Inspired by Piaget, Montessori, and Dewey, the Developmental Model argues that learning emerges from within the child, guided by readiness and interest. Dianne praises this model for its respect for childhood and its rejection of one-size-fits-all pacing. Curriculum is often integrated (math through cooking, reading through nature journals), and assessment is qualitative.
Here is a deep dive into the four Dianne models: Model 1: The Transmission Model (The "Factory School") Core Metaphor: The school as an assembly line. Primary Goal: Efficient transfer of standardized knowledge. Teacher Role: Subject-matter expert and gatekeeper. Student Role: Passive receiver and replicator. school models dianne
High intrinsic motivation, better long-term retention, lower anxiety. Supports neurodiversity. Pathologies: Can be too laissez-faire; may under-prepare students for structured environments or content-heavy higher education. Difficult to scale in large systems. Example: Montessori schools, Reggio Emilia-inspired programs, many progressive independent schools. Dianne’s caution: "Developmentalism without rigor becomes a vacation. The garden still needs pruning." Model 3: The Apprenticeship Model (The "Guild School") Core Metaphor: The school as a studio or workshop. Primary Goal: Competence through guided practice in authentic contexts. Teacher Role: Master practitioner and coach. Student Role: Apprentice and eventual journeyman. Inspired by Piaget, Montessori, and Dewey, the Developmental
However, Dianne notes a troubling trend: many schools claim to be "student-centered" (Developmental) or "real-world" (Apprenticeship) while actually running Transmission behind the scenes. The result is a kind of that frustrates everyone. Here is a deep dive into the four
The Transmission Model is what most people picture when they hear "traditional school." Originating from the Industrial Revolution, it treats curriculum as a fixed body of facts to be deposited into students before they are tested for cracks. Dianne notes that this model excels at sorting—identifying who can memorize quickly and follow instructions—but fails at deep inquiry.
In the noisy debate over school reform—standardized tests vs. project-based learning, discipline vs. free play, tradition vs. innovation—few frameworks offer clarity. One that does is the lesser-known but increasingly influential . Named for its creator, educational theorist Dr. Dianne S. (whose full work appears in Reimagining the Grammar of Schooling , 2018), this framework argues that every school, regardless of its claims, operates from one of four core models.
By J. Hartley, Education Futures
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