After hearing a short explanation of our school's philosophy, many people
understandably try to link it with something already familiar to them.
The most frequently mentioned "so-you're-sort-of-likes" are listed
below. We have tried to be fair, but clear, in distinguishing ourselves
from other philosophies. However, all the subtleties of these educational
models are not laid out and comparisons are not made from every angle.
We hope that the explanations below serve to clarify what the Sudbury model
is really about, and what it is not.
. . . A MONTESSORI SCHOOL? There are some ways in which the Sudbury
model is similar to the Montessori approach. Children in both settings
are allowed more freedom to make decisions about what interests them and
how to pace themselves than in most other schools. Both models also hold
the basic assumption that children are naturally curious and don't need
to be forced to learn. But Montessori children may choose only between
the specific options presented by the teacher, not from the full array
of activities which life itself presents. Montessori educators believe
that all children learn according to specific patterns and sequences. They
base classroom activities on the model's assumptions about what is "developmentally
appropriate" for each age group, and restrict access to certain activities
if earlier activities in the preplanned sequence have not been completed.
The Sudbury model makes no assumptions about how individual children will
learn at any age. There is no expectation that one learn multiplication
before negative numbers or how to draw a circle before a square. Interest
is the only criterion for engaging in any activity, and satisfaction the
only evaluation of success.
. . .A WALDORF SCHOOL? Like Waldorf schools, Sudbury schools care about
the whole child. We are not only interested in academic success, but in
the happiness and full human potential of each individual. Like Waldorf
schools, we do not push children to read early, as traditional schools
do. We both value play, "deep" (intensely involved) play, in
particular, as crucial to the development of children's mental, physical,
emotional, and spiritual selves, indeed as the fundamental "work"
of children. We both respect the intuitive wisdom of children, and take
their world views and interests quite seriously. But the Sudbury model
espouses no particular path of spiritual or emotional growth. Rather than
listening to children in order to better guide them, we listen to them
to respond to their self-determined needs. Unlike Waldorf education, we
have no predetermined curriculum. We trust children to make their own mistakes,
work through their own problems, and come to their own solutions, with
help, when it's needed, but without the assumption that we know the best
outcome. Waldorf educators endeavor to move children, and society in general,
in a particular direction, and seek to set up an environment which fosters
such social transformation. By contrast, Sudbury schools seek to create
an environment where children can recognize and pursue their own agenda.
Children and adults together assess and modify the culture of the school
through the School Meeting. The democratic process in a Sudbury school
can be loud and contentious; it involves special interest groups politicking,
voters making judgments, defendants being sentenced. It is "real"
and not necessarily "enlightened" (although always respectful).
The Sudbury model simply aims to give children access to the full complexity
of life, and the curiosity, confidence, and competence to participate in
-- and perhaps to change -- society according to their own interests, experience,
knowledge, and goals.
. . . A PROGRESSIVE SCHOOL? Sudbury schools believe, as progressive
school reformers do, that traditional schooling is not working. Both identify
authoritarian teaching and administration as problems, and seek to reduce
the stresses students experience in being coerced into learning and evaluated
by "objective" testing. But the Sudbury model also rejects the
notion that the alternative to authoritarianism is permissiveness -- kind
teachers giving kids second and third chances to shape up, trying to prevent
any unhappiness, and bending over backwards to "make learning fun,"
getting children to learn without them noticing they are learning. When
kids are treated permissively they do not learn personal responsibility
for their actions. Adults in progressive schools are still retaining the
authority to grant or deny that second chance, to step in to resolve disputes,
to establish the rules of conduct in their schools. There can be an illusion
of freedom or democratic decision-making in progressive school, but if
kids make poor decisions, adults always retain the power to step in and
solve the problem for them. In the context of learning, progressive schools
often try to have the curriculum follow students' interests. But the effect
of teaching to a child's interests is, as Daniel Greenberg has argued,
like a parent waiting for a child to open her mouth to speak before popping
in the medicine the parent wants to give her. Children who show an interest
playing Cowboys and Indians for a few hours, might be subject to six weeks
worth of projects about Native Americans, regardless of whether their interest
is sustained or not. The child administered medicine in such a manner may
learn never to open her mouth around a parent with a spoon; the student
administered education in such a manner may learn not to show interest,
at least in school. Learning something new can be hard work, and children
are quite capable of hard work -- when they are working on something they
want to do. When a student has a serious interest, there is no stopping
her, and "making it fun" is often an intolerable distraction.
When a student has an interest, we believe she should be allowed to pursue
it only as far as she feels necessary. She may return to an important idea
later, to deepen her interest, but forcing or manipulating her to deepen
it will only serve to lessen her curiosity and sense of self-determination.
Some progressive schools offer an array of courses, but do not require
attendance. Sudbury schools do not have standard offerings, because learning
to pursue one's own agenda can be challenging, sometimes painful, sometimes
boring. We think boredom is a valuable opportunity to make discoveries
about one's self. It is often easier to sit in classes, be entertained
(maybe not as well as TV entertains, but still better than nothing), and
avoid parental pressure, than it is to schedule one's own life, wrestle
with one's own questions, learn how to seek the answers, and master one's
own destiny.
. . . HOMESCHOOLING? There is a particular philosophy of homeschooling,
often referred to as "unschooling," which shares many similarities
with the Sudbury model. John Holt was its best known proponent, and his
writings have been invaluable to us in helping to explain just how learning
can happen without teaching, and why on earth a child might choose to learn
arithmetic or some other supposedly dreadful subject. Unschoolers believe,
as we do, that children are born curious about the world and eager to succeed
in life and that kids learn best through experience and experimentation
rather than by being told how and what to think. In the words of John Holt:
"Real learning is a process of discovery, and if we want it to happen,
we must create the kinds of conditions in which discoveries are made. .
. They include time, freedom, and a lack of pressure." But unschoolers,
for the most part, see the family environment as the best place for children
to grow, while the Sudbury model believes that, as the African proverb
states, "It takes a village to raise a child." Children and parents
have complex relationships and interdependencies which make it harder for
children to discover true independence within the family. In the environment
of a Sudbury school, children face direct personal responsibility for their
actions, without the emotional baggage that family-based accountability
can sometimes carry. In addition, children are more able to develop some
important social skills in a democratic school -- the ability to tolerate
diversity of opinion, to speak out against inappropriate behavior, and
to develop and carry out group projects, for example. In most homeschooling
families, the parent sees him or herself as ultimately responsible for
the child's education, while at Sudbury schools, that responsibility rests
squarely with the child.
. . .STUDENT GOVERNMENTS IN TRADITIONAL SCHOOLS Sudbury School Meetings
are similar to student governments only in that they are composed of students.
But the School Meeting is a participatory democracy, where every student
and staff member has the option of a direct vote in every decision made.
Student governments are representative -- students are chosen to represent
the larger student body. More importantly, student governments are hardly
ever given real power over substantive issues. Elected positions serve
primarily as symbols of status, popularity, and "leadership potential"
for college admissions purposes. The School Meeting decides who will be
staff each year, how tuition will be spent, what each and every rule of
the school will be, and who will be suspended or expelled for violation
of those rules. Staff members are involved on an equal footing, arguing
their positions with gusto. But they are also equally bound to the rules
of the school. As a free majority, students experience real control over
their lives at school, and real consequences if they fail to meet the responsibilities
such control requires of them. That kind of government brings a community
identity and sense of individual empowerment no token school government
could hope to achieve.
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