Wednesday, April 11, 2012

The Beginning Part 1

This blog will follow my second part of my year long journey towards understanding the Edge concept. The Edge Academy is not like other classrooms or teams. For the purposes of this thorough analysis, the Edge Academy must be discussed as a separate entity, not part of the Essex Middle School, rather a school-within-a school. If this classification is not made, one would not be able to discuss the special support and community has to offer that, in essence, creates the Edge’s pure desire to the implementation of a holistic education. Unfortunately, the Edge is still a new program, a new school. Many are not sure of its accomplishments or its possibilities, so, in a flight or fight mode, many onlookers decided to cast original thought and cast the effectiveness of Edge aside. Essex Middle School educators, from what I have witnessed, have not shown any assistance or support to their fellow educators in the Edge, the same happens with students of Essex and Edge. However, in spite of the adversity, the Edge Academy has developed and nourished an alternative learning environment that is committed to constructivist teaching methods, the development of a strong and fruitful community, and an environment that promotes equality among all students.
Students of the Edge learn a curriculum much different from their peers down the hall in “traditional” classrooms as part of the Essex Middle School. This type of classroom is ruled by a curriculum that “marches students through textbook pages, workbook activities and lists of decontextualized skills and bits of knowledge, punctuated periodically by tests.” Instead of teachers taking the time to plan out a customary curriculum, they hand the job over to the students. The Edge Academy serves the town of Essex as that establishes an environment where students who feel they can succeed better in a community based classroom rather than in a traditional classroom, have a place to learn and to achieve their goals.  This non-traditional theory of teaching is an inclusive theory, no one is left behind and no one is discriminated against because of sex, race, creed, etc. The Edge is exactly what it sets out to be – on the edge of educational practices.

1 comment:

  1. Do you have any thoughts on how the Edge might be different if it had its own campus? Do you think being still physically a part of the big school impacts their ability to follow through on some of their more progressive ideas?

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