Tag Archive for '4fives'

Sir Ken Robinson Revisited: Bring On The Learning Revolution

Hey Hey SuperForest

Back in 2008 SuperForester Jackson posted a video by the marvelous Sir Ken Robinson on the subject of education and creativity that is so much worth a watch that, if you haven’t already seen it, I highly recommend you do now – it is not only inspiring and thought-provoking, but Sir Ken is one of those extremely funny, naturally entertaining public speakers that it’s a pleasure to watch. Please do!

my contention is that creativity now is as important in education as literacy

Now, I come from a family filled with teachers and I believe passionately in the power of education – that education can shape lives – remember that one teacher who believed in you? that opened up a whole world of confidence and possibilities? – that education can open your eyes to who you are and what you are capable of.  But I speak from a position of privilege. I know the system doesn’t always work. Many students feel disinterested, unmotivated, disenfranchised.

I think there are many reasons for this, but one point Sir Ken makes is that “every education system on earth has the same heirarchy of subjects … At the top are mathematics and the languages, then the humanities, and the bottom are the arts … There isn’t an education system on the planet that teaches dance every day to children the way we teach them mathematics. Why? Why not? I think this is rather important. I think math is very important, but so is dance.” And he explains this as borne from a historical context I had, to my chagrin, never even considered:

Now our education system is predicated on the idea of academic ability. And there’s a reason. The whole system was invented — around the world, there were no public systems of education, really, before the 19th century. They all came into being to meet the needs of industrialism. So the hierarchy is rooted on two ideas. Number one, that the most useful subjects for work are at the top. So you were probably steered benignly away from things at school when you were a kid, things you liked, on the grounds that you would never get a job doing that. Is that right? Don’t do music, you’re not going to be a musician; don’t do art, you won’t be an artist. Benign advice — now, profoundly mistaken. The whole world is engulfed in a revolution. And the second is academic ability, which has really come to dominate our view of intelligence, because the universities designed the system in their image. If you think of it, the whole system of public education around the world is a protracted process of university entrance. And the consequence is that many highly talented, brilliant, creative people think they’re not, because the thing they were good at at school wasn’t valued, or was actually stigmatized. And I think we can’t afford to go on that way.

The system should value other talents as well as the hard skills that so much seems to be predicated on the basis of . We are all unique individuals and school-smarts is just one facet of the human gift that we express (emphatically not to devalue academic skills – as the lady says, we can all be awesome without having to prove we are more awesome than each other).

Well, Sir Ken has recently given a follow up talk, expanding on this – “the real challenge is to transform education from a 19th century industrial model into a 21st century process based on different principles”:

There’s so much idea-y goodness in there that I wouldn’t purport to summarise (watch it!), but a couple of things stuck in my mind in particular:  At one point Sir Ken shares an Abraham Lincoln quote and his thoughts on it:

“The dogmas of the quiet past are inadequate to the stormy present. The occasion is piled high with difficulty, and we must rise with the occasion.” I love that. Not rise to it, rise with it. “As our case is new, so we must think anew and act anew We must disenthrall ourselves and then we shall save our country.”

I love that word, “disenthrall.” You know what it means? That there are ideas that all of us are enthralled to, which we simply take for granted as the natural order of things, the way things are. And many of our ideas have been formed, not to meet the circumstances of this century, but to cope with the circumstances of previous centuries.

And:

I think we have to recognize a couple of things here. One is that human talent is tremendously diverse. People have very different aptitudes …

But it’s not only about that. It’s about passion. Often, people are good at things they don’t really care for. It’s about passion, and what excites our spirit and our energy. And if you’re doing the thing that you love to do, that you’re good at, time takes a different course entirely. My wife’s just finished writing a novel, and I think it’s a great book, but she disappears for hours on end. You know this, if you’re doing something you love, an hour feels like five minutes. If you’re doing something that doesn’t resonate with your spirit, five minutes feels like an hour.

Undeniably true! And Sir Ken’s suggestion?

We have to move to a model that is based more on principles of agriculture. We have to recognize that human flourishing is not a mechanical process, it’s an organic process. And you cannot predict the outcome of human development; all you can do, like a farmer, is create the conditions under which they will begin to flourish.

The unlimited capacity of children, of humans, and our opportunity to nurture this. Gift husbandry? SuperForesty.

I couldn’t post on this without mentioning the ever awesome 4fives – have you checked out their blog?? DO. For real, these kids (and their teacher Miss Bee Ladd) are super cool.  As SuperForester Graham says – Teach Your Children Well:

In terms of educational reform I don’t know what the solutions are… SuperForester Julius started a great discussion on this and there are some interesting models (do any of you have experience of Freinet pedagogy schools? it sounds really interesting). But as SuperForester Jordan has counseled: “follow your bliss” – and I think the world, and all of us in it, is probably best served not just when we do our best to try and follow our own, but when we create an educational environment that encourages children to follow theirs.

Love to Teachers,

Love to You

P

SuperForest Interviews: Katherine Fairfax Wright

Good Morning SuperForest!

In February I wrote about Frugan Living, the blog of Katherine Fairfax Wright. Fairfax, as she’s known, has been enjoying the abundance of food and items she’s rescued from the streets of NYC.

Katherine is tall, well-read, fiery, compassionate. A busy yogini, chef, writer, documentarian, blogger, who took the time to venture to Brooklyn and spend the day with the 4Fives.

Katherine Fairfax Wright is SuperForestastic!

SF: How has your frugan lifestyle affected you over all?

Bits of it have been engrained in me since I was a wee lass sticking my nose in the air at the sight of my dad eating fruit well past its prime, explaining to my friends why our lawn looked like it was wearing a sweater (my dad rerouted the washer plumbing to water the grass, though we could have done with a better lint filter), attending every library book sale and garage sale in the neighborhood, taking our bottles and cans to the recycling center (my brother and I got to keep the cash), scouring thrift stores with my grandma and aunts—these were typical weekend activities. And since I declared myself frugan, not so much has changed either. My schedule and everything the same, I still travel a lot, work a lot, have great friends. I think people think it takes far more time and headspace to be frugan than it does. Resource consumption is indeed something I am always aware of—but that includes my time, I don’t want to waste my time more than anyone else does. But seeing as it doesn’t usurp all my time, I see no reason not to provide for myself while at the same time curbing my own waste by utilizing that of others. And while doing so, I’m (re)exposed to the ill effects of our consumptive practices, which serves as a constant reminder of why I started doing this, and what habits I’d like to see improve. Living this was has made me a more conscious citizen. It also serves as a tiny outlet for me to feel like rather than just reading a lot about these issues, I’m doing at least a little something to counteract the negatives.

SF: Have you ever gotten sick from eating found food?

Nope. I’ve never had even the mildest of ill effects from eating found food. It may help to realize that this stuff is for sale on the store shelves less than an hour before I get to it. Although that said, recent events in the news would indicate that even purchased food is not without its pesky microbes.

SF: Have you ever gotten into trouble while foraging? And if so, how did you deal with it?

Nope. I’ve come across employees at most shops, and the occasion is very rare that they are anything less than friendly. Besides maybe a quick comment to make sure you’ll close up the bags after, they really let you be. It also helps that, at least with my neighborhood shop, I also purchase stuff there, so they know me as a customer as well. If you engage with them, or even just make eye contact, it helps to personalize the situation, and take it beyond just the act of a random individual getting free stuff from a shopkeeper’s overhead. I’m sure any shopkeeper is as adverse as I am to chucking goods he or she has paid for, and in throwing out the goods, he or she is really only keeping up with consumer demand.

Passersby either don’t notice or just give me a slightly funny look. Or maybe it’s more of a double take when they notice my nice coat or my iPhone earbuds. I’m obviously aware that I’m not a typical dumpster diver, although if you spend any time with a group like the Freegans, you’ll notice that even they are quite a varied bunch. Nevertheless, of course there are certain stereotypes surrounding this kind of lifestyle, and while I do break the mold, it just serves to show that anybody can do this. It’s as legal for me as anyone else. That said, I’m not advocating for people to dumpster dive, it’s just what happens to work for me at this moment in my life. What I am advocating for is for people to make conscious and conscientious decisions about their resources: time, capital, environment, and so on.

SF: What is your go-to foraging outfit? Any special tools?

Lots of canvas bags, rubber gloves (from previous dives, a mix of the laboratory-types and the dishwashing ones), a little LED light is helpful for the black bags. Rubber goulashes and some sort of scrounging pole are helpful in the proper dumpsters, but most trash is just in trash bags on the street. During summer it’s fun to dress in fun clothes, but in winter, I’m just concentrating on staying warm and dry, while maintaining my dexterity and ability to schlep.

SF: Have you gotten much feedback from people who been inspired by your actions?

As of late, some comments to this effect have come to the fore. But more noticeable, for me at least, is the effect I’ve had on my friends. Despite initial hesitation in some cases, many of my friends come out with me regularly—which makes the event much more fun, it’s always fun to mix a mission (as in an actual set goal for the evening, not so much an ideological one) with socialization. And those friends who don’t come out are always willing to eat what I cook, or some come over to take groceries home after a good score. They are also always sure to contact me before they throw something out that I might find a use for, or to ask questions about travelling abroad, or building shelves or the best paint to use, or what have you.

SF: How did the mention on boingboing affect you?

It made my traffic increase by about three gazillion…for the time being at least. It may have also made my dear parents feel like maybe there is some greater reason why their daughter, on whose education and etiquette they have so labored over, eats from the trash.

SF: What (if anything) would make you stop living frugan?

I can’t really stop being frugan. While the label is something I only came up with a year or so ago, I’ve always exhibited the characteristics that it’s comprised of, and I don’t think they’re going anywhere. That said, I entirely expect my methods of fruganism to shape-shift with time. I’m considering a move back to Los Angeles, for example, in which case much of my garbage foraging may come to an end, but I do intend to have garden full of yummies (assuming my thumbs prove green), maybe a hen-house, things like that. I’ll always love second-hand goods. If I ever owned a thrift shop I would ask my donors to tag their items with stories about the goods: this was Aunt Mildred’s, baby Jake puked on this once on Halloween, the scratch on the left is from my dog Caligari, who had three legs so he dragged his feet. The meaningfulness of a story, or at least the fodder for small-talk it provides, I think easily surpasses any set-back eminating from an object’s status as used. I’m so much happier wearing my grandma’s clothes than some random garment from a shopping mall. Although if I am going to buy something, I’ll always feel more contended buying a designer dress from Loehmann’s than Barney’s. But that’s just me, it doesn’t have to be everybody.

SF: Who/what/where inspires you?

Most of my inspiration comes from reading. Lester Brown. Jared Diamond. Michael Pollan. Jeff Sachs, and the work of the Earth Institute as a whole. GOOD. Worldchanging. TED. Those are the big names. I took a great class on the anthropology of consumption, which gave me a lot of food for thought about value systems and how arbitrary they are. But on a more personal level, backpacking, both in the wilderness and travelling abroad has taught me supreme admiration of two things—nature and people…and thereby spawned an inquiry into their peaceful and sustainable cohabitation. For the two to coexist in a maximally pleasant manner, I think that individual adjustments have to bore their way into social norms. I have no intention of prosthelytizing the wonders of dumpster diving (it really is just what happens to work well for me right now), if I’m going to preach anything it is just that stigmas should be taken with a massive dose of salt, and that as idealistic as it sounds, creative approaches can ameliorate a lot of sticky situations, and yield a satisfying sense of self-rule. People like gifts, people like beauty, people like food, people like people. I understand that, it’s just the elements that fulfill those desires that are all wonky—people let the way of the masses dominate the way of the self.

But that’s enough ideological banter for one day. I’m gonna go instantiate it now by way of the shiny bookshelf I spot peaking out from the snow on the sidewalk downstairs.”

A huge “Thank you!” to Katherine Fairfax Wright for all of the incredible work she is doing on behalf of her fellow human beings.

Check out Frugan Living!
And K’s visit with the 4Fives!

Katherine Wright Visits The 4Fives!

Katy Wright, she of the amazing Frugan Living blog, and I went and paid a visit to the 4Fives the other day. Katy brought a bag of amazing things she’d rescued from the trash, including some red hots, which are my favorite candy. She talked to the Fives about the abundance of resources out on the streets just going to landfills, and how eating food that she’d rescued had never once made her sick.

Then she talked about her recent trip to Uganda, where she made a documentary about an anti-gay bill currently being considered by the Ugandan government. Her documentary features interviews with gay Ugandans as well as straight ones, and the profound disconnect between the two. In Uganda, being gay is not considered a human right.

We then had a wonderful discussion about the need to treat all people with respect, and our shared humanity. It was an amazing and thought provoking talk, and watching the 4Fives process these ideas was a joy to behold. Katherine is currently cutting together her film and we’ll post about it when it’s done.

Later, as the kids lined up to go home, we each ate a red hot. Trash never tasted so good!

Here’s part of the 4Fives post about her visit:

The 4Fives Visit With Katherine Fairfax Wright! from The 4Fives on Vimeo.

A great day was had by all.

Thank you very much to Katherine Wright for so generously giving her time and energy. SuperForester Katy, you are an inspiration and a treasure.

Check out Frugan Living! And check out the 4Fives! Yeah!

The 4Fives & SFJ Draw Robots!

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Goooooood Morning SuperForest!

It’s been far too long since we last caught up with the 4Fives. If you’re just reading SuperForest for the first time, the 4Fives are a fourth/fifth grade blogging team at P.S. 58 in Brooklyn, NY. They are so awesome! The 4Fives and their incredible teacher Bee Ladd are my absolute favorites, as they are so smart and positive and productive!

Yesterday we did a skype chat and I taught the class how to draw Herculon, the SuperForest mascot/robot.

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We use technology to stay in touch and have fun!

Okay, here’s 4Fiver Taliya to tell you how it went.

“Helllllllloooo everyone!

This is Taliya, and I am going to tell you what we did today. What we did was we had the best Skype ever with our friend Jackson!

First we asked him a lot of questions, and then we asked him if he would teach us how to draw a robot. He told us “go get a piece of paper and something hard to write on”.  So everyone ran to get a clipboard and a piece of paper.  And then he said “are you all ready?”  And we all said “YES!”

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So now I am going to tell you how you can draw a robot.

  1. Draw an arch.
  2. Draw two eyes.
  3. Draw a mouth that is shaped like a smiling hotdog.
  4. Draw another mouth around the first mouth.
  5. Draw a line across the mouth.
  6. Draw lines up and down across that line that you just did on the mouth.
  7. Draw the nose… you make two straight lines from the middle top of the mouth to the top of the head.
  8. Draw dark lines on the bottom of the nose, and draw lighter lines towards the top of the nose.
  9. Draw squiggly arms on both sides of the head.
  10. Draw a claw hand on each of the arms.
  11. Draw lines on the arms.
  12. Draw the mushroom ears on the head.
  13. Draw lines under the mouth. They make a shadow so that the robot looks real.
  14. Last, make a word bubble coming out of the robot’s mouth to say something fun.

So that is how you draw a robot.  Thank you Jackson for teaching us how to draw a robot!”

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Here are some of the wonderful robots that the 4fives drew:

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Soooooo cool! To see the rest of the robots and read more about the 4fives, check out their blog!

A massive SuperForesty thank you to Bee Ladd for having the greatest class of 4th and 5th graders known to man, and to the 4fives themselves for inspiring me endlessly. Jordan, Adrian, Taliya, Maya, Malaysia, Jon Scoobydoobs, Johnny G., Deven, Travis, Ray, Nicky T. and Emanuel, you are the very best!

Click here to read the 4Fives blog!

Love from SFJ

Jackson’s Journal (9/24/09) – What Is SuperForest?

picture-112(image via henryjenkins.org)

Goooood Morning SuperForest!

Yesterday, my good pal Michelle Bonfils came over to interview me for her vlog. We were talking about SuperForest and she was trying to put into words exactly what I did and what this blog was all about. This was causing her difficulty, as we SuperForesters do a lot. I had a brain flash in my skull-parts.

I said: “To best understand SuperForest, think of it in these terms… I (SuperForester Jackson) am a superhero. I lead an international team of superheroes in an epic battle against negativity, hatred, and sadness.

(It is not easy to say that you are a Superhero, but try it out anyway. Look in a mirror, peer right into your very own eyes, and say: “I am a Superhero.”)

Truly, there is only one person that will make any difference on this planet and that person is you.

No one single superhero will save the day. All of us joined together will save the day.

Become a SuperForester. Become a Superhero. Join us in our joyful quest.

How?

Do these three easy things and everything will change:

Awesome!

I spent most of Tuesday out in Brooklyn with Bee, Superforester Jackie, and the 4fives, and we learned all sort of cool new things! I’m working on hot new posts as you read.

Have an excellent day.

-Jackson

Season 2 of The 4Fives!!!!!

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Gooood Morning SuperForest!

It feels so good to say this: Welcome to Season 2 of the 4Fives!

There have been some technical difficulties (opportunities) with the 4Fives blog from Season 1, and we are trying very hard to see if it can be salvaged. Happily, there is a brand-spankin’ new blog for the 4Fives Season 2, in which we chronicle the exploits of Brooklyn’s youngest positivity bloggers, Bee Ladd’s 4th and 5th grade mixed class at P.S. 58!

I will soon be making my inaugural appearance at P.S. 58′s hallowed halls, that the 4Fives/SuperForesty team up goodness may once more resume.

In the meantime, I have wrangled the access codes to their blog, and have set about messing things up good and proper for them to find on Monday. Mwah ha ha! Take a gander at the 4Fives new blog, and if you like, say hello to that great bunch of catros in the form of a happy comment.

And as all this is going on, Bee and I are still hard at work on Eco-Tech School, and wait until you see what we have planned! Exciting things are in the works, oh beloved SuperForesters. Just you wait and see.

Love,

-Jackson

Jackson’s Journal (5/6/09) – The Arch

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Good morning SuperForest!

Today has been a busy one.
We just received the German translation of the Humanifesto, which master Spoon is typing up as we speak. A huge thank you to SuperForester Susanne who did the translating.

germanhumanifesto(Danke Schoen, Susanne!)

The French version just came in as well! Bravo, SuperForester Marie-Paule! I’ll have that formatted and up with great haste!

I spent the afternoon in the fine company of the 4fives, (whose blog is looking excellent,) and we learned about the arch and how very useful it is. I’m working on a grand ol’ post about that.

SuperForester Severine called and told me that in reference to my ravishing rescued rosemary plants, a good idea is to take a pice of willow tree bark and soak it in water for an hour to the release salycilic acid. If one dips a cutting into this mixture, the acid provokes a hormonal response in the plant, and the plant responds by sending out shoots! Thanks for the tip, Sevvy! Botany win!

I hope everyone is having a great day.

Much love,

Jackson