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Education Decision-making & Problem Solving

Can this be School?

Fifty years of democracy at ALPHA

by (author) Deb O'Rourke

edited by Ronald Weihs

Publisher
Artword Press
Initial publish date
Oct 2022
Category
Decision-Making & Problem Solving
  • Paperback / softback

    ISBN
    9780992009663
    Publish Date
    Oct 2022
    List Price
    $25.00

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Description

ALPHA School was started in Toronto in 1972 by a group of parents unhappy with the lock-step education in the public system. They wanted a school with no homework, no grades and no tests, where their kids would experience both freedom and responsibility. A community school, where everything would be decided in open meetings by the teachers, parents and kids.

Part of the great countercultural wave of the 1960s, ALPHA stands out in two ways: it's a public free school funded by Toronto's School Board, and it has lasted fifty years.

The first year was “chaos”, but the school found its way, and real democratic education started to happen. But then educational trends swung back to just-the-basics and rigid structures. ALPHA’s struggle to maintain its principles and survive for fifty years (and counting) is the subject of Deb O’Rourke’s passionate and engaging book. It also provides a well-researched and highly readable history of alternative education, in Canada and internationally.

About the authors

Contributor Notes

Deb O'Rourke, MEd Deb is an artist, writer and educator, Her lifelong commitment to education reform began in her teens, when her self-governing youth organization formed a summer free school. In 1985, she enrolled her son in ALPHA, an alternative school within the Toronto public school system and became a committed participant for over ten years. As a visting artist, she taught art in over 20 schools. In 2004 she returned to ALPHA as volunteer coordinator, and began researching ALPHA’s history and culture, while earning a Masters degree in Education.

Excerpt: Can this be School?: Fifty years of democracy at ALPHA (by (author) Deb O'Rourke; edited by Ronald Weihs)

About The Author

Let us acknowledge that the objective or disinterested researcher is always on the side that pays best.

 

Wendell Berry

I am not a disinterested researcher. Like the American teacher Kristan Morrison, I am a refugee from “the deep, underlying paradoxes” of a system that I initially believed and excelled in.

I still remember the relaxed sociability with which I settled into my first morning at kindergarten, in 1958. It was to be the last time I would feel like that. A few hours later, I was shocked into complete docility. The technique was gentle and positive, and would have been admired for its effectiveness and civility in any school in the land.

There were no warnings or instructions as we settled into the bright room and played with plasticene. There was no admonishment that our friendly chatter as we created and fantasized was disruptive. But at the end of the morning, the teacher placed gold stars on the foreheads of children who had been quiet, the shy ones. The mothers who picked us up expressed their disappointment to those of us who emerged with bare foreheads. This was a gentle tactic for the time, but my spontaneity, trust and self-confidence instantly crashed and burned. Aware that I was constantly watched and judged, I could afterward barely speak in front of adults, and avoided children who might lure me into illicit behaviours—like friendly sociability.

Award-winning American teacher John Taylor Gatto claims that teachers don’t teach subjects, they always “teach school”—with seven lessons that, whatever content they are purportedly trying to transmit to students during any particular era or fad, “constitute a national curriculum”.

In a single morning, my kindergarten teacher had transmitted lessons 4 to 7. Through “stars and red checks . . . prizes, honors, and disgraces” this gentle teacher taught me emotional and intellectual dependency, the surrender of my will “to the predestined chain of command” (Lessons 4 and 5). Most effective was Lesson 6, provisional self-esteem, through being “constantly evaluated and judged”. This was enforced by Lesson 7, the awareness that one can’t hide from the judgmental gaze.

I was a quick study. Timid and attentive, I quickly learned to read, and developed a taste for the quiet, bookish life that kept me out of trouble. I did well academically, and tried hard to face the rigors that education put me through: the hours of silence and boredom, lining up, marching, struggling to keep up with faster children, watching “naughty” students spanked with rulers and straps. In my own experience it wasn’t the playground bullies who were most often strapped. It was small people, usually boys, whose itchy bodies couldn’t stop moving, or who couldn’t understand group instruction and were accused of being willfully inattentive and disruptive.

As I got older, my elders began to criticize me for not being social enough, for being too studious, for reading too much. I started to wonder what they wanted from me. When I first became aware of the youth counterculture that was forming as I entered my teens in 1966, I still accepted social control of youth as necessary for our betterment. But I was confused when adults who preached to me about freedom of thought, speech and action became upset about young men and women who grew their hair long and said what they thought. I began to wake up.

Editorial Reviews

Can This Be School? Fifty Years of Democracy at ALPHA is part memoir, part thoroughly researched polemic, and part history of the democratic school movement. Then, perhaps most importantly, it enters into the permanent record the dramatic story of what is arguably the planet’s oldest, publicly funded democratic school for elementary-age children.

O’Rourke is the best one to share it because she arrived, as the parent of a sensitive young child just like she had once been, early enough in ALPHA’s history to be able to catalog all the ins and outs of convincing the Toronto District School Board to sign off on a radically different kind of public school. It’s a compelling account of how possible it is for a committed group of parents to help create something better for their children so that they won’t have to endure the same educational misery.

Chris Mercogliano
Co-director of the Albany Free School
Making it Up as We Go Along, How to Grow a School, In Defense of Childhood.

If you are interested in improving children’s schooling experiences, I strongly recommend O’Rourke’s book. It is not just a story about a single public school in Toronto. It is a story about societal changes over the past fifty years that have worked against freedom, especially for children in school.

Peter Gray, Ph.D
Research professor at Boston College
Author of Free to Learn and the textbook Psychology (now in 8th edition)
Founding member of the nonprofit Let Grow.

The book is so thorough, well-written, balanced, well-researched and in places hilarious that I am very grateful to you for writing it. Good for you to keep getting out there and spreading the ideas. I think this is very important work!

Helen Hughes
Founder, Windsor House School, Vancouver B.C.

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