"Beyond Bread and Cheese: An Artisinal Approach to Teaching and Learning"

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I N D E P E N D E N T S C H O O L G U I D E 2 01 6- 2 01 7

BEYOND BREAD AND CHEESE An Artisanal Approach to Teaching and Learning BY M E E RA V I SWANATHAN HEAD OF SCHOOL T H E E T H E L WA L K E R S C H O O L

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ne of the distinct pleasures of being a public elementary school student in Los Angeles during the 1950s and 1960s was the annual field trip to the vast Helms Bakery headquarters in Culver City. It was never quite clear to us what we were meant to take away from this putatively educational ritual, but we thoroughly enjoyed the break from the tedium of school routine. The ritual visit would end with a hortatory speech by someone at the bakery and the awarding of a miniature identical Wonder Bread-like loaf to each child. Some managed to convey their souvenir loaves intact to their homes for parents to admire, but most of us nibbled away surreptitiously for the rest of the return trip. It was the idealized vision of industrial modernity, a place where plenty was to be had, where hygienic conditions were insured by gleaming metal ovens and doors, and where the beauty of uniformity and homogeneity of composition prevailed. By contrast, my husband’s stepmother in Paris would sniff contemptuously at the inedibility of what she termed “industrial bread,” consumed so avidly and mindlessly by Americans. Now decades later our notions of consumption have changed and daily we select among numerous craft beers, artisanal breads and handmade cheeses purveyed for our delectation, reveling in the prospect of farm-to-table dining. Curiously, though we might imagine a

similar trend taking place with respect to secondary education—a move say from “industrialized” learning toward something less mass-produced, generic and prosaic, the reality is more complex. Clayton Christensen, a professor at the Harvard Business School, argued several years ago in his provocative book Disrupting Class: How Disruptive Innovation Will Change the Way the World Learns (2008), written with Curtis Johnson and Michael Horn, that there is a great need for individualized instruction at the secondary level with a wider choice of subjects but also in which a multiplicity of learning styles ought to be available to every student. We might wonder for a millisecond if this means a return to the one-room schoolhouse, but instead he proposes a rather different solution, one rooted in educational technology. He suggests that by 2019, 50 percent of high school classes will be accomplished online. In their words, we will see the substitution of “computerbased learning for monolithic learning.” Teachers, now already repurposed by some as mere content providers, will largely be replaced by laptops, tablets and other smart devices, and the remaining faculty will function as coaches and guides, individually helping students locate appropriate online sites and resources. What are we to make of this? Why is it that as we demand more human involvement in the production of our comestibles and potables, our discussions around education alight on electronic instruction, distance learning, online CBEs (competency-based education) 2016 INDEPENDENT SCHOOL GUIDE

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