+ “Nothing in life is to be feared, it is only to be understood. Now is the time to understand more, so that we may fear less.” ~ Marie Curie
Polaris | A New Learning Ecosystem
When you tell other educators you’re in the business of crafting an educational “reset” it can set off a wide range of responses ranging from genuine excitement and curiosity to skepticism to outright edurage.
The one constant is everyone has an opinion and no matter what, there will always be ideas being brought forth for how we can continue to transform education. And if anyone believes that a commitment to change in education is just for the sake of change, they are seriously misguided. It has to do with who we are as humans, a species of great endeavour, advancement and evolution.
My perspective is that all educational communities, systems and organisations are home to ideas and innovation. These innovative ideas need to be given the breathing room to evolve naturally.
In December 2018 Terry Heick published an article on TeachThought titled Want To Change Education? You’d Better Have These 6 Things. In his article Heick stated that a ‘great idea’ to transform education should probably be characterised by one or more of the following:
1. Vision - Shift paradigms. Make us see what’s possible. Dare to dream. Make it so that we can’t remember what it was like without it. So that we see everything else different because our whole way of seeing is different. That’s substantive change.
2. Disruption - It should be uncomfortable. Messy. Annoying. Make us have to do this and this all over again because of that new thing. If it only lubricates what you’ve always done, it’s probably not great, and will be forgotten the moment the next lubricant comes along. Make distracted people notice.
3. The ability to appeal to base human emotions - One great idea should spawn countless other great ideas, a conceptual copy-pasting that is joyful and addictive and crazy fun. Courage. Hope. Love. Belonging. Progress. Fear. Popularity and trend. Whatever you do, make it ‘human’ to make it stick.
4. The ability to scale! - Works on a variety of levels without clumsiness or inefficiency or degradation of performance. Full macro. Work small and big. The classroom and the district and the state and the federal level. In India and the US and U.K. and Australia and Africa. Work everywhere.
5. Beauty - As in, beautiful moments where we forget what we’re doing because the flow of it all is so human and powerful and moving that we feel like we’re flying. And that means everyone–students, teachers, parents, and communities, all witnessing this beauty and in collective awe. Beauty is an icon–a form that’s naturally compelling and instinctively pure. A great idea that helps us handcraft the minds and hearts of children should be beautiful.
6. Endurance - If it’s great, it lasts. It just might be that even great ideas die without being nourished, so that public education acts as a kind of graveyard for all of our best thinking. Seems that way sometimes, but let’s just hope this isn’t true.
I know I am bias but The Marcellin Difference, titled Polaris is what we are rolling out from 2020 and it is awesome. Is Polaris the answer? probably not. Having said that it is a brave and audacious answer to a complex problem - the future of schooling and learning.
Polaris is our ‘great idea’:
1. Polaris is our vision for faith, learning and life for a new world environment.
2. Polaris is highly disruptive and calls for all in our community to learn, unlearn and relearn their role in learning - students, teachers and parents.
3. Polaris is fundamentally a human ecosystem that is personal and born from the Gospel construct of hope and love.
4. Polaris understands the duality of each young man’s immediate needs, while having a lens on the bigger picture of their world of work from 2030.
5. Polaris is inherently beautiful, it launches up from the pedagogy of encounter with self, place, God and the other.
6. Polaris is in it for the long game. It requires high support, high expectations and a trusting endurance as we set a new direction about what is possible in learning and schooling.
Why are there more people in education less interested in standing out than they are pushing the factory machine along? Well, it is time more of us are prepared to stand up and celebrate our collective wisdom to transform learning and schooling as we know it.
Plumber, pilot or paediatrician - whatever your direction in life, Polaris will allow you to discover your worth and calling. I am proud to be part of the Marcellin community. An amazing community led by a Principal in Mark Murphy that gives each person the permission to triumph. An inclusive faith learning community open to the inherent possibility of each young man and staff member in our care.
The future world is full of great possibility – very soon we will publish a document inviting you to join us on this remarkable journey called Polaris.