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Indybay Feature

Free Skool Marks Two Years of Learning Outside the System

by Free Skool Santa Cruz
Grassroots project has grown to include hundreds of classes and continues to blur the line between teachers and students
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Free Skool Marks Two Years of Learning Outside the System

Grassroots project has grown to include hundreds of classes and continues to blur the line between teachers and students

Santa Cruz, CA, February 1st, 2007: Two years ago this spring, Free Skool Santa Cruz started as an idea between friends. It was a resuscitation of an old idea: interactive and informal learning in a non-institutional, non-hierarchical setting outside of the monetary economy. In other words, friends sharing what they know with others in an informal skill-sharing network. And in two years, Free Skool has offered over 260 different classes on everything from DIY-philosophy such as bike repair and knitting to more academic subjects such as local and radical history.

In fact, looking at the quarterly-produced Free Skool calendar -- with classes offered almost every single day -- it is nearly impossible to easily summarize the breadth of the subjects offered. "History of the Future" falls next to "Don't Die! Wild Foods." " Polynesian Star Navigation" cozies up to "Surveillance Camera Walking Tour" on the Free Skool calendar. More mainstay classes -- language, yoga, cooking, and art. -- also round out the schedule.

As much as possible, Free Skool works to blur the line between teachers, students, and organizers. Teachers make most of the arrangements for their classes including subject, material, timing, and location. Classes are informal, egalitarian, and are held in homes, social spaces, and parks. "We are all students and we are all teachers here," says the Free Skool website. And once a quarter, students, teachers, organizers, and community members all pitch in to put on the Free Skool Community Picnic.

Organizers view Free Skool as an intrinsically radical project. It is not only a framework in which students and teachers can share what they know, but a direct challenge to institutional control and the commodification of learning. It is a completely grassroots effort, with no outside funding or support, a bunch of individuals working collectively and autonomously to make it happen.

New Free Skool teachers are always welcome. The deadline to submit new classes for the upcoming Spring Quarter is February 10th.

Spring Quarter runs March 1st to May 31st. Calendars for the new quarter will be available mid-February on-line and at most cafes, bookstores, and community centers in Santa Cruz and beyond. The Free Skool Santa Cruz website, which offers the current calendar, class reviews, and discussion, is at http://santacruz.freeskool.org

Add Your Comments

Comments (Hide Comments)
by Dan D. Lyon
a dandelion. I wonder... is that symbolic of the transient and impermanence of Free Skool Santa Cruz? Will Free Skool Santa Cruz, like a dandelion, one day scatter to the wind, planting seeds in new places?
by free skooler
beyond being a hardy, useful, and deliciously edible plant, dandelions are tenacious survivors. ask any suburban lawn farmer. and while the individual plants might come and go, dandelions keep springing up year after year after year, all the while, spreading their seeds far and wide.

drifting seeds: directly inspired by santa cruz, free skools have sprung up or are sprouting in Denver, Portland, San Francisco, Mexico, and Anchorage.

other free skools have sprung up independently or have been going strong for years and years. see the free skool santa cruz list of active free skools:

http://santacruz.freeskool.org/content.php?content.11

or check out the wikipedia article on Free Skools:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free_Skool
by Ezra Niesen
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If you've got a free school, I've got a free audio book on the Science of Human Equality. (You can order printed copies of my book through my website too.) You can read the first half of the book on my site for free, you can download my audio lecture for free, and you can read my lecture for free. Pretty soon I'll have a free video and a couple more books too.

There aren't very many people in the world who can do the things do, so basically, I'm trying to set up a free school through the internet. I don't live in your area, but if anyone would care to check out my work and some of the books that went into it, you could teach it to yourselves or help teach it to each other or whatever.
by Free Skool Santa Cruz
Do you have unique skills and knowledge? Are you willing to share what you know in a non-authoritarian and interactive way? Do you appreciate learning in an informal setting? We’d like you to be part of this project. We are all students and we are all teachers here.

See Indybay article on becoming a Free Skool teacher.
by Free Skool Santa Cruz
We'll be printing up new calendars a week or so after our teacher deadline on February 10th. Free Skool's only major expense is printing calendars. Printing about 2500 calendars costs us about $400. Will you consider donating cash to support our printing costs?

See Indybay article about supporting Free Skool.
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