~Woty
~Woty
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* from our experience in trying to start a SVS-model school in Ottawa,
the worst thing is that parents don't understand the model, and that
what we'd call freedom and democracy is so foreign to the current
culture of authoritarian control, that those who need it don't avail
themselves of it.
...but of course we've never actually been part of an operational SVS
school,
fred.
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fred schueler
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Frederick W. Schueler & Aleta Karstad
Bishops Mills Natural History Centre - http://pinicola.ca/bmnhc.htm
now in the field on the Thirty Years Later Expedition -
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But I don't suggest that a 'purer' form of democracy is called for. Perhaps a more honest accounting of the real forces at play and the compromises necessary in founding, growing, and maintaining such a complex organism.
Certainly it requires a special devotion and faith in the early stage for enthusiasts (god bless them) but there is something beyond simply drinking the koolaid.
________________________________________
From: discuss-su...@googlegroups.com [discuss-su...@googlegroups.com] on behalf of Frederick W. Schueler [bck...@istar.ca]
Sent: Thursday, February 17, 2011 10:57 PM
To: discuss-su...@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [DSM] Negatives
Of course it's a negative question. That's why the subject line is
"negatives". Everything has its drawbacks, and this isn't an advocacy
list, it's a discussion list.
I don't think it's a dumb question though. I think that people involved
in almost any organization have answers to that for the organization
they're involved with--either things they disagree with on principle or
think are implemented poorly in practice.
For instance, Scott Grey thinks that the Sudbury Valley School ought not
to issue diplomas.
I'm aware of very strong advantages to the Sudbury model (both in theory
and in practice); I'm curious what people see as the weak points because
I very rarely see them discussed by people who have any significant
grasp of the model. And I'm sure they exist, just on general principles
(not because I dislike the Sudbury model, I in fact like it a lot, but
nothing is perfect.)
~Woty
Yes, being this far outside mainstream culture is really difficult,
especially before reaching critical mass of people who are on board with
those values. I've found that when I describe the sudbury model most
people think it's basically like progressive schools and that students
must not *really* be making significant decisions and that adults must
*really* be controlling the environment, the learning, and the rules.
I think that's also one of the most valuable things the model provides
and a primary advantage over unschooling, though--having access to other
kids who have control over their own lives is really important.
~Woty
I don't think it's either dumb or negative. Self evaluation is a valuable thing, and nothing is.perfect. How can we improve if selfcritizism is considered "dumb" and "negative"?
On Thursday, February 17, 2011, Ruti Regan <woty...@gmail.com> wrote:
> What do you consider to be the worst thing about the Sudbury model?
>
> ~Woty
>
Jess Haugsjaa
--- On Thu, 2/17/11, Mydlack, Daniel J. <dmyd...@towson.edu> wrote:
~Woty
* from our experience in trying to start a SVS-model school in Ottawa,
the worst thing is that parents don't understand the model, and that
what we'd call freedom and democracy is so foreign to the current
culture of authoritarian control, that those who need it don't avail
themselves of it.
fred.
What do you see as the problem with parent-school relationships? That's
not something I've ever thought about.
~Woty
I think one reason it's such a hard problem is that it causes cultural
distortions within schools. They're all under constant attack and live
with substantial fear of being closed down; this makes criticism and
innovation harder than they ought to be.
SVS and the other schools ought not to be causes, and mostly aren't, but
to some extent have to be because of the degree to which the surrounding
culture opposes them. That's very unfortunate.
~Woty
Yes, being this far outside mainstream culture is really difficult, especially before reaching critical mass of people who are on board with those values. I've found that when I describe the sudbury model most people think it's basically like progressive schools and that students must not *really* be making significant decisions and that adults must *really* be controlling the environment, the learning, and the rules.
I think that's also one of the most valuable things the model provides and a primary advantage over unschooling, though--having access to other kids who have control over their own lives is really important.
~Woty
Or at least, control over their lives while they are at school... which points again to why the parent-school relationship is so touchy...
Is this primarily driven by staff? I thought it was a school meeting
policy that was important to the students as well.
~Woty
~Woty
From: Mydlack, Daniel J. <dmyd...@towson.edu>
Date: Thu, Feb 17, 2011 at 11:16 PM
Subject: RE: [DSM] Negatives
To: "discuss-su...@googlegroups.com" <discuss-su...@googlegroups.com>
--
-- Scott David Gray
http://www.unseelie.org/
Invalidating the views of someone who is speaking by suggesting bias, is one of the Machiavellian techniques I, as a parent, encountered. ...(snip)...
The underlying premise that parental involvement in the lives of our children is contrary to their freedom is a bias I cannot tolerate. It would be easier to educate the parents about the model by involving them and addressing inappropriate actions on their part, than by excluding them. These are the greatest weaknesses I see in how the model is being enacted.Elizabeth
--
That said, there is not a place for parents in the day-to-day life of
a Sudbury school. This would be true even if every parent were
"perfect." Sudbury schools work to the extent that the children can
make it *their* place. Ownership is key.
I've written elsewhere:
> In just about every culture without schools, children
> naturally by about age 4-6 start seeking each other out in
> order to spend time with other kids unsupervised by adults.
> And even when those kids do spend time with adults, they
> rarely spend it with their parents.
>
> I think that there is wisdom in this, for both the parents
> and the children. By leaving the child to own her/his own
> day _away_ from the parents (the most important people in
> her/his life), the child can develop a richer relationship
> with her/his parents.
Showing trust in your child's ability to manage his/her own time when
away from you is a gift; a vote of confidence. It means that when you
are welcomed (as parents very often are, at our school, for various
Assembly events and for short casual visits at the end of the day when
picking up their children), you are welcomed as a guest into a place
that belongs to the members of the day-to-day community (the students
and staff).
On Fri, Feb 18, 2011 at 11:50 AM, Tom Hall <tomhallf...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> The sad fact is, for the vast majority of children parental involvement in their lives IS very often contrary to their freedom.
> But I do agree that assuming this is true of any individual parent is not necessarily useful.
> The question is: Is this assumption a part of most Sudbury Model Schools, either officially or unofficially.
> Does this assumption work or not work to the student's benefit? To the School's benefit?
> and if it doesn't work, what might work better...
--
-- Scott David Gray
http://www.sudval.org/
I apologize for my reactive response to your question and to anyone else
whose buttons I may have pushed. I was reacting to the fact that there is
already so much negativity in the world today and in that moment I was just
tired of hearing it.
And I love the Sudbury model so why would I want to hear negativity about
it.
Peace,
Carmel
-----Original Message-----
From: discuss-su...@googlegroups.com
[mailto:discuss-su...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Ruti Regan
Sent: Thursday, February 17, 2011 5:23 PM
To: discuss-su...@googlegroups.com
Subject: [DSM] Negatives
What do you consider to be the worst thing about the Sudbury model?
~Woty
--
Mike,
So how do you explain it so parents can understand it as a simple equation, supporting a natural and healthy independence, and don't feel that they are left out and not trusted? Is there a way to do it? Is there a way to create some other kind of support network that will do it? What have schools tried and what has worked for them?
One thing I have noticed after staffing in a Sudbury School for 14 years is that everyone in the community (whether you are a student, staff or parent) is constantly asked by the intrinsic nature of the beast to grow as a person. With personal growth, comes difficult challenges and conflict. This is not easy stuff! But this Model offers the healthiest platform I’ve seen to allow the free discourse and organic feedback needed for this difficult challenge of personal growth. We are never done!! The model puts ownership for all learning in the lap of each individual. Students rarely have anyone or anything else to blame but themselves. They are constantly looking inward, learning to own their part in the conflict or challenge. I have been inspired by these students to do the same for myself!!!
Diane
Thanks for the discussion,
Tom
What do you think the benefits would be of greater parental involvement in the school?
~Woty
Which is why it's great there is a forum like this where people who
actually understand the model and work in Sudbury Schools are willing
to discuss and correct fundamental misunderstandings in such detail
and with such patience (including those I brought up today)!
Thanks for the discussion,
Tom
On Feb 18, 2011, at 5:58 PM, Karen Hyams wrote:
> Fundamental misunderstandings about the model can cause schools to
> fail, which is, in my opinion, the biggest negative aspect of
> Sudbury model education.
>
> Karen
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The rules for the list are available at http://groups.google.com/group/discuss-sudbury-model/web/basic-rules-for-the-listThanks to everyone for their comments in these threads - even the more bitter ones, in the sense that they bring about a sharper, clearer, stronger picture of many of the great aspects of the Sudbury model.
I want to share with you a couple of related experiences, that I hope may shed a little light on the issues of parental involvement with the education of their children, and Machiavellian power play, because they come from a different perspective.
When I lived in London, I attended a theatre school that was not only not mainstream, it took pride in being anti-mainstream. I enrolled age 20, having dropped out of a course at London University in English and Drama. I wanted to work as an actor, and after considering the alternatives I believed without a doubt that this school would provide me with the most knowledge and skill of any of the schools around. I enrolled onto a 2 year acting course, transferred onto a 3 year directing course, which played out to 4 years all told (I skip the details). I returned there to teach soon after my graduation, and so long as the late founder and Principal of the school was involved with it, I was probably the most frequently employed-by-the-school graduate, both as a teacher and director. As a freelancer, I also taught outside of the school - over many years and in many different settings, and I taught the material I was familiar with and had been taught myself.
Here’s the thing. As the primary business of the school was to teach acting, and the Principal had developed his own acting system which had its roots in his Russian training, a great deal of study was devoted to theoretical and practical understanding of daily life. Someone in the field once said, “if you want to know how to act, look at how you live” - I paraphrase lazily. And as nothing at the school was considered more important than to prepare oneself for the chosen profession, nothing was off limits. This led to many students questioning a lot of behaviours that most of us take for granted, and re-aligning themselves towards these processes with a new set of values, often not shared by the mainstream. Also, students brought into question many of their real-life relationships, and the role they played in your character as a whole. Well, it wasn’t long before the school was accused of being a cult - a friction between people “on the outside” as opposed to those “on the inside”. And very often, with or without this cult label - which was an understandable but flawed opinion - parents of students would want to be more involved. I’m talking here about mature students. In some cases parents paid the tuition, but that was not the clincher: the fact was that many parents, even when their children had grown up and chosen to pursue a profession, and a rigorous training path towards success in that profession, were reluctant to release influence over their children. This is really what I’m getting at and I hope that you excuse the lengthy background.
We are all aware of the extent to which our parents, benignly or otherwise, consciously or otherwise, influence us, even way past the age at which one might consider it “naturally useful”. I believe this is the force that is at play in generating parents’ discomfort with the model, a sort of inbuilt protectiveness combined with a societal fear that, when it comes down to it, maybe our kids won’t really need us any more.
In another situation, I worked for a while in a small trade union in the UK. The members were, by virtue of their profession, independent and strong-willed. Whereas the intention and broad structure of the organisation was democratic, the actual practice was more of a hybrid, English-style democracy where those who had been around longest wielded most power. This of course bred resentment amongst those few members who actually wanted to exercise their democratic influence, and created a degree of Machiavellian struggles. As Dan wrote in his 2005 article The Core Ideas of the Sudbury Model, democracy and politics are hard - even in the West where we have "stable democracies", it took a long time to get there, and they're still far from perfect. The constant struggle between individual and group is very complex. What I’m trying to highlight here is that these problems arise in other circumstances, and are at least as emblematic of radical models and democratic structures generally, as they are pertinent to the Sudbury model itself.
I think what Tom is driving at is whether the discomfort or alienation experienced by some parents is systematic of the model, and if so, what can be done to be rid of that? “I understand that there is no hostility involved in a philosophical rejection, but why should parental offerings to contribute not be solicited, valued and used?" Why would they want to contribute - because they think kids should be doing something they’re not? Because they have lots of spare time on their hands? Because being with their kids at morning and evening and weekends and holidays is not enough? Because they feel the school is a poorer environment without their offering? Or because they believe that sharing their offering will contribute to a greater benefit for the community? Even if this latter, it still goes against the grain of the model, that students themselves initiate their learning. "Why not have an easily referenced listing of any offerings that are available to students? A simple, easy to access database of potential opportunities?" In my experience these lists are rarely simple to maintain; what is on offer changes often, for a myriad of reasons - no longer the time, no longer the will, no longer the means, to name a few. Every time something changes it means more administration. So even aside from the philosophical difficulties, it's not practical. The school’s administrative resources could be put to better use, in my opinion. "Isn't there a difference between creating opportunities themselves and creating awareness that such opportunities are available?" Yes there is, but why would you want to create awareness unless you doubt the potential and ability of the recipient? "How is that any different than the awareness created by having a musical instrument available, or a book, or a dance studio, or a potting wheel, or a pile of rocks, or a pond, or…" Awareness of the features and utilities of a school comes about through a natural interaction with the environment, which has in turn evolved through the school’s history and culture. There is a huge difference between something evolving, and something being imposed, even if the imposition is “meant well”. As Mimsy says, there has been an enormous amount written about the model, in theory and practice, over many years. A particular piece that springs to mind in relation to parents offering things is The Kind and The Real - it illustrates how similar yet different interpretations of the model can be, even if you read the literature.
I love Mike’s post about video games, but I’m not sure I agree with “There is plenty of time to figure out what you need to make yourself happy.” I mean, in a Sudbury school there is, but normally kids are deprived of this time - everything is scheduled for them from the minute they wake till the minute they sleep, and the result is often that after the first 16 years or so they have no clue what they need to make them happy, and spend many tough years that follow working that out, and quite often in a mentally or emotionally handicapped state.
In conclusion I’d like to say how it’s almost absurd that parents at large do not seem too worried about forcing their kids to go to “normal” schools, about fighting with them to get their homework done, about seeing their natural enthusiasm and independence dwindle, or seeing them trained into being small-mindedly competitive in the way the school system encourages; and yet a number of those parents that seek an alternative to this slow death of the spirit in turn worry that their children may become too independent, or that their own influence may become insignificant. Thanks to all of you who help to perpetuate childrens‘ autonomy; it is a rare opportunity indeed.
Our school has had parent discussion nights. We would have a topics that were different aspects of the model like "The Value of Play" or " The Role of Staff " . This did deepen my understanding of my model. There were times there was conflict. Several years ago a group of students wanted a high speed connection there was real debate about whether that was an essential like heat and water or the responsibility of the computer corporation to finance.
* I'll suggest a model for this: that in interactions with the School,
the students represent their families, and the parents agree to
subordinate themselves to their children in interactions with the
School, so that if the parents are to do something "for" the School,
this is done because their children have, on their own initiative,
suggested it at the School, and elicited enough support among others
that the School invites the parents to do whatever it is.
This subordination of parents to children should be easy, at least,
among Christian families, who worship a God who acts only through his
children...
Sent via BlackBerry by AT&T
It's not just a matter of whether parents are properly able to support
their children's freedom.
It's also that there's a certain kind of autonomy that is only possible
to have if you have a kind of privacy that isn't really possible if
you're constantly supervised -- I think it is impossible for kids at
home to not be under a significant degree of supervision, even if it's
extremely respectful and by people who value their freedom highly.
Sudbury model schools aren't a substitute for families, and they're not
in opposition to parental involvement in a child's life (after all, at
the end of the day the kids go home), but they do provide unsupervised
space and that is very valuable.
~Woty
A musical instrument isn't watching you.
~Woty
Also, it is extremely difficult to find staff who are capable of doing
the job, and many schools find after electing staff *who have gone
through a rigorous hiring process* that they don't understand what their
role is, are incapable of doing the job, and cause problems by trying to
direct student activities.
I'd think this would be even more true of parent volunteers who *aren't*
rigorously selected.
And also, I don't think it's ideal for parents to be staff at the same
school their kids go to, but it's not easily avoidable given the rarity
of schools that respect children's autonomy. It's not as big of a
problem as it could be with staff, though, both because they are elected
and because having some parents on staff doesn't add all that many
parents into the community. If there were a *lot* of parents though,
including people who don't really understand what it means to respect
autonomy without actively supervising, it would cause bigger
distortions. A school that's based partly on lack of supervision needs a
certain critical mass to make that culture possible, and presence of a
lot of outside people who are used to supervising some members of the
community would necessarily be disruptive to that.
There are other models that offer valuable things which have greater
parent involvement, like homeschooling co-ops, but they work very
differently from a Sudbury model school and there are things they can't
offer.
~Woty
I'm not interested in bashing. I think the Sudbury model in general and
SVS in particular are important. I also think that, just from general
principles, they must have disadvantages and I rarely see them discussed
by people who are substantially familiar with and respectful of the model.
I wanted to see what people would say, and to learn more things about
how it works, and what could be better. My intent is in no way destructive.
~Woty
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I think it's unfortunate that in our culture as it exists now, schools
that respect children enough not to interfere with their freedom all
have to be extremely cheap in order to be economically viable.
I think they'd be better places if it were otherwise and some schools
could be expensive, and school meeting could buy expensive things.
~Woty
And I think that although most people who disagree with the model
seriously misunderstand it (willfully or otherwise), it is possible to
understand the model but think that some things about it are mistaken or
implemented poorly. Somehow I never hear from anyone in that category,
though I'm sure they must exist. If some of them are on this list, I'd
like to hear what they have to say.
~Woty
Because being with their kids at morning and evening and weekends and holidays is not enough? Because they feel the school is a poorer environment without their offering? Or because they believe that sharing their offering will contribute to a greater benefit for the community? Even if this latter, it still goes against the grain of the model, that students themselves initiate their learning. "Why not have an easily referenced listing of any offerings that are available to students?� A simple, easy to access database of potential opportunities?" In my experience these lists are rarely simple to maintain; what is on offer changes often, for a myriad of reasons - no longer the time, no longer the will, no longer the means, to name a few. Every time something changes it means more administration. So even aside from the philosophical difficulties, it's not practical. The school�s administrative resources could be put to better use, in my�opinion.
~Woty
~Woty
On 2/18/11 9:03 PM, Mimsy Sadofsky wrote:I think that people with this complaint are not saying that they wish someone would do more to explain the model to them. They want something else. I'm not entirely sure what it is -- I'd like to hear about it.
The dirty underside of that effort on our parts is that many people don't want to understand -- they just want to send their kids to a place where the kids may be happier than they were before. They don't want to read about it or do the heavy lifting involved in figuring out why it works. That is their privilege, but it does not negate our efforts to make the model accessible and clear.
> So far our School Meeting's members have always figured out how to get
> the expensive things they need; not an indoor gym, which would be
> nice, but more modest things like fabulous musical and recording
> equipment.
> I think everyone would prefer to have the broadest possible economic
> spectrum than to have the gym!
Why?
> Anyway, most private schools do not use their tuition money to build
> gyms -- those are more likely to be arranged for through having people
> in the position of raising money non-stop. That is to say, adults
> devoting themselves to that end. At a Sudbury school, it would not be
> easy to find anyone who would spend big amounts of their time in
> fund-raising.
I can see how outside adult volunteers raising money for particular
projects would cause problems, but why would it be impossible or
undesirable to have a fund-raising clerk?
~Woty
There are several reasonable responses to this criticism. But I wonder if anyone would consider any formal or systematic processes beneficial to the model? For example: in the way that everyone has to serve at least once on the JC, should everyone have to argue for or against a certain issue at School Meeting? Do people involved in schools feel that this criticism has any foundation in practice, and if so what procedures are in place to mitigate it?
Why is giving the backstory an act of being "automatically discounted"? Where is the logic in that? Suppose someone comes out and says that from their personal experience, some particular political policy is manipulative, destructive, and machiavellian in its intent? Would it be an act of "automatic discounting" to simply point out that the person involved was a political activist in an organization devoted to opposing that policy? On the contrary, pointing out the personal interest that the speaker has in what he is basing on his personal experience is, in fact, adding to the discourse, not distracting from it. It is considered altogether proper and appropriate in the political discourse engaged in by virtually everyone in this country, and in every democracy. There is no shame, or discounting, when pointing out that a particular person testifying from personal experience for a specific political goal is a member of a political party pursuing that goal. That backstory does not invalidate or discount the testimony; it sets it in context.
I think it's unfortunate that in our culture as it exists now, schools that respect children enough not to interfere with their freedom all have to be extremely cheap in order to be economically viable.
I think they'd be better places if it were otherwise and some schools could be expensive, and school meeting could buy expensive things.
Can you give examples? Like what would you get and how would it enhance the experience?
mike
--Any number of cool things can be purchased with money.
| I'm a bit confused by this whole discussion because it seems that people are forgetting such a simple, fundamental thing: Sudbury Schools are inherently imperfect because they are human endeavors, and all human endeavors are imperfect. Just because I think it is the best model for my children does not mean I think it is perfect. I tell people who are looking for a happy-slappy utopia for their children where everyone just runs around barefoot in the sunshine and grows healthy veggies all day to look elsewhere. Different families are going to be sensitive to different "negatives": too much screen time, not broad enough exposure, manipulation by staff/older students (perceived or real), etc., etc. So, while I agree that criticism can be useful and lead to growth and improvement, I sometimes grow tired of it because it seems people
are asking for utopia. Oh, a place with no conflict or self-interest, and lots of yummy toys and brain-stimulating activities, and space for the parents to be involved, and available to absolutely anyone, and while we're at it, a place that will raise my child up into the perfect well-rounded adult I want him to be. My personal mantra that I share ad nauseum with anyone who will listen is "schools do not raise children, families do". As an SVS parent, it is my responsibility to learn what I can and involve myself as I can, not the school's. I am grateful to everyone for their interesting thoughts and ideas. Now I leave it to the kids. As to the problems of School Meeting, has anyone been to open town meeting in their town? I've said this before, but I repeat it because it is just so darn instructive. Imperfect democracy at work. Jess Haugsjaa --- On Sun, 2/20/11, Mike South <mso...@gmail.com> wrote: |
Thank you so much for sharing your views with the group. As a parent who is fairly new to SVS, I am still learning about how everything 'works' and have found this discussion both fascinating and educating. In the midst of all this discussion there is one question that I keep wondering: "what do the students think about the issues that have been raised?". The majority of people who have responded have been adults, and while I am glad to have been able to hear all of the various perspectives, it seems that without the students' voices the discussion is not complete. As majority 'shareholders' in the Sudbury model, I think it a very important piece.
Again, thank you Isabella for your response. I appreciate it!
Erica Pierce
> On Saturday, February 19, 2011, mzwoggles <mzwh...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>> There is one question that inevitably comes up when I tell someone
>> about SVS that I simply do not have a good answer to: "how are kids
>> exposed to topics and ideas of a broad range of subjects?" (sometimes
>> another way of expressing "I had to take algebra, everybody should
>> have to suffer through it!") The real 'negative' I see here is the
>> issue of broad scope. I think this must be an issue in the smaller
>> schools that don't have critical mass of students to provide a wide
>> range of interests and perspectives. I think this also fuels part of
>> the frustration of parents who are turned aside from contributing
>> because they feel they have an expertise that they would
>> enthusiastically share.
>>
>> My own experience as a parent of a teen at SVS: in spite of having a
>> wonderful relationship with my daughter, it has been an exercise in
>> self inspection to fully, unconditionally trust her to do what she
>> needs to do. I'm not sure how long it would have taken if she was
>> younger. If I ever doubted I would be summarily voted off the campus,
>> all doubts were erased when her voice was heard on the new SVS video
>> extolling the campus as "our own space to do what we want to do". Bye
>> Mom!!
>>
>>
>>
>> On Feb 17, 8:23 pm, Ruti Regan <wotyf...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>> What do you consider to be the worst thing about the Sudbury model?
>>>
>>> ~Woty
>>
Erik
My intention is not to bash, but this is in fact this *discuss* Sudbury
model list, not the *advocate* Sudbury model list. I think seeking out
the disadvantages is legitimately on topic.
> I tell people who are looking for a happy-slappy utopia for their
> children where everyone just runs around barefoot in the sunshine and
> grows healthy veggies all day to look elsewhere. Different families
> are going to be sensitive to different "negatives": too much screen
> time, not broad enough exposure, manipulation by staff/older students
> (perceived or real), etc., etc.
Well, yes, different people dislike different things about the model --
what I'm looking for is things that really *are* bad, not things that
are commonly *perceived* as bad. A lot of things that people often think
are bad are in fact good (like not making students go to class or meet
with adult advisers about their learning.) I'm very glad that lack of
parental involvement and screen time have been defended numerous times
on this list, because I think those are both *good* things about the model.
> So, while I agree that criticism can be useful and lead to growth
> and improvement, I sometimes grow tired of it because it seems people
> are asking for utopia.
I'm not asking for utopia. Nothing is perfect. I just want to know what
is bad about the Sudbury model, and I think asking people who are
familiar with it what they think is a reasonable way to go about finding
out.
~Woty
All,
One possible solution to having parents who show interest in joining in and
being
part of the community is to drop the upper age requirement at Sudbury
schools.
What is being offered at a Sudbury school is a great education that
certainly the vast
majority of "parents" have never had access to. Let them drop their role
as a
"parent", petition and apply as the person they are, pay their tuition,
show up and
be a student. They would learn the model day in and day out, from the
inside, from
the ground up.
Best Regards,
Bill Richardson
~Woty
~Woty
Are there things we in Sudbury schools could do better? Absolutely! Another strength of the model is that it invites constant self-examination, a continual search for the best means of realizing our institutional values. No doubt this is enhanced by the entrepreneurial nature of the endeavor. Consequently, those working in and on behalf of Sudbury schools are always thinking about what we're doing and how we might do it more efficiently and effectively. For example, we’ll likely never cease efforts to improve our marketing—as Mimsy said, to make it “more accessible and clear.”
Truth is, I’ve never been part of anything so systematically open to members' input and to changing what needs changed within the given structure and philosophy. (Related to this is the room for variation and interpretation of the model by each individual Sudbury school.) That last statement is absolutely key. Chores, JC procedures, the diploma process—so many things are regularly tinkered with, but the core aspects of the model cannot be changed without making it a different kind of school. (Of course, what those core aspects are is another thread to follow, for which I strongly recommend Daniel Greenberg's essay "The Tapestry of Themes" as a starting point.)
As many have noted, the relationship between parents and the school is an ongoing issue, and understandably so: a great deal of trust is asked of Sudbury parents, even as they are not a direct part of daily life at school (for very good reasons, previously mentioned in this discussion). Yet even while we're susceptible to insider-outsider tension, this need not lead to adversarial relationships. Over the years at Alpine Valley we've worked very hard to cultivate good relations with parents. The past couple years in particular, we've shifted our monthly informal discussion meetings toward an emphasis on supporting everyone involved with the school, even as everyone is encouraged to look for ways to support the school's growth. Many good ideas have come from this forum, and some perspectives shared that I believe wouldn't otherwise have been brought to light.
Others have touched on the dilemmas of small schools such as mine. To this I would add first that it takes surprisingly few people to make for an incredibly vibrant Sudbury school. Also, to echo Mike Sadofsky, I would say that the tradeoffs of having a small Sudbury school far outweigh the disadvantages of not having one at all. Alpine Valley recently hosted a panel discussion with our alumni, and I was pleasantly overwhelmed with the wondrous things those alumni have accomplished in the past ten years. It was humbling and deeply gratifying to see what we have made possible in our own small way.
Of course I am frustrated that we face an uphill battle or, to mix metaphors, that we're constantly swimming against the cultural mainstream. I wish Sudbury schooling in general had a much higher profile. I wish that, as a staff member, I didn't always feel there are ten thousand more things to do than I have time for as I go about daily operations and promotion of the school. I would love to have a multitude of people spreading the Sudbury word (and would welcome a conversation on how to do so more effectively). And I would love for our individual Sudbury schools to find ever better answers to the question of how we can support each other.
Yet after all these years, and despite the challenges and frustrations, I remain convinced that the model itself is sound. I am immensely fortunate to be part of something so consistently amazing, and grateful to everyone who has contributed to making it what it is. If that sounds like a love-fest, so be it: I love these schools!
Neither my husband or I ever felt like outsiders at SVS. Of course we paid attention during our initial interview and understood our roles within the setting of the school. Sometimes we wished we could be more involved, or might have disagreed with a situation or two; but we understood the "why nots" of the reasoning - like it or not, that's what we signed up for when we enrolled her.
Candidly, there were few negatives from the perspective of our family; and in essence most of those that were perceived, came from us, as parents (I am using "us" very loosely here). Except I will say having a child attend SVS and then leave for a traditional education is a double edge sword - and that is a HUGE negative. The loudest concerns our daughter ever voiced were in wishing her social circle, with same age peers, was greater. We witnessed a natural flourishing with our daughter while she was enrolled at SVS - in a number of areas. As for classwork, and purely as an example, she never took a class in spelling; she learned organically - via AIM and online chatting and phone texting with her friends. Personally, I found great joy in witnessing this first hand. Having said that, we did worry (needlessly) when she was eventually enrolled in public school that she might test behind grade level. Those fears were unfounded, except in math. And even in that situation, it wasn't understanding and meeting the challenges of concepts that proved difficult, but rather the tedious processes that are insisted on, right down to exactly where to put her name on the paper. It didn't take long and those tedious processes too were mastered. I'm not sure how SVS could have made that any easier, except to expressly offer math classes and to be prepared for the student, such as our own daughter, who needed to be moved ahead in material as quickly as it was mastered. It could very well be that specific need could have been met at SVS, but we'll never know since she never followed through with a single math class she signed up for...it just wasn't a priority in her life at that time.
The area I personally expressed concern over was in relation to science. I believe we were told there were plenty of science books, but our daughter wanted to experience science, not read about it (her words). A chemistry lab would have been wonderful. Apparently, not enough students were interested in a chemistry lab, so there wasn't one. Our daughter, now in her second year of public schooling absolutely loves science LAB (note I did say lab); but not the way it is taught, because there is nothing organic or playful about it. Still, she tells us how much she enjoys being introduced to the scientific disciplines, even though it is very frustrating for her that she can't just stay with 'it' until she's ready to move on.
Here is where we hit the double edge sword. Our daughter experienced, knows and understands the importance of allowing students to learn to their hearts content - that's just not the way it works outside of SVS, or maybe other schools like SVS. SVS may very well be an ideal learning environment, but once outside that model it's almost an assault on dignity and the desire to truly learn, play with concepts, and absorb information. And unless college has changed since I attended I don't see that getting any better.
Geez, how I wish I could expound on the negatives of the traditional education model - but that's not what was asked for, or what this list is for. I'll end by saying if there were a SVS in the city/state we are now, she would be there in a heartbeat. (Negative) Double edged sword or not.
Jackie
As a parent myself, I can see that it's only natural that we want to be
involved in our child's experience at a Sudbury school. I don't think I'm
going out on a limb to say that for most of us, our children are the most
important people in our lives, and we enjoy, even crave, being a part of all
aspects of their lives, and especially part of something as hugely important
to them as their school, a school that we as parents have possibly made a
big philosophical leap and/or allocated significant resources for them to
attend. In addition, in today's society, due to all kinds of factors, many
people are only connected to their community through their child's school,
so their child's school community becomes the family's community. And who
wouldn't want to be a part of the wonderful environment that is a Sudbury
school?
As a staff member, I also understand the concerns with parent involvement
such as the ones that have been mentioned here and in other places. It
seems to me that there is no perfect solution to this question right now.
For me, the problem lies in the fact that a Sudbury school is not the same
as a tribe.
Humans have evolved in tribes, and most of us crave a tribal community
because it is in our biological wiring. In today's society most of us are
far from living a tribal life. A Sudbury school comes close to
approximating a hunter-gatherer tribe in many ways (see Peter Gray) but it
has differences as well. In comparision to a hunter-gatherer tribe, there
is some artificiality in a Sudbury school in terms of the lack of presence
of parents.
Here's the problem. In a tribal society, the parents aren't present in the
community specifically *for the purpose of educating their or others'
children*. Their tribal activities have to do with their own purposes,
whether it's hunting, or gathering, or any other activities they undertake
for the survival of their family and tribe. Of course this sometimes
involves the children, naturally, but for the most part, if I understand the
research properly, the parents do their own thing, and the children do their
own thing.
This model doesn't translate well into a modern setting with today's
economic realities. If parents were present at a Sudbury school, their
purpose of being there would not be to do their normal daily activities,
their economic pursuits or family/home management, but specifically to take
part in the education of their children. That completely changes the
dynamic.
Another aspect is that any kind of large adult presence tips the scales in
terms of how many fully successful and capable people are around. One of
the most powerful advantages of a Sudbury school is the age-mixing.
Students spending their days around children a little bit older and a little
bit younger has myriad advantages that have been discussed extensively in
Sudbury literature. One advantage is that children have many models of
people who are either just a little bit better or just a little bit less
skilled at many endeavors. Change the ratio of adults to students, and
suddenly, students are seeing mostly people who are much more capable than
themselves, who have mastered many things, so much so as to almost make
students feel that acquiring new skills are out of reach.
When I reflect on the unschooling group I started while I was between
Sudbury schools, while I experienced the positive side of parents and
children being together so much, I also saw some less desirable effects of
that type of setting. I saw a lot of children who were afraid to try new
things because they couldn't do it right the first time, much more than I
saw when I taught in public school or did our first Sudbury school. When we
created our new Sudbury school and almost all our students were former
homeschoolers, I saw again how long it took many of those children to get
over being afraid to try new things. Of course this is purely anecdotal,
but I feel that this was a result of being around adults more of the time
than around children who are just a little more or less skilled than they
are. (I also saw a lot of children asking their parents to do things that
they would be perfectly capable of doing by themselves and would be doing by
themselves had mom or dad not been around, but that's another issue.)
At our school we are trying more activities and trying to come up with even
more creative ideas to help the parents feel like they are part of the
community. And we'd do a lot more if we could somehow squeeze more than 24
hours into a day! Maybe in the future, our society will evolve to the point
that it returns to a more natural tribal-like community, where parents may
be around, mostly doing their own thing, yet can naturally interact with
their children and other children throughout the day. For now, it seems to
me that the best way to give children a close-to-natural setting that
provides them with the kind of autonomy and age-mixing they thrive in is a
Sudbury environment.
- Melissa
----- Original Message -----
From: "Ruti Regan" <woty...@gmail.com>
To: <discuss-su...@googlegroups.com>
Sent: Saturday, February 19, 2011 10:02 PM
Subject: Re: Parental involvement Re: [DSM] Negatives
> On 2/18/11 1:31 PM, Mike South wrote:
>> Everything you say here about using a parent as a resource without
>> compromising the student's autonomy is also true about using the staff as
>> resources. I think it needs pointing out, though, that there is one
>> crucial difference--students elect staff, and they can fire them. This is
>> not true of parents. Even if actual firing of staff rarely happens, the
>> fact that the relationship is structured that way represents a very
>> fundamental difference. (I suspect this is one reason why you hear
>> parents who are staff talk about it how it interferes with the model for
>> their kids.)
>>
>> This, itself, is not prejudice against parents. It is an objective,
>> unarguable difference. Staff have relationship X, parents have
>> relationship Y. X is not equal to Y. But it could easily be perceived
>> as prejudice against or mistrust of them. "What? Staff can be around
>> the kids all day and possibly suggest activities or organize field trips
>> and parents cant??? Don't you TRUST us??". That's a completely natural
>> reaction. And even when you explain it--"Hey, the kids and fire me, but
>> they can't fire you"--well, that's also likely not to go over well, even
>> though it's true. Because the parent then has to think "why would they
>> want to fire me?". And it's not about that--it's about what SDG said,
>> just spending time away from the most important people in your life and
>> figuring out who _you_ are, etc.
>
> Also, it is extremely difficult to find staff who are capable of doing the
> job, and many schools find after electing staff *who have gone through a
> rigorous hiring process* that they don't understand what their role is,
> are incapable of doing the job, and cause problems by trying to direct
> student activities.
>
> I'd think this would be even more true of parent volunteers who *aren't*
> rigorously selected.
>
> And also, I don't think it's ideal for parents to be staff at the same
> school their kids go to, but it's not easily avoidable given the rarity of
> schools that respect children's autonomy. It's not as big of a problem as
> it could be with staff, though, both because they are elected and because
> having some parents on staff doesn't add all that many parents into the
> community. If there were a *lot* of parents though, including people who
> don't really understand what it means to respect autonomy without actively
> supervising, it would cause bigger distortions. A school that's based
> partly on lack of supervision needs a certain critical mass to make that
> culture possible, and presence of a lot of outside people who are used to
> supervising some members of the community would necessarily be disruptive
> to that.
>
> There are other models that offer valuable things which have greater
> parent involvement, like homeschooling co-ops, but they work very
> differently from a Sudbury model school and there are things they can't
> offer.
>
> ~Woty
>
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--- On Tue, 2/22/11, Jessica Haugsjaa <jhau...@yahoo.com> wrote:
From: Jessica Haugsjaa <jhau...@yahoo.com>
Subject: Re: [DSM] Negatives
To: discuss-su...@googlegroups.com
Date: Tuesday, February 22, 2011, 5:43 PM
Here-here to Karen and Bruce! Thanks for your thoughts!
--- On Tue, 2/22/11, Karen Hyams <karen...@gmail.com> wrote:
From: Karen Hyams <karen...@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: [DSM] Negatives
To: discuss-su...@googlegroups.com
Karen
| Here-here to Karen and Bruce! Thanks for your thoughts! --- On Tue, 2/22/11, Karen Hyams <karen...@gmail.com> wrote: |
|
|
I was nodding my head while reading Bruce's list of what is hard, while also seeing the upside of some of those very things. Especially for the kids, some of the hard is what makes it good.
How does the Source Corporation evaluate who is serious?
~Woty
The worst thing about the Subury Model is the people who have nothingYes, that's a really big problem and I suspect it's the biggest and most difficult.
to do with the Sudbury model. Most people aren't familiar with Sudbury
schools and of that most don't care to understand it, so people will
tell me' I'm not learning anything and it's a do-nothing school, and
there's no way to convince them otherwise because they don't want to
think otherwise. So probably the worst part about Sudbry schools is
people who look down on them for whatever reason.
I think one reason it's such a hard problem is that it causes cultural distortions within schools. They're all under constant attack and live with substantial fear of being closed down; this makes criticism and innovation harder than they ought to be.
SVS and the other schools ought not to be causes, and mostly aren't, but to some extent have to be because of the degree to which the surrounding culture opposes them. That's very unfortunate.
I think being honest to the parents helps filter out the bad seeds or ones who truly don't believe.
Stephany