Now is the time for whole-child education
Throughout the course of the pandemic, we have seen students, families and educators leaning into the unknown. By reflecting on what we have learned and what we want to keep, we may be able to build on the silver linings of this most difficult period in our lives.
One of the most important insights that relate to all constituencies is the long-overdue recognition of the “whole child” and the undeniable interconnectedness of our physical, social and emotional wellbeing with our cognitive and academic development. And just as we use the term “whole child” with regard to students, we have seen that applying the same lens to our families and educators is equally important. It is by meeting the needs of the whole person that other accomplishments become possible.
Similarly, we now see in stark relief that students learn in many ways, in many places, from many experiences — and that too is a lesson we should hold onto and around which we should build enabling systems.
If it wasn’t evident already, parents and students are now pretty clear: a narrow academic focus on math and English isn’t enough. It’s demoralizing and boring and too narrow to really prepare young people for life. We need a balance of social and emotional life skills and a way to help learners feel the usefulness of what they’re learning. Developing a sense of agency and interest-driven learning leads to growth that students and parents recognize as valuable.
Unfortunately, the combination of our desire for some return to “normal” and our conditioning to the status quo may be pulling us back to what was familiar before the pandemic.
Primary on the list of misaligned considerations is the reality that we do not yet have a common framework to gauge progress with respect to wholechild development or more interest-driven learning — and we need these.
Lacking them, we are reverting to what we have traditionally measured, which tends to focus exclusively on academic development in reading and mathematics.
To be clear, we are strong proponents of these foundational literacies, but we must also expand our view of success to further recognize the development of habits and skills that we have not historically emphasized.
Measuring and recognizing whether a school is supporting the broader development of all aspects of the whole child — social, academic, mental and physical — will be imperative as we evaluate the progress of individual learners and of our collective system.
The new target we are aiming for must include knowledge, habits and skills. Just as there are common-sense problems if we swing too far on the pendulum and ignore the critical nature of core knowledge, there are also legitimate hazards if we focus myopically on a narrow set of academic outcomes.
Now is the time to make the shift to a new and improved model of education for all learners.
To guide our efforts, instead of measuring our progress exclusively through tests, we should instead clearly articulate whole-child outcome frameworks through learner profiles (such as the one used by Logan County Schools in Kentucky) and then develop strategies that align with these aspirations. We need multiple tools that take into account student self-reflection, peer feedback and educator observations to support this move to learner-centered, whole-child education so that we avoid re-doing the onesize-fits-all approach that we know has not worked for all students.
This is a particularly acute need now when students are all coming to school from the pandemic gap back at different places in their learning depending on how much they learned through different learning experiences or lack thereof. We must find better ways to understand what each child knows and can do.
Just as students, families and teachers have adapted through the pandemic, it is time for our educational systems and structures to evolve as well.
Devin Vodicka is the CEO of Learner-Centered Collaborative and the author of LearnerCentered Leadership. Kim Smith is the founder and former CEO of NewSchools Venture Fund, Bellwether Education Partners and the Pahara Institute. Jen Holleran is a philanthropic adviser who brings an equity-based, learner-centered, whole-child vision to the future of learning and school design. Jean-Claude Brizard is the president and CEO of Digital Promise.