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That You Need to Find a
Different Kind of Education for Your Child
Governance of schools is
becoming an increasingly important issue, as
educators begin to realize how crucial it is
to empower the participants in any
educational process.
There are currently many hundreds of schools
in the United States and other countries,
both private and public, which operate with
varying degrees of of student
self-government. These take a variety of
forms, including democratic vote by students
and teachers, a majority vote, or consensus
by students and teachers.
For the purposes of this discussion I am not
including representative governments or
student councils because, for the most part,
they are nothing more than a sham and have
very little decision making power. It is our
contention that the more that the student
learner can be empowered, involved in making
decisions about his or her education, the
more powerful that force can be toward
helping them to take true responsibility for
their own education. I feel that it is
possible to set up such a decision-making
process almost anywhere, and that all
participants should have safeguards in that
process.
In a true democratic process, decisions are
made by using all the creative forces and
all the authority of the many participants
who are involved in making those decisions.
To the extent that they are disempowered by
special groups having veto power, to that
extent is the authority and the creative
power of the total body eroded.
When we founded Shaker Mountain school, in
1968, it was set up as a democratic school,
with the encouragement of the
then-Commissioner of Education of the state,
Harvey Scribner. Students were even the
majority of our board of trustees. We did
this because Scribner had said we needed to
have the people we could trust the most on
our board of trustees (rather than those who
could raise the most money), to make
decisions that would be best for the school.
We felt that the ones we could trust the
most would be the students, themselves.
Throughout the years, all important
decisions were made by the school meeting,
with all students participating. When
particular items were brought to the board
of trustees, invariably the student
trustees, the majority, would refer these
decisions back to the school meeting,
feeling that it was the proper forum for
making any decision.
Those decisions even included such major
issues as buying and selling buildings, the
organization of major funding events, and
all basic school policies. I feel that the
procedures which were developed for the
school meeting at Shaker Mountain, created
the most effective school self government
that I've ever seen, having visited several
hundred alternative schools, including
Summerhill, in England, which was the
pioneer in this process.
In the earliest years, decisions were made
by a straight majority. Our meetings were
always long and sometimes emotional because
the real decisions operating the school were
made in the meeting. Its always seems to me
that schools that reserve their meeting time
for "Wednesday afternoon for one hour"
couldn't really be democratic because there
are so many more decisions to be made during
the week. We often had meetings that lasted
the entire Monday morning and Friday
morning, sometimes spilling over into the
afternoons. In addition, we had meetings for
class announcements every morning during the
week, which often had other decisions
brought into them. Special meetings could be
called by any staff or student by ringing
the meeting bell. I feel that this latter
feature was very important because it wasn't
necessary for someone to get permission to
call a meeting or for a particular person to
go around the school rounding up people for
a meeting. If the meeting bell rang, there
was a meeting, and the meeting bell was
considered rather sacred around the school.
In fact, if anyone ever rang the meeting
bell when there wasn't a meeting, there was
an automatic meeting on that person "for
calling a meeting when there wasn't one."
But this probably didn't happen more than a
handful of times in 17 years.
In the following sections, I will outline
the decisions governing the meeting as they
evolved at Shaker Mountain School, however,
I think it is important to point out that
the meeting system is really more of an art
than a science, and like all democracies, it
is fragile and depends very much upon the
respect it is given by the constituents. If
at some point people begin to feel that they
are not really the ones making the
decisions, attendance and participation and
creative energy fall off, not unlike the
apathy manifested recently in national
elections. On the other hand when people
feel that they have important decisions to
make, attendance is high.
One obvious implication of the last
statement is that attendance at the meetings
was not compulsory. Neither was attendance
at all classes in the school. However, if a
group of people at a regular school meeting
felt that a particular issue was of such
importance that everybody in the school
needed to know about it and its
consequences, somebody could propose that
there be a "super-meeting." If it was
passed, that meeting become a
"super-meeting." It would be necessary for
all people around the school to come to the
meeting until it was voted that it did not
need to be a "super meeting" any more. This
probably didn't happen any more than 10% of
the time.
One interesting by-product of the school
meetings was that the rate of increase in
vocabulary on the part of the average
student in school was 2 1/2 times the
national rate. We actually had students
increase 6 grade levels in a year in their
vocabulary, even when they were otherwise
not attending classes. We can only assume
that this was a consequence of the student's
participating in and listening to the
meetings, and determining that they wanted
to understand everything that was being said
in them.
Two of the most common approaches to
self-government are democratic decision
making by the majority and decision by
consensus of the group. Shaker Mountain
school evolved an interesting blending of
the advantages of both these approaches,
being heavily influenced in the early years
by their involvement with the traditionalist
Mohawk Indians of the Iroquois Confederacy
(We had regular exchange visits with them).
This is perhaps quite fitting because it was
the influence of the Iroquois confederacy
that convinced Benjamin Franklin, among
others, that democratic decision making was
a good form of government and, therefore, a
good one to be used for the fledgling
independent colonies. In our early contacts
with the Mohawks we discovered that they
made their decisions at a council by having
each member express their opinion. If a
minority opinion was indicated they would
then listen very carefully to that minority
opinion, and allow it to be fully expressed,
perhaps then changing the decision of the
whole group. But ultimately, if they felt
that the minority opinion was fully explored
and that there were no options offered, the
decision of the majority became the decision
of the tribes.
An approach somewhat similar to this is used
in consensus decision making, in which a
person or persons may wish to "stand aside."
They may disagree with the decision, but are
willing to let the decision of the rest of
the members stand. As it was described to me
by Eric Joy, a teacher at the Arthur Morgan
School, a Quaker School in Burnsville, N.C.,
consensus to him means "sense of the
meeting." The clerk of the meeting will try
to determine what this sense of the meeting
is. If a person offers a dissenting opinion,
they are given a chance to express what that
opinion is, and then given some time to come
up with an alternative proposal. But if they
are not able to come up with an alternative
proposal, it is incumbent upon the clerk to
determine what the sense of the meeting is,
and proceed on to make decisions based on
that sense.
At Shaker Mountain, decisions were
technically based on majority vote. However,
it became customary at our meetings for the
chairperson to ask people who had voted
negatively to say why they had done so, if
they were willing say. Subsequently, anybody
in the meeting could then ask for a re-vote.
The re-vote automatically reopened
discussion. If a minority felt so strongly
about a proposal that they just could not
live with it, they could continuously call
for re-votes at the meeting, effectively
"filibustering," causing people to come up
with a better or more comprehensive or more
universally acceptable proposal.
Even after the meeting was over, if anyone
still felt like it didn't sit well with
them, they could call another meeting by
ringing the meeting bell or putting it on a
succeeding agenda. On the other hand, if
people dissented on a particular decision,
even if it was a fairly large number, but
nobody called for a re-vote or another
meeting, that decision would then stand.
That minority would be essentially "standing
aside."
By making the commitment to be part of a
community that makes decisions by democratic
vote, the minority members are obliged to
stand by the consequences of the decision of
the majority. As opposed to consensus
decision making, the people who voted
negatively could always say "I told you so"
if things don't work out well. This latter
observation is not necessary just a joke,
because one of the potential negative
consequences of some kinds of consensus
decision-making processes is that people
could be manipulated out of their opinions
in order to reach consensus.
In some school democracies the students
elect a chairperson who then chairs the
meeting for a semester or some fairly long
period of time. This is how it is done at
Summerhill. At Shaker Mountain, everybody at
one time or another chaired the meetings.
Because so many of our decisions were made
by democratic meetings under so many
different circumstances, it was felt that it
was important that everyone learn how to run
a good meeting. When a new student came into
the school, they would often be elected to
chairperson. Then people would 'kibitz' them
into becoming good chairpersons as they
struggled in the initial phases.
At the beginning of each meeting the people
who wanted to chair the meeting would
indicate so, or there could be nominations
from the membership. There was then an
immediate vote by show of hands, a process
that generally would only take a minute or
so. The person who got the most votes would
become chairperson and start the meeting,
usually with the words "who called this
meeting and why?" if it was a special
meeting, or "what is the first thing on the
agenda," if it was a regular meeting. If the
chairperson needed to leave the room or was
getting tired, they could appoint somebody
else to be chairperson. If people felt that
the person who was chairing the person was
flagging in their attention or was not doing
a good job at that point, they could call
for a new chairperson. If there was a call
for a new chairperson there would be an
immediate vote whether or not there should
be a new chairperson. If the majority
disagreed, the chairperson continued. If the
majority of people indicated that they
thought there should be a new chairperson,
the current chairperson could either name
another chairperson at that point or there
would be another immediate election. People
tended to elect those whom they thought
would get us through the meeting
efficiently, but anybody who wanted to chair
a meeting generally got a chance and had
plenty of opportunities.
The meeting was not allowed to go on,
whether it was a special or a general
meeting, unless somebody had volunteered to
take the log and keep track of the proposals
and the decisions that were being made in
the official log book. The log book was a
large, hand bound volume of blank pages.
Several log books would be filled up during
a school year. When a topic was put on the
agenda the chairperson would ask who put it
on the agenda. The person who put it on the
agenda would explain why they put it on.
Then a discussion of that topic would ensue.
People could make proposals that needed to
seconded. Those proposals did not need to be
voted on one at a time but could be voted on
in a list when somebody "called the
question."
One somewhat unusual decision that was made
by the meeting concerned this "calling of
the question." Rather than have this be done
strictly by majority vote, it was determined
by the meeting that if 5 people were opposed
to the question being called (and,
therefore, discussion being ended and a vote
taken), that was sufficient for us to
continue discussion. I don't recall where
the number 5 came from, but it always seemed
to be a reasonable procedure. For somebody
just visiting the meeting for the first
time, this could be very confusing because
somebody would call the question; the
chairperson would say "all those opposed," a
vote would be taken, and if there were more
than 5 people opposed, the meeting would
continue. For the uninitiated, they might
wonder if they had missed something: Did
they miss the vote of those in favor?
The skill of the chairperson was often
determined by their ability to notice when
people had raised their hands to speak, and
in what order. Sometimes a chairperson would
write the names down so they would remember
the order in which people had raised their
hands. However, it was considered the
prerogative of the chairperson to call on
people who they felt would move the meeting
forward the best. This for example might
include calling on people who had not spoken
yet, even if they had only raised their
hands after other people who had spoken
before. It was also their job to point out
to the meeting when they thought certain
points had already been expressed, or that
people were repeating themselves. The
chairperson could call for a vote without
the question being called if nobody
objected.
New items could be added to the agenda
during the meeting. This was sometimes done
at the urging of the chairperson when he
felt that the business had strayed from the
original agenda item and that there was
another issue to be decided.
It is important to point out that there was
no veto power over the decisions that were
made in the school meetings. The staff, for
example had two long meetings a week, but
the staff had no arbitrary power. The staff
were free to offer whatever classes they
wanted, and discuss whatever kinds of things
they thought were important to the school,
but they could not make decisions for the
entire school. Any changes that the staff
wanted to make in the overall school policy
had to be brought to the school meeting. The
meetings often made many creative decisions,
decisions that might not have been thought
of by any individual operating on their own.
I think that it is important to note that we
went into the meeting without having a
pre-set idea about the decisions that the
meeting "should" make, but rather, fully
expected that the meeting would be greater
than the sum of its parts, and would find a
creative solution that no one individual
could foresee.
One early decision that was made at the
school meeting was the creation of the "stop
rule". It was noted that conflicts between
students often arose when two students would
be horsing around and one wouldn't realize
that the other had become upset. In such a
circumstance, it was decided that the person
would then say "stop" at that point, and if
it was not clear what they were saying
"stop" to, they would say "stop to
wrestling", or even to "stop to calling me
fatty." Those words would communicate the
fact that that student was at the point of
great frustration and would otherwise feel
that they were about to get into a real
fight. One of the first questions that would
be asked in a school meeting was "did so and
so say 'stop'?" If they had said "stop" and
somebody broke the stop rule, it was taken
to be a very serious transgression.
We note that at Summerhill, fining people
from their allowances is often a consequence
of negative behavior. At Shaker Mountain
people generally were of low income and did
not have money which they could be fined, so
a lot of discussion centered around whether
a student would be given a "warning" or a
"strong warning" for a particular behavior
that people objected to. It was sometimes
amazing to me how important people found
this distinction to be. A "warning" meant
that there would be no particular
consequence at that point except for the
equivalent of community censure. But a
"strong warning" meant that the next time
the community could not take that option,
but needed to take action. It was very
uncommon for some kind of negative behavior
to go beyond the strong warning stage. When
this did occasionally happen people would go
scrambling through the log to see if the
person had gotten a warning or a strong
warning for the previous behavior.
Our meetings were not only used for
discipline in that sense, but also for
positive brainstorming. For example class
announcements would be made in meetings.
Anybody could announce a class. Trip
meetings would also be announced there, and
the trip meeting would decide where they
were going to go and how they would raise
the money to get there.
If someone had a problem that came out in a
meeting that looked like it was going to
take more attention than the meeting could
provide, someone would often propose that
there be a "small group" to help that
person. Anybody could volunteer to be part
of that small group but the people in the
group would have to be approved by the
person for whom the group was being formed,
or in the case of a conflict between two
people, by both parties. Our process of
conflict resolution by meeting was so
effective that we would often go an entire
school year without any kind of a physical
fight between students. Especially because
of the size differentials and age
differentials between students in the
school, physical force was very highly
frowned upon. The meeting did have the power
to suspend a student from the school or kick
them out of the school. What was more common
as a result of serious transgressions over a
period of time would be for the meeting to
propose that a student be sent back through
the admissions procedure and under the
supervision of the admissions committee, as
if they were a new student trying to get
into the school. The admissions committee
was comprised of students and staff who ran
for the office and were elected by the
school community annually. I regularly ran
for it, because I usually had the basic
information about a new student. Sometimes I
was elected. Sometimes I wasn't. One student
explained to me once that he had not voted
for me because he felt I had enough power
just sitting in on the admissions meetings.
One final and important point: People were
respected in my school and in the meeting
for who they were and what they said. I had
to express myself strongly because of the
fact that I had no arbitrary power. Others
learned how to do the same. I knew I would
be listened to, and that the meeting had
fail-safe procedures. Sometimes my ideas
were accepted by the meeting. More often, we
came up with something better. We had faith
in our ability, as a group, to solve any
problem that came along. And for the 17
years that I was there, we did just that.
These ideas have been adapted for use by a
wide variety of schools and programs. Sussex
School, a 70 student independent alternative
in Missoula, Montana, had a waiting list of
325. Those people, with the help of Sussex,
hired me to help them create a new school.
Organizing a meeting of potential students
direcly from the attendees, we had the
"first meeting" of the new school, before it
even had a name. My niece, 11 year old
Jenifer Goldman, whom I was homeschooling at
the time, chaired the first meeting. This
ultimately led to the creation of Shining
Mountain School, and a spinoff school called
Avalon. It also led to a public school
alternative that was inspired by the
process.
This democratic meeting process has also
been developed for use by such diverse
groups as LIGHT, a Long Island homeschool
group, and Islip Alternative, a public
school program for "at risk" high school
students. The homeschoolers were immediately
at home with the idea, with even the
youngest, a four year old, participating
fully. At first, the students at Islip were
skeptical of the idea, but as we went along,
you could see the body language of the
students change. They committed themselves
to the idea of their own empowerment, and
continued to have such meetings every week.
When the school district made plans to lay
off some of their teachers at the end of the
school years because of budget cuts, these
"at risk" students were the only ones in the
district to mount a protest to the school
board. One of the teachers told me that she
was sure it was because they had become
empowered by the democratic school meetings.
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