What if our schools were focused on this?
What if the purpose of schools changed from producing the highest test scores to a place where kids learned to be a member of their community—focusing on cooperation, not competition? In the words of GOOD Magazine’s Liz Dwyer, who recently wrote an article about this issue, what if school were a place where students “learn to live a life of selfless service on behalf of the community; it’s where (students) find the path of virtue, subordinating inner self-interest as individuals to the interests of the community, the good of the whole.” What if schools were, essentially, “the birthplace of the citizen ideal?”
Imagine the impact of students dedicating over twelve years of their lives not to learning information geared towards a test, but learning about, and working on, the challenges the world currently faces—starting at a community level. The results would be a tangible difference in their own community, not a piece of paper with numbers and letter-grades. What if students had the ability to work on projects that interested them, and worked with teachers to integrate the learning of necessary skills into their projects—learning how to apply them in the real world?