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Freedom,
Boredom and Motivation
by Stephanie Sarantos, Staff
At
The Clearwater School, students are able to freely choose
their activities and pursuits, every day of the year.
So it is surprising to hear a student exclaim with loud
angst, "School is so boring! There's nothing to do!"
How
can students get bored in a school that doesn't have
mandatory assignments, preset curriculums or time schedules?
Students who transfer to Clearwater from other schools
often expect to escape boredom, knowing that they will
be able to do exactly those things that interest them
most. Instead they may discover that Clearwater students
experience boredom of a wholly different kind. Boredom
that leads to great results-like self-initiative, self-confidence
and the ability to set and accomplish personal goals.
Boredom
in Traditional Schools
In
traditional settings boredom is usually linked to a
lack of freedom. Students have little choice over how
they spend their time. One choice they do have is how
to express their boredom. Each individual's style of
expression influences how teachers, parents and institutions
respond. For example, some students find that school
is just uninteresting-subjects may be too dry, too easy
or too difficult. Students may act on these feelings
by spacing out, drawing, writing or thinking about something
else during class. Institutions respond by trying to
create more entertaining classes to engage a broad range
of students.
Other
students find that school doesn't fit their temperament,
learning style or personal rhythm. These students usually
want to be active when required to sit at desks. They
tend to act out, underachieve and become management
problems. Institutions tend to label these students
as troublemakers or at-risk kids. They may be offered
interventions or punished.
Yet
another group of students experience schoolwork as too
easy or below their level. They may underachieve, stop
working altogether or learn the system and get good
grades-without investing themselves personally in their
work. Institutions often tend to ignore these students.

Boredom at The Clearwater
School
Students at The Clearwater School are not expected to
find mandatory activities interesting. They are free
to follow their own rhythms throughout the day. Staff
members do not make it their business to tell students
what is important for them to learn or do or think about.
The freedom that defines Sudbury schools leads to other
kinds of boredom. For example:
One
kind of boredom is, "I know exactly what I want to do,
but I am not doing it." This boredom may occur because
a friend has not arrived at school yet, materials are
not available or the student must wait for a turn.
Sometimes,
boredom means, "I do not know what I want to do." Students
may enjoy freedom for awhile-intently pursuing activities
for days, weeks or months-but often they reach a day
when nothing seems to captivate them. They can't quite
figure out what to do next. This kind of boredom presents
itself as aimless wandering, pacing in circles or sitting
in one place watching other students flow in and out
of the room. This boredom is like a time of rest-a space
that opens and stays empty until the student is struck
by the next impulse.
There
is another kind of boredom that seems to be a phase
of maturation and education. "School is so boring,"
means: "I am not ready to take responsibility for determining
what I do at school, and ultimately with my life." This
is a kind of essential boredom. It has nothing to do
with how an individual fits with an imposed, external
set of expectations or activities. This boredom is much
more personal-it expresses the need of each individual
to create meaning in one's own life.
At
The Clearwater School, boredom is considered a phase
of learning. Bored students are not punished or labeled.
Staff members do not try to alleviate boredom by offering
entertainment or ideas for productive uses of time.
If staff offer help, it is to help the student understand
and learn from the experience of boredom. Staff may
talk with students in order to understand the situation
and the student's feelings or to share their own experiences
of boredom. Staff may feel uncomfortable themselves,
as they watch students experience boredom, but resist
the temptation to intervene. Students are left to experience
the full extent and accompanying discomfort of their
boredom.
The
Place of Boredom at The Clearwater School
It
is ultimately up to each student to find a way out of
boredom-to take responsibility for finding out what
to do with his or her life.
Hal
Sadofsky is a graduate of Sudbury Valley School and
a cofounder of Blue Mountain School in Oregon. In his
Blue Mountain School Newsletter article "Entertainment,
Boredom and Responsibility," he describes his response
to complaints of boredom:
This
is life! It is up to you to chart a course you find
interesting and worthwhile. It is ultimately your
life and you have to recognize that. This is your
life, make what you want of it.
Taking
personal responsibility for all one's actions is one
of the hallmarks of a Clearwater education. Hal states:
The
most fundamental educational lesson we hope our students
will learn is that they are responsible for their
own education, and in fact for their own lives. Actually
internalizing this and all that goes with it is the
best lesson they can have for the rest of their lives.
I believe that it is important for people to acquire
knowledge and skills, but I don't believe I can or
should force them to do so. Much more important is
for our children to learn that if they value something
it is worth working for, and that if they have a goal
they care about, they need to take responsibility
for realizing it.
Students
learn how to take responsibility for their lives through
practice. Each time students decide what to do with
their time, they are learning what it feels like to
take responsibility for the course of their lives. Taking
responsibility for personal accomplishments can be wonderfully
empowering; taking responsibility for boredom can be
painful. Students stuck in boredom have not yet figured
out how to take responsibility for determining their
next activity in the day-let alone the direction of
their lives.
The
way out of boredom is by marching through it. Eventually
students realize no one else is going to tell them what
to do and they begin to think about what's important
to them. They find the courage to make decisions based
on their interests and the goals they have for their
lives. This process can take months, even years. The
skills gained from transforming boredom into motivation
at school prepare students for their adult lives. They
practice the skill of decision making and develop self-initiative
and confidence. These characteristics are well worth
the investment of time and trust The Clearwater School
offers.
Reprinted from the Spring 2001 issue
of The
School Bull, the newsletter of The Clearwater
School
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