Jan 25 2009

Lifelong Learners…when, where, and how? Part 1

The only buildings built for ‘public’ activities that are more underused than schools are churches. In most communities many of these buildings could be open seven days a week if the ‘owners’ would take off the blinders of how these places have been traditionally used and let their vision expand.

It drove me up a tree to hear administrators say that we may have to cut back to a four day school week when the price of fuel was skyrocketing. In the face of that pain, throughout most of the communities in our country, the response should have been that we need to work our way to having our schools open seven days a week, not closing them an extra day. And, if needs be, convert some of our space to emergency shelters for folks who cannot keep their homes heated and buy and cook their food.

It did my heart good to see the worship services in our cafeteria when one of our local churches was damaged in a flood.

I am in school often on the weekends and here during the week often after most of my colleagues and students have left for the day. The feeling is the identical to the feeling I had in the churches I served in when I was a parish clergyman. I felt then and feel now as though we are squandering a tremendous resource: that we are not being good stewards of what we have been given to manage.

Our school now has Saturday Academy, Distance Learning, and expanded ’school day’ through the funding that comes through the 21st Century Grant. This is just the beginning. We should ultimately be doing so much more.

This is the beginning of our discussion of being lifelong learners.

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