Andrew Cuomo, the beleaguered governor of New York State, made an offhand remark the other day in one of his regular press briefings. “I don’t think we get back to normal,” he said with one of his philosophic sighs. “I think we get to a new normal.”
So, I have begun to ask: What is to be this ‘new normal?’ Here are some things that were not so normal as late as New Year’s Eve 2019 and yet three months later have very quickly become the norm – at least for now.
While there are plenty of things I would not like to see stick around that relate to the current pandemic, there are other things I would. These are briefly jotted down, in no particular order.
While we would not choose to convert our school programs to “distance learning”, this technological medium may, from one perspective, actually be nudging us to become ever more Waldorf in our teaching, in the sense that we are having to rely much more on what our students can experience by themselves (albeit with our guiding questions) than on what we can tell them or discuss with them in a classroom setting. Inevitably, we are having to become all the more experiential, all the more “student centered”, ultimately all the more“e-ducational”––in the original meaning of this term––through our pedagogical practices.
We may here glimpse something of “the new normal” in a future approach to the life of education –– and of life as a whole.
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