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NAIS | 7

ally delivering energy back to the grid. Yet,

global sustainability is also a critical area of

focus, and Bassett refers to private schools

participating in an NAIS initiative known as

Challenge 20/20. An online-program that

allows for virtual exchange between K-12

students from schools in the U.S. with their

counterparts in schools of other countries;

Challenge 20/20 connects teams of students

seeking solutions to one of 20 seemingly

insolvable global problems. In one case, a

composite of students from the Montessori

School of Denver partnered with a school in

Tanzania to identify solutions for reducing

the outbreak of malaria. While the resolv-

ing of that issue remains critical to nations

throughout Africa and other areas, the ex-

change between students and the process of

identifying potential strategies is a critical

teaching tool for all involved.

Bassett says one of the current educa-

tional trends involves recognition of creativ-

ity as an important skill. He says, unfortu-

nately, schools are too often where creativity

goes to die through a process he describes as

“drill and kill.” Bassett says high-stakes test-

ing and reliance on worksheets as opposed

to hands-on training models has resulted in

increasing student disengagement, but pri-

vate schools, in equipping students with 21st

Century skills, have increasingly become

incubators for creativity and entrepreneur-

ship. Bassett references schools such as As-

pen Academy (CO) which not only teaches

traditional subjects, but constructs a curric-

ulum with entrepreneurship as the primary

theme. Students are provided with mentors

and are actually tasked to create a business.

In this case, outcomes involving creativity

are tracked, measured and scored in con-

junction with typical academic metrics.

At Cushing Academy in Massachu-

setts, Bassett says the school has deployed an

iPad application into seminar table-tops (an

iTable) which imparts cross collaboration

with Internet-based research functionalities.

Meanwhile, at Falmouth Academy, another

Massachusetts-based private school, cre-

ativity and collaboration has prompted ad-

vancements in robotics. Students here were

recently tasked with creating a submersible

robot which could find an object at the bot-

tom of a dark pond, secure a rope around

it and deliver the object to the surface. The

team leader of that initiative went on to se-

cure a scholarship to MIT.

February 2019 |

Business World Magazine