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May 1, 2007
Vol. 64
No. 8

EL Study Guide / Educating the Whole Child

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In this issue, Julie Landsman and Paul Gorski (“Countering Standardization,” p. 40) warn that teachers have much to lose if we accept as a definition of “educator” one who delivers awesome test scores. In contrast to this narrow definition, James L. Hymes Jr. defines a good school as one that helps children “develop to their maximum their social powers and their intellectual powers, their emotional capacities, their physical powers.”
This issue's writers give concrete suggestions for how we can teach so that, by our interactions and our presence as well as our curriculum choices, we enlarge the definition of “educator” to one who helps a whole, powerful child emerge.

Protecting Enrichment

Visual arts, music, foreign languages, and physical activity are the parts of the school day most likely to be placed on the chopping block in today's schools, according to Landsman and Gorski. Talk in your group about what you see happening with these subjects in your school. Have hours devoted to arts or recess been cut? What about in the higher- or lower-grade schools associated with yours?
Just as important, do your enrichment teachers integrate what they teach with the content and skills teachers focus on in traditional academic classes? Or are arts and foreign language classes isolated from the rest of your curriculum—which could make them more vulnerable to being eliminated? How might they be brought into your overall curriculum plan?

How to Measure “Whole Child” Success?

  • Do you agree that schools should be held accountable for their students' future civic participation, or lack of it? If Rothstein and his colleagues' idea is reasonable, how might it be practically carried out?
  • These authors explored what a sample of adults think are the essential goals of education; what dostudents think are the goals of education? Give your classes a list of the eight goal categories listed on page 9 of the article. As Rothstein did, ask each student to assign each of these categories a number from 1 to 8 representing how important that goal category should be in schooling, relative to the other seven goals. Average the results and report back. How do these students' priorities compare to those of the adult sample?
  • To give citizens the information they need.
  • To enable citizens to calculate and express their ideas, contracts, and accounts in writing.
  • To improve, by reading, their morals and their mental faculties.
  • To understand their duties to their neighbors and country.
  • To know their rights; to choose with discretion their elected representatives and monitor their conduct with diligence, candor, and judgment.
  • To observe their social relations with intelligence and faithfulness.
  • Each student goes to school healthy and learns about and practices a healthy lifestyle.
  • Each student learns in an intellectually challenging environment that is physically and emotionally safe for students and adults.
  • Each student is actively engaged in learning and is connected to the school and broader community.
  • Each student has access to personalized learning and to qualified, caring adults.
  • Each graduate is prepared for success in college or further study and for employment in a global environment.

Summer Growth and Support

  • Have each group member bring in a book that teachers might profit from reading together and discussing. Is there interest in a summer book club among your faculty?
  • Do you, or teachers you know, have a special area you've researched that you'd like to share with colleagues—anything from how to “level” books to how to create an irresistible class blog? Talk with your principal about arranging a summer in-house professional development institute, like that at Hoerr's school.
  • Gather a group to meet during the summer—as you plan for the upcoming school year—to brainstorm concrete ways you could each bring a stronger “whole child” emphasis into your teaching. You might select four practices you intend to try during the coming year, pledge to the group members that you will follow through, and ask them to hold you accountable. For example, two teachers could commit to creating a joint class blog (see Eric Langhorst's article “After the Bell, Beyond the Walls,” on p. 74). Why not have your summer group keep meeting during the school year as a support for keeping your teaching practices focused on the whole child?

Naomi Thiers is the managing editor of Educational Leadership.

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