Tag: alternative education

  • School is boring!

    School is boring!

    How often have we heard this sentence!  Googling the expression will give more than 60 million results.

    Most education “innovators” start with the same statement “school is boring” and end up with the same conclusion ” let’s change it”.

    But our innovators arrive late. Let’s look back in history for a moment.

    For centuries, brillant educators have introduced innovative methods and practices based on a simple conviction: school shouldn’t be boring!

    Saint Augustine in the fourth century defined education as “a process of posing problems and seeking answers through conversation”.

    The Saint Augustine Taken to School by Saint Monica. by Niccolò di Pietro 1413-15
    The Saint Augustine Taken to School by Saint Monica. by Niccolò di Pietro 1413-15

    After him, Swedish educator Ellen Key, German education reformer Kurt Hahn, Italian paediatrician Maria Montessori, Austrian philosopher Rudolf Steiner, French educator, Célestin Freinet, British visionary A.S. Neil, Catalan anarchist Francisco Ferrer y Guardia, American psychologist John Dewey, Brazilian educator Paulo Freire all envisaged education as a dialogue, flowing from learner to teachers and back.

    Their ideas and methods are however still considered as marginal and categorized as  “alternative” as no other words seem to fit them.

    We are prompt nowadays to celebrate any innovation in education, advocate for education entrepreneurship but we forget the truly disruptive nature of innovation, i.e. restore freedom to learn and freedom to teach as a central component of any education system.

    Students and teachers require after all two basic “rights” to do their jobs right: engage into continuous dialogue and be free to learn and teach.

    All education innovators should help strengthening these basic rights.

     

  • When formal education turns non-formal: How big is the hole in the wall?

    Hole in the Wall Project in India
    Hole in the Wall Project in India – photo by Philippe Tarbouriech

     

    During a vision workshop held in Seville a couple of weeks ago, we had a chance to reflect upon the future of schools at the horizon 2030. Among the many topics that were addressed, two retained my attention: the degree of learner autonomy and the role of informal / non-formal education in the overall learning process. For the sake of reflection, we were asked to think creatively about the learner’s behaviour in a fully autonomous situation and in a totally informal/non-formal educative environment.

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