The Educational Revolution that Nobody Saw Coming (But That Everyone Needed)
In a turn of events that surely left traditional education gurus speechless, the school A Favor del Niño (AFN), hidden in the south of Mexico City, has just snatched the coveted World’s Best School Prize in the Community Collaboration category. Imagine: while many schools are content to survive the day, this institution is dedicated to the boring and unglamorous stuff of truly transforming lives. What a lack of ambition.
With a current enrollment of 339 little human beings in preschool, elementary and secondary school, AFN retains them for a staggering 10 consecutive hours a day. The goal? Nothing special, just promoting the comprehensive development of children. Come on, the basics: compulsory subjects, food, good habits… unimportant details that, apparently, the rest of the world’s educational system had forgotten in a drawer.
The Best Kept Secret: Caring for Children Holistically (What a Radical Concept!)
Daniela Jiménez, director of the institution, explains it with a logic so forceful that it hurts: “This comprehensive model is anchored in a scheme that lasts 13 years of accompaniment. The children arrive at a year and a half and leave at 15 years of age. So it is about seeing the children in a comprehensive way, but during a 13-year training process, until we position them in a high school of quality“. Wow, wow, so the secret is continuity and long-term commitment? Someone should alert world educational authorities about this revolutionary discovery.
But wait, there’s more: A Favor del Niño is the first Mexican institution to be awarded this international award, the most prestigious, which distinguishes the schools with the greatest impact in the world. Of course, because in a country where education is usually in the news due to budget cuts and teacher protests, who would have imagined that a Mexican school could stand out on a global level? The irony is so delicious that it should be served in the student cafeteria.
The World’s Best School Prizes are five awards dedicated to best practices in educational institutions that are transforming lives inside and outside the classroom. In other words, they reward exactly what any self-respecting school should do. What an extravagant concept.
The Four Secret Pillars (That Are Not So Secret)
The AFN model is based on four pillars so obvious that it is embarrassing that they are not standard everywhere: a personalized and collaborative education (treating children as individuals, how crazy!), preventive health, a nutritious diet and integral human development. In other words: they care about the complete well-being of the student. Someone call the press, this is revolutionary!
Located at 860 San Jerónimo Avenue, south of the capital, this study house has a large plot of land with classrooms, infirmary, dining rooms, a teacher’s room and a children’s room where students learn healthy and eating habits during their days. Basically, it’s everything you’d expect from a decent school, but in practice it’s as rare as finding a unicorn on the subway.
The institution accompanies the training of children by ensuring that they all have their complete vaccination schedule, that they have optimal vision, hygiene habits and that they are fed according to an adequate regimen. In other words, they do what any responsible parent would do… if they had the resources and the knowledge. What an insignificant detail.
Sara Ávila, coordinator of the Health area at AFN and a nutritionist by profession, enlightens us with another pearl of wisdom: “I consult with the children and with the parents one on one on issues of whether they have any weight imbalance, if they have not reached the growth curve and nutritional education.” So does having a dedicated nutrition specialist improve students’ health? Take note, schools of the world.
The Scandal of Quotas and Socioeconomic Selection
Here comes the controversy: the enrollment is made up of children who underwent a socioeconomic evaluation, whose families receive an average income of between nine thousand and 10 thousand pesos per month, and contribute to the school a monthly fee that is between one thousand 800 and 320 pesos. That is, they serve families with limited resources with affordable rates. Where is the trick? There must surely be one, because this sounds too good to be true.
Xóchitl de Garay, president of the board, reveals another uncomfortable truth: “We take them off the streets, we take them off social networks, we take them out of idleness, from bad friendships and they are here. The children, although they go to school, when they go out in the afternoons they go out a lot. They are not street children, but they are children on the street with the same risks.” Wow, so the problem is not only the educational quality but also the social environment? What an inconvenient revelation for those who prefer simple solutions to complex problems.
The Deadly Sin: Involving Parents (Dare!)
Another reason why this institution won the award, say its directors, is the way in which they have managed to involve parents in their children’s activities. Can you imagine? Treat parents as allies instead of enemies. What a subversive concept.
Sofía de Garay, a member of the board, explains the methodology with a logic that would make many pedagogy experts cry: “We made an entire model through which parents meet with their peers and discuss the issue among themselves and reach solutions among themselves, only with a mediator in the center who guides them. This has been revealing, because someone who understands you and is experiencing your same situation gives you much more than an expert.” That is, they trust the collective intelligence of the communities. What a dangerously democratic idea.
This strategy also contributes to the personal growth of parents, who are often very young or single; After joining AFN, teachers report that parents have been able to resume their studies, find better jobs and improve their lifestyles. In other words, they not only educate children but transform entire families. Aren’t schools only supposed to teach math and Spanish?
The Uncontrollable Contagion of Good Ideas
To make matters worse, the model has had an impact throughout the area’s school district, whose directors have approached the AFN to learn about its methodologies, with the intention of implementing them on their campus. Imagine: success being so evident that even other educators want to copy it. What a lack of originality.
And if that were not enough, teachers allocate three hours every Monday to conflict resolution, quickly addressing cases of violence, bullying or educational deficiencies. Instead of sweeping problems under the rug, they confront them head on. What a radically sensible approach.
In summary, In Favor of the Child shows us that educational excellence does not require magic formulas or extravagant technologies, but rather real commitment, continuity and – attention because this is very important – treating students as complete human beings with physical, emotional and intellectual needs. Was it that difficult?
While the educational world desperately seeks complex solutions to simple problems, this Mexican school applies common sense on a monumental scale and, surprise, it works. The real scandal here is that its model is not the norm but the exception.
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