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Play! By Stuart Grauer

By Stuart Grauer

Reprinted from: from Association of Supervision and Curriculum Development Smartbriefs, most popular column of the year, 2014:http://smartblogs.com/education/2013/11/06/play/
 

Children and adults alike use play to make sense of the world. Here are some things we develop through play: creativity, imagination, problem solving, resiliency and the ability to handle the unexpected.

Back in 1999, after eight years of operating out of a shop front (and eventually several shop fronts), we moved The Grauer School onto our dream site: five, green, coastal acres in Encinitas, Calif. We could have a real playtime at last — a green recess. Running, chasing, throwing, falling. It was then that we made an unexpected finding about the typical California suburban kid: many did not know how to recreate or use unstructured time. They stood around, looked into their computer screens, hung out in corners of the field and slouched on couches in the lobby.

Since I grew up running pretty much all day long, and since my parents’ primary form of discipline consisted of the demand, “Get outside!” this problem had never occurred to me. I assumed that there was something instinctual about play and that, if you let kids alone, they would just do it. However, in the case of many kids, play sometimes is drummed out of them through tightly-managed schedules, too much homework, too many digital devices, too little time in nature, too little sleep, and too much parenting and schooling. Eventually, we stationed teachers outside not so much as to supervise as to nudge the kids into games that they could learn to play together again. We even made a policy that middle schoolers were required to be outdoors during lunch and breaks. It took a couple of years before we finally felt we had established a culture of open space and free play in the out of doors. We still have to work at this regularly, which we do primarily through nudging, encouraging and telling kids: “Get outside!”

At this year’s annual conference of the Progressive Education Network (PEN) in Los Angeles, I was privileged to see a legendary mind address the topic of play: Stuart Brown, a Stanford psychiatrist and producer of a PBS series on play whose home office is a tree house.

Brown embarked on his research early in his career, when he noticed that homicidal young males had little playtime as young children compared to healthy non-murderers! This research would have struck me as bizarre and irrelevant as a young teacher, but since that time America’s nightmare dreams have become real as students have actually attacked several schools. The high school massacre at Columbine seemed to wake us up to a new reality.

Great minds have a way of enabling us all to rededicate our lives more clearly to things that matter. Brown talked for an hour about “What nature wants you to know about play.” Here is some of what he said, and I guarantee you will agree that it matters.

Brown’s first challenge was this, for all of us: “If you are not bringing your sense of play into your work-life, take a second look.” Play is embedded in nature and we must express it routinely to be healthy and happy. Play and laughter reduce anxiety and enable us to “redefine” failure in terms of the growth it brings. “Neuroscientists, developmental biologists, psychologists, social scientists, and researchers from every point of the scientific compass now know that play is a profound biological process,” Brown notes.

One critical aspect of play as we are growing up is imagination. “While you are imagining who you can become, you are them,” and this provides you with essential lessons going forward as you develop. Aside from imaginary play, there is celebratory play, ritual play, aesthetic (artistic) play, rough and tumble play, narrative (story) play, and more. They all belong in school, says Brown. Brown also likened playing to dreaming, one of the most fascinating notions I’ve ever heard, and one I will surely follow-up on. Why are play and dreaming alike? Wow, what a fantastic question!

Compared to others Brown studied in his research, that creative achievers such as Nobel laureates virtually all had high amounts of play in their early lives. Brown even studies obituaries. There, he finds that what we tend to remember most kindly and importantly about people when they are gone are their playful moments and their expressions of joy.

Play, he has realized, is directly related to the development of optimism and a lack of play is associated with addiction, anxiety, and other disorders. We develop empathy at play. One reason for this is that as we play together, we lock eyes, “tune in” to one another physically and mentally, and our mental activity is actually synchronizing. This synching is called “attunement,” and if we get enough of it as we grow up, we develop empathy. Deprived of this attunement as adults, we lead mundane or disconnected lives.

Physical play seems particularly important to many. When the legendary Jet Propulsion Lab (JPL) got into a rut not many years ago, they analyzed their new recruits and realized they were focusing on people with the best grades: compliant people who were not solving real problems. Then, they analyzed their older engineers and found that the most successful ones were those who had spent lots of time playing with their hands as they were growing up — an amazing finding that caused the JPL management to completely redesign their hiring process. If you haven’t played much as a kid, you need not apply to the JPL.

“The opposite of play is not work,” he pointed out. “It’s depression.” So play when you are at work! Luckily, we have the capacity of play throughout life — this keeps us happy and creative. Play, Brown strongly believes, is what makes life worth living. It is our “star system,” where many of our actions are designed to guide us in getting along with others.

He cautions against “play hygiene,” where we try to make every environment safe and controlled. Our kids need to learn how to fall. According to Dr. Brown, never in history has there been such deprivation of play. This will bring huge losses according to Brown, since our most essential and distinctive talents are first exemplified in play. Nobel laureates and other such successful people are those who stay true to their play nature. What can we do in the classroom to discover our rediscover our sense of play?

 

Stuart Grauer is a teacher, founding head of The Grauer School in Encinitas, Calif., and founder of the Small Schools Coalition. He accredits and consults for schools worldwide. He is the author of “Real Teachers” and is launching his newest book, “Fearless Teaching: Collected Stories” through Aero Press in November 2015. Visit www.fearlessteaching.com for more information his newest book.

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GREENFIELDS ACADEMY IN CHICAGO SEEKING CLASSROOM GUIDES

Are you convinced that the way we are educating children has to fundamentally change?

Do you have the patience needed to allow students to experience and learn from failure?

Are you prepared to inspire a generation to tackle the challenges that lie ahead?


Greenfields blends state-of-the-art learning software, real-world projects, Socratic discussions and a Hero’s Journey dialogue in a student-driven, multi-age learning studio. Our approach to learning does not include tests, grades, or teachers leading lectures. Our classroom structure is unique. It ensures that the Guides create and facilitate the learning environment, but empowers students to take ownership of their individual learning path and collective classroom governance. 

Greenfields currently has an Elementary program and will be growing in Fall 2015 to include Early Learners (ages 4-6), Elementary (ages 6-10) and Middle School (ages 11-14) programs. We are currently interviewing candidates for all three programs. 

Position Description
Each program is led by two Guides working in close partnership to oversee a mixed-age class of 20 to 40 students. Guides help each student find their calling and reach their full potential by:

  • supporting individual students in setting and achieving their learning goals
  • assisting students in identifying and pursuing their passions
  • facilitating Socratic group discussions
  • evaluating and refining the existing curriculum
  • designing and experimenting with new projects, tools, and approaches
  • organizing speakers and field trips to inspire students
  • creating and maintaining a studio environment that supports and motivates students
  • acting as a role model as an independent learner on a Hero’s Journey
  • documenting learning through student projects, achievements, and everyday activity
  • communicating actively with parents
  • guiding students through the creation of their learning portfolios

Qualifications 
We are looking for Guides with a deep curiosity about life, a lifelong love of learning, endless patience, and an entrepreneurial spirit. Candidates should have proven excellence in guiding others, whether in or out of a school environment. Montessori, project-based and/or experiential learning experience is a plus. 

We seek Guides who love to experiment, evaluate, and improve on everything they do. Candidates should have proven excellence in written and oral communication skills, and be comfortable using and learning a variety of technology tools. And most importantly, candidates should have a deep respect for all children. 

Salary
Greenfields Academy offers a salary commensurate with experience plus a bonus structure based on performance.

Next Steps
Candidates should email a resume and thoughtful cover letter that outlines how their skills and experience meet the qualifications of the position, how the position is part of their Hero’s Journey, and how they heard about this opportunity to hiring@greenfieldsacademy.com. Applications will be reviewed on a rolling basis.

 

More info at: GreenfieldsAcademy.com  

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Free School Starter Webinar This Thursday

AERO will be offering, for the first time ever, a free webinar on school starting next Thursday, August, 20, at 7 PM. If you are interested in participating in it just register here
 
After you register you can e mail questions in advance toJerryAERO@AOL.com
 
If you plan to start your new alternative in the next year or two and you want to avoid common pitfalls, enroll in the online School Starters Course before it fills up. It might be filled after the webinar. 
 
 
For example, this week weI had a meeting with two people from here on Long Island who have registered. One will start her alternative in Crete, Greece. The other will start a program for at-risk teenagers here. And we just got a registrations from people in Belgium and the Philippines. 
 
This will be the last week for applications for the partial scholarships for the School Starters Online Course. Just reply to this newsletter or write to JerryAERO@AOL.com and tell us what your vision is and why you need the scholarship in no more than three or four paragraphs. The recipients will be announced next week.
 
A scholarship application does not guarantee registration for the course. Enrollment will close when we reach 25 individuals or groups. If you register now at the regular tuition (which will probably go up significantly next year) your place in the course is guaranteed. Payment options are available at the registration site. 
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Heart Attack Report


By Jerry Mintz

Surprisingly it didn't quite dawn on me at first. But in retrospect it is easy to see that your life can end in a flash. At the time I knew it was a heart attack, but maybe because I walked into the hospital I didn't realize how serious it was. It was a 100% block of the artery from the heart they call the "widow maker." If I had been in on a jet in the middle of the Pacific or in the rural part of a developing country it might have been a different story.
 
The first lesson to take from this is to call an ambulance! Instead I had someone drive me to the closest hospital, but it turned out that they didn't have the ability to do catheterization. So they had to take me by ambulance to another one. That half-hour extra could have been crucial, as a 1 1/2 hour window is the current gold standard.
 
So I was in the hospital three days. Ten days later I had a stress test that indicated that my heart was operating below proper efficiency, although I was cleared to do about anything I wanted.
 
But the most important thing that happened at that point was that an AERO reader sent me two books by cardiologist Dr. Joel Fuhrman. The key one is called Cholesterol Protection for Life.  Furman practically guarantees that you won't have another heart attack very soon if you follow his regime.  It means practically a vegan died (occasional fish and eggs),  lots of leafy greens, no grains but oatmeal,  low salt,  no added sugar, no oils! I took the whole situation as a challenge and started following the diet, along with regular gym workouts and lots of high-level table tennis.  But I still had to take four of the five medications the cardiologist insisted on, including a statin and Plavix. The latter is supposed to prevent the stent from clogging.
 
For the first two months my legs got pretty tired after an hour of table tennis. But eventually I got my stamina and energy back.
 
One thing that worried me is that the damage of a heart attack can make your heart much less efficient, enlarging the heard and sometimes eventually requiring a pacemaker and leading to heart failure. This actually happened to another player at my league who now has a pacemaker.
 
After four months I lost 15 pounds, my blood pressure was 110 over 70, and my total cholesterol was 116!
 
And when they did a follow up echocardiogram, the cardiologist said the heart efficiency had gone up above the danger level. 
 
I've been exploring the possibility of stopping the statins since the cholesterol is so low. Statins are known to have long-term side effects. The cardiologist said I could try it for a few weeks and see what happens to the blood numbers.
 
The support that I've received from readers all over the world (25 countries!) has been very important for me, and has helped a lot with my recovery.
 
So that's about it at this point. We're working as hard as ever in the office. They say I can fly wherever I want and I've been invited to speak at a few places.
 
And I'm now quite sure that I'm mortal!  So I don't want to waste any time!