As we approach the end of week two of fall cycle and our “add / drop” period, I wanted to write and remind families to make any last adjustments to children’s schedules. Along with that reminder, I also wanted to reflect for a moment on the importance of that shopping period and why we try to offer a variety of class options each day at each of our sites. The objective in both cases is to encourage children and families to try new things and consider what they’d most like to learn about. That process of choosing is an exercise in freedom, developing interests and the capacity for life-long leaning.
On Tuesday, September 17th, noted historian Timothy Snyder spoke at the New York Historical Society here in the neighborhood to launch his latest book entitled “On Freedom.” In the book, he makes the case that freedom is not an inheritance that one comes by automatically, but instead is something that each of us has to work toward and develop individually. In recounting a childhood memory of a 4th of July celebration he writes, “The bell rings. Time for freedom. Time for dinner.” As a young child (he was six at the time) he perceived freedom as something that just happens, just is.
That naive conception of freedom as something that “just is” resonated with me and it’s something I’ve often thought about in relation to our afterschool program. In everyday life, we often find ourselves doing the next thing and the next because something external to us has signaled that it’s time. An alarm clock sounds. Time to wake. A school bell rings. Time to learn. When, with so many external prompts, do we train ourselves and cultivate our ability to choose what we want to do and what we want to learn?
I would like to assert that cultivating the skill and capacity for choosing, to become free, is the mission and purpose of Arts and Athletics. As the children in our schools are presented with a number of options each day, I hope the deliberations begin, discussions between children and parents about what classes to choose…and why… Maybe they’d like to do art because it’s taught by their favorite teacher or soccer because their best friend is enrolled or trumpet because it’s a little difficult but they like the way it sounds and they want to see if they can do it!
Considering and weighing all of the various factors, discussing their interests with the adults in their lives and with their friends, realizing that with each option they stand to gain something and also must give up something else, is indeed training in freedom. It is a way of engaging in an activity having decided to be there, to give it a try, to give it, for a time, part of themselves. That process of choosing is individual, but it’s also communal, not done in isolation, but by negotiating one’s place among friends and subjects and spaces. Where do I fit? Where do I belong?
And then the hope is that that sense of agency transfers even to those areas and parts of the day that are more regimented. The school bell rings. Time for math. Whether that school-day subject is their favorite or not, they still feel they bring something to the equation. They are learners who have preferences and sometimes have to do things that aren’t their favorite and even then realize that “toughing it out” is also important and can lead to interesting outcomes. And they are more free because they are learning to navigate their own path amongst and alongside others.