ABSTRACT

In A Pedagogical Design for Human Flourishing: Transforming Schools with the McCallister Model, Cynthia McCallister presents a revolutionary paradigm for education that is practical, conceptually convincing, and grounded in contemporary behavioral science theory. Beginning with the assertion that equality of educational opportunity depends on access to experiences that are sufficiently appropriate and rich to enable the achievement of diverse human potentials, she provides a comprehensive school design for intervention that demonstrates how to achieve it. Grounded in recent advances in learning science, McCallister asserts three necessary conditions for learning: the need for learners to have access to diverse, rich environmental experiences; the need for them to enjoy fundamental freedom and autonomy to direct their own learning; and access to full and free forms of association. In her model, these conditions provide what is necessary for learners to coordinate their minds with others to develop their identities, personalities, and talents. These conditions are animated in concrete procedures that can be adapted to a wide variety of populations in formal, informal, and remote educational settings. The procedures take the form of rules that learners comply with in the exercise of their freedom. When they are followed, the rules provide a grammar for the social norms that govern the moral worlds of learners and compel them to flourish. Tested over two decades in her work as a teacher, scholar, and school reformer in more than 20 NYC public schools, the McCallister Method has delivered an innovative and disruptive approach to schooling that has proven successful in finally transforming low-performing industrial schools into 21st-century learning organizations.

Online support material includes assessments, records, surveys, and more to be used in school design and classroom settings.

part Section I|74 pages

Background

chapter 21|22 pages

Schooling the Possible Self

Introduction to a Learner-centered Educational Model

chapter 2|17 pages

The Schools We Have

chapter 3|33 pages

A Positive Learning Paradigm

part Section II|54 pages

A Pedagogy for the Self

chapter 764|11 pages

The McCallister Method

Program Design

chapter 5|27 pages

Sparks

A Learner-facing Personalized Curriculum

chapter 6|14 pages

The Cultural Capital Curriculum

part Section III|102 pages

An Activity Curriculum: The Learning Cultures Formats

chapter 8|10 pages

Lessons

chapter 9|9 pages

The Learning Conference Format

chapter 10|5 pages

The Learning Share Format

chapter 11|7 pages

The Writing Conference Format

chapter 12|10 pages

The Writing Share Format

chapter 13|4 pages

The Pretend Play Format

chapter 14|18 pages

The Cooperative Unison Reading Format

chapter 15|11 pages

The Learning Teams Format

chapter 16|6 pages

The Integrative Math Format

chapter 17|6 pages

The Language Games Format

part Section IV|38 pages

The “We” Curriculum: Social Norms

chapter 23218|24 pages

Keepers of the Culture

The Social Norms Curriculum

part Section V|76 pages

The Ecosystem Curriculum

chapter 27020|30 pages

Whole-School Transformation

The Ecosystem Design

chapter 21|14 pages

The Assessment Program

chapter 22|8 pages

The Civil Rights Program

chapter 23|4 pages

The Community Education Program

chapter 24|5 pages

The Curriculum Program

chapter 25|3 pages

The School Culture Program

chapter 26|10 pages

The Training Program

part Section VI|79 pages

Existence Proof

chapter 34627|16 pages

There Are Learning Cultures

chapter 28|15 pages

Transforming a Large NYC High School

chapter 30|30 pages

The “Rise of the Phoenix”

chapter 31|6 pages

Conclusion

Shapes