New Marlborough, Mass.        
 IN a speech last week, President Obama said it was unacceptable that “as  many as a quarter of American students are not finishing high school.”  But our current educational approach doesn’t just fail to prepare  teenagers for graduation or for college academics; it fails to prepare  them, in a profound way, for adult life.        
 We want young people to become independent and capable, yet we structure  their days to the minute and give them few opportunities to do anything  but answer multiple-choice questions, follow instructions and memorize  information. We cast social interaction as an impediment to learning,  yet all evidence points to the huge role it plays in their psychological  development.        
 That’s why we need to rethink the very nature of high school itself.        
 I recently followed a group of eight public high school students, aged  15 to 17, in western Massachusetts as they designed and ran their own  school within a school. They represented the usual range: two were close  to dropping out before they started the project, while others were  honors students. They named their school the Independent Project.         
 Their guidance counselor was their adviser, consulting with them when  the group flagged in energy or encountered an obstacle. Though they  sought advice from English, math and science teachers, they were  responsible for monitoring one another’s work and giving one another  feedback. There were no grades, but at the end of the semester, the  students wrote evaluations of their classmates.        
 The students also designed their own curriculum, deciding to split their September-to-January term into two halves.        
 During the first half, they formulated and then answered questions about  the natural and social world, including “Are the plant cells at the  bottom of a nearby mountain different than those at the top of the  mountain?” and “Why we do we cry?” They not only critiqued one another’s  queries, but also the answers they came up with. Along the way, they  acquired essential tools of inquiry, like how to devise good methods for  gathering various kinds of data.        
 During the second half, the group practiced what they called “the  literary and mathematical arts.” They chose eight novels — including  works by Kurt Vonnegut, William Faulkner and Oscar Wilde — to read in  eight weeks. That is more than the school’s A.P. English class reads in  an entire year.        
 Meanwhile, each of them focused on specific mathematical topics, from  quadratic equations to the numbers behind poker. They sought the help of  full-time math teachers, consulted books and online sources and,  whenever possible, taught one another.        
 They also each undertook an “individual endeavor,” learning to play the  piano or to cook, writing a novel or making a podcast about domestic  violence. At the end of the term, they performed these new skills in  front of the entire student body and faculty.        
 Finally, they embarked on a collective endeavor, which they agreed had  to have social significance. Because they felt the whole experience had  been so life-changing, they ended up making a film showing how other  students could start and run their own schools.        
 The results of their experiment have been transformative. An  Independence Project student who had once considered dropping out of  school found he couldn’t bear to stop focusing on his current history  question but didn’t want to miss out on exploring a new one. When he  asked the group if it would be O.K. to pursue both, another student  answered, “Yeah, I think that’s what they call learning.”        
 One student who had failed all of his previous math courses spent three  weeks teaching the others about probability. Another said: “I did well  before. But I had forgotten what I actually like doing.” They have all  returned to the conventional curriculum and are doing well. Two of the  seniors are applying to highly selective liberal arts colleges.        
 The students in the Independent Project are remarkable but not because  they are exceptionally motivated or unusually talented. They are  remarkable because they demonstrate the kinds of learning and personal  growth that are possible when teenagers feel ownership of their high  school experience, when they learn things that matter to them and when  they learn together. In such a setting, school capitalizes on rather  than thwarts the intensity and engagement that teenagers usually reserve  for sports, protest or friendship.        
 Schools everywhere could initiate an Independent Project. All it takes  are serious, committed students and a supportive faculty. These projects  might not be exactly alike: students might apportion their time  differently, or add another discipline to the mix. But if the  Independent Project students are any indication, participants will end  up more accomplished, more engaged and more knowledgeable than they  would have been taking regular courses.        
 We have tried making the school day longer and blanketing students with  standardized tests. But perhaps children don’t need another reform  imposed on them. Instead, they need to be the authors of their own  education.        
 
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