Does the learning of LCES students today look the same as
your recollection of your elementary school years?
I’ve noticed in my career as an educator that things in
schools are constantly changing. This happens as we understand more about how
students learn, how their brain and body work together as they explore God’s
world, how technology and culture shape them, and how the social nature of a
school learning environment both helps and challenges them. We dedicate
ourselves to figuring out which learning methods work best for each student. Even
the basic recognition that all of our students learn differently is a very different
starting point than the education that typified many of their
great-grandparents.
Learning happens in a relational context. An excellent
example of this is easily noted by observing our Educational Assistants. We are
grateful to have three of them (Ms. Bruinsma, Ms. Dykstra, Ms. Moniz) whose
presence in our building affirms what we think about learning. They move
throughout the entire school connecting with nearly every grade in some way.
They are an extra set of hands to help with many tasks, but they do much more
than that. Sometimes they are working with one student, other times with a
small group, or perhaps the entire class. In some cases they have relationships
that span many years, and as result have a wider understanding of students as
learners than the current teacher since they move from one grade to the next. This
enables them to watch the learning tasks and goals of the classroom and adapt,
substitute, or extend them meaningfully for students who need something else.
They can expand the variety of learning methods available to achieve the same
understanding for all our students. Their presence in classrooms gives
direction and affirmation to all of our learners.
I’m thankful for an educational home for our students that
continues to adapt in order to create opportunities for great learning with the
resources it has available. Join me in praying for wisdom in that pursuit as we
aim “to educate children, equipping them for a life of faithful, Christian
discipleship.”
SJ