About the Author:
THE TEAM OF AUTHORS came together at the invitation of Architects of Achievement, a Seattle consulting firm focused on building bridges between educational design and architecture. Victoria Bergsagel, founded and directs Architects of Achievement. Focused on designing schools where all students achieve, this Harvard-trained educator, has been a teacher, principal, adjunct professor, community relations director, school district administrator and research institute director. Her gift for nurturing people s talents and insights has resulted in inspired and award-winning school programs and designs. Tim Best consults in the public and private sectors on innovative projects involving change, technology, and learning. He is Director of State Partnerships at the Wexford Institute in California, MATRIX Learning, a national research project exploring the benefits of games and mobile technologies for formal learning. Kathleen Cushman has since 1989 written many books and essays on school change and student-centered teaching and learning. A cofounder of the nonprofit What Kids Can Do, Inc., she also helped found the Francis W. Parker Charter Essential School in Massachusetts. Lorne McConachie, a senior principal architect with Bassetti Architects in Seattle, has 25 years experiences in planning educational facilities. His innovative designs have won high acclaim. He won the 1999 James D. MacConnell Award for his Edmonds-Woodway High School design and was a finalist for that award in 2004 for his Todd Beamer High School design. Wendy Sauer, who has a master s degree in curriculum and instruction, spent a decade in the classroom and later served as director of education at Experience Music Project. She has consulted with a variety of educational organizations, including the Library of Congress. David Stephen, an architect, straddles the worlds of architecture and education reform. He has worked with schools around the country on innovative teaching and learning. In addition to working with Architects of Achievement, he is Director of Design for High Tech High Communities, a network of charter schools in California with nationwide affiliates.
Review:
A must for those embarking on small school design, including the conversion of big buildings, but also a good read for those thinking about the way human beings are influenced by space. The authors wonderfully capture the many ways and circumstances in which different architects and school people have reimagined physical settings where schooling of a different sort can take place. I love it! --Deborah Meier, small-school leader, author, New York University
Transforming public schools into learning environments that build community is critical to improving academic achievement. Architects of Achievement provide a vision and much-needed road map for changing the way we educate children in America. --Board President Monica Garcia, Los Angeles Unified School District
Educators, planners, and architects will find this an invaluable tool in understanding the important role small learning communities play in the success of all students. It provides wonderful images of the simple and inventive ways that schools can be designed and reimagined, as educators collaborate with architects to create dynamic and practical centers for learning. --Tim Dufault, American Institute of Architects Committee on Architecture in Education; President, Cunningham Group Architecture
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