"Progressive"
I work in a school that calls itself progressive, and which was founded 88 years ago by people who were entranced with John Dewey and his ideas.
We spent the years from about 1945 to 1993 mumbling about or apologizing for our progressive history, but in recent years we've embraced and trumpeted both the heritage and a set of practices that we have chosen to describe as "progressive teaching." Most of these practices are based on ideas that have flourished in the past couple of decades, ideas that find their own sources in the work of Howard Gardner, the Sizers, Robert Sternberg, Grant Wiggins, Heidi Hayes Jacobs, and more lately Carol Tomlinson and others. We have also become a diverse community and have paid close heed to some of the more renowned thinkers in the areas of equity pedagogy and multicultural education: James Banks, Lisa Delpit, Gloria Ladson Billings, Jaime Wurzel, Peggy McIntosh, Carol Gilligan, Claude Steele, and the Sadkers.
While all these folks have produced ideas that seem to be clearly connected philosophically with the aims of Dewey et al., there seemed to be something inadequate, and even misleading, about calling the work we are engaged in "progressive." The problematic areas were simply that the received critique of Progressive Education (from the likes of Ravitch, Hirsch, the Thernstroms, and the Hoover Institute folks) was really aimed at aspects of Old Progressive practice that have largely been abandoned by contemporary educators or whose implementation on a large scale in public school systems has failed owing largely to a watering-down of both aims and methods. (Then there is the whole permissive/"free school" thing leftover from the 60s and 70s.) I have noted that Ravitch sent her own kids to what she called a "progressive" independent school and that in each section of Hirsch's point-by-point attack on what he calls "progressive" practice in THE SCHOOLS WE NEED he allows that, properly implemented, all the practices he derides could provide valuable learning experiences. The long and the short of it is that the term "progressive education" means too many things to too many people, and we here spend too much time explaining it, and ourselves.
The EdWeek piece (attached to this message) was designed to put the modern practices that we favor (and that seem to be the meat and drink of NAIS conference content these days, much to my delight, even if not every school is embracing these ideas whole-hog) under an umbrella and give the umbrella a name. The New Progressivism seemed as good as any--acknowledges the heritage but allows for new content. Selfishly, I am hoping that the term takes hold simply to allow our school and schools like ours to be able to talk about what we do in a positive, non-defensive way. I might hope that it could also become a way for all educators to celebrate the work of the New Progressive gurus mentioned above, and perhaps--this is the biggie--to give a name to a movement that might someday unseat the monsters of standardized testing and lockstep curriculum that seem to be stultifying public education in so many places.
So that's where I'm coming from on this. Your thoughts?
Thanks--PG
Tags: banks, delpit, dewey, gardner, gilligan, hirsch, progressive, progressivism, ravitch, sadker
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