 |
Who We Are |
Exploring
Progressive Education
|
Polishing The Progressive Approach:
Why An “Endangered Educational
Species” Should Be Protected
by Elaine Winter
I’ve been thinking a lot lately about
what brought me to the progressive independent school where
I work. Why did I land here rather than somewhere else? I know
the answer lies in the school’s mission – not its
mission statement, or its heritage, or image, though all these
count, but in its defining purpose.
All the people at my school arrived here,
I imagine, by different routes. Some always knew they’d
be educators, some tried other fields. Some have taught around
the globe, in other schools and with other approaches. Some
are dyed-in-the-wool progressives. Whatever the path, we all
now find ourselves the spokespeople for a tradition, a specific
belief in children and philosophy. Today we are the protectors
of an endangered educational species.
My own route began when I had children in
1972 and started to read educational writers of the 1960s like
John Holt, Jonathan Kozol, Herbert Kohl, Robert Coles, George
Dennison, and Ned O’Gorman. These writers made education,
and teaching in particular, feel like a mission. In their own
unorthodox ways, they were each helping children live more
fully and work more resolutely to better their world. This
soon felt like a meaningful career avenue for me – and
so it has been. The progressive approach seemed to make sound
child sense, though I didn’t have a fully formed notion
then of what progressive education actually meant.
In the early 1970s, as my sons started preschool,
I got to know the Reggio Emilia pedagogy, and so gained another
slant on empowering, bottom-up teaching. Among the many conceptually
based underpinnings of this approach, three resonated for me
at that time: respect for the learner’s experience and
current developmental perspective; a valuing of collaborative
endeavor; and a use of the cultural surroundings as primary
resource. I remember that teachers put children’ quotes,
verbatim, on the classroom walls for parents to read and that
birthday books were made by the whole class for each child.
These contained a drawing and a dictation; individual messages
becoming a group gesture. And one of the richest activities
I remember from that time was the class replicating the fall
vendemmia, or wine-making process. Parents brought in plastic
bags to cover children’s feet, then the children stomped
big bucket of grapes to make themselves grape juice. It was
exciting because it was so relevant to the children’s
lives and culture. The approach valued children’ voices
and brought academic learning close to real- world experience.
As parent and educator, I was won over.
This kind of thinking is summed up well in
the following description of “the beliefs that underlie
progressive methods” written by Carol Samuels Montag
for the 1983 Miquon Conference on Progressive Education. They
are:
-
That intelligence
is not fixed by genetic inheritance,
but responds to experience
-
That to
have the greatest beneficial
effect, any experience the
child gains must bear some
relation to what he or she
understands already, and
be such that further new
experience can be added to
it. This means it may have
to be individual. That children
are geared towards growing
up: They seek maturing experience.
-
That education
in situations based on experience
and active individual participation
may cut right across the
barriers between “subjects.” It
all felt very different from
the see-saw learning I’d
had: learn/forget, learn/forget – all
beneath an umbrella of angst.
The learning of facts and
putting them in correct form
greatly outweighed decision
making, problem solving,
opinion forming and creative
endeavor. There were good
feelings, of course — satisfactions
of being a good student,
of doing well, of accomplishing — but
the cost was high, and my
dependence on teacher directive,
nearly total. My education
was about adult expectation.
When I began my first teaching experience
in Rome, I wasn’t sure about what role expectation should
play in a progressive approach. I worried about drowning out
children’s voices, and so became guilty of slippery expectations,
of leaving too much room for individual interpretation and
having too much faith in the late-bloomer dynamic. I didn’t
realize that this approach only works if it works. In other
words, if the education piece is of a very high caliber; stuff
and substance that kids have to examine, understand, think
over, and communicate are powerfully intelligent. Without high
standards, progressivism loses its punch.
For most of its defenders, progressive education
is a meaningful, even powerful approach to teaching. Yet I
have referred to it as an “endangered species,” a
philosophy whose growth is currently threatened. By threats,
I don’t have in mind schools with different approaches.
We all know there are many fine avenues. It’s not my
goal to promote a “one way only” kind of thinking.
But there are few progressive schools than there were five
years ago. While many schools have adopted progressive language,
terms such as “child-centered” and “active,” “integrated” learning,
bits and pieces of progressive practice, they many not be committed
to the philosophy itself. There are many parents who prefer
more easily defined rungs for their children’s educational
progress – pages, scores and the basics. There’s
also an image problem that makes progressivism sound outdated
and loose rather than challenging and current. There are many
versions of misinterpretation: Last summer, Republican presidential
candidate Bob Dole remarked that “while students in Japan
are learning math, sciences and languages, our kids are getting
in touch with their feelings. Let’s get rid of all that
PC stuff and move on.” Progressive education is a hard
read. Consequently, it is also easy to write off. It has been
borrowed from, misread and maligned.
We now must ask what we can do to “polish
the progressive approach” and make it shine so it can
be appreciated for what it really is? I don’t believe
our mandate is to be more radical, but to be more consistent,
united and clear; eloquent advocates of this philosophy. Through
our work and our language, through children’s work and
the walls of our classrooms, we can make the statement that
children are worth respecting; that meaningful teaching includes
listening, questioning, responding and refocusing. By always
clarifying what kind of learning is taking place and what kind
of work is going on – because we all know that what is
obvious to us is often unclear and unconnected for parents
and other educators – by clarifying, we become leaders.
Certainly one cornerstone of progressive
education is its respect for how children learn. We know that
students want to learn to know and grow competent, to become
their own brand of expert. Meaningful learning opportunities
for them include problem- and conflict-solving, theorizing,
defending a view and composing a poem; critical, analytical,
reflective and creative thought. They also embrace organized
work habits, neatness, clear communication and good form. And
maybe even “getting in touch with feelings”.
This foundation broadens to value social studies, as the hub of relevant
learning – from the community of students to larger more diverse
groups. So our philosophy embraces civic commitment and citizen-shaping
activity. But does that stop at empathy and appreciation? I’m wondering
if active response might be what we risk losing if progressive education
falls by society’s wayside.
Pat Carini, the former director of the Prospect
Center, also spoke at the 1983 Miquon Conference on Progressive
Education. She said: “Classrooms are bellwethers of society
and anything in the atmosphere comes back to schools through
children. Because of this, schools have an unusual opportunity
to grapple, and I mean grapple, with the larger issues of society.
Society’s hopes, aspirations and values are right there
before us – if we’ll look…Some of us may
decide to go out and effect public policy, not all of us will,
but in our classrooms we are shaping our common destiny and
our individual perspectives right along and with the children.”
At my school, we’ve been talking about
the dynamic of educating activists, and I think that may be
one corner of the educational platform still owned by progressive
thought. It means being unafraid to take a community stand
when it counts, no matter how uncomfortable or inconvenient
that may be. It includes, but goes beyond community service.
In her book, Schoolhome, Jane Roland Martin warns against what
she calls, the “education of spectatorship” and
talks about the difference between educating “consumers” and
educating “voters”.
She says, “Dewey wanted us to educate ‘the
whole child’. I have been talking about educating all
our children in our whole heritage. That valuable capital includes
ways of living as well as forms of knowing, societal activities
and practices as well as literary and artistic achievements.
It is all too easy, however, for school to instruct children
about their heritage without ever teaching them to be active
and constructive participants in the world – let alone
how to make it a better place for themselves and their progeny.
This is especially so in the United States, where school is
thought of as an instrument for developing children’s
minds, not their bodies; their thinking and reasoning skills,
not their emotional capacities or active propensities.”
Ralph Nader said recently that “politics
has been corrupted, not just by money but by being trivialized
out of addressing the great, enduring issues of who controls,
who decides, who owns, who pays, who has a voice and access.” Maybe
this is part of our mission.
Debbie Meier, a co-founder of the Central
Park East Secondary School in New York City, describes schools
that nurture citizens as those that promote skepticism, empathy
(both an affective and cognitive quality), hope, and respect.
She says what we know, that “it is doable to create schools
that are respectful places.” Which brings up to the stuff
of a progressive community. Are we really a team that works
together as we encourage our students to go; benefiting from
the same dynamics of interdependence that color classroom life
and curriculum design? In discussing this aspect of progressivism,
the director of my school talks of “doing, dignity and
diversity.” Jane Roland-Martin speaks of “care,
concern and connection.” Both imply shared burden and
shared gains, and are equally applicable to classroom and faculty
communities.
One aspect of a progressive community is
its group-decision making stance, which often requires a lot
of effortful, time-consuming “process.” But collaboration
in a progressive community involves more than this. It calls
for the kind of collegial support that enhances both our teaching
and our school’s leadership position. Really working
together requires opening up and allowing oneself to share
the rough edges with colleagues, not just the shiny gems of
our programs.
While that can be very hard to do, for a
progressive school, interdependency is the starting point.
For example, there are not desks in my lower school’s
classrooms – a statement about the value of collaborative
endeavor. Though in true progressive fashion, we do also have
an exception. We ask our students for collaborative effort
across lines of race, class, gender and gender preference,
age and family configuration. We also ask them for openness
and flexible thinking – compromise and change, balanced
by all-out stubbornness when it’s called for; for respect
for their own work and for others’ – for accomplishments
as well as good tries. We ask for willingness to take risks
and explore what is new, for the ability to find pleasure in
group work. And finally, we ask them to build an interdependent
world and to start here.
Christopher Reeve, in a great moment from
his speech to the Democratic National Convention last summer,
remarked about how often in recent years he’d heard reference
made to “family values.” He’d been working
to figure out what was meant by the phrase, he said, and he’s
come up with this answer: It means, Mr. Reeve said, that “we
are all a family and we all have value.”
In this “family” spirit, progressive
educators need to think about ways we can let some barriers
and defenses fall and help each other with our work. The answer
lies not in a list of how-tos, but in the knowledge that progressive
education can only survive within a truly progressive community.
We can’t fake it. By becoming a stronger community, we
can make a stronger statement. That is a worthwhile goal to
share.
future.
* * *
|
|