Archive for ‘Open Thinking’

Competition

Ned Hallowell

Parents often worry about competition in childhood. What does losing a game do to a child’s budding self-esteem? Does the pressure to get good grades in school do damage? If a child does his best and still gets a C+ or fails to make the team, does this scar him for life? Shouldn’t the enlightened school protect students from cutthroat competition? More...

Curiosity and Imagination

Ned Hallowell

What distinguishes a great education from a good and solid one is the extent to which the student’s curiosity and imagination flourish and grow and the extent to which a student remains curious and loves the life of the imagination after school is done. More...

The Purpose of Childhood

Ned Hallowell

I’ve spent my career talking to people about their inner lives, their hopes, their regrets, their entanglements, their harmonies and cacophonies, their pleasures and pains, their triumphs and disasters. What I’ve learned in talking to people—and in working with children and families—is that, despite the ruling paradigm of brain science and genetics, what happens to a person in childhood does matter. A lot. More...

The Gift of Hope

Ned Hallowell

One of the most helpful attitudes a child can develop growing up is an abiding, tough-minded faith that things will work out for the best no matter what, a fervent belief in life as a possibility rather than an impossibility, a reflexive tendency to recoil from disappointment with hope. More...

The Secret to Leading a Great Life

Ned Hallowell

Okay, with a title like that I better have something off-the-wall good or issue a disclaimer right off the bat. In fact, I have something off-the-wall good. More...

Jennifer Inniss on Physical Education

Jennifer Inniss Video
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In this short video interview, Jennifer Inniss, the director of athletics and physical education for Avenues: The World School, talks about the benefits of fully integrating PE into the core curriculum. Take a look and check back soon for more on PE at Avenues. More...

Developing a Vision of Greatness

Ned Hallowell

Alfred North Whitehead wrote, “There can be no moral education without an habitual vision of greatness.” One must first determine what is great before one can determine how to become great. I believe, and I know the people at Avenues believe, that the evolution of a child's vision of greatness is one of the most formative dramas of childhood.  More...

The Vision of Greatness

Ned Hallowell

In its mission statement, Avenues states its intent to graduate students who are “architects of lives that transcend the ordinary.” In other words, Avenues wants its students to achieve greatness. That’s what “transcend the ordinary” means. But what is greatness? More...

Building Birdcages

Ned Hallowell

In the last few blog posts, I’ve offered a five-step method I call the cycle of excellence, in counterpoise to the prevailing pyramid model, which currently perverts and corrupts education and childhood. The cycle of excellence is rooted in science and truth, while the pyramid model is rooted in fear and ignorance. If children are raised at home and at school in a connected culture, More...

Technology @ the Avenues Campus

Development of our technology program is well underway, with the hiring of almost all members of the technology team and the finalization of a number of decisions about technology. Technology team members include two Apple Distinguished Educators, innovators from More...