BLOG ARCHIVES
Shared Vision and Shared Leadership
I am reading, The Constructivist Leader, recommended to me by Linda Henke, superintendent of Maplewood Richmond Heights School District. Linda Lambert writes the introduction and she begins with a list of themes that will recur in the book. The first: The lives of children and adults are inextricably intertwined. Democracy must be experienced by both children and adults as must trust and positive regard. Authentic work must be experienced by adults as well as children, as must authentic relationships and possibilities.
I love this powerful statement. It seems obvious though it is not a common occurrence in schools or in life. One of the tenets of Sustainability Education is Authentic Youth Engagement. This means that young people are doing real work that matters in the real world. It also means that they are experiencing as well as creating positive regard, possibilities and democracy. At Maplewood Richmond Heights, leadership is one of the four cornerstones, for all ages. There, leadership is understood as: Bringing people together to accomplish important work. (At Maplewood Richmond Heights aspirations and inspirations are written beautifully on the walls of the school.) Leadership skills in students are nurtured through authentic relationships and shared leadership with adults. One of the ways that leadership can be developed and shared is through the practice of structured conversations where participants listen to one another's reflections on past goals and hopes and dreams for the future. 
As we have turned into a new year, I have been reflecting on practices that cross over from my personal life to professional life and visa versa. I realize that our family's practice of family meetings is one of those cross overs. Our family meetings started many years ago when Ashley and I attended a class called Parent Effectiveness Training. One of the rituals that they recommend is a weekly family meeting where honest, productive and clear listening can occur between children and adults and shared responsibility and leadership dispositions can develop.
When we started, our youngest son was 5; now he is 28! As our sons have moved into their own homes and careers and families, our family meetings have moved from weekly to yearly. We hold these family meetings some time during our winter holidays together. And now, we look forward to them as times to support one another's goals and dreams year in and year out. We still start by reading the notes from the last meeting, now a whole year ago.
With this ritual and practice, we are bringing together a group of people, in this case our family, to support authentic relationships and all of our best work in the world. I am grateful to my family members as I am grateful to the students and educators with whom I work from Portland, OR, to Indianapolis, IN, to St. Louis, MO, to Middlebury, VT for authentic dialogue with people who work to create more and more possibilities to build a healthy, hopeful future.
Reflecting on 2011
We are in Vermont this week between Christmas and New Years at the farm where Ashley grew up. This morning there is a dusting of sugar snow on the ground, a clearing sky and flat light and the dogs are running joyful circles in the yard. The oven is on and bread is baking. What could be better really? In less than a week 2011 will be gone and we will be launched into another year. Cadwell Collaborative has been up and running for three and a half years now. Ashley and I are enjoying our work and our collaborations with schools and educators in so many productive and happy ways. During this month we have been updating our website and blog and we are almost finished with this round. A wonderful friend and colleague, illustrator and graphic artist, Penny Dullaghan, is helping us.
This morning I came across an idea on a photographer friend's blog to reflect on the year in photographs, Beautiful 2011. We will do that in this post, sharing several of the new photos that are up on our website and a few other favorites from our work in schools this year. With continuing thanks to the schools where we have worked as part of learning teams in 2011: The St. Michael School; The College School; Maplewood Richmond Heights School District; Indianapolis Public School Butler University Laboratory School; and Opal School.
Singing the Praises of Music in School
Last week Ashley and I attended holiday concerts at three of the schools where we work in St. Louis. Last Wednesday, we went to the Maplewood Richmond Heights Winter Market where students sold bee products from wax and honey that they had harvested from their own bees. They researched how to and then created tea lights, lip balm, tree ornaments, and soap. And, of course, there was golden, local MRH honey for sale. These students are working on a triple bottom line business plan for their small non profit business. The holiday concert which followed the Winter Market featured the MRH exemplary bands and and choirs. Several students from this small district have been chosen out of hundreds of competitors state wide to play for a state music educators conference in 2012.
We also were so happy to attend the St. Michael School holiday concert where students sang songs and carols in different languages and from different religions surrounded by a glow of twinkling lights. On Friday, we witnessed the extraordinary talent of all ages at The College School at their Winter Arts Share. At all of these events we were in awe of the skill, passion, presence and grace of all of the students ranging from age 3 to 18 who sang and danced and played with all of their hearts. It is such a privilege to see all three schools' students on stage at this time of year.
Ashley and I are lucky to work with these three schools where we collaborate with dedicated educators, students and families.
Especially at the darkest time of the year, what light and joy they offer the world of education, their communities and families!
We wish all of you a joyous holiday! Louise and Ashley
Vea Vecchi: Beauty and Ethics are Foundational for our Future
I just listened to an impassioned TEDx Talk given in Reggio Emilia, Italy a few months ago by Vea Vecchi. I found the TEDx because I was reading Jennifer Azzariti's blog, In Dialogue. Jennifer is a friend and colleague who I greatly admire and with whom I have been lucky enough to work. We were together in Reggio Emilia and Ligonchio last July. There, we both had the privilege of spending a week with Italian educators and other educators from all over the world in the stunning natural environment of the Apennine mountains. Among those we spent the week with was Vea Vecchi, an atelierista who worked closely with Loris Malaguzzi, the founder and philosopher behind the Reggio Approach.
Vea recently authored Art and Creativity in Reggio Emilia which I recommend to everyone who is interested in how children learn and the role of creativity in learning. It is a beautiful book written in a direct, narrative voice. Vea tells lots of learning stories, some about her grandchildren that are enchanting and amazing. The kind of stories we might all tell if we were keen observers and listeners, and life long researchers of creativity and the imagination.
The TEDx Talk is in Italian. It is worth watching even if you don't understand the Italian to feel Vea's passion, courage and vision.
A few excerpts:
We are convinced that it only through education that we can confront the difficulties of our time that have the attention of everyone, that humiliate us as citizens of the world. What is a school and an education of quality?
For one, we give so much importance to the environment. Beyond the right of having a school is the right to have a school that is beautiful and taken care of with an attitude of care so that parents, children, and teachers want to come to school every day. We have in some ways confused luxury with care.
The atelier has brought many materials and techniques, but also has illuminated a need, not only for children, but for human beings to communicate in a way that rationality and imagination travel together. We believe in a multiplicity of languages that are integrated and not separated. We believe that this makes learning and understanding more rich and more complete.
Poetic thought does not separate the imaginative from the cognitive, emotion from the rational, empathy from deep investigation. It lights up all the senses and perceptions and cultivates an intense relationship with what is all around us. It constructs thoughts that are not conformist. And this creates two important elements: solidarity and participation, both of which are the foundation of democracy.
To conclude, we believe that identifying and researching beauty and ethics is the indispensible foundation for a livable, sustainable future that everyone speaks about but that seems so difficult to bring about. It is only with an intelligent heart, with courage and with vision that we can proceed.








