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Edvolution

Monday
Sep 08th
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Keillor on NCLB Garrison Keillor added his two cents to the No Child Left Behind debate with his editorial "We're Failing Our Kids." The tagline is "No Child Left Behind has plenty of flaws, but throwing it out because it's a Republican plan is morally disgusting." Read his editorial at Salon.com.

I was appalled. The bard of Lake Woebegone siding with George Bush? It can't be.

I've long enjoyed the wit and wisdom of The Prairie Home Companion where Keillor displays a rustic kind of homespun wisdom in his monologues and songs. He calls himself a democrat and his writing is flavored with small town, common sense liberalism. So to hear him suggest even the slightest support for Bush's education agenda hit like a punch in the gut. I immediately thought "He doesn't know what's going on. He needs to be taught a lesson." I felt betrayed.

Those primal feelings of defensiveness, however, are exactly at the heart of his message. We've failed our children because we haven't helped them learn how to rise above those feelings. We haven't taught them the value of listening closely and with compassion to opponents so that common ground for negotiation can be found. Instead, liberals and conservatives alike, dismiss the concerns of their opponents with utter contempt. Keillor points out that liberals in the U.S. have done exactly that with No Child Left Behind. The result is no genuine discussion, no compromise, no progress and the children lose.

This is behavior that may have had value for our most primitive ancestors but it certainly does more harm than good today. We as a society and as a species are tragically stuck - making little progress on issues like poverty, pollution, oil, etc. - because our primitive inclination is to fight, not to negotiate. And every time we snear in contempt at those with whom we disagree, we model that way of thinking to our children.

It's particularly reprehensible because we know better. Conflict resolution and negotiating skills are long studied arts that can be learned easily by children. But we have to get it through our heads that they will never learn these lessons from lectures when what they see and hear is so different.




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    The most pressing issue today is that education is not the most pressing issue. While many issues such as climate change, peak oil, healthcare, war and poverty compete for our attention, only education offers hope for all the rest. Supporters of holistic education believe it is the best way to help people learn to live more sustainable, effective and happy lives.

    Yes, this site is for students and teachers but, from the perspective of holistic education, everyone is a student and a teacher. The holistic perspective is about sharing what you learn, recognizing connections between the things you learn (and feel), and learning with an eye on the big picture.

    Edvolution aims to put the spotlight on writers, educators and organizations working to nurture this kind of learning. As you can see, though, the scope of issues we cover is very broad. Why?  Well, the answer goes right to the heart of holistic learning: before you can teach, you must learn what is important to your audience. These are the issues important to the people we need to reach.

  • Blog
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    Teens and Technology: More of the Same only Faster (11.02.2008)

    Growing Up Online: Documentary Broadcast on PBS January 23, 2008

    Available for viewing and discussion online at PBS.org. 

    As with everything else on TV, while documentaries may educate, their first job is to entertain. That requires drama, ...

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Highlights: Phi Delta Kappa/Gallup Poll

gallupthumb.jpgFull report,  slide show, video and more from PDK/Gallup

"In an era of high stakes testing in schools and with a sense of urgency to show short-term results, leaders in a culture of change require a quality that all long-term effective leaders have - the capacity to resist a focus on short-term gains at the expense of deeper reform where gains are steady but not necessarily dramatic" Michael Fullan, Leading in a Culture of Change

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