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News
Reconnecting the Generations:
New Charter School Attempts to Recreate Community
Aired October 5, 2000
The new reality of single-parent homes and latch-key
kids have slowly changed the traditional family structure. A child raised
in modern America often doesn't have the benefit of learning from the
experience of older siblings and grandparents. 90.3's David C. Barnett
reports that a new charter school in Cleveland is trying to recreate a
sense of community that seems to have been lost in contemporary society.
David C. BarnettEarley King lives a busy
life, but she says her grandchildren come first. As a custodian for five-year-old
Jordan and two-year-old Destiny, Mrs. King wants to make sure they have
as normal a childhood as possible. She says that's why she has enrolled
Jason in the Intergenerational School - a place that mixes old and young
in a common learning experience.
Earley KingThe village, raising the child.
Everybody has a hand in. To give support. To give that balance.
DCBThe Intergenerational School is housed
in a former residence on the campus of the Fairhill Center for Aging on
Cleveland's east side. Principal Cathy Whitehouse walks us over to a busy
group of students chattering away around several tables in one of the
back rooms.
Cathy WhitehouseThe thing that's interesting
about this classroom is that one would be hard pressed to look at this
group of students and identify the grade level. Which is exactly what
we want.
DCBThe children range in age from kindergarten
through second grade, but... you really can't tell who's who. Each of
the three tables has a different grade-level, with appropriate books spread
out in front of them. The room buzzes with a cacophony of kids that falls
silent as teacher Margie Snipes signals them with a clap of her hands.
Margie SnipesThank you. Is everybody ready?
Yellow table, you have enough copies? Okay, let's get busy. (Children
at her table start to recite passages from The Farm Concert --- "Moo moo
says the cow. Quack quack says the duck....")
DCBDuring the course of the day, some of
the older children act as mentors to the younger ones, helping out with
tougher words. Margie Snipes circulates among the tables, listening and
answering questions. The Intergenerational School is only a couple of
months old, with two full time teachers and about 30 students. School
officials say, gradually, that number will rise to about 100 and encompass
grades K-4. But the mix will also include adults over the age of 55 -
cited by social critics as a great untapped resource.
Mark FreedmanWe have the healthiest, most
vigorous, best educated population of older adults in the history of the
world that has essentially been squandered by keeping older adults out
of the central institutions of American life.
DCB Former Clevelander Mark Freedman is an
expert on the subject of mentoring and he contends that the aging of America
has the potential to renew our sense of community - reconstructing something
we've lost as families have changed.
MFIt's finding new ways to do old things
that used to happen naturally. That we assumed, like the oxygen in the
air, but have broken down. It's requiring a new level of creativity, and
the creation of new institutions like the Intergenerational School to
do that.
DCBAn institution that exists in the family-friendly
setting of an old house. Principal Cathy Whitehouse says that while the
school's quarters can be a bit tight, they also create an atmosphere that
is quite different from a traditional classroom.
CWAnd it's nice because, when people walk
in - I mean, so many people say, oh, it's so comfortable and homey-feeling.
It doesn't feel like a school. And that's exactly what we're trying to
get it to be. We don't want school to be different from what real life
feels like.
DCBEarley King watches the children playing
in the yard behind the Intergenerational Schoolhouse. Grandson Jason spots
her and runs up with a picture that he drew today. Mrs. King is happy
for places like this that are becoming part of the village that is raising
her custodial grandchild. But she is quick to point out that it is a two-way
exchange - the seniors also benefit from this interaction between young
and old.
EKThe joy that we sometimes forget when we
get busy with our regular everyday schedules. But, when you get a chance
to see a child smile or the joy that they get from you taking the time
out to hug them or spend time with them. The peace and the reassurance
that things are getting better, that this is a good world that we live
in. I think that's what the grandparents and the older people get from
the children. You know, sometimes we lose that as we grow older and get
busier.
DCBIn Cleveland, David C.Barnett, 90.3 WCPN® 90.3
FM.
Author Mark Freedman will be in town to discuss his
work with senior mentors at a conference called "Ageless Wisdom - Best
Practices in Intergenerational Learning". For more information you can
call 216-421-1350.
Suggested Websites
Mark Freedman's Mentoring Site:
Temple University's Center for Intergenerational Learning:
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