Hands On: A Year in an Eastern Kentucky Classroom


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Description
Anne Lewis. 1992.

Hands On goes inside an eastern Kentucky classroom to examine the potential of a student-centered, democratically run learning environment. Teacher Linda Oxendine-Brown and her 24 second graders are the collective managers of their classroom and the focus of this chronicle of their activities during the 1989-90 school year in rural Knox County. Hands On follows the children as they produce a weekly radio program; write, edit and publish a collection of short stories and non-fiction; enjoy an informal performance by some mountain musicians; plant tomatoes; and visit a classmate's farm. The program also includes Oxendine-Brown's visits to her students' homes and consultations with their parents.
Oxendine-Brown is shown using the Foxfire teaching method which emphasizes democratic decision-making, hands-on experience, collaborative learning, and student involvement in the world outside the classroom. Hands On also examines her implementation of the whole language reading method which stresses students choosing their own reading materials and learning to write by writing. Hands On is recommended viewing for anyone interested in school reform and the future of public education, teacher education, child development, and what it will take to help our children both do well and feel good about school.