When I think about what a school should be for young people I cannot help but think of my former student Jorge. In many other high schools Jorge would have been ostracized but in the high school where I taught him he was loved and accepted in the community. I remember my first conversation with him on the phone when I called to remind him that we had sophomore retreats in a few days. I had never met him and on the only response I got from him were a few grunts. During the course of that year he would listen and do most of his work but rarely talked. But our small school and advisory program allowed other young people in the school to get to know him through his work and slowly Jorge began to speak more. By his senior year he defended and passed his senior portfolio orally in front of 25 of his peers and teachers. Jorge was the one who is ultimately responsible for his success, but the school and teachers set up the safe space for him to take the risks that come along with learning. Jorge’s success is an example of what our public schools should be doing for our young people. His story should be the rule not the exception.
Jorge graduated almost three years ago and I think about him often. I think about who he was as a student when I met him and how his school experiences in elementary and middle school shaped the learner he was when he entered high school. My world now focuses mostly around preschool age children as I have a preschooler myself. I see how easily she learns from her environment and through play and not formal education. I am left wondering when and how that love and ease of learning changes into something that makes our young people tune out.
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