Hadar, L. Hotam, Y., & Kizel, A. (2018). "No school is an island: Negotiation between alternative education ideals and mainstream education- the case of Violin school." Pedagogy, Culture and Society 26 (1), 69-85
Abstract
This paper provides insights into the pedagogy in practice of non-mainstream education through a qualitative case study of a radical alternative school in the context of the Israeli school system. The school's alternative agenda is based on being isolated and independent from mainstream education. Our paper explores the negotiations between the school’s pedagogy and mainstream educational standards. We point to the tensions stemming from the intersections between the school’s ideals and the external context. This issue is significant for understanding the voices that affect alternative education, in relation to its aspiration for autonomous practices, and the ways in which secluded practices are permeated by mainstream influences. Our findings reveal that these negotiations centre on issues relating to learning, knowledge, and assessment. Mainstream standards pass into the alternative educational schemes, creating challenges leading not to a rejection of mainstream demands but rather to a need to balance between the different educational approaches. We further suggest that the act of balancing does not negate the significance of the alternative school. On the contrary, the ability to suspend educational isolation by interacting with the surrounding educational context enables this type of alternative education to stay in touch with its radical educational agenda.