Unother Radiateing Glow
Anthony Burik
Note:
The author is a staff member at Diablo Valley School, in Concord, CA.
When
I first applied to graduate school in education six and a half years ago, it
did not cross my mind to become a teacher.
I was much more interested in developing curricular materials that would
teach kids about Asia and all of its glory.
In the months before I actually started my program, one of my eventual
faculty advisors convinced me to become a teacher before moving on to other things
in the field. If you are going to do
anything in education, as she explained, you have to become a teacher
first. So I became a teacher.
One
thing that nagged at me while I was in the program (and now rankles me almost
five years out) was the absolute lack of discussion about ones philosophy of teaching and education. Lawyers and doctors take classes on ethics
that cut right to the heart of decisions that they are to make in their
day-to-day work lives. In her or his
race to become a professional
teacher, however, the silence surrounding why a person would come to make the
decisions she or he would make in the classroom was deafening. After an intensive and expensive year of
graduate school, I was no closer to understanding what I or the others around
me were really hoping to achieve with a masters degree in social studies education.
It
took one horrible semester at a public middle school for me to realize that
even though the principal knew what he wanted me to do, and the kids knew what
they wanted to do, I did not have the slightest clue how to reconcile the
principals demands, the kids
desires, and what I thought I wanted to accomplish. I left.
A>A and >an.=@
Not >an. . . it's >un.=@
It's >an.=@
No, it's >un. . . you know, like in >another.=@
Are you sure?
Yes, I'm sure.
In
this my full first year at Diablo Valley School, I have felt much like some of
the new students at the school, walking in and out of rooms, observing,
talking, thinking, and always wondering about what it is I should be doing at
this unusual place. Many students who
transition from a traditional school to a Sudbury school inevitably face
boredom in their own wanderings in this new environment. I, though, have been staring face-to-face at
life choices, skeptical friends and family, and the complete opposite of my own
almost 20-year education and the couple of years of teaching I have completed
in other schools. Anyone like myself
who starts as a new staff member at a Sudbury school will eventually have to
ask her- or himself some difficult questions.
A school with no classes? No
instruction? No curriculum? No adult supervision? Is this why I got into education? What exactly have I gotten myself into here?
I
never dreamed that it would be like this.
In the weeks after my public school resignation, when I first read about
deschooling
and unschooling
and found Diablo Valley School, I was merely looking for an environment that
was very different from the one I had just abandoned. I thought that I would find some answers to my questions about
what was supposed to take place at a school.
Spend some time at the school, see what it is all about, and then make a
decision about the next move.
The
problem, of course, is that you can not go to Diablo Valley School or any of
the two dozen or so schools modeled after Sudbury Valley School and think about
education in the same way. It goes way
beyond whether or not there should be any kind of testing of knowledge or
skills or aptitude, or whether or not there should be any kind of academic
requirements, minimal or otherwise.
Rather, you walk in the door, and no matter your role as student,
parent, educator, or interested bystander, you begin to ask, consciously or
otherwise, the fundamental questions in education that are rarely asked for
mysterious reasons. How does a living,
breathing, intensely individual, one-in-six-billion person really learn? Out of the infinite body of things known and
unknown about the human experience, what, if anything, is going to click with
that person at 11:27AM on Tuesday morning on a half-empty, growling
stomach? Considering our libraries, the
Internet, family, friends, movies, media, and the potential teacher in all of
us, why does a child have to go to school in the first place to learn about the
world?
For
the staff member, there are other gnawing questions. You walk into a room of kids, or maybe just one, reading,
talking, or playing, and you ask yourself: what now? Do I open my mouth and
join in? Do I leave the room and let whatever
was going on continue? Do I harp in at
well-placed moments where I might actually teach something? Do
I just keep quiet and wait for something to happen?
What
now, indeed!
In
less than five minutes, I had unwittingly stumbled onto enough problems to keep
any elementary school teacher tossing and turning at night. It had started with the spelling of a single
word, one of the estimated 600,000 or so in the English language: radiate.
R-A-D-I-A-T-E, I said. Too
fast. I gave the last three letters a
second time in slower succession. A. T. E.
Radiate,
like all of the other words on the page kept in the orderly blue binder,
eventually had -ing appended to
the end. I looked at the sheet. Radiateing.
That
was all I needed to pique my interest in the other words on the paper.
An. One of the
simplest words in the English language.
An (as in >can), one kid
said. No, un as in another,
the writer corrected the other, giving this seemingly solid response. Back and forth. In the end, un had won, from what I could tell.
Then,
the interest in another word on the page, glow, and how the word low was most likely spelled L-O-W since glow was
G-L-O-W. Immediately, the words came to
my mind: how, now, cow, and others that
I am sure would have spewed forth as fast as I could think of them.
Mere hours after my part-time
job as an EFL (English as a Foreign Language) teacher in the morning, so far
deep in the teaching moment
that I could barely see the surface, I started to open my mouth.
And
then. . . I said nothing.
I
said nothing about that rule we have to drop the e at the end of a word before adding -ing.
I
said nothing about how we have five vowels in English but at least 15 vowel
sounds, and how an is really an and another is
one of the thousands of exceptions in this crazy language that millions around
the world and a few dozen students I teach at a time are trying to learn.
I
said nothing about how or tow or now or row or cow or how now brown cow.
On
the inside, I said everything.
And
at the end of those five minutes, I finally had learned something about being a
staff member that had eluded me for the last five months. I learned how to trust a child.
A
lot was going through my head in those five minutes, thoughts and questions
that have been keeping me up at night during this past school year. A years
education in my graduate school program.
How interesting that this child had radiate in their vocabulary. Wouldnt it be good for the child to have some spelling and
punctuation rules tucked away in their brain?
How the two other children standing there might have latched onto what
came out of my mouth. What either one
or both of the parents would have done had they been sitting at that table. Would they have been disappointed or
frustrated or angry with me had they known that I did not chime in? Indeed, what was I doing at a school if I was not teaching
something?
This
is why I did what I did. I trusted that
somewhere, somehow, someway, this child would eventually learn about -ing and about an antidote baked in another bran flan and about how
now brown cow and why we do what
we do when the grass is dewy and John Dewey and Tom Dooley are due in Duluth and all kinds of other interesting things there are
to know.
I
trusted the child.
Simple,
and yet not so.
Even
though a teacher in a regular school may trust her or his students completely,
the deck is stacked against her or him. When that cold, blustery day in
February comes when a teacher has to teach that we drop the e at the end of
a word before we add -ing, she or he does
not have the luxury of going around the classroom and either whispering in each
students ear the drop
>e and add >-ing=@ rule, or Sure is cold outside today, because she or he knows deep in her or his heart that
today is not the day to talk with that child about dropping the e and adding -ing because that
is the last thing on that particular childs
mind. There is no way to do what is
necessary and meaningful for each and every student in the classroom. She or he must say the rule aloud to
everyone whether they are ready for it or not; therefore, drop >e and add >-ing=@ hangs in the room like a dusty chandelier that a few
gaze upon and wonder where it came from, and some think it would look great in
their house, while most others pass under it on their way to the punch bowl.
Ultimately,
drop >e and add >-ing=@ does nothing to strengthen the bond between two
people in a learning environment that should be a hallmark of education, but
which is grossly lacking in our nations
schools. It would be wonderful if every
person even remotely associated with education insisted on a strong, lasting
bond of trust between educators and those they educate. Yet every day in this country, unfortunately,
for whatever reason, most of us insist that drop
>e and add >-ing=@ is far more
important than cultivating fruitful relationships between two interesting and
independent, yet still somehow connected individuals.
Is
it that we are all too afraid?
You
can read all you want and discuss with others until kingdom come what it means
to trust in children. And yet, when you
have that three- to five-second window where you either open your mouth or keep
it to yourself, that is where a teacher and a staff
member show their true mettle.
This
year, I have realized what it means to be a staff
member at a Sudbury school.
The proper title on your fictitious business card would be revolutionary. (Though in deference to A.S. Neill and the
original founders of Sudbury Valley School, perhaps Johnny-come-lately revolutionary would be more appropriate.) The reason for this designation has to do with trust. A staff member, new or old, has to trust
that children, and not adults or the curriculum or schools, belong at the
center of education, and has to believe that she or he can and will do
everything possible to put and keep children front and center. Radical ideas, even in the year 2000.
In
five minutes, however, I learned how amazingly difficult this business about
learning is for a staff member. There
is no doubt that drop >e and add >-ing=@ has its place in life; it and the vast store of
academic knowledge humans have assembled help us to learn about the world and
expand the mind in the process. Yet the
acquisition of academic knowledge is not the be-all and end-all of education, as
some would have us believe. Education is
such an inherently personal, private, of-the-moment experience. It is not the education of impersonal, mass schooling to which most Americans
have been subjected, and for which the acquisition of academic knowledge has
secured a place of preeminence out of all proportion to other pieces of the
educational picture.
The
educational model put forth by Sudbury schools relies on trust. When a staff member trusts a child and the
child trusts her or him, and each person trusts her- or himself, many things
are possible, even learning the drop
>e and add >-ing=@ rule. Until that trust is in place, however, the
potential for intellectual, emotional, and spiritual development lies dormant
in both parties, waiting for the moment to awake and blossom into a vital and
lasting relationship.
Copyright
The Sudbury Valley School
Press, Inc.