Mission / Principles
Our Mission
Our students will be creative critical thinkers who employ multiple literacies and contribute to their surrounding communities.
Embedded in our mission are the following guiding principles. These principles are inherent in both how we will facilitate learning and why we believe educational experiences are essential for children and adults.
Our Guiding Principles
Community
- Martin Luther King Jr.
Humans are social by nature, and connected to one another through our interactions and the spaces we occupy. Our lives are interrelated through dependence on one another. Community is the manifestation of this dependence.
Our students will understand that, even as children, they are vital members of multiple communities and therefore have the opportunity and responsibility to contribute to them. By nurturing a sense of belonging to community and accepting a responsibility within it, we will foster an environment where students learn to become empowered members of society. From their classrooms to the expanding global community, students will develop their academic skills and a social consciousness by identifying community needs, proposing and mapping out innovative solutions, and putting realistic plans into practice.
In this sense, the community itself is also a classroom. Conscientious participation in our communities deepens the humanity of our students and all others in our school community.
Creativity
Critical Thinking
Critical thinking not only aids the acquisition of content-specific knowledge, but also is itself a valuable tool for understanding and altering the world in which we live. We will encourage reason, reflection, and questioning as powerful tools our students can use to examine their world.
Multiple Literacies
Too often, we are rendered mute in situations where the language being used is different from our language of origin, or the words are unfamiliar, or the speaker is of another age, gender, class, ethnicity, or value-set. Our students will learn to employ multiple literacies, empowering them to communicate across these dividing lines and communicate powerfully in a variety of exchanges, through a variety of media.
Posted on July 7th 2009