| Attempting
to counteract these traditional limitations and to develop a prototype
for education in the future, students and teachers at the new Maslow-Toffler
School of Futuristic Education in Brentwood, Long Island, are exploring
all aspects of themselves, their environment and their possibilities.
There are no bells, homerooms,
grades or detentions. There is an emphasis on doing and experience
and an unusual closeness among students and between students and staff.
All make decisions regarding school policies and, instead of grades, students
and teachers do written evaluation of each other.
“Grading is ridiculous!”
says student Ona Nierenberg, a National Merit Commended Scholar.
“Letters and numbers really tell so little about human beings.”
Work experiences often relate
to future career aspirations. Award-winning photographer Doug Knox,
a Maslow-Toffler student, works as a photographer at the Suffolk County
Crime Lab. Tina Paparatto, interested in working with autistic children,
has completed a work experience in special education at Pine Park School.
As a preparation for a nursing career, Dianna Chase works with patients
at Pilgrim State Hospital while Lisa Agis has experienced notable success
in music therapy with children at Montfort Seminary Suffolk Child Development
Center.
Individual responsibility
replaces superimposed discipline at Maslow-Toffler and can be initially
hard for students to accept. “Many experience several months of floundering
trying to adjust to the new freedom and responsibility,” says Ona Nierenberg.
“You hear things like ‘Make up my own schedule?? But it’s always
come out of a computer before!’ or ‘Can I really get away with not going
to class?!’ You begin to realize after a while that if you don’t
go to class, you’re just hurting yourself. At this school, you learn
a lot about respect. We relate as human beings. Teachers have
something to offer, but so do we. We share with each other.”
The sharing atmosphere has
brought interesting results in the one year of the school’s operation.
Sixty percent of those students with no previous plans to attend college
applied – with a total of eighty-four percent of the student body going
on to college. Seventy-two percent have increased the number of books
they read and most see new value in education.
“I’ve started to think of
all the options I have and have decided that I do want to go to college,”
says Ona Nierenberg. “My experience this past year has helped me
- and all of us – to feel for and relate to people as people. I want
to be a part of the social change and to be, most of all, a vulnerable
human being.” Such openness and flexibility is vital for coping with
the future, insists Ed Herman, an educational administrator from Orange
California, who admires the Maslow-Toffler experiment. “Things are
changing so fast that the student body today will probably have six different
careers in his or her lifetime,” Herman says. “You will have to be
retrained for each one and you will need a great deal of flexibility.” |
 |
| "America's
schools... still operate like factories. They subject the raw material
(children) to standardized instruction and routine inspection.
An important
question to ask of any educational innovation is simply this: Is it intended
to make the factory run more efficiently, or is it designed as it should
be, to get rid of the factory model altogether and replace it with individualized,
customized education?".....
"If
a proposal seeks merely to improve factory-style operations or create a
new factory, it may be a lot of things. The one thing it is not is
THIRD WAVE."
CREATING
A NEW CIVILIZATION: The Politics of the Third Wave by Alvin and Heidi
Toffler, 1995 |
|
|
|
|