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EduCrate, a portable classroom that can be delivered anywhere in
the world where there is a crisis in school buildings, grows out of our
mission to improve educational thinking resulting in greater learning
for all students. Our mission: SchoolWorks Lab, Inc. helps to bridge
the gaps between parents, teachers, researchers, administrators, and
policymakers by conducting and distributing research filled with common understandings, clear findings, and coherent Policy,
resulting in greater learning for all students. Our research work
turned up thousands of school sites that have been destroyed by natural
or man-made disasters. Our response was to invent a portable learning
environment to restore educational hope by providing a portable
classroom that delivers the power of learning to children who have lost
all hope of learning.
"I think all children
are incredible learners," says Rob Southworth, inventor of the portable
classroom called EduCrate. "I have dedicated my life's work to helping
create circumstances where children can learn. When we create or
restore learning environments that support success for every student,
we are harnessing the power of learning to improve our world. EduCrate
is one way that we can help make this possible for every child, in any
circumstance. We must give them the power to learn and the power to
make our world a better place." (February 13, 2007).
Jesús is a third grade student in Bronx, NY. Jesús is quiet, lives with
10 brothers and sisters in two rooms and does not do well on his first
standardized tests in an American Elementary School. His school teacher
vies for his attention and over the course of a year convinces him that
he is smart. This teacher’s assessment launches Jesús on an upward
trajectory of learning by alerting his mind to its own naturally
developing powers. These powers are a quantum leap above the
rote-memorizing and mind-numbing low-level of standardized,
pre-packaged and teacher-proof curriculum he has encountered.
I
And why can’t we do this for every Jesús? He has literally and
figuratively crawled up Bloom’s Taxonomy from some recall of facts to
knowledge of ideas, comprehension, application, analysis, synthesis and
evaluation. He has learned that his power to learn is actually
versatile, adaptable and flexible. He has learned that through another
human’s assessment of, and praise for what he can do he has made leaps
and bounds in learning." (December 15, 2006).
Jesús
is now fifteen and has spent some part of the last five summers with my
wife and our three children. My wife was his third grade teacher. Now
when I speak to him while painting our barn, his head comes up, his
eyes focus on me with genuine Inquiry, and he talks like someone who
has joined the upward path of an educated person who has found the
power of learning.
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