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      Where Principles Come First

       昵稱4267701 2010-10-29
                                                            Where Principles Come First

      The Hyde School operates on the principle that if you teach students the merit of such values as 
      truth, courage, integrity, leadership, curiosity and concern, then academic achievement naturally 
      follows. Hyde School founder Joseph Gauld claims success with the program at the $18,000-a-year 
      high school in Bath, Maine, which has received considerable publicity for its work with troubled 
      youngsters. 
      "We don't see ourselves as a school for a type of kid," says Malcolm Gauld, Joseph's son, who 
      graduated from Hyde and is now headmaster. "We see ourselves as preparing kids for a way of life — 
      by cultivating a comprehensive set of principles that can affect all kids." 
      Now, Joe Gauld is trying to spread his controversial Character First idea to public, inner-city schools 
      willing to use the tax dollars spent on the traditional program for the new approach. The first Hyde 
      public school program opened in September 1992. Within months the program was suspended. 
      Teachers protested the program's demands and the strain associated with more intense work. 
      This fall, the Hyde Foundation is scheduled to begin a preliminary public school program in 
      Baltimore. Teachers will be trained to later work throughout the entire Baltimore system. Other US 
      school managers are eyeing the program, too. Last fall, the Hyde Foundation opened a magnet program 
      within a public high school in the suburbs of New Haven, Connecticut, over parents' protests. The 
      community feared the school would attract inner-city minority and troubled students. 
      As in Maine the quest for truth is also widespread at the school in Connecticut. In one English class, 
      the 11 students spend the last five minutes in an energetic exchange evaluating their class performance 
      for the day on a 1-10 scale. 
      "I get a 10." 
      "I challenge that. You didn't do either your grammar or your spelling homework." 
      "OK, a seven." 
      "You ought to get a six." 
      "Wait, I put my best effort forth here." 
      "Yeah, but you didn't ask questions today." 
      Explaining his approach to education, Joe Gauld says the conventional education system cannot be 
      reformed. He notes "no amount of change" with the horse and carriage "will produce an automobile". 
      The Hyde School assumes "every human being has a unique potential" that is based on character, not 
      intelligence or wealth. Conscience and hard work are valued. Success is measured by growth, not 
      academic achievement. Students are required to take responsibility for each other. To avoid the 
      controversy of other character programs used in US schools, Gauld says the concept of doing your best 
      has nothing to do with forcing the students to accept a particular set of morals or religious values. 
      The Hyde curriculum is similar to conventional schools that provide preparation for college, complete 
      with English, history, math and science. But all students are required to take performing arts and 
      sports, and provide a community service. For each course, students get a grade for academic 
      achievement and for "best effort". At Bath, 97% of the graduates attend four-year colleges. 
      Commitment among parents is a key ingredient in the Hyde mixture. For the student to gain 
      admission, parents also must agree to accept and demonstrate the school's philosophies and outlook. 
      The parents agree in writing to meet monthly in one of 20 regional groups, go to a yearly three-day 
      regional retreat, and spend at least three times a year in workshops, discussion groups and seminars at 
      Bath. Parents of Maine students have an attendance rate of 95% in the many sessions. Joe and Malcolm 
      Gauld both say children tend to do their utmost when they see their parents making similar efforts. 
      The biggest obstacle for many parents, they say, is to realize their own weaknesses. 
      The process for public school parents is still being worked out, with a lot more difficulty because it is 
      difficult to convince parents that it is worthwhile for them to participate. Of the 100 students enrolled 
      in New Haven, about 30% of the parents attend special meetings. The low attendance is in spite of 
      commitments they made at the outset of the program when Hyde officials interviewed 300 families. 
      Once the problems are worked out, Hyde should work well in public schools, says a teacher at Bath 
      who taught for 14 years in public schools. He is optimistic that once parents make a commitment to the 
      program, they will be daily role models for their children, unlike parents whose children are in boarding 
      schools. 
      One former inner-city high school teacher who now works in the New Haven program, says teachers 
      also benefit. "Here we really begin to focus on having a fruitful relationship with each student. Our focus 
      is really about teacher to student and then we together deal with the…academics. In the traditional 
      high school setting, it's teacher to the material and then to the student." The teacher-student 
      relationship is taken even further at Hyde. Faculty evaluations are conducted by the students. 
      Jimmy DiBattista, 19, is amazed he will graduate this May from the Bath campus and plans to attend 
      a university. Years ago, he had seen his future as "jail, not college". 
      DiBattista remembers his first days at Hyde. 
      "When I came here, I insulted and cursed everybody. Every other school was, 'Get out, we don't 
      want to deal with you. 'I came here and they said, 'We kind of like that spirit. We don't like it with the 
      negative attitudes. We want to turn that spirit positive.'"

      品德至上/Where Principles Come First


          海德中學(xué)的辦學(xué)宗旨是:如果你向?qū)W生傳授諸如誠(chéng)實(shí)、勇敢、正直、領(lǐng)導(dǎo)能力、好奇心和關(guān)心他人等美德的話,學(xué)生的學(xué)習(xí)成績(jī)自然就會(huì)提高。該校的創(chuàng)始人約瑟夫·高爾德聲稱學(xué)校的教學(xué)計(jì)劃很成功。 海德中學(xué)坐落在緬因州巴思市,每年的學(xué)費(fèi)高達(dá)1.8萬(wàn)美元,因其教導(dǎo)問(wèn)題少年有方而遐邇聞名。 
          "我們并不把自己看作一所專為某一類孩子而開設(shè)的學(xué)校,"馬爾科姆·高爾德說(shuō)。他是約瑟夫的兒子,畢業(yè)于海德中學(xué),現(xiàn)任海德中學(xué)校長(zhǎng)。" 我們把幫助孩子培養(yǎng)一種生活方式看作自己的職責(zé),辦法是倡導(dǎo)一整套能影響所有孩子的價(jià)值觀念。" 
          現(xiàn)在,喬·高爾德(約瑟夫·高爾德)正試圖將他尚有爭(zhēng)議的"品德第一"的理念向市中心貧民區(qū)的公立學(xué)校推廣。這些學(xué)校愿將用于傳統(tǒng)教學(xué)計(jì)劃的稅金用于實(shí)施這一新的教學(xué)方法。 第一個(gè)海德公立學(xué)校教學(xué)計(jì)劃始于1992年9月。 但幾個(gè)月后,該計(jì)劃即告暫停。 教師們對(duì)教學(xué)計(jì)劃的過(guò)高要求以及高強(qiáng)度工作所帶來(lái)的壓力表示抗議。 
          今年秋天,海德基金會(huì)計(jì)劃在巴爾的摩啟動(dòng)公立學(xué)校預(yù)備教學(xué)計(jì)劃。 教師要接受培訓(xùn),以便今后能在整個(gè)巴爾的摩體系內(nèi)勝任工作。 美國(guó)其他學(xué)校的領(lǐng)導(dǎo)們也在關(guān)注這個(gè)教學(xué)計(jì)劃。 去年秋天,在家長(zhǎng)的一片抗議聲中,海德基金會(huì)在康涅狄格州紐黑文市郊區(qū)的一所中學(xué)內(nèi)啟動(dòng)了一個(gè)引人注目的教學(xué)計(jì)劃。 當(dāng)?shù)鼐用駬?dān)心該??赡苷羞M(jìn)來(lái)市中心貧民區(qū)的少數(shù)民族學(xué)生和問(wèn)題學(xué)生。 
          就像在緬因州那樣,求真也在康涅狄格州的這所中學(xué)得到廣泛推崇。 在一堂英語(yǔ)課上,11名學(xué)生用最后的五分鐘展開激烈的討論,依照1-10的評(píng)分標(biāo)準(zhǔn)相互評(píng)價(jià)他們當(dāng)天的課堂表現(xiàn)。 
          "我得10分。" 
          "我有意見,你沒做語(yǔ)法作業(yè),也沒有做拼寫練習(xí)。" 
          "那好,就7分吧。" 
          "你只能得6分。" 
          "等等,我可是全力以赴的。" 
          "是的,可你今天沒提問(wèn)。" 
          在解釋自己的教育方法時(shí),喬·高爾德指出,傳統(tǒng)的教育體制不能只是改革。 他說(shuō)"無(wú)論怎樣改革",馬和馬車"都改革不出汽車" 。 海德中學(xué)認(rèn)為"每一個(gè)人都有自己的獨(dú)特潛能",這種潛能的基礎(chǔ)是品格而不是智力或財(cái)富。 良知和苦干受到推崇。 成功是由成長(zhǎng)來(lái)衡量,而不是由學(xué)習(xí)成績(jī)來(lái)評(píng)定。 學(xué)生必須相互負(fù)責(zé)。 為了避免美國(guó)中學(xué)使用的其他品格培養(yǎng)方案所引發(fā)的爭(zhēng)議,高爾德解釋說(shuō),"全力以赴"這一概念并不是要強(qiáng)迫學(xué)生接受某一套道德原則或宗教觀念。 
          海德中學(xué)的課程與那些開設(shè)大學(xué)預(yù)科課程的常規(guī)學(xué)校相似,設(shè)置完整,包括英語(yǔ)、歷史、數(shù)學(xué)和自然科學(xué)。 但所有的學(xué)生都必須修習(xí)表演藝術(shù)和體育,還要提供社區(qū)服務(wù)。 在每門課程中,學(xué)生都會(huì)得到一個(gè)綜合了學(xué)習(xí)成績(jī)和"努力程度"的分?jǐn)?shù)。 在巴思市,97%的海德中學(xué)畢業(yè)生都升入了本科。 
          在海德中學(xué)的綜合教育中,父母的參與是一個(gè)關(guān)鍵的組成部分。 為了使孩子被該校錄取,家長(zhǎng)也必須同意接受并實(shí)踐學(xué)校的思想和觀點(diǎn)。 家長(zhǎng)簽約同意每月出席一次區(qū)小組會(huì)議(共20個(gè)區(qū)小組),每年去區(qū)休養(yǎng)所三天,每年至少參加三次巴思市的研修班、討論組和研討會(huì)。 在很多活動(dòng)中,緬因州學(xué)生家長(zhǎng)的出席率高達(dá)95%。 喬和馬爾科姆都說(shuō),當(dāng)孩子們見到自己的父母都在全力以赴時(shí),他們也會(huì)竭盡全力。 他們說(shuō),對(duì)許多家長(zhǎng)而言,最困難的是讓他們意識(shí)到自己的不足。 
          公立學(xué)校學(xué)生家長(zhǎng)的活動(dòng)計(jì)劃仍在制定之中。這項(xiàng)工作的困難要大得多,因?yàn)楹茈y使家長(zhǎng)相信自身的參與很有價(jià)值。 在紐黑文市錄取的100名學(xué)生中,有30%左右的家長(zhǎng)出席了各類特別會(huì)議。 這一低出席率違背了他們?cè)诮虒W(xué)計(jì)劃開始實(shí)施時(shí)所做的承諾,當(dāng)時(shí)海德中學(xué)的官員曾走訪了300個(gè)家庭。 
          巴思市一名在公立學(xué)校教書達(dá)14年之久的教師說(shuō),一旦問(wèn)題得到解決,海德教學(xué)計(jì)劃就會(huì)在公立學(xué)校中獲得成功。 他很樂觀地相信,一旦家長(zhǎng)們投入到計(jì)劃當(dāng)中,他們就會(huì)成為孩子們?nèi)粘P袨榈陌駱?,這一點(diǎn)與寄宿學(xué)校的學(xué)生家長(zhǎng)完全不同。 
          一名曾任教于市中心貧民區(qū)學(xué)校的教師如今在實(shí)踐紐黑文教學(xué)計(jì)劃。他說(shuō),教師也能從中受益。" 在這里,我們真正開始集中精力與每一個(gè)學(xué)生建立卓有成效的關(guān)系。 我們的重點(diǎn)真的是先考慮師生關(guān)系,然后是師生共同研討……學(xué)業(yè)。 而在傳統(tǒng)的中學(xué)里,是先考慮教師和教材的關(guān)系,然后再考慮師生關(guān)系。" 師生關(guān)系在海德中學(xué)被進(jìn)一步深化了。 對(duì)教職員工的評(píng)估也由學(xué)生來(lái)進(jìn)行。 
          19歲的吉米·迪巴蒂斯塔今年5月將從巴思校區(qū)畢業(yè),并準(zhǔn)備升入大學(xué)。對(duì)此他感到驚奇。 幾年前,他還覺得自己的前途"是在監(jiān)獄,而不是在大學(xué)"。 
          迪巴蒂斯塔還記得他剛到海德中學(xué)時(shí)的情景。 
          "我來(lái)這兒時(shí),見人就侮辱,就咒罵。 其他每所學(xué)校都會(huì)說(shuō):'滾出去!我們這兒不要你。'我來(lái)到這兒,他們卻說(shuō): '我們有幾分喜歡這種活力,但并不喜歡它消極的一面,而是要將它轉(zhuǎn)化成積極的一面。'"

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