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C.H.I.L.D. | Covenant to Help Inspire Learning and Development

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OUR WORLD HAS CHANGED.
OUR MINDS HAVE CHANGED.
OUR EDUCATIONAL SYSTEM HAS NOT.

Covenant to Help Inspire Learning and Development
(C.H.I.L.D.)

Instead of standing on the shore and proving
to ourselves that the ocean cannot carry us,
let us venture on its waters just to see.

- Pierre Teilhard de Chardin


NOTE: The following document is a working draft based on crowdsourced input from educators and parents/guardians, elaborate analysis of common principles, and the collaborative review and refinement of nine leading voices in education and child development. Click here for more information about the gathering of educators and parents/guardians from 125 schools and districts with which this covenant is associated. All are invited to use this document to facilitate continued reflection and action, mindful of the possibility of subsequent revisions based on continued input. For a .PDF copy of this covenant click here.

Adding your signature to this petition acknowledges both your belief in these principles, and your commitment to promoting intentional reflection and concrete action to honor these principles in your school and/or home.

 
In the context of a gathering on November 10, 2012*, nine leading voices on education and child development — Carol Dweck, Richard Gerver, Nikhil Goyal, Ken Kay, Alfie Kohn, Steven Jones, Wendy Mogel, Ken Robinson, and Yong Zhao — engaged more than 600 educators and parents from 125 private and public schools in reflection on our deepest commitments to the lives and the learning of school-aged children at school and at home. What follows is a statement of common principles — shaped by participants’ input and these leaders’ collaborative reflection and design — that may help schools and families to determine how best to support our highest aspirations for the welfare of the children in our care.

As Sir Ken Robinson noted in his contribution to the dialogue, “there are many practices to share, but the practices will all be different. They’ll be vernacular in nature. They’ll be customized and crafted to local circumstances.” Nevertheless, our collective efforts, in collaboration within and between our schools and our homes, “should adhere to certain common principles.”

In that spirit, we invite schools and families to examine what practices might authentically support these principles, and what practices might predictably defy them. This covenant, affirming our common commitments, might therefore serve as “a framework for collaborative action that could take us a very long way into creating the kinds of education systems that we need.”

As educators and parents/guardians, we believe that we should develop a culture of learning defined by intentional practices that explicitly honor the following principles:

 
STUDENT ENGAGEMENT

01 | Nurture each child’s great curiosity, interest, and potential to achieve high levels of success
02 | Allow learning to develop at a pace determined by the child’s needs and interest
03 | Honor the voice of students and promote self-awareness and expression
04 | Honor children’s questions and value their opinions
05 | Develop independent thought and self-efficacy in a community of engaged learners
06 | Provide explicit opportunities for unstructured and uninterrupted play
 
CHARACTER & COMMUNITY

07 | Foster interdependence and collective responsibility as members of a learning community
08 | Encourage resilience, persistence, and responsibility in the face of ambiguity, challenge, or conflict
09 | Promote ethical decision-making with a balance of critical thought and compassion
10 | Develop children’s cultural competencies to include, respect, and support each other
 
DEEPER LEARNING

11 | Promote learning in meaningful contexts of experience and ‘real world’ challenges
12 | Develop children’s abilities to solve problems creatively and collaboratively
13 | Support critical thought about information and media to which children have access
14 | Promote interdisciplinary learning without compartmentalizing ‘subjects’ and ‘departments’
15 | Connect children’s learning to opportunities to make a better world
16 | Discontinue practices and policies likely to undermine a child’s love of learning

 
 

* From “#PSP2012: TEACHING AND LEARNING AT HOME AND AT SCHOOL,” hosted by the Center for the Future of Elementary Education at Curtis School (CFEE). For more information, please see http://cfee.me/PSP2012 or contact info@CurtisCFEE.org. You can follow CFEE on Twitter at @Curtis CFEE

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c f e e Center for the Future of Elementary Education at Curtis School

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