This article about the challenge approach
to self-directed learning was first published in the "Phi
Delta Kappan" in May, 1974. It became the most requested
reprint in the history of the "Kappan", won an excellence
award from "Education Digest", and was reprinted in
over a dozen books. For several years the "Kappan" produced
a Walkabout Newsletter and Walkabout school programs appeared.
Several of these are still active after nearly thirty years. In
May, 1984, the "Kappan" published "Walkabout Ten
Years Later" and reports from several active programs. The
main features of Walkabout, in adapted form, now appear in a
wide
array of educational approaches. The version that follows is
edited to about two thirds of the original article's length.
A year ago I saw an Australian film called Walkabout
which was so provocative -- and evocative -- I am still rerunning
scenes from it in my mind. In the movie, two children escape into
the desert-like wilderness of the outback when their father, driven
mad by failure in business, attempts to kill them. Within hours
they are exhausted, lost, and helpless. Inappropriately dressed
in private school uniforms, unable to find food or protection
from the blazing heat, and with no hope of finding their way back,
they seem certain to die. At the last moment they are found and
cared for by a young aborigine, a native Australian boy on his
walkabout, a six-months-long endurance test during which he must
survive alone in the wilderness and return to his tribe an adult,
or die in the attempt. In contrast to the city children, he moves
through the forbidding wilderness as if it were part of his village.
He survives not only with skill but with grace and pride as well,
whether stalking kangaroo in a beautiful but deadly ballet, seeking
out the subtle signs of direction, or merely standing watch. He
not only endures, he merges with the land, and he enjoys. When
they arrive at the edge of civilization, the aborigine offers
-- in as ritual dance -- to share his life with the white girl
and boy he has befriended, but they finally leave him and the
outback to return home. The closing scenes show them immersed
again in the conventions of suburban life, but dreaming of their
adventure, their fragment of a walkabout.
The movie is a haunting work of art. It is also
haunting comment on education. What I find most provocative is
the stark contrast between the aborigine's walkabout experience
and the test of adolescent's readiness for adulthood in our own
society. The young native faces a severe but extremely appropriate
trial, one in which he must demonstrate the knowledge and skills
necessary to make him a contributor to the tribe rather than a
drain on its meager resources. By contrast, the young North American
is faced with written examinations that test skills very far removed
from the actual experience he will have in real life. He writes;
he does not act. He solves familiar theoretical problems; he does
not apply what he knows in strange but real situations. He is
under direction in a protected environment to the end; he does
not go out into the world to demonstrate that he is prepared to
survive in, and contribute to, our society. His preparation is
primarily for the mastery of content and skills in the disciplines
and has little to do with reaching maturity, achieving adulthood,
or developing fully as a person.
The isolation involved in the walkabout is also
in sharp contrast to experience in our school system. In an extended
period of solitude at a crucial stage of his development, the
aborigine is confronted with a challenge not only to his competence,
but also to his inner or spiritual resources. For his Western
counterpart, however, school is always a crowd experience. Seldom
separated from his class, friends or family, he has little opportunity
to confront his anxieties, explore his inner resources, and come
to terms with the world and his future in it. Certainly, he receives
little or no training in how to deal with such issues. There are
other contrasts, too, at least between the Australian boy and
the urban children in the movie: his heightened sensory perception,
instinct, and intuition, senses which seem numbed in them; his
genuine, open, and emphathic response toward them in saving their
lives, and their inability to finally overcome their suspicious
and defensive self-interest to save his. And above all there is
his love and respect for the land even as he takes from it what
he needs; and the willful destruction of animals and landscape
which he observes in disbelief during his brushes with civilization.
Imagine for a moment two children, a young native
looking ahead to his walkabout and a young North American looking
ahead to grade 12 as the culminating experiences of all their
basic preparation for adult life. The young native can clearly
see that his life will depend on the skills he is learning and
that after the walkabout his survival and his place in the community
will depend upon them, too. What meaning and relevance such a
goal must give to learning! What a contrast if he were preparing
to write a test on survival techniques in the outback or the history
of aboriginal weaponry. The native's Western counterpart looks
forward to such abstractions as subjects and tests sucked dry
of the richness of experience, in the end having little to do
directly with anything critical or even significant that he anticipates
being involved in as an adult -- except the pursuit of more formal
education. And yet, is it not clear that what will matter to him
and to his community -- is not his test-writing ability or even
what he knows about, but what he feels, what he stands for, what
he can do and will do, and what he is becoming as a person? And
if the clear performative goal of the walkabout makes learning
more significant, think of the effect it must have on the attitude
and performance of the young person's parents and instructors,
knowing that their skill and devotion will also be put to the
ultimate test when the boy goes out on his own. What an effect
such accountability could have on our concept of schooling and
on parents' involvement in it!
For another moment, imagine these same two children
reaching the ceremonies which culminate their basic preparation
and celebrate their successful passage from childhood to adulthood,
from school student to work and responsible community membership.
When the aborigine returns, his readiness and worth have been
clearly demonstrated to hand to his tribe. They need him. He is
their hope for the future. It is a moment worth celebrating. What,
I wonder, would an alien humanoid conclude about adulthood in
our society if he had to make -- his deductions from a graduation
ceremony announcing students' maturity: speeches, a parade of
candidates -- with readings from their yearbook descriptions --
a formal dinner, expensive clothes and cars, graduates over here,
adults over there, all-night parties, occasional drunkenness and
sexual experience or flirtation with it, and spray painting "Grad
'74". on a bridge or building. For many it is a memorable
occasion -- a pageant for parents, a good time for the students.
But what is the message in this celebration at this most important
moment of school life and in this most important shared community
experience? What values does it promote? What is it saying about
12 years of school experience? The achievement of what goals is
being celebrated? What is it teaching about adulthood? How is
it contributing to a sense of community? What pleasures and sources
of challenge and fulfillment does it encourage the young to pursue?
And if our alien humanoid could look into the students' deepest
thoughts, what would he conclude about heir sense of readiness
to live full and1ndependent lives, to direct their own growth,
to contribute to society, and to deal with the issues that confront
us as a world -- perhaps a universe -citizenry? I think his unprejudiced
conclusions would horrify us.
In my opinion, the walkabout could be a very useful
model to guide us in redesigning our own rites of passage. It
provides a powerful focus during raining, a challenging demonstration
of necessary competence, a profound maturing experience, and an
enrichment of community life. By comparison, preparation and trial
in our society are incomplete, abstract, and impersonal; and graduation
is little more than a party celebrating the end of school. I am
not concluding that our students should be sent into the desert,
the wilderness, or the Arctic for six months -- even though military
service, Outward Bound, and such organizations as the Boy Scouts
do feature wilderness living and survival training. What is appropriate
for a primitive subsistence society is not likely appropriate
for one as complex and technically sophisticated as ours. But
the walkabout is a useful analogy, a way of making the familiar
strange so we can examine our practices with fresh eyes. And it
raises the question I find fascinating: What
would an appropriate and challenging walk-about for students in
our society be like? Let me restate the problem more specifically.
What sensibilities, knowledge, attitudes, and competencies are
necessary for a full and productive adult life? What kinds of
experience will have the power to focus our children's energy
on achieving these goals? And what kind of performance will demonstrate
to the student, the school, and the community that the goals have
been achieved?
The walkabout model suggests that our solution to
this problem must measure up to a number of criteria. First of
all, it should be experiential and the experience should be real
rather than simulated; not knowledge about aerodynamics and aircraft,
not passing the link-trainer test, but the experience of solo
flight in which the mastery of relevant abstract knowledge and
skills is manifest in the performance. Second, it should be a
challenge which extends the capacities of the student as fully
as possible, urging him to consider every limitation he perceives
in himself as a barrier to be broken through; not a goal which
is easily accessible, such as playing an instrument he already
plays competently, but a risky goal which calls for a major extension
of his talent, such as earning a chair in the junior symphony
or a gig at a reputable discotheque. Third, it should be a challenge
the student chooses for himself. As Margaret Mead has often pointed
out in "Growing Up in Samoa",
for instance the major challenge for young people in our society
is making decisions. In primitive societies there are few choices;
in technological societies like ours there is a bewildering array
of alternatives in life-style, work, politics, possessions, recreation,
dress, relationships, environment, and so on. Success in our lives
depends on the ability to make appropriate choices. Yet, in most
schools, students make few decisions of any importance and receive
no training in decision making or in the implementation and reassessment
cycle which constitutes the basic growth pattern. Too often, graduation
cuts them loose to muddle through for themselves. In this walkabout
model, teachers and parents may help, but in the Rogerian style
-- by facilitating the student's decision making, not by making
the decisions for him. The test of the walkabout, and of life,
is not what he can do under a teacher's direction, but what the
teacher has enabled him to decide and to do on his own.
In addition, the trial should be an important learning
experience in itself. It should involve not only the demonstration
of the student's knowledge, skill, and achievement, but also a
significant confrontation with himself: his awareness, his adaptability
to situations, his competence, and his nature as a person. Finally,
the trial and ceremony should be appropriate, appropriate not
as a test schooling which has gone before, but as a transition
from school learning to the life which will follow afterwards.
And the completion of the walkabout should bring together parents,
teachers, friends, others to share the moment with him, to confirm
his achievement, and to consolidate the spirit community in which
he is a member. Keeping these features of the walkabout analogy
in mind, let now ask the question, What might a graduation ceremony
in this mode be like in a North American high school?
The time is September. The place, a classroom somewhere
in the Pacific Northwest. Margaret, a student who has just finished
grade 12 is making a multimedia presentation to a number of relatives,
over 20 of her classmates, several friends from other schools,
some teachers, the mayor, and two reporters she worked with during
the year. Watching intently are a number of younger students already
thinking about their own walkabouts. Margaret has been thinking
about this moment since grade 8 and working on her activities
seriously since the night the principal met with all the grade
10 students and their parents to outline and discuss the challenges.
Afterwards she and her mother sat up talking about her plans until
early morning. She is beginning with the first category, Adventure,
which involves a challenge to her daring and endurance. The film
and slides Margaret is showing trace her trip through the Rockies
following the path of Lewis and Clark in their exploration of
the Northwest. Her own journal and maps are on display along with
a number of objects -- arrowheads and the like -- which she found
enroute. The names of her five companions -- she is required to
cooperate with a team in at least one, but no more than two of
the five categories -- are on display. In one corner of the room
she has arranged a set of bedroom furniture -- a loft-desk-library
module, a rocking chair, and a coffee-table treasure-chest --
designed, built, and decorated as her work in the Creative Aesthetic
field. On the walls are photographs and charts showing pollution
rates of local industries which she recorded during the summer
and used in a report to the Community Council. The three newspaper
articles about the resulting campaign against pollution-law violators,
and her part in it, are also displayed to give proof that she
has completed the third category, Community
Service.
Margaret, like many of the other engaged in a Logical
Inquiry which related closely to her practical work. Her
question was, What structural design and composition has the best
ratios of strength, ease of construction, and economy of materials?
Using charts of the various designs and ratios, she describes
her research and the simple experiment she developed to test her
findings, and she demonstrates the effectiveness of the preferred
design by performing pressure tests on several models built from
the same material. After answering a few questions from a builder
in the crowd, she shows how the problem grew out of her studies
in architecture for the Practical Vocational
category. Passing her sketch books around and several summer-cabin
designs she drew up, she goes on to describe her visits to a number
of architects for assistance, then unveils a model of the summer
camp she designed for her family and helped them build on their
Pacific Coast property. Slides of the cabin under construction
complete her presentation. A teacher asks why she is not performing
any of the skill's she developed, as the challenge requires, and
she answers that her committee waived that requirement because
the activities she chose all occurred in the field.
As Margaret's friends and relatives gather around
to congratulate her, down the hall Ken is beginning his presentation
with a report on his two-month Adventure
alone in a remote village in France where he took a laboring job
and lived with a French family in which no one spoke English.
The idea arose during a discussion of his proposal to travel when
the teacher on his committee asked him to think of a more daring
challenge than sight-seeing in a foreign country. A professor
in modern languages has been invited by the school to attend the
presentations, converse with him in French, and comment on his
mastery. Later, with his own guitar accompaniment, Ken will sing
a medley of three folk songs which he has composed himself. Then,
to meet the requirements of the Community
Service category, he plans to report on the summer-care
program which he initiated and ran, without pay, for preschool
children in the community. The director of the local Child Health
and Welfare Service will comment upon the program. Finally, Ken
will turn to the car engine which stands, partially disassembled,
on a bench at the back of the room. His Logical
Inquiry into the problem, "What ways can the power
output of an engine be most economically increased?" is summarized
in a brief paper to be handed out and illustrated with modifications
he has made on the display engine with the help of a local mechanic
and a shop teacher. He will conclude his presentation by reassembling
the engine as quickly as he can.
If we entered any room anywhere in the school, similar
presentations would be under way; students displaying all kinds
of alternatives they selected to meet the five basic challenges:
- Adventure: a challenge
to the student's daring, endurance, and skill in an unfamiliar
environment.
- Creativity: a challenge
to explore, cultivate, and express his own imagination in some
aesthetically pleasing form.
- Service: a challenge
to identify a human need for assistance and provide it; to express
caring without expectation of reward.
- Practical Skill: a
challenge to explore a utilitarian activity, to learn the knowledge
and skills necessary to work in that field, and to produce something
of use.
- Logical Inquiry:
a challenge to explore one's curiosity, to formulate a question
or problem of personal importance, and to pursue an answer or
solution systematically and, wherever appropriate, by investigation.
We would learn about such Adventures
as a two-week solo on the high river living off the land, parachute
drops, rock climbing expeditions, mapping underground eaves, an
exchange with a Russian student, kayaking a grade three river to
the ocean, scuba-diving exploits, sailing ventures, solo airplane
and glider flights, ski-touring across glaciers, a month-long expedition
on the Pacific Crest trail, and some forms of self-exploratory,
meditative, or spiritual adventures. We would see such Aesthetic
works as fashion shows of the students' own creations, sculpture
and painting, jewelry, tooled leather purses, anthologies of poetry,
a humor magazine, plays written and directed by the author, a one-man
mime show, political cartoons, a Japanese garden featuring a number
of home-cultivated bonsai trees, rugs made of home-dyed fibers,
illuminated manuscripts, gourmet foods, computer art, a rock-group
and a string quartet, a car-body design and paint job, original
films, a stand-up comic's art, tapes of natural-sound music, and
a display of blown glass creatures.
In the Service category
students would be reporting on volunteer work with the old, ill,
infirm, and retarded; a series of closed-circuit television hookups
enabling children immobilized in the hospital to communicate with
each other, a sports program for the handicapped, a Young Brother
program for the retarded, local Nader's Raiders kinds of studies
and reports, construction of playgrounds, hiking trails and landscaped
parks, cleanups of eyesore lots, surveys of community needs and
opinions, collecting abandoned cars to sell as scrap in order
to support deprived families abroad, shopping and other trips
for shut-ins, and a hot-meals-on-wheels program for pensioners.
In the Practical realm
we might see demonstrations of finely honed secretarial skills,
ocean-floor plant studies, inventions and new designs of many
kinds, the products of new small businesses, a conservation program
to save a locally endangered species, stock market trend analyses
and estimates, boats designed and built for sale, a course taught
by computer assisted instruction, small farms or sections of farms
developed and managed, a travel guidebook for high school students,
a six-inch telescope with hand ground lenses and a display of
photographs taken through it, a repair service for gas furnaces
and other home appliances, and a collection of movie reviews written
for the local suburban newspaper.
And we would hear about Logical
Inquiries into such questions as, How does a starfish bring
about the regeneration of a lost arm? What does one experience
when meditating that he doesn't experience just sitting with his
eyes closed? What is the most effective technique in teaching
a dog obedience? How do you navigate in space? Does faith-healing
work, and if so, how? How many anomalies, such as the ancient
Babylonian battery, are there in our history and how can they
be explained? What folk and native arts and crafts have developed
in this area? What are the 10 most important questions man asks
but can't answer? What is insanity -- where is the line that separates
it from sanity? and, What natural means can I use to protect my
crops most effectively from disease and insects? All day long
such presentations occur throughout the school, each student with
his own place and time, each demonstrating his unique accomplishment,
each with an opportunity to be successful in his own way.
At the end of the day the families, their children,
and their friends meet to celebrate this moment. The celebration
takes a variety of forms: picnics, dinner at a restaurant, meals
at home -- some cooked by the graduating students -- and buffets
which all guests help to provide. In some instances two or three
families join together. The ceremonies are equally varied, according
to taste and imagination; some are religious, some raucous, some
quite quietly together. In each the student is the center of the
occasion. Parents and guests respond to the graduate's presentation.
Teachers drop by to add their comments. And the student talks
about his plans for the future. Some may find ways to announce
the young person's entry into a new stage of independence and
responsibility, helping him to clarify and pursue his next life
goal. To conclude, there may be a school or community celebration
to which all are invited for music, singing, and dancing. The
only formal event would be a presentation of bound volumes of
the student's reports on their accomplishments to the principal
and mayor for the school and the community libraries. My own preference
would be to include, also, some ritual experience of the family
being together at the moment of its coming apart, or some shared
experience of life's mystery; perhaps a midnight walk or coming
together to watch the dawn -- the world beginning again, beginning
still.
Preparation for the walkabout challenge can be provided
in various degrees of intensity, depending upon how committed
the school staff is to creating a curriculum which focuses upon
personal development:
- It can be an extracurricular activity in which
all planning and work is done during out-of-school time.
- It can be one element of the curriculum which
is included in the schedule like a course, giving students time
for planning, consultation, and training.
- It can be the core of the grade 12 program, one
in which all teaching and activity is devoted to preparing for
trial.
- It can be the goal around which a whole
new curriculum is designed for the school, or for a school-within-the-school
staffed by interested teachers for interested students.
If the school is junior secondary -- this concept
can readily be adapted to elementary schooling, too -- students
and parents should be notified of the graduation trial upon entry
in grade 8, perhaps by a single announcement with an accompanying
descriptive brochure. Trial committees -- including the student,
the parents, and a teacher -- should be organized for meetings,
likely as early as grade 9, to guide the student's explorations
of possible challenges, so that serious planning and the preparation
of formal proposals can begin in grade 10. To make the nature of
the walkabout vivid, the committee should involve students in a
series of "Experience Weeks" during which they would be
out of school pursuing activities, first of the school's design
and later of their own design, as trial runs. During these early
years the student could also benefit from association with "big
brothers" in the school, older students in more advanced stages
of preparation who can help their younger colleagues, with considerable
benefits for themselves as well. The committee would also be responsible
for helping the student make his own choices and find the resources
and training necessary to accomplish them; and by their interest,
they would also help the student to develop confidence in his decisions
and commitment to his own goals. A survey of student plans during
any of the senior years would give the staff the information necessary
to plan the most useful possible training, which could be offered
in mini courses -- one day each week, for instance -- or in a semester
or a year long curriculum devoted to preparation for trial. If students
were required to write a two-page report on each challenge, a collection
of these reports could provide an accumulating resource for younger
candidates as well as a permanent "hall of accomplishment"
for graduates. In such ways the walkabout challenge could also become
a real focus for training in such basic skills as speaking, writing,
and use of the media. These are only a few of the ways this proposal
can be implemented and integrated with other aspects of school life.
I am interested in the Walkabout challenge because
it promises what I most want for my own children. No one can give
life meaning for them, but there are a number of ways we can help
them to give life meaning for themselves. Central to that meaning
is their sense of who they are in the scheme of things and their
confidence that, no matter what the future holds, they can decide
and act, that they can develop skills to be justifiably proud
of, that they can cross the most barren outback with, a certain
grace and find even in simple moments a profound joy. I hope that
by exploring what they can do and feel they will come to know
themselves better, and with that knowledge that they will move
through today with contentment and will look forward to tomorrow
with anticipation. I think a challenging walkabout designed for
our time and place can contribute to that kind of growth.