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School Design > Learning Structures
Homes to Powerful Learning & Delight
Type: Horace Feature
Author(s): Herb Childress
Source: Horace. Vol.18, #1. Fall 2001.
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Architecture has many purposes. It keeps the rain off our heads, keeps
our belongings secure, and brings pride and beauty to our lives. But architecture-and
school buildings in particular-can do far more than that. Every building
ever made carries within it the goals of its creators. Just as we can
learn what was important about ancient societies by examining their physical
artifacts, we can see what we ourselves value by looking at the buildings
we construct. In America, school facilities usually promote economies
of scale, separation of kids and adults, passivity of learning, and standardization
of practice and outcome. We don't seek these results maliciously but our
decisions-from the six-period day to row-and-column individual classrooms
to large consolidated high schools- lead to these results.
Architecture almost never causes behaviors directly, but it certainly
makes some actions easier and others harder. If a school building clusters
its administrative staff away from teachers and students,it helps administrators
work together more efficiently, while at the same time increasing the
isolation of those decision-makers from the teachers and students they
serve. If a school locates itself in the heart of a town, it allows easier
access for students to the real day-to-day life of their community. If
a school uses one-piece desk/chair combinations, it reinforces learning
as an indi-vidual act and hinders collaboration and group understanding.
If we actively want to pursue different goals, then architecture can
help us do that as well. We can use intersections in corridors to enhance
social contact. We can arrange tables and chairs in ways that help learning
become a joyful, unselfish act instead of a solo performance. We can locate
our schools in the centers of the neighborhoods they serve, to promote
parental contact and student service work. We can use local services like
theaters and athletic programs to reduce the isolation of school from
community and increase the numbers of adults in kids' lives. We can make
the principal's office the heart of the school community rather than a
punitive outpost for the disobedient. Schools can be helpful, satisfying,
and equitable places. Architecture alone will not make them so, but we
can use buildings to assist us in creating schools that are homes to powerful
learning and delight.
Herb Childress, Director of Research
at the Bay Area Coalition of Equitable
Schools, wrote Landscapes of Betrayal,
Landscapes of Joy: Curtisville in
the Lives of its Teenagers (State
University of New York Press), a
penetrating look at the use and
meaning of school, home and town
in teenagers' lives.
This resource last updated: May 28, 2002
Database Information:
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Source: Horace. Vol.18, #1. Fall 2001.
Publication Year: 2001
Publisher: CES National
School Level: All
Issue: 18.1
Focus Area: School Design
STRAND: School Design: learning structures
Learning Structures: Small Learning Communities
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