It is seductive to give ourselves permission to see bad things happening in the world and give ourselves the cold comfort of thinking, “but that is over there.” “Over there” is somewhere else. It is not where we are, and while we may care deeply, sympathize, it remains not where we are. It doesn’t seem to impact us noticeably more on a day-to-day basis than it did yesterday.
This is a false comfort. For a small industry that uses the word “ecosystem” a lot, educators should recognize their fallacy. When the strongest brands in education globally, such as Harvard and Columbia, are under pressure to drift from their core convictions, all mission-driven educational institutions are under the same threat. And yet the components of that ecosystem barely recognize their dependence on each other.
There is an unhelpful distance that exists between conversations regarding the challenges facing K-12 education, higher education, and graduate/professional education. While each represents its silo, many of the topics are the same: financial sustainability, ascendant student mental health issues, socio-political polarization, curricular preservation versus innovation, and more. Yet, the dialogue that exists between different arenas of educational leadership is stilted and often takes place, if at all, only tangentially to the actual decision-making within each area.
The different arenas of education may share some limited vocabulary; they may struggle against similarly recalcitrant issues, yet, they don’t share, and perhaps more poignantly, they are not prepared to hear ideas, answers and approaches that come from beyond our silo. Why?
Several answers come quickly to mind:
My premise, however, is this: to create sustainable models and to best serve students, various educational institutions must find ways to create dialogue between all areas of education—public, independent, and higher, and they must put it at the center of their efforts to create positive change.
While there are differences and nuances in each arena, they must bring to the center what they share in common. They must seek synthesis and connective tissue so that they can move forward in ways that make sense comprehensively in a student’s education. Remember: an individual student has an experience as a student that goes from early childhood to graduation from high school, college, or graduate school. To that student, connection and continuity matter.
Given the powerful and threatening tides that face education, the clock is ticking to meet the challenges and opportunities ahead.
Some questions: