It wasn't me.
But I thought about raising my hand. I thought about asking questions. Why didn't I? Probably because it felt awkward to pose challenging, ruckus-raising questions from the gym bleachers in front of the whole faculty. Now I wish I had.
So I'm using my blog as a do-over. If I could turn back time (sorry Cher) and ask the questions that were bubbling in my mind, here's what they would have been:
- This year we devoted two days to the Rube Goldberg challenge in middle school. The idea began as a two-week J-Term and was reduced to two days. Next year, will we take the first two weeks of January, as was originally proposed, to provide the time and space for a new challenge for our middle school students and faculty? If so, who is leading it? What will it look like? What do the kids need and want?
- We have seen the success of the Day of Play in the lower school and the Rube Goldberg challenge in the middle school. How will we provide a similar experience for our upper school students?
- And the big dog daddy of a question: How do we move from pockets of innovation to full-scale educational overhaul. In other words, how do we make our school different? (I probably would not have really asked these questions, but it is the one that drives me every day as a parent and an educator).
Next month, in the gym, I will ask my questions.
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