|
Beacon has been
recognized for it's unique approach to education through a number
of publications including CNN and TIME, and recently interviewed
by Dr. Beth Halbert for Women's Radio.
Click
here to listen to Thelma's recent radio interview with Dr. Beth
Halbert, Host of Bridging the Parent/Teen Communication Gap.
Read the article
on CNN.com called, Educators close book on homework which
highlights Beacon Day School and its unique approach to homework
at the Elementary level.

OAKLAND,
California (CNN) -- It seems like a child's wild fantasy. But it's
a fact at Oakland's Beacon Day School: Homework doesn't exist for
students in the lower grades.
The private
school just doesn't believe in it, saying younger children aren't
developed enough to benefit from it or have the discipline to study
for long periods.
Continue
reading on CNN site....
Read
excerpt on Beacon Day School Site...
Read the archived
article on TIME which highlights Beacon Day School's no homework
policy called All Schoolwork but No Homework By ANDREW GOLDSTEIN

The beach
is a mile away, the July sun is shining. But at Beacon Day School
in Oakland, Calif., it's the 212th day of classes (only 28 to go
before the one-week summer break!), and a group of nine- and ten-year-olds
is struggling through a spelling test on parts of the body--lungs,
heart, stomach, brain. The afternoon math lesson isn't any easier:
How many times does 6 go into 8,342? You might think these were
18th century Puritans. But the kids are all smiles. "School is really
fun," says precocious Annie Marcuzzo. "Camps are boring."
Read
on TIME site...
Read
excerpt on Beacon Day School Site...
U.S.
Government Report
A school
year that never really ends. At Beacon Day School in Oakland, California,
the school year never really ends. At this private elementary school,
the school day is over ten hours long. There is no set vacation
period. Parents plan vacations to fit family needs. Students work
in teams by achievement level, not age. Letter grades are unknown
and students spend six to eight hours a week on art, music, dance,
drama, or martial arts. "There's no summer vacation, so there's
extra time to learn," 10-year old Colin Gage told the Commission.
Thelma Farley
and Leslie Medine founded this award-winning school over a decade
ago as a fundamental alternative to traditional notions of schooling.
"We knew that what was going on in most schools was absolutely wrong,"
says Medine. "Nothing about the way schools were run had anything
to do with the ways kids learn." This philosophy explains why Beacon
kids are not scolded for getting up to stretch while the teacher
talks or for sitting on the floor to study. It also explains why
teachers eat lunch with the students and recess is five times longer
than in most public schools.
Continue
reading on Government site....
Read
excerpt on Beacon Day School Site...
|