a special feature the, Sunduy daily by nadine cohodas 4i Number 35 Night Editor: Jim Beattie Sunday, November 8, 1970 -0 Clonlara: Where a kid. .. can be a people . . . ON A TYPICAL day at Angell School nine- year old Tim DeRosia sat in his seat al- most all day. The only time he could get out was to go to recess and lunch, and if it were the right day, to gym, music or art class. Whether he wanted to or not, Tim had to do his one hour of math, his one hour of reading and writing when and how the teacher wanted him to. If he and his classmates were quiet and good, the teacher told them, they would get a treat at the end of the week. But at the end of the month, Tim says, there was no treat. Somebody always made too much noise or was bad and wrecked it for the whole bunch. Tim didn't like this set up. He was bored and discouraged. So his parents, Marlene and Jim DeRosia, enrolled him in Clonlara, a privately run nursery and elementary school. There are no typical days at Clonlara. Each one is different because each of the 30 kids who goes there feels different on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday. One day they all might sit for a full half day and do math. Another day might find them out in the yard building bird- houses or making forts out of the giant logs there. Still another might find them back in one of the work rooms having a science hour to unearth a problem one of them has been puzzling with. Or they might be making collages from magazines and con- struction paper, or decorating Indian tom- toms that were once gallon ice cream con- tainers. 1rH AT STARTED Clonlara was the con- cern of two parents, Pat and Jim Montgomery, for their children as they started their formal education. The Mont- gomerys were anxious for their kids to avoid the kind of experience Tim had. Pat knew his was real. She has been a school teacher for 18 years - eight of those in a convent, and, she says, "I knew what it was I had left. I didn't want my children to go into that - not into a situation where they would be mistrusted." So, in October, 1967, the Montgomerys plunked down a $4,000 payment on a piece of land just off Industrial Highway on Jewett and set up a viable alternative to public education in Ann Arbor. It started as a nursery school and expanded to a certified elementary school in September, 1969. Pat and University graduate Steve Sand- ler do the bulk of the teaching for the elementary school students. They get help from University and Eastern Michigan University student volunteers and from Jim Montgomery who is the secretary-treasurer of the school. Pat does not mince words in expressing her views about public school education, and her elucidation of what she dislikes at the same time reveals much of what Clonlara is about..I "Public schools can be a waste of time," she bluntly says. "It is a waste of time for kids to be with people who don't trust them." Consequently, at Clonlara great emphasis is put on the child's ability to make valuable and correct decisions for himself in terms of what he would like to do each day and what he would like to learn., "YOU HAVE to respect the child's individ- ual feelings-what he wants," she main- tains. "And you have to have an enormous amount of faith in kids." The method of operating schools now, Pat adds, is ground- ed in the theory that "if we don't train children they will not grow up right and will veer from the right path. "But allow a child to discover for himself Making pretty things the way to go," Pat contends, "and he will never veer." All of this philosophy is transformed into fact at Clonlara. Classes take place wherever they happen to develop-in the yard build- ing a birdhouse with Steve, in one of the workrooms clustered around a table making wax collages from candle drippings, in the music room singing. around the piano, in another room at the math table, at a rock quarry in the area, in downtown Ann Arbor, at the University's philharmonia rehearsal and almost any other place where the chil- drens' interests lie. And learning-the mastery of the skills we've all been taught to hold dear like read- ing 'riting and 'rithmetic-does take place. Only it takes place in an atmosphere of exuberance and creativity. The kids pick up math, for example, through the use of Cui- sinaire rods and Montessori counting beads. The rods are graded by colors and the colors make up families of different size rods. When the kids want to learn to read, they learn .the words "out of their head," Pat says, "none of the Dick and Jane stuff." They tell Pat or Steve a word they would like to know and then either one of them writes it down and the kids learn it. Writing works much the same way. Friday the group was sending letters to Steve who had been sick. They were busily printing up their messages as best they could with help from Pat, because prior to that time, she says, half the kids didn't know how to write. But they learned. some of it Friday through their desire to send a letter. And one is confident that this new knowledge will stick with the kids much longer than it would, had they been taught it through an educational super structure that said, "Today is Friday-it's time to learn how to write, like it or not." 1jHIS IS the type of education that drives people like Steve out of the public school system "I was very disillusioned with the kind of education I had had," he says. "I wanted to teach but didn't know what set- ting I'd be comfortable in. I heard about this place and started to volunteer." When one of the regulars became ill in May, Steve filled in full time and has con- tinued ever since. This kind of devotion to the ideas Clon- lara espouses is not unique. Many books have been written about the concept of open education and many schools have tried to achieve it. Clonlara's philosophy likewise is in good company among the education world. Educator John Holt, for example, in "How Children Fail," offers some views that are remarkably similar to those expressed and implemented at the Ann Arbor school. Near the end of the book Holt says: "It is not the subject matter that makes some learning more valuable than others, but the spirit in which the work is done. A child who is learning naturally, following his curiosity where it leads him, adding to his mental model of reality whatever he needs and can find a place for, rejecting without fear or guilt what he does not need, is growing in knowledge, in the love of learning and in the ability to learn." Despite affirmations from Holt and other notable educational innovators like A. S. Neill of Summerhill, the concept and reality of Clonlara is foreign and frightening to more traditionally minded people. They are the ones, as Pat notes, who basically mis- trust children and who fail to see them as small human beings who are separate en- tities and who are entitled to develop along the lines of their interests and needs. t "LONLARA REALLY goes beyond being simply an educational institution where children learn FACTS in an open environ- ment. It becomes instead a way of living and looking at the world. It is both a posi- tive and sensitive way-positive in that it sees people - grown ups and children in terms of what they are able to do. And it assumes they can and will do. Sensitive in terms of each person understanding first himself and then understanding and accept- ing others for what they are and wish to be. These ideals inevitably lead people to believe that everyone runs wild at Clonlara, that, like the title of the recently popular song, "Express Yourself" is the prime ideal -no matter where, with whom and how that expressing is done. Both Pat and Steve can easily correct this error in perceiving what open education is all about. "Some people think permissiveness is what the school is about," Pat says, "and it de- cidely is not. Permissive-that means a cer- tain letting go, a certain not caring about what the child does. The idea of school is to do what I understand is the child's level of development. "What you always want to remember about a school like this is that there are not times when no one has control," Pat em- phasizes. "That would be like chaos, utter chaos, no direction of any kind." INEVITABLY, A situation such as Clonlara involves not only the children but their parents as well. And sometimes the parents, whether they realize it or not, do not fully understand and embrace what the school and they are doing. Many times a disparity exists between the way the child is treated at school-as a person with the ability to make his own decisions-and at home where he is strictly governed, the implication being that he is unable to make his own decisions however small they may be. This, Steve explains, is a very trying and unhealthy predicament for the child. "The child is caught between two different life situations. In one," Steve says, "there is a certain set of authority figures, certain things a child can say and what he can't. Then he is in this (Clonlara) atmosphere for five, six, seven hours a day where that is broken down. He ends up going from one to the other, one to the other-the kid consequently grows up filled with so much confusion and hostility. "In the morning when he gets to school he's angry and frustrated," Steve adds. "By the end of the day he's calmed down and then he goes back to the hostility at home." Pat and Steve attempt to remedy this as much as possible. The first step, of course, is trying to select kids who come from homes where the philosophy of Clonlara is accepted and encouraged. "We don't like to accept children of parents who just want to get their kids out of the house for the whole day," she says. BUT PAT admits that the degree of com- mitment to the school varies with each family. Regardless of the commitment, though, both Pat and Steve agree that it is "in- cumbent upon the school to maintain close relationships with the parents and kids." This takes place through workshops where the parents get together at the school and discuss what goes on there and at home. Most parents of Clonlara kids seem to genuinely believe in the school, evidenced by the large number of kids who are in their second, third or fourth year there. Virginia Thomas says she sent her son to Clonlara "the day it began. People say public school is supposed to prepare a child for life, but I don't feel it did that for me- why subject my child to that?" she asks. "For Parky (her six-year old son) Clon- lara is good," Thomas adds. "It may not be for every child. My daughter starts next fall-she'll be three," she adds. "Parky is more relaxed and secure than most kids," his mother believes. "He knows what he's about. He's gone through a divorce if they don't want to be shown no matter how those parents try. It comes from the inside out. "If you don't allow children to recognize themselves as loveable human beings," she warns, "then you have denied them the most essential thing in their lives. You can give them all the clothes you want . . . and it's not going to work." Steve speaks to this point on a somewhat more day to day basis. "We're not letting kids run around without limits," he says. "We're giving them limits that are based on reason, a reasonable sense of what a child can do and what is harmful to other people. "We don't let a child run free to harm himself physically, emotionally," Steve ex- plains. "We're not going to let a child crack his head against the wall or throw a tantrum until he's sick." PARKY THOMAS is a six-year old Clonlara nursery school graduate who moved into the elementary school section. He is a whizz at math, already up to fractions. But he can't read, apparently because he isn't interested. This does not mean, however, that he will go through life able to communicate only through quotients and products. He will learn to read when he is ready and that day seems to be rapidly approaching. About two weeks ago the following conversation ensued between Pat and Parky. "Pat," Parky said, "I'm mad at you cause you didn't teach me to read." "Did you come to reading class," Pat asked. "No," he admitted, "I was too busy." "What were you doing?" "I was building birdhouses." "Well," Pat told him, "if you can take time out to come to the class I'll teach you." "What will you teach me?" Parky asked. "What do you want to know?" Pat asked. "Everything." with no side effects-unless they show up later," she adds. "I don't think he would have been as secure if it were not for the school." LIKEWISE, Richard Venus who has two children enrolled in Clonlara, is tre- mendously pleased with the experience his children are having. "Wow," he says, "my kids like to go to school." Venus says he sent them there for both positive and nega- tive reasons. "Positively," he explains, "we think the free school education is impor- tant. Kids ought to be allowed to make choices. It's free versus repressive learning." "That's the negative part. We think that public schools are in the main repressive. They do two things: One, they build kids into the system which seems to be going nowhere. Two, they hinder the child's own growth and development." Some parents-some whose kids are at Clonlara, and some who shy away from the idea of open education, cannot totally ac- cept Clonlara's philosophy. One of their main difficulties seems to be overcoming that long held view that children cannot make wise decisions for and about them- selves. Children need limits, they say, to preserve themselves. They need to be taken care of so they won't harm themselves or others. While this is in large part true - a small human being cannot cook his own food and drive himself to work or get a job - Pat and Steve can provide explanations for why these parents' fears can and should be alleviated. "People are always more aware of the physical needs of kids and that is sad be- cause in our day and age the physical needs - and I'm not including the ghetto - are more attended than they've ever been," Pat says. "If people were as concerned about the psychological development of children as they are about the physical development, we'd have a lot fewer kids running away from home, a lot fewer kids on drugs, a lot fewer kids not knowing themselves. Contrary to what many of us might think, more problems arise from the child "who will not come out" than from the exces- sively active one. The quieter one "will not let himself be known," Pat says. "He does not trust adults because he has been taught adults are not to be trusted." A child like this, Pat says, "withdraws into himself" and is very difficult to know. "In fact," she says, "there's a 'no entrance' sign across his face. "Nobody's going to push him to come out," Pat adds. But eventually that child will come out of himself because he wants to. "HERE'S WHERE love comes in," Pat says. "Here where because we're all human together he might gradually show himself because he learns that unlike other adults he has known these, here, are to be trusted." And eventually, the withdrawn child can learn to know and trust the other children and himself because he interacts with them all day long at school. "It's the best training for life," Pat says. "They have to work out inter-kid problems among themselves." To accomplish this the kids have meetings such as the one two weeks ago to set policy on keeping inside equipment like the mag- nifying glass inside rather than letting it sit out in the yard where it may rust. Or they have small discussions about their own behavior. If somebody is hitting some- body else, Pat says, that child will say, "Hey, stop punching me." And hopefully the hitter will realize that hitting someone else is not a good thing to do. This kind of interaction is geared to let children find out for themselves who and what they are and how that fits in with what everyone else is. In fact this concept came to the surface Thursday after an in- fomal meeting suddenly occurred at a table in one of the work rooms. The kids were discussing their educa- tioinal experiences to date and how Clonlara was different than other systems they had known. During the meeting they all decided, as one of the children stated, that "the biggest thing you have to do at Clonlara is to care for other people." This doesn't manifest itself every minute of every school day, of course. There are squabbles and frustrations that arise. But these are worked out by the kids them- selves or with the help of Pat and Steve when it is needed. Neither teacher sees these kinds of prob- lems asthe crucial ones. One important one exists, however, stemming from the energy andcreativity of the children. This is the problem of finding resources for the school. "If a child can pick and choose what he wants, you have got to have an enormous amount from which he can pick and choose," Pat explains. "You need equipment of all kinds-audio visual aids, things he can make himself, things that are made for him, things that we make together. "Your community is your greatest re- source." Pat contends. "You've got to know that when we're talking about rocks, there are two places in this community where you could take that child to get those rocks. Now if you're unaware of these things you're a lousy teacher." BUT PAT and Steve indeed are not. And their efforts have proven successful. The school is now in its fourth year-two and a half years longer than the life expectancy of most open education schools, Pat says. The only other major effort in the area recently, Children's Community School, fold- ed in 1968 as a result of financial difficul- ties and lack of a viable building. Pat has a theory on why Clonlara has lasted when something like Children's Com- munity has not. "People who are responsible for beginning Clonlara are not transient," she says. "They expect to say in a situation - they do not expect to be like college students-in town and then leave. You have to have people who are going to be. pillars and stay for a while. It helps also for them to have chil- dren," she says, "because then they have a real vested interest. They're willing to put themselves on the line financially." Getting down to what Pat calls the "real fine points," she admits that keeping politics out of Clonlara has alleviated some of the difficulties that plagued Children's Com- munity, run for a time by the late Diana Oughton and now Weatherman Bill Ayers. "We don't wear our politics out loud be- cause it doesn't show well through the eyes of a three year-old," Pat says. "They can't be caught up in political things, but their- parents certainly can and should and must. But that's if you're working in another ball park." Having your own place Pat characterizes as essential. "Look how our school is left day after day-we couldn't have this ready for church on Sunday. We couldn't have any people coming here using it for meet- ings. We can't worry every minute if the plate glass window gets broken." AND IF IT DOES, it will be repaired prob- ably by the kids themselves so the school will be ready for another day, another year. Current plans call for the expansion of the school to two different buildings, the pres- en one on Jewett and another that doesn't wi 41 A- of 4 ._: ;: se am I