Juniper Heartwood

Exploring New and Old Paths to Learning

Education is changing. The one-size-fits-all approach that prevailed for more than a century is coming to a slow and leaky close. Today, due to technology and increased interest in community and nature, children and families now have access to diverse choices and wonderful new opportunities. Joseph Sarosy is the author of How to Tell Stories to Children (now in 21 languages) and the creator of the Juniper School, an outdoor co-op serving learners in Northern New Mexico. An engineer with a second degree in philosophy, he and his students are but one small branch on a rapidly growing and increasingly well-funded network of independent educators, students, and families in urban and rural neighborhoods across the US. This podcast is about empowerment. It explores what education looks and feels like when we stop fearing what a child might not learn, and instead begin to integrate that child's education and growth into life, family, culture, and neighborhood. josephsarosy.substack.com

Episodes

  1. 06/04/2024

    Asleep in the Barn

    Last week, the kids and I were camping at Ron Boyd’s majestic farm in La Villita, New Mexico. Fields of heirloom grains. Chiles, potatoes, newborn calves. Waist deep water, tumbled and flicked and splashed on too-hot friends. We drove tractors and mowed hay. We ate over fire, got sick of oatmeal, and thinned orchards full of fuzzy little peachlings. And slept. The kids dozed in an old horse barn, while bats flickered outside snapping up mosquitoes. Dreams, like rumbling old hooves, echoed through our nights. Shortly after returning, I recorded this podcast (scroll to top to listen) to commemorate the time, the story, and the fruitful reality that education and life can be part of our days and the living world. There is a significant movement to bring learning back into our lives - urban lives, rural lives, all diverse and autonomous lives. It’s all being built around one central tenet - a child’s education no longer needs to be acquired behind closed doors. Several years ago, after a massive effort following the publication of How to Tell Stories to Children, I let go of a lot of storytelling infrastructure - websites, social media, podcasts, etc. It was just too much to keep it all running and teach full time, especially with the devotion I like to bring. I am slowly returning to this work, coupling it to my interest in education, and I’ll be sharing more of that in audio and video format in the coming weeks and months (a high quality recording of our play War & Peace is currently in post-production). I’m using projects like these to teach skills to the kids as well. Writing, always a passion, will continue to be present. If you enjoy what we do, please share our work. I’m attending a conference in Washington, DC June 13-15 where I’ll be connecting with hundreds of other educators in a watershed movement trying to bring education back into children’s and families’ lives. Two days ago, our little community of parents and families put up two yurts in a splendid new location in the mountains where I’ll be teaching and learning next fall (see photos below). This movement is for real, and it’s increasingly easy to find people and resources to tap into. I’ll be sharing a lot of that in coming months and years. Having fun. Laughing. Learning. Telling beautiful and new stories about where we’re going as people, as children, as planet. Join us. The New Yurts Photos from the Farm Support the Juniper School and outdoor education by becoming a free or paid subscriber. Get full access to Juniper Heartwood at josephsarosy.substack.com/subscribe

    29 min

About

Education is changing. The one-size-fits-all approach that prevailed for more than a century is coming to a slow and leaky close. Today, due to technology and increased interest in community and nature, children and families now have access to diverse choices and wonderful new opportunities. Joseph Sarosy is the author of How to Tell Stories to Children (now in 21 languages) and the creator of the Juniper School, an outdoor co-op serving learners in Northern New Mexico. An engineer with a second degree in philosophy, he and his students are but one small branch on a rapidly growing and increasingly well-funded network of independent educators, students, and families in urban and rural neighborhoods across the US. This podcast is about empowerment. It explores what education looks and feels like when we stop fearing what a child might not learn, and instead begin to integrate that child's education and growth into life, family, culture, and neighborhood. josephsarosy.substack.com