Five years ago, I was at Teach for America’s summer institute getting trained for my first day of school. We were learning how to diagnose achievement levels, track mastery, and bust value-added goals. I heard another corps member in my group ask a question off to the side. What if we want to make a revolutionary classroom?
I don’t know.
But I do have a list, in my head, of all the things I would give my students if I woke up tomorrow in an imaginary world where limitations didn’t exist. I am ready to write this list down. I would like you all to help me edit it. Then I can bring it to my students, and we can edit it some more, and then we can start to make it. Why not?
My List-in-Progress
Constructivist pedagogy
Curriculum on community organizing and social movement theory
Practice in activism and advocacy
Critical theory about race, class, gender, nationality, and post-colonialism geared for a middle school audience
A classroom art gallery
A library that looks like a book store display section and makes you want to stay all day
Reinvention of classroom design, with lots more couch action
Intensive community building, and the experience of unconditional love in a peer group
A garden and knowledge of food production
Hours of free-play time
A soundtrack
Media literacy and digital media production experience
Conflict mediation training that critically examines the roots of systemic violence
Math problem-solving and quantitative and logical analysis skills