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AERO Black Friday Schedule.

Dear AERO Readers!
Although it’s been a very difficult week for me, it’s important that we count our blessings. We thank all the AERO supporters out there who believe, as we do, that learner-centered education should be available everywhere. If that can happen it would solve a lot of the world’s problems.
November 27th is Giving Tuesday, a time to support your favorite nonprofit. And we could use your help now. There are a few ways that you can support us on Giving Tuesday: You can become an AERO sustainer or make a one-time donation.  You can also reach out to people in your network and encourage them to do the same.
Also, we’ll be announcing a list of AERO products at ridiculously low prices for Black Friday that will be available just for a few days. We’ll feature the appropriate ones on each day, but you can order them any time during this period. Also, there will be some surprises with each announcement. Please consider purchasing them and supporting us (and yourself, if it meets your needs).
This week we heard of the deaths of several people in our movement who were important to us. We plan to memorialize them at the AERO Conference in Portland, along with John Gatto.
Personally. I just had eye surgery and at the moment can only use one eye, but the blurriness from the other is supposed to go away. What this means for AERO is that I need to take my small salary this year, to cover my bills. Last year AERO didn’t take in enough to cover any compensation for me.
We know you don’t take our work for granted. Please mark us down for a Giving Tuesday donation and let others know.
Thanks, and have a great holiday season!
Jerry and the AERO Team
AERO Black Friday Schedule
Black Friday is upon us again. So AERO will be offering the obligatory ridiculous sale offers never to be seen again!
Starting Thursday
  • Book Sales 50% off all books! use code aerobf2018
Friday
Saturday
Monday
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The Council of Europe (CoE) is holding a conference to launch its ‘Free to Speak; Safe to Learn – Democratic Schools for All’ project at the Wergeland Centre in Oslo

FROM DERRY HANNAM – Another piece of news from Europe. The Council of Europe (CoE) is holding a conference to launch its ‘Free to Speak; Safe to Learn – Democratic Schools for All’ project at the Wergeland Centre in Oslo this week. This project is an offshoot of the long-running Education for Democratic Citizenship/Human Rights Education (EDC/HRE) for which I used to work when a UK school inspector some years ago. On behalf of EUDEC Council I have been negotiating with CoE that the conference would be greatly enhanced if some of the very democratic schools from EUDEC’s network were to be invited. They listened and the Netzwerk Schule, Berlin has been invited to join 10 state schools from across Europe. This will be the first time that a EUDEC network democratic school has participated with a Europe wide gathering of progressively inclined state schools to discuss how democracy and human rights can be better developed as day-to -day practice in schools. There will be an official post-conference report that I will post here in due course.
Here are the attending schools –

The schools selected to participate in the campaign launch conference in Oslo, from 14 to 16 November,
are:

  • Kushrimi i Lirisë, Albania
  • Osnovna Skola Gradac, Croatia
  • Collège Charles Péguy, France
  • Netzwerk-Schule, Germany (EUDEC member)
  • High School of Makrygialos Pieria, Greece
  • 23rd Primary School of Kalamaria, Greece
  • Bremore Educated Together Secondary School, Ireland
  • Grammar School Slobodan Skeroviv, Montenegro
  • Lorin Salagean Technical College, Romania
  • Stanimir Veljokovic Zele, Serbia
  • Chernivtsi Secondary School, Ukraine
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Please Read This Note To You From AERO

AERO supports educational alternatives around the world. There are a lot of dramatic stories about transformation that AERO has been a part of. For example, we came back from the International Democratic Education Conference that we cosponsored in 2003 and worked with people to create the first democratic school in the NYC area in decades, Brooklyn Free School, which led to several others in the NYC area. Subsequently, we worked with people to start Manhattan Free School from the waiting list for Brooklyn Free School. When that nearly folded several years later I was invited to what was supposed to be their final meeting. At that meeting, I encouraged the parents, students and staff members there to use the resources they had, a nonprofit status and a building in which to operate and get volunteer parents to keep going. One parent, from a software background, volunteered to be the interim director. Because of his IT background, he applied the agile learning approach to the school and thus Manhattan Free School morphed into the first Agile Learning Center. The idea has now been spreading around the world.

One of the most dramatic alternatives we work with is the Sri Aurobindo Ashram/orphanage in Kathmandu, Nepal. It was started by Ramchandra who ran away from Nepal to India at 12 years old. Educating himself there, he returned 20 years later and saw the great poverty in Nepal with many homeless children on the street. He then started the Ashram, an orphanage that now takes care of over 200 children with nothing paid for the children and no government subsidies. They raise 100% of their food at the Katmandu location and at another one in southern Nepal. They also started a retreat center in the mountains, staffed with graduates, to help support the Ashram.

The children there are raised almost like middle-class children. They now have a school that goes through 10th grade, but they send their graduates on to high school and university. One, who came as a 4-year-old now has a masters’ degree in math and physics from Germany and has returned to be principal of their school. Another also came back to teach and is now teaching at a gap year program. He recently visited us after bringing 22 American students back from Nepal after visiting the Ashram and other adventures. Another graduate became a world-class dancer.

The Ashram was preparing to host the 2018 IDEC when the deadly earthquake hit Nepal. As fortune would have it, all the students were outside unloading hay when it hit, and nobody was injured. But it did tremendous damage to their buildings. AERO members raised $10,000 to help them with repairs and found other resources, such as an architect to help them design the repairs. We also arranged a $5000 donation from a famous actress to help them buy a new milk truck to help them deliver excess milk from their dairy to sell in Kathmandu. They now plan to host the IDEC in 2020 in the new school building they are erecting brick by brick. You can see a video we made of the ashram here.

This is an example of the work that AERO continues to do. We do not receive any government funds and foundation grants only cover about 20% of our costs. This is why it is important that our new membership initiative to get 100 more sustaining donors is so important. We are just a small nonprofit that depends on the niche of readers and supporters who understand that children are natural learners and believe in learner-centered education.

Nevertheless, we put out a newsletter every week of the year, have an annual conference, have published more than 10 books , and have an annual school starters course. We also have the #1 alternative education website, according to Google, with a half million accessing it every year. We don’t know how many schools and programs have been inspired by AERO but we do know of more than 100 we have directly helped to start. This year’s school starters online course begins September 24th.

So, if you see we have gone to the effort of putting out yet another e-newsletter, even if we seem to be selling something that helps us keep going, please open it, and if you have time, give us some feedback. If we ask you to become a sustainer or AERO member, please consider it.

Thanks!
Jerry and The AERO Team