High school is one of the most stressful times in
the life of the average American teenager. You're being told the rest of your
life depends on the decisions you make when you're not even an adult yet.
Simultaneously being pressured to perform at your peak academic ability and
still maintain an active social and extracurricular life outside of the
classroom, students need school to be a relaxing and creatively stimulating
place. If given the time and money to "redecorate" St. Mark's I would
provide students for places to be comfortable and efficient. Like Graham Hill
says in his TED talk "Less Stuff, More Happiness" we need to
consolidate our lives. Straight board wooden desks would be replaced by
ergonomically designed chairs with ample writing space and leg room for those
tall kids ;). Text books would be swapped out in favor of laptops, not iPads,
where students can research on the web and type notes quickly in the middle of
class. Smart boards would take the place of whiteboards, automatically saving
teacher's notes and posting them on mySMHS. With enough space to let creativity
flow students' time would be better put to use. However, school is still
school, and everyone needs a break once in a while. Lunch periods, now less
than half an hour long, would be lengthened to provide students with enough
time to eat and hang out with friends (social interaction leads to better
people skills and is key in healthy brain development in young adults). While
all this lounging around is great, students, inevitably, would take advantage
of their extra flexibility and misuse their teacher's time. In order to keep
students listening, lessons would be more interactive, engaging the students in
more enjoyable ways to learn. Pictures, videos, and live action would keep the
student involved and is preferred over bland notes on a centuries old power
point. The teaching/learning relationship between educator and student is only
possible when the student WANTS to learn. These changes would provide enough
downtime and relaxation that students no longer dread going to class. They
welcome the change in environment and are eager to participate in studies.
School should be a place where students go with the intention and ambition of
learning something new every day. Without an environment stimulating learning
and academic growth, we might as well be, as the great Jack Baldino says,
"cavemen eating mud."
Maybe we still need recess.
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