The learning center idea has certainly taken off as more and more people are realizing that the compulsory, oppressive, disconnected, test-driven schools that exist today are not the best option when it comes to preparing children for success in the world.
I recently came across three alternative views of what 21st century learning environments might look like. One, written several years ago, outlines what community learning might look like if suddenly schools no longer existed. The next, written earlier this year, outlines a learning environment that resembles a mall-like shopping center. The third provides 12 design principals that give new meaning to the idea of "Re" "Forming" education.
1) When the School Doors Close: A Midsummer Night’s Dream by Linda Dobson
In her timeless article, When the School Doors Close: A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Linda Dobson outlines the transformation that would occur if schools ceased to exist and instead we engaged in community-centered learning. Rather than compulsory, age-based facilities, with community learning people choose to attend and learn about topics of deep personal passion and interest. There would be many options available to individuals of any age. The community takes ownership and responsibility of the learning and well-being of others.
Dobson outlines a vision that is worth reading about which you can do here.
2) My Dream Place by Mystified Mom
Mystified Mom shares her vision of what the ideal learning environment would look like in her post, “My Dream Place.” In it she shares a fantastic overview of a community learning center which would look similar to a shopping mall where the stores become learning centers with facilitators rather than shop keepers. Each store could be devoted to a particular subject. For example, there could be a store filled with everything about dinosaurs. The room would be painted to look like a dinosaur habitat and facts about dinosaurs could be posted on the walls. There could be dinosaur fossils and pictures, sandboxes where kids could dig up mock dinosaur bones, computers with dinosaur games on them, and anything else that you could imagine involving dinosaurs.
The center would house the community library and other community service centers. Like libraries, it would serve all people from the cradle to the grave and would not be compulsory. It would be a place that was so cool and interesting that people would clamor to spend their days there. There would be no need to make it compulsory because it would be a warm, welcoming, and fun place to be. It would be open year round and have extended hours to accommodate the parents that work late or the children that don't want to leave. Parents could attend with their children whenever they want. There would be no age segregation. Instead, people could move about the center based on their interest and skill level rather than age.
You can read the entire piece here.
3) The Classroom Is Obsolete: It's Time for Something New by By Prakash Nair
In his Education Week article Prakash Nair identifies the most visible symbol of a failed education system: the classroom which he explains has been obsolete for several decades. He says that classroom-based schools could permanently sink our chances of rebuilding our economy and restoring our shrinking middle class. He points out that the classroom is a relic, left over from the Industrial Revolution, which required a large workforce with very basic skills. He blames classroom-based education for the inability to deliver the creative and agile workforce that the 21st century demands.
He identifies the problem being that because each student “constructs” knowledge based on his or her own past experiences, a personalized education model to maximize individual student achievement is needed. He explains classrooms, are based on the erroneous assumption that efficient delivery of content is the same as effective learning.
He shares the following 12 education design principles for learning facilities: (1) personalized; (2) safe and secure; (3) inquiry-based; (4) student-directed; (5) collaborative; (6) interdisciplinary; (7) rigorous and hands-on; (8) embodying a culture of excellence and high expectations; (9) environmentally conscious; (10) offering strong connections to the local community and business; (11) globally networked; and (12) setting the stage for lifelong learning.
You can read the whole article here and see what some of these learning facilities (some of which are featured in this post) look like here. They are worth a look because they are simply amazing and they exist around the world today.
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