“The school system prepares your child for success. Honestly, if your child listens, it’s amazing. The teachers–it’s unreal.” That wise comment came from the mouth of one John Aldridge. He had fallen off his lobster boat well out in the Atlantic Ocean off the tip of Long Island, New York, at about 2 AM one summer morning. He survived for 19 hours, an ordeal which included dive bomb attacks by hungry seagulls and other seabirds, as well as a visit from an occasional shark. The boat was on autopilot, and his mates were asleep, alarms set for 6 AM, which guaranteed that no one would even know he was missing for at least four hours!
The story of John’s survival, which includes the remarkable reaction of his best friend and shipmate, Anthony Sosinski, can be heard on “Here’s The Thing,” a podcast hosted by Alec Baldwin. The story is called, appropriately, “A Speck in the Sea,” and John and Anthony are great storytellers.
John was wearing only a T-shirt, shorts, and fishing books when he went into the sea. The boots filled with water and were making it difficult for him to float, but rather than kicking them off, he carefully took them off his feet, brought them to the surface, emptied them, turned them over, and put them under his arms, turning them into flotation devices. He thought quickly, remained positive, and stayed alive…
Toward the end of the podcast, Baldwin mentions the value of living in a strong community (Montauk), and John immediately and tellingly goes right to the role of the schools, with a powerful and entirely unsolicited endorsement.
I found that deeply moving; Baldwin mentions ‘community,’ and John says ‘schools.’
The connection shouldn’t be overlooked, because strong public schools are foundational. It’s a two-way street, of course. When most of a community supports public education—even though it’s likely that only 25-30% of households have school-age children–good things happen.
In many thousands of cities and towns in the US, Community and School are officially joined in an enterprise known, naturally, as a Community School. These intentionally bring together the best of both, and today close to 10,000 Community Schools are in operation. Since the US has not quite 95,000 public schools, that’s an impressive number. By contrast, Charter Schools—which receive much more publicity–number only about 7,000. I’ve been a big fan of Community Schools since my own children went to public school in Washington, DC. They attended a public dual language school, but there was an early Community School not too far away, a place where parents were welcome and where additional services were available, and not just for children.
I was reminded of this while reading an early draft of a book about Community Schools by my friend and former colleague Marty Blank and three other authors. Apparently many people confuse the two approaches to educating students, which could not be more different. Some Charter Schools have admission tests and turn away students with disabilities; moreover, quite a few Charter Schools are profit-seeking businesses. The draft includes this passage: “Community schools supporters tend to be wary of charter schools for several reasons: Charters are privately run and are often allowed to operate outside public oversight systems. When students attend charters, that reduces the level of public resources available to district public school systems. Moreover, very wealthy donors, including a handful of billionaires, have handsomely supported charter schools as part of an effort to weaken teachers unions and privatize public education. Charters are part of a broader “school choice” movement that includes vouchers, education savings accounts, and tax credits for families of students attending private and religious schools.”
Many in the GOP want to pit parents against teachers and schools, but in the best cities, towns, and schools, educating children is a shared enterprise, with the common goal of ‘Helping Grow American Citizens.’
I’ve written about this before; here’s an excerpt: Because the purpose of school is to Help Grow American Citizens, it’s worth unpacking that phrase. “Help” conveys an essential point: schooling is a cooperative endeavor with parents and educators working in the best interests of children.
Because schooling is a movie, not a snapshot, “Grow” suggests that School Boards should actively discourage high-stakes testing. Those exams reveal how students did on that test on that particular day–and perhaps not much more. Those tests (asking “How Smart Are You?”) are supported by those who want to sort and classify children. However, parents and competent teachers recognize that every child has talent and therefore ask a different question, “How Is This Child Smart?”
What does it mean to be “American” today? Is it flag-waving, flag-burning, or somewhere in the middle? That’s an important, if difficult, conversation to have.
The final word of the phrase, “Citizen,” also cries out for public conversation. Just what do we want all children to be able to do when they grow up? If we want adults to work well with others, then students ought to be working together in school on projects and other ‘cooperative learning’ endeavors. If we want adults to be comfortable speaking in public, then children ought to be doing that in school. If we want adults to be able to make sound decisions, then students ought to be deeply involved in determining their course of study.
Let’s close where we began: “The school system prepares your child for success. Honestly, if your child listens, it’s amazing. The teachers–it’s unreal.” To which I say, Amen…..
With public education under bitter and unrelenting attack from right wing zealots, now’s the perfect time for those who believe in public schools and in the value of communities to step up and support schools and leaders who back them.