Interesting Question
I received a round of interview questions recently with regard to an assistant principal opening in another district. While most of the questions were pretty straightforward with regard to my opinions about the role of APs, discipline, management style, and such, the first question was extremely interesting. It was much more philosophical (the kinds of questions I love to grapple with for days, weeks, or even years….don’t get me started on Walter Brueggemann’s Israel’s Praise again).
The question asked for my ideas regarding the purpose of a public school education in the life of a middle school student. After writing my answer, I posed that question on my Facebook wall and asked my friends to give me their ideas. Their responses were somewhat close to my own in some ways.
Here is what I wrote:
Middle school is the most interesting part of education. Our school is grades 6 to 8, and it is really more three schools than just one. Students change so much in each year, so middle school has to take on several roles as well.
First, middle school is a time of exploration. Middle school students are exploring relationships, extra-curricular interests, academic strengths, boundaries put in place by anyone in authority, and a lot about themselves. Middle school should be a place where the exploration has meaning. Students learn how to act in society, how to be kind and giving (sometimes they learn this by experiencing the opposite), how to organize, study, and a host of other lessons aimed at making them more productive students and citizens.
Second, middle school is a time of preparation. The changes from self-contained classrooms to changing teachers every period, from cubbies to lockers, from no dress code to some form of dress code, and more, help students create a slow, deliberate readiness to life in high school and beyond. Middle school is a place that helps foster this readiness for life.
Third, middle school is a time of decision-making. Students begin to decide who they are in the world. They also decide if they like school or not or if they are good at it or not. Some research indicates many decide in middle school whether or not to even stay in school. As such, middle school takes on an even greater role in engaging students in academics (learning in general), exploring career choices (discovering what they like and what they are good at), socialization (how to treat others as well as deciding how they want to be treated), and aiding in the formulation of a beneficial world view (citizenship, family, friends, etc).
I would love for you to leave me some comments as to your own thoughts. What did I get wrong? What did I leave out? Or better yet, what did I get right?




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