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Vitamins
Starting Strong: A Different Look at Children, Schools, and
Standards Patricia F. Carini. New York: Teachers College Press,
2001. 219 pp.
Betsy Wice
Frederick Douglass Elementary School, Philadelphia
The title comes from
a story told by Toni Morrison in her Nobel Prize Acceptance Speech.
Uppity children badger an older woman: "Is there no context
for our lives? No song, no literature, no poem full of vitamins,
no history connected to experience that you can pass along to
help us start strong?... You are an adult... Stop thinking about
saving your face. Think of our lives and tell us your particularized
world."
Carini's collection
of essays concerns itself with responsibility, what we adults
owe to the young generation. Throughout the volume, Carini makes
it clear which schools she envisions as the context for fulfilling
this responsibility. She emphatically does not restrict her discussion
to only some of America's schools, such as, only those which are
well-financed to serve a privileged elite. As Carini says (p.
145), "I, you, and humans everywhere have the capacity enacted
daily to make and remake, to work and rework, whatever there is
to work with." This "human capacity, widely distributed"
is a starting point for the ideas in this book. Starting with
humanity, the book starts strong.
The nine essays are
arranged in four parts, "On a Human Scale: Works, Lives,
Schools", "The Politics of Educating/the Politics of
Work," "Standards in the Making." "Generation/Regeneration."
Each essay is broken up with helpful subheadings, unobtrusive
signposts guiding the reader along the vector of thought. The
Index offers a way of entering the text across chapters (see such
headings as: Measurement, Democracy, Number, Fear, Description,
Desire). There are color plates from the Prospect Archive. There
is poetry from Karen Brodine, from Robert Frost, from William
Carlos Williams. Joseph Featherstone wrote the sassy introduction.
In 1964 I began my
years of teaching in public schools in Philadelphia neighborhoods.
I remember the buoyancy of that early start, riding a national
consensus that children of all backgrounds, in all parts of the
nation, could and should become members of the Great Society.
Though I was not aware of it at the time, those were also the
years when Prospect School was starting out in North Bennington,
Vermont. In that era, no one thought it strange that a small independent
school in rural Vermont was being called to work with city teachers
in Paterson, New Jersey, in the Bronx, in Philadelphia. We were
not saying, back then, that some children should be given progressive
education rich in developing possibilities while other children
should be handed over to private corporations for the cheapest
possible delivery of higher test scores.
Carini's personal involvement
in American public education intensified in the late 1980s and
'90s. The essays in Starting Strong are a product of that
work. They are based on talks Carini gave between 1989 and 1998.
The audiences were colleagues, teachers and parents Carini was
working with, in cities and towns such as Ithaca, Phoenix, Philadelphia,
New York, Chicago, Mamaroneck. Typically, Carini and these colleagues
would have been planning a one- or two-week institute, days filled
with reviews of children and of their works, days focused on the
details of classroom life, seminars of collegial discussion by
a group sitting in a circle, informed also by intense sessions
of classroom observation by Carini. That is one reason these essays
seem so embedded in the real world of real classrooms.
But the essays are also
embedded in a very large world of ideas. The list of References
at the back gives a feel for the breathtaking scope of Carini's
reading and thinking. Isaiah Berlin ends up sitting next to kindergarten
children from West Philadelphia; Goethe and Newton alongside a
four-year-old in a laundromat; Milan Kundera alongside Jenny from
Phoenix; Walt Whitman alongside pictures and poetry from Iris
(taken from nine years of her work collected in the Prospect Archive);
Pat Barker alongside a play yard in Ithaca. Large ideas inform
specific classroom events. The particularized classroom stories
inform the large ideas.
Carini's words, in these
essays, bring sustenance to teachers isolated in neglected city
neighborhoods. Our children are something other than the low-achieving,
poorly-taught Problems we hear politicians moan about. Our schools
carry value that is not appropriately expressed in numbers. Starting
Strong brings us back into a world where teaching and learning
are possible, a world of hope.
Betsy Wice is a teacher
at Frederick Douglass Elementary School in North Philadelphia,
and a member of the Philadelphia Teachers Learning Cooperative.
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