Categories
Building Relationships

The Courage to Learn

By Victoria John
Lakehill Preparatory School, Middle School Mathematics and Latin

Several years ago, I joined colleagues at a weekend educational retreat, hosted by the Fetzer Institute in Kalamazoo, Michigan. It was most exciting for me, as our facilitator, Parker Palmer, noted educator and author of several books, including his seminal work, The Courage to Teach, was someone I had respected for years. He is one of those rare individuals, who instantly puts individuals at ease, while empowering them to trust their intuition. Parker Palmer gave voice to my own intuition with his words, “If students get to know each other as people first, it is easier to share ideas.”

As a child entering school in the 1950s, I was always uncomfortable, afraid of sharing ideas, in a classroom setting. During my undergraduate work at Indiana University, I was drawn to John Holt’s groundbreaking book, How Children Fail. Its premise was that fear in the classroom is the biggest deterrent to learning. Inspired by his thinking, I wrote a paper suggesting a model for reducing fear in the classroom. Children would get to know each other by meeting in small groups and sharing stories about themselves. They would gradually rotate groups until students felt safer with one another in the classroom setting. My professor encouraged me to use this model when I started teaching. I successfully launched this project at Indiana University Middle School, and observed happily that my students gradually became more confident to participate in class discussions without fear of ridicule or judgment.

The original model has morphed into telling my own childhood stories related to learning, followed by my students sharing their experiences. Despite the difference in our ages, at times we all feel uncomfortable about our ability to learn. We spend more time comparing ourselves to others than focusing on our own growth. We realize how we are alike, and in the process of that acceptance, learn to respect differences. Through annual student-written feedback, I discover that students feel at ease in my classroom. This comfort level translates into a sense of community, builds teamwork and results in mutual respect that contributes to learning without fear.

My most memorable story reveals that I failed the seventh grade math final exam. I was shocked and ashamed to see a huge red “F” marked at the top of my paper. I felt terrified, not because of what my parents would say, but because of my own doubt in my ability to think. How could I, an “A” math student, fail a math test? My parents trusted me to handle the situation. I made an appointment with the teacher to discuss my performance and requested extra summer math assignments to ensure I understood the material.

I value that experience and the resulting empowerment I felt from focusing on the solution and not the problem. That choice gave me the ability not only to acknowledge my students’ disappointments, but also to guide them through the process of understanding why it happened and taking steps to move forward. They learn that resilience builds courage.

I love teaching middle school and believe in empowering students. I encourage them to trust their intuition and live within their own integrity. I believe in the inherent good in each and am inspired to guide them through the middle school experience. Through stories, my students embody the value of what Parker Palmer noted as “getting to know each other as people first.” They share amazing, humorous, and valuable stories that have a profound effect on their peers, as well as on me. In the process, they are able to focus on learning the subject matter in Latin or math, rather than hiding silently behind a wall of fear. It is a gift to have taught at Lakehill Preparatory School for 19 years. I dedicate this blog to my current eighth grade students who have influenced my life through their willingness to grow by choosing the path of courage.

 

Categories
Building Relationships Service Learning Uncategorized

Africa is NOT a Country

By Patty Pippen
Social Studies Teacher

Since 2010 we have been connected to a rural school in Namibia and now I’m sharing Africa with a new generation.

Africa is NOT a Country

It all started innocently enough. We planned to travel with extended family to a destination that we let our children choose. The choice? Namibia.  It turned out to be more than a vacation but a place we would return to and support through the years.  The first trip included aunts and nephews and cousins all intent on discovering a new place in the world. We went with the purpose to learn about animal conservation, rural school life, and of course, we wanted to see the wildlife. We did see lions, elephants, cheetahs, and zebras, but we also returned with a commitment to make a continued difference in a small way to the school we visited.

With enthusiasm, my son’s 6th grade class held a bracelet and rooibos tea sale in February 2011 to raise money for orphans and the poorer students’ school fees. Everyone at Lakehill, from teachers to senior students to kindergarteners, lined up in the cold mornings to drink free samples of rooibos tea (a Fair Trade, completely pure, caffeine-free, organic tea grown in Namibia) and buy a Himba bracelet (made from recycled PVC pipe).  Boxes of shirts and jackets were sent, along with the $1100 raised in the fundraiser, to the students in Namibia.

The following year, the 7th grade class sold handmade beaded bracelets and African art, including animal woodcarvings and soapstone sculptures. Packets of the popular tea were sold once again. That year, we were able to send even more money to support the orphans and any children who could not afford school fees and school supplies. Many letters of thanks were posted to the class and read during class meetings. Lakehill students got to see first hand the beauty of their kindness and caring for someone less fortunate.

In addition to raising money for the eleven orphans we committed to fund, we identified a need for classroom sets of books so that teachers could advance the reading comprehension skills of the students.  The school teaches all classes in English beginning in the primary school years so most students speak and read English.

Each year during the last week of school, Lakehill students donated their used paperback books that had been studied through the school year. My older son obtained and sent corresponding teacher guides and student study guide tools to the Namibian teachers for each collected book title. These could be used for student self-study or for the teachers to guide the students as they used the donated books.

Lakehill students learned that the children in Namibia led lives very similar to theirs, striving every day to be good citizens in their schools, homes, and community. Very positively, our students learned about the world in which we live.

Fast forward to 2014: My older son and I travelled to Rundu, Namibia to deliver books, clothing, and school supplies. We also donated funds for the orphans that had been supported for the past five years. The library was expanded and organized. Lakehill’s Parent Faculty Club (PFC) spirit shop, bookstore, generous families, and our school contributed a large amount of clothing and books. By the end of our stay, we were able to sort and distribute over 800 pieces of clothing, which was enough to give one or two items to every student in the entire school, 1st through 10th grades.

The Lakehill students who started all that giving years ago are now juniors in Upper School. I now teach full-time at Lakehill, and offer an Upper School elective: Africa is Not a Country, which guides students through current issues in Africa, from wildlife poaching to civil conflict, to the HIV epidemic, to expanding deserts. The years of our family’s and Lakehill’s commitment most tellingly paid off when we met with the eleven orphans who have been supported for these last years: all are still in school and are motivated to continue to perform well. They have lost their parents to war and AIDS and disease; yet, through the support that continued through the years, they kept coming to school and pursuing their academic journey.  One of the orphans was not present, not for a sad reason, but for a jubilant one: she had so excelled academically that she was chosen to go to a government upper school for the most gifted students in the country where she is receiving an all-expense-paid higher education.  The principal and administration are proud to have such a distinguished student and told us it could not have happened without our funds that supported her.

Categories
Building Relationships

Thanks for the Memories

By Ray Dent
Lakehill Preparatory School, Director of Development and Alumni Relations

What will I remember most about my first school year at Lakehill? Well, for starters, how quickly it went! It’s hard to believe there are only a few days left.

I will certainly remember the kindness and hospitality. Everyone made me feel welcome and comfortable in my strange new environment.

I will remember my first impressions of the faculty, administration, students, and parents. Those initial impressions guided my decision to start this job.

I saw the faculty and leadership as stable and very capable. Their core dedication to the students was also immediately evident. The students were bright and friendly and eager and…happy. The parents were forthcoming, anxious to get involved, and wanted to help me succeed.

Those impressions have now become imprints that guided my decision to stay in this job.

I will remember the laughter and smiles from the almost countless activities that made this school year fly by so quickly. From my first Back-to-school Picnic, Homecoming Parade, Chili Cook-off, Halloween Carnival, PFC Meeting, Trek for Tech, Kindergarten Rodeo Day, Reindeer Games, Grandparents Day, Flash Mob, PFC Auction, ESCape to Nature, Headmaster’s Reception, or Mark Twain Day to the last Tribe Meeting, there was always something going on that involved laughter and smiles.

Categories
Building Relationships

New Traditions, New Connections

By Lara Gajkowski
Lakehill Preparatory School, Assistant Headmaster 

Lakehill is a school that prides itself on creating a community of spirit and connectedness.  While we are a diverse group of individuals with varying interests, talents, and skills, our common purpose of tending to our children and nurturing their souls binds us together.  Families from all walks of life are welcomed and embraced and our special aura of warmth and acceptance is felt by those who enter our school. Here, you feel like family. Our connectedness is evident in the way we work together and play together.

Relationships and connectedness are strengths of Lakehill. This year, we want to build upon this strength by creating groupings of multi-aged children and adults, affectionately known as Tribes. All adults and students have been divided into 28 groupings with two adults and about 12 students per Tribe. The students are divided amongst the 28 Tribes in three different clusters.  Cluster one will include students from grades 1, 4, 7, and 10. Cluster two will include students from grades K, 3, 6, 9, and 12 and Cluster three will include students from grades 2, 5, 8, 11. Our tribes will meet eight times throughout the course of the year with the sole purpose of fostering relationships among people who might not otherwise have the opportunity to interact. Students are able to bond with additional adults, older students are able to practice being positive role models, and our younger students are able to work with positive role models.

Our Tribes will stay intact from year to year, so that over the course of several years the students within each Tribe will really get to know one another.  I always enjoyed having older and younger siblings so I am hopeful that through our Tribes students will develop an extended family feeling with older and younger siblings.

Our first Tribe meeting of the year will be on Thursday, September 20. During this initial meeting our goal will be to get to know one another and plan some fun activities together.