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What New Forms of Education Are Emerging?


Key Shared Insights & Perspectives


What is essential to learn in life?


Heather MacTaggart starts by describing the role of education as an avenue to acquire “the ability to think, collaborate, solve problems and make decisions.” Kristen Simonson adds, “knowing who you are” as another essential learning in a world where we have lost our sense of connection. Finally, Max reminds us that “adaptability” is an essential skill to thrive in a world of profound change and constant disruption.


What behaviors do we traditionally learn at school, aside from academic content?


This question can be answered from two perspectives: students and teachers.


Student Behaviors

The panelists agreed that our current system is teaching poor behaviors such as conformity while confidence and critical thinking are lacking in most classrooms. As a consequence, the panelists have witnessed that kids who don’t take “no” for an answer are tagged as troublemakers, but later become the most successful in life.


Teacher Behaviors

The role of teachers is being challenged and, as a result, it is evolving from the person standing in front of the class to a facilitator. Kristen Simonson shares her experience as she embraces her new role as facilitator.


Max challenges us with the idea of “Adult Privilege,'' a self-imposed right to exert our power over others - which is responsible for long-term turbulent relationships with our children and in society as a whole.

Three New Educational Initiatives


When Responsibility Leads to Creation

TMaxRD (Talent Maximization Research and Development)

TMaxRD is a learning method designed to stimulate creativity, problem solving and innovative thinking. As a project-based learning approach, the program is student-centered, so they acquire a deeper knowledge through active exploration of real-world challenges and problems. Located in Canada, the program offers free-range thinking for young minds and gives kids responsibility to see what they can accomplish under real world conditions. The benefits include increased creativity and self confidence. TMaxRD is currently looking for new facility space and donations from communities.


Reconnecting with Mother Earth

The Sage Prairie School

Sage Creek School offers a series of new programs designed to reconnect children with the wild and outdoor spaces. It has four onsite outdoor spaces for ages ranging from 2 to 10 years old; an early years free play zone, a permanent outdoor classroom space and fire circle, a rugged space at our "beyond classroom" coulee site, and a brand new food forest. The school celebrates the past and present connections to the land and what it can teach children and kids about food security, balance, survival, and resilience. Adventures are planned and led by dedicated and experienced nature lovers. Using a mix of biology, environmental science, outdoor education, Forest School Principles, and a whole lot of fun, they make it possible for students to establish lasting connections with the outdoors.


Building a Community of Parents & Educators

Unschooling School

The Unschooling School is a volunteer group of educators, parents and students fervently supporting public education, but with a core belief that it is time for a radical rearrangement to the structure of 'school.'

The team teaches and provides resources to help schools let go of top-down structures and coercive practices and trust children, who are biologically driven through play, curiosity, and exploration, to educate themselves. The team advocates the support of students to become Free Learners by selecting the classes, tools, resources, and support which work for them, leading schools to operate more like community centres and libraries and less like schools. Unschooling School is looking for open-minded, forward-thinking schools to create authentic demonstration projects and show that a fully self-directed education model can work in the public system.

Final Thoughts to Consider


The pandemic gave us a chance to reflect on our education system's obsolete processes and methodologies. Based on the Industrial Revolution, our current system focuses on IQ in a one-size-fits-all model to “produce citizens ready to take part in employment processes that are destructive to the environment we live within” - as Nora Bateson pointed out during Pass the Mic Episode #22, “Is Disruption the New Normal For Education?”


As a result, many people feel an urgency to find alternative educational models. A diversity of initiatives is essential to create critical thinking and diverse programs bring momentum, like a snowball effect, that is revolutionizing our education system.


The panel agreed on a few game-changing ideas and practices:


First, recognizing that there are multiple types of intelligence and each helps create a diversity of talents which benefits the world. Max Noble leaves us with a profound truth that we must remember.

When it comes to problem solving, diversity of thoughts and approach will always trump intelligence and knowledge.”

Second, rethinking our power and adult privilege requires us to trust ourselves and our children.

By letting go of our fears and habits, we’ll get out of the way and let kids learn through play, which is both a natural way of learning and of being.

Third, using language to trigger curiosity. Calling ourselves ‘Evil Genius’ and ‘Super Wizard’ instead of ‘Teacher,’ is a game changer - as it shifts our perception of our roles and responsibilities and others’ expectations.


Connect today with the speakers to change the system: Kristen Simonson, Max Noble and Heather McTaggart.


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