Wednesday, February 22, 2017

The LCES Difference: Who are we?

LCES Board meetings in January and February have been focusing on taking stock of what we are, where are, and where we feel called to go as a school. I left one such meeting a few weeks ago with my head full of thoughts from the valuable discussion. Sleep evading me, I thought I would take the opportunity to try to get specific with the first question; “Who is LCES?”



LCES is not just a building that is spacious and bright
                …although it does look like that that
LCES is not just a place of song, laughter, quiet concentration, and noisy learning
                …although it does sound like that
LCES is not just a school of people who enjoy community
                …although we are blessed to live with much in common
LCES is not just a place of change, growth, and renewal
                …although we delight each term with how students change
LCES is not just a place where students are steered toward a future occupation
                …although we do find joy in recognizing gifts and talents for use in God’s kingdom
LCES is not place where people are perfect and problems escape us
                ...because we are in need of God’s grace like everyone else

LCES is a place of learning that exists because of Christ
                “For from him, and through him, and for him are all things. 
                  To him be the glory forever! Amen” (Rom 11:35)

SJ

Wednesday, February 15, 2017

School Yard Breakdowns and Grace

“I forgive you.” 

These powerful words came unprompted in a conversation while two students and I were responding to a conflict they had involved in that morning. Words spoken and actions carried out on the part of one student had devastated another. It was clearly a situation in which wisdom had not prevailed and tempers and a flair up of past wrongs not righted won out over restraint and better judgement. It drove a wedge between the two of them. 

After helping them to retrace the steps of the choices made, entirely on their own, these students seemed to feel the pressing need to extend and receive forgiveness. The day seemed to be a little brighter for them as they left my office because they could go back to way things are supposed to be. I sure wish I could promise them that they won’t face situations that will trip them up and in which they will be back again where they once were, caught in conflict. Everyday life will continue to remind them of the need for grace and forgiveness. 

When people wonder what personal and parental relationships look like here, I often use the phrase “we are not able to park sin out on Clarke Rd and hold it at a distance.” It affects all of what we do each and every day. Thankfully, so does God’s grace and love – a force much stronger. We realize the richness of that grace as a school when we dedicate ourselves to one of God’s good gifts – community. We collectively bring all of our hurts, hangups, and hiccups to one another and ask all to “… be patient with each other, making allowance for each other’s faults.” (Ephesians 4:2) 

The flood of relief that students and adults feel when the harshness of conflict have been turned into the joy of living at peace with one another hints at the way we are hard-wired to live before the Lord. It feels right and good to be living in community that way because that’s the way we are created. When we find delight and pleasure in living honestly, authentically, and graciously with each other we do so because we experience the goodness of the coming kingdom. 

The other student’s response? “Thank you. I’ll try to do better.” 

Your kingdom come, your will be done on earth…. SJ

Wednesday, February 8, 2017

First Loops and Joy: Spirit Days at LCES

A student giggled this morning as I walked in to her classroom with what she called “fruit loops hair.” I grinned. There is no better way to start a Monday morning.

Some pretty unusual hair is on display today at LCES as spirit week starts with crazy hair day. Florescent colours, blinking lights, wigs, and pipe cleaners are challenging our “normal” every day hair. There are signs of some advance preparation and creative thinking: bottles of hair flowing into a cup, a family of stuffed animals peeking out from a swirl of hair, hair seeming to defy gravity and so much more. What fun! We can hardly wait for the rest of the week with wacky clothing, career day, colour day, and the perennial favorite - pajama day.

Spirit week with all of its unusual wardrobes and activities is a welcome break in the month of February to our regular patterns. One of the things I appreciate most about it is the smiles and laughter that it brings to our community of learning. The delight for students of seeing their classmates (and their teachers!) in their creative, fun-loving best brings joy to their day. Plenty of life's journey's in living and learning are quite serious, it feels good to balance that with not taking ourselves so seriously. God wants good things for his children and joy is one of those good gifts.

“The joy of the Lord is your strength” (Nehemiah 8:10) were the words of comfort that Nehemiah shared with the very upset Israelites when a public reading of the law had revealed their shortcomings. God’s law was clear, but so was his love. Nehemiah wanted them to be sure that the people knew God wants good things for his people.

God is good to us. Joy is an integral part of our days here at LCES. There is joy of fellowship and companionship, joy of learning and discovery, joy of service to each other, and joy in living in full assurance of God’s presence, love, and provision. A culture of joy makes our school a wonderful place to be. SJ

Wednesday, February 1, 2017

Big Things Guide our Learning

Many years ago I had the unique opportunity of helping a young student learn the potential of something they knew nothing about. Since he had just mastered basic addition, subtraction himself, I showed him how a calculator was able to solve these problems and spit out answers for him if they were entered correctly. Lots of practice ensued and he was quite impressed that it knew all the answers and was consistently correct. I then showed him how it could also work in the domain of his newest skill - multiplication. With wide-eyed wonder, he looked at me and said “This thing can do multiplication too?”

Education would be much more effective if its purpose was to ensure that by the time they leave school every boy and girl should know how much they do not know, and be imbued with a lifelong desire to know it. ~William Haley

At LCES we are interested in creating those life-long learners that William Haley, a British newspaper executive, was talking about. He lived and worked between the world wars, a time period where information was delivered by a teacher or book, not by Wikipedia, twitter, or facebook. So, what do we hope to see in our life-long learners of 2017?

Connectedness: We aim for our students to see God’s creation as an intricate, complex, and amazing
example of how purposeful God is. God’s world is something to be studied as a whole, as well as in
parts.

Discernment We want our students to develop tools and have opportunities to practice, under the
watchful idea of a passionate educator, figuring out what is God’s truth and what it means for them.
God’s world is designed around God’s truth.

Service: We strive to have our students live out the truth of biblically knowing as the study the Lord’s
handiwork directs them to love their
neighbor in every way, in everything they do and say. God’s world is one of community.

Wonder: God’s world is a place of beauty and we wish for our students to meet God in new ways as
they learn. God’s world speaks of his greatness.

Big things guide our learning!

SJ