Tag Archives: Bedford Experiment

Friday Flashback #316

In the 1960s and ’70s, Staples High School buzzed with educational innovation.

There were English courses in things like filmmaking, and an Alternatives program for students who learned in non-traditional ways. The Staples Governing Board gave students, teachers and administrators a powerful voice in nearly every aspect of school decision-making.

But radical new ideas were not limited to the high school.

In 1969, Eric Bosch was a 9th grader at Bedford Junior High (today, the building is Saugatuck Elementary School). Principal Ken Brummel had an idea: Allow teachers to teach any course they wanted, in any area that intrigued them.

Allow students to choose any courses they wanted, across all disciplines. There were no restrictions. If they wanted, they could take 7 classes of phys. ed.

And, oh yeah: Letter grades were optional. Every instructor could provide any type of evaluation they wanted: “Outstanding, Satisfactory or Unsatisfactory,” for example, or a written set of comments.

Eric Bosch’s course evaluation for “Nutrition.”

Students also graded themselves.

The “Modular Teaching Experiment” began that spring, for the final 6 weeks of the marking period.

The other day — more than 50 years later — Bosch found material from those experimental days.

He did not choose 7 periods of gym. Instead, he took:

  • “Nutrition,” (taught by Don DiGennaro)
  • “Tube Talk” (Edward Elendausky)
  • “Vampires Unlimited” (Annette Silverstone)
  • “Keeping up with the News” (Karley Higgins)
  • “Metalworking” (David Conrad_
  • “The Athlete” (Ray Comeau)
  • “Track” (Ed Hall).

Course description for “The Athlete,” taught by Ray Comeau.

Looking back, Bosch finds the 6-week session “mind blowing.” It was also — well, different.

When he was applying to Clark University 3 years later, an interviewer asked, “What the hell was going on with your 4th quarter in 8th grade?”

Eric Bosch’s 4th quarter report card included grades from traditional and experimental courses. “French was not my strong suit,” he says.

But, Bosch adds , he is “grateful that Westport’s teachers and administrators were willing to try new approaches to teaching. While some college admissions personnel might not have liked it, isn’t that the price you pay for being on the leading edge of anything?”

Early in his first year of college, Bosch recalls, he told his parents he was more prepared than many of his classmates.

The Bedford Experiment ended. But Westport schools — in particular, Staples — continued to innovate.

And what happened to Ken Brummel, the BJHS principal who pushed the envelope?

A few years later, he was named Westport’s superintendent of schools.

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Bedford Junior High School, back in the day.