph B. Smith, Executive
Director of the Cooperative School
for Student Teachers. For twenty-five
years, “Rank” Smith
embodied and strengthened the
school’s mission — fostering,
as he put it, “the capacity
to master the conditions of one’s
own life” and the ability
to contribute effectively to
the continuing work of building
a democratic society.
In the decades
since Rank Smith retired in 1968,
the Little Red School House and
Elisabeth Irwin High School has
experienced inevitable change
and growth. It has expanded its
facilities, developed new programs,
and its enrollment, currently
over five hundred students in
grades Pre-K through 12, has
continued to grow. But underlying
the evolution of the school has
been a remarkable continuity
of core values and school spirit.
Our reputation as a leader of
the progressive movement in education
has remained undiminished. Every
day, distinguished teachers,
wonderful students and enthusiastic,
committed parents continue to
bring fresh ideas and energy
to the achievement of the school’s
historic goals.
Educating
the Whole Person…
The LREI experience
nurtures social consciousness
and ethical awareness. It combines
respect, support and high expectations
with rigorous academic challenges,
broadening experiences in the
arts, athletics, community service
and a wide range of stimulating
opportunities for personal growth.
Drawing on the rich legacy of
the progressive tradition, we
believe that education is an
organic, developmental and interactive
process of growth encompassing
all aspects of the child’s
nature — emotional, social,
physical, moral and creative,
as well as purely cognitive and
academic. We believe that authentic
learning grows out of the complex
interplay of curiosity and purpose,
creativity and play, and the
child’s innate drive to
make sense of the world. And
we believe that children acquire
knowledge and skills both through
interaction with their physical
and social environment and through
the prisms of their own perspectives,
purposes, values and prior understandings.
Elisabeth Irwin and other pioneers
of progressive education believed
that childhood and adolescence
were unique and wonderful stages
of human life. “Sometimes
we forget,” she wrote, “that
the child is not comparable to
any factory product whatsoever.” Her
vision continues to inspire us
today as knowledge continues
to explode and the demands and
pressures on youth continue to
evolve in unprecedented and unpredictable
directions. We believe it remains
as important as it was when she
founded the school to help young
people find their own unique
voices and test their values
in order that they may be able
to confront effectively the conditions
of their own lives, make a difference
in the lives of others and meet
the challenges of an increasingly
complex world.
Educating
for Academic Excellence…
Each year LREI
graduates enter many of the most
selective colleges and universities
in the United States — equipped
with the curiosity and confidence,
the initiative and drive, and
the knowledge, imagination and
skills they will need to achieve
success. Progressive education
at LREI promotes disciplined,
intellectually rigorous inquiry.
Academic excellence requires
much more than the rote memorization
of disconnected facts and formulas
and the ability to produce “right
answers” on demand. Rather,
it requires asking the “right
questions,” grasping the
organizing principles and concepts
that form the core conceptual
patterns of each discipline of
learning, and developing strategies
that make sustained and meaningful
inquiry possible. From the earliest
grades our students are encouraged
to become critical thinkers,
makers of meaning and solvers
of problems. They observe, question
and consider alternative points
of view, they develop theories
and gather evidence to support
them, they search for connections
within and across disciplines,
and they share, perform and communicate
the products of intellectual
inquiry and creative endeavor
with members of the school community.
LREI is an
exciting place to go to school.
Our curriculum is learner-centered,
problem-based and inquiry-driven.
Eighty years ago Elisabeth Irwin
revolutionized American education
by taking students out of the
classroom and into the world — and
by bringing the world into the
classroom. Our students are still
learning from experience, and
from the critical reflection,
practical application and creative
transformation through which
unmediated experience matures
into authentic understanding
and personal knowledge. The arts
are a fundamental dimension of
this experience. And so is technology.
Rich opportunities for creative
expression and aesthetic experience
are integrated throughout the
curriculum and provide students
with distinct and rigorous forms
of knowing and being in the world.
The technological skills that
have become basic tools in today’s
world — personal, professional
and academic — are learned
and practiced in every subject
and at every grade level. The
people who make all this possible
are our faculty — experts
in their fields who are skilled
at developing each child’s
unique potential. And the continuing
proof of our approach lies in
our graduates, who for generations
have gone on to lead accomplished,
personally rewarding lives that
make a difference in the lives
of others — and the world
a more creative, humane, just
and inclusive place in which
to live.
Educating
for Democracy…
The progressive
tradition of education has always
been inextricably connected to
the purposes of democratic society. “The
foundations of democracy are
built by daily habits of recognizing
the rights of those who differ
from ourselves,” Elisabeth
Irwin wrote. “For the teacher
whose eyes are open to the many
human situations arising in group
life, there is ample opportunity
to discover and discuss problems
of democracy in children’s
own terms.” LREI retains
its historic commitment to social
justice, to inclusion and diversity,
and to preparation for lives
of active citizenship. This commitment
is reflected in the school’s
respect for the dignity of each
person, its weaving of individualism
and community, its honoring of
creativity and hard work, its
recognition and celebration of
racial, ethnic and religious
diversity, its egalitarian spirit,
and its pervasive ethic of trust
and cooperation, mutual assistance
and group decision-making. Starting
with our very youngest students,
we take care as a community to
resolve problems justly and rationally
and to appreciate each individual’s
unique qualities, needs, rights,
and responsibilities. In the
classroom, in the life of the
school community and through
service to the larger community
of New York City and beyond,
personal independence, achievement
and self —awareness are
nurtured in a culture of interdependence,
cooperation, compassion and connection
to others.
The
Living Legacy of Progressive
Education…
“The
complacent formalism of schools,” Elisabeth
Irwin wrote, “its uncritical
and therefore uncreative spirit,
must be replaced by an honest
hospitality to experimentation.” Indeed,
until the end of her life, long
after it became one of the most
famous schools in America, she
continued to refer to LREI as
the “experiment.” She
believed that in order to remain
relevant, guiding educational
principles must be continually
revisited, tested in the context
of contemporary issues and reaffirmed
by current practice. This may
be her greatest legacy. Critical
and collaborative experimentation
and ongoing application of theory
to practice continue to characterize
progressive education at LREI
today.
When viewed
through the lens of our school’s
lively history and significant
contributions to the development
of progressive education, familiar
phrases like “educating
the whole child,” “learning
by doing,” and “educating
for democracy” come vividly
and compellingly to life. From
our youngest children to our
high school seniors, students
at LREI develop and mature within
an atmosphere of high expectations
and mutual respect. They experience
the satisfactions of working
hard and doing difficult things
well, of being part of a supportive
group of classmates and friends
and of celebrating one another’s
unique qualities of mind, spirit
and imagination. In 1941 John
Dewey wrote that the story of
the Little Red School House provided “much-needed
proof” that the progressive
movement in education had “come
of age.” But in a very
real sense, progressive education
is always coming of age, always
responding to the needs of children
and contemporary society and
to the findings of emerging research
in teaching and learning. LREI
continues to play a significant
role in the ongoing dialogue
about the methods and purposes
of American education. In the
educational climate in which
we find ourselves today, this
role has never been more important.
We invite you to learn more about
us and to participate in this
important conversation.
Nicholas
O’Han, School Historian
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