Andover students left campus just a handful of days ago for a well-deserved spring break. This afternoon, outside my window in Adams House, snow is falling onto the Quad from a darkly greying sky. We are in the liminal space — the threshold between seasons, between school terms, the very transition period when in March 2020 as we anticipated the launch of the Workshop’s pilot term, the pandemic upended life, work, and school as we had known and had reimagined it. For the students and teachers involved in the first iteration of the Workshop, spring term 2020 felt like a perpetual liminal space, neither allowing us to “do school” in the familiar way, nor in the immersive, place-based, hands-on way for which we had been eagerly readying ourselves.
Two years on and we are less than a week from launching the Workshop 3.0. (Last year’s iteration, a hybrid blending of in-person and Zoom-based experiences, was perhaps even more of a liminal experience, but that’s a story for another time.)
This spring — barring unforeseen global events — twenty students and four faculty members will work together to explore (and practice) the theme, “Experiments in Education.” With in-person school in session this spring, we will implement our original goal of integrating off-campus experiences, community-based partnerships, and student-directed projects, even as we continue to operate within pandemic safety protocols and an eye to the possibility of needing to adapt to changes in national, state, and local conditions. One deep lesson we have learned over the past two years is that flexibility and openness to the unexpected, good communication, and collaboration based in deep listening and reflection, are key to good teaching and learning under even the best of circumstances, not to mention under a global pandemic.