Knock Out

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‘When I was first asked to play the character of Steppin Fetchit, my initial reaction was shock,” says actor Roscoe Orman, describing the moment, in 1993, when he was given a one-man play titled
The Life and Times of Steppin Fetchit. “I was a little bit offended,” Orman admits.

“I didn’t really know that much about Lincoln Perry,” Orman continues, “the real man behind the character of Steppin Fetchit. I knew that he was a controversial figure, an actor who had been seriously criticized for creating a negative portrayal of black people. But that was about all.”

The playwright who asked Orman to play the part was Matt Robinson, who originally created the piece for himself. A longtime writer and producer for television, Robinson was the first actor to play the beloved character of Gordon on the PBS children’s show Sesame Street. The second actor to play Gordon was Roscoe Orman, who went on to play Gordon for 40 years.

As it turns out, Orman was impressed with Robinson’s play. After a successful run in New York City, he went on to tour it internationally, off and on, for the next 12 years.

This week, he steps into the character again. This time, though, it’s in a powerful new play by writer Will Power. Titled Fetch Clay, Make Man, the play—kicking off the Marin Theatre Company’s new season—explores the real-life friendship between Perry and boxing legend Muhammed Ali.

“It was an interesting, intriguing, extremely dramatic relationship,” says Orman, who saw the play in New York last year and immediately knew he wanted to appear in it the next time it was produced. “Having played the man himself for such a long period,” he says, “I think you could say I’m bringing a certain expertise to my portrayal of the character. So here I am, appearing as Steppin Fetchit for the season opener of the Marin Theatre Company.”

Asked to illuminate any differences in character that might exist between the two very different plays, Orman says it’s not easy to compare them.

“Perry was a controversial figure, but he was a very important figure: the first black actor in Hollywood films to have an extended and successful career,” Orman says. “Both playwrights have discovered the man behind the myth—and let me tell you, he was quite an amazing man.”

‘Fetch Clay, Make Man’ runs Tuesday–Sunday, Aug. 14–Sept. 7 at the Marin Theatre Company. 397 Miller Ave., Mill Valley. Times vary. $20–$58. 415.388.5208.

Debriefer: August 13, 2014

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NEWSOM HIGH ON POT

State Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom told an enthusiastic crowd in Marin County last week that he supports legal weed, with the usual and expected caveat: Keep the boo away from junior until he’s at least old enough to drive.

Our bud Newsom’s long-held pro-legalization posture is at odds with ol’ Gov. Jerry Brown, who opposes legalization and whose economy-boosting priorities these days revolve around the great cosmic death frack.

If Newsom were running the show, he’d let the Cali-cool freak flag fly proud, pungent and profitable. Legalization is a far more popular stimulus option among the progressive base that Brown’s been bogarting all these years.

But Brown’s a shoe-in for reelection this year, he don’t need no stinkin’ progressives, and the pot issue is neutralized anyway since Brown’s opponent in the fall election, Republican Neel Kashkari, also opposes legalization.

Yet Kashkari (shown) made headlines of late when he “dressed up” like a homeless person in order to, you know, get a feel for the street life. We think he might have been trying to score some Mexican dirt-weed as a way to take the sting out of his party’s anti-immigrant animus, but that’s just us. Get yourself a dispensary card, brother. That street stuff is bunk.

For Gen X pol Newsom, this is no mere dab into pot politics. The Kentfield resident lit up the joint in Marin when he told the crowd, as reported in the Marin Independent Journal, that he’d stump around the state for a 2016 legalization ballot measure.

Newsom’s pro-pot speech came on the heels of a stunning recent New York Times editorial that laid out the rolling-paper of record’s newfound pro-legalization posture, despite Maureen Dowd’s recent and hilarious psychotic encounter with a pot-laced candy bar in a Colorado hotel room. If the gray lady can get with the greenery, can the S.F. Chronic be far behind?

Newsom has on occasion huffed and puffed about running for higher office—he would have run for governor this year if Brown had bowed out of the race—and Debriefer’s down with that plan: Aim high, sir! The people are with you on this one.

DOGS AT THE TABLE

Speaking of Jerry Brown going completely to the dogs, the governor has a bill headed to his desk that he better sign—oh, but he better! Yes, Debriefer is referring to our favorite bill outta Sacramento this year, our pet bill, Napa assemblywoman Mariko Yamada’s dogs-in-restaurants bill, which would localize decisions about whether Fido’s welcome in al fresco dining settings. Her office e-blasted Debriefer with the news last week that the bill made it through both houses in Sacramento. Roll a bone and go for it, Gov.

PENSION PUFFERS

And in other wacky-tobaccy news we first read about in the Marin IJ, Nels Johnson had a great zinger in his piece last Friday about Marin County supervisors barring the sale of tobacco in unincorporated parts of the county. Johnson took the opportunity to remind readers about the county’s pension fund: “The supervisors barred tobacco sales without mentioning the county pension system’s
$8.7 million investment in tobacco stocks, half of it in Philip Morris.” Love that unfiltered reporting, Nels.—Tom Gogola

In Da Club

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In 2008, the California Teachers Association declared a “state of fiscal emergency” when the state’s education budget was slashed by $18 billion. Libraries went unstaffed, teachers were laid off and schools closed, including some in the North Bay.

Enter the Boys & Girls Club, whose Roseland Elementary School site was honored in June by the Boys & Girls Clubs of America as the best in the country—out of more than 4,000 contenders.

“It’s almost like winning the best movie award at the Oscars,” says Jason Weiss, co-CEO of the Boys & Girls Clubs of Central Sonoma County. “What’s unique for us is we run the same program at all our club locations. For us, it felt more like an organizational award.”

The Boys & Girls Club steps up when budgets are slashed and programs cut. It’s more than just a place for kids to hang out until parents can pick them up—each club tailors its offerings to fit the needs of each site. If a school had its physical-education program cut, a club can offer it as an activity. Library shut down? The club will put extra attention on reading and literacy tutoring. Art program canceled? You get the picture.

“We have more flexibility than the school does during the day,” says Weiss. “Our whole goal when we open on a campus is to be a partner at that school. We have a lot of communication with the principal and teachers.”

If programs are cut, he says, “we can very often fill some of those gaps for the kids.”

The club serves at least a hundred students at each site, says Weiss, most of whom are from disadvantaged circumstances. “We’re filled to the max at these places,” he says.

The Sonoma County program came about through a years-long centralization process that put 28 individual clubs in the county under one umbrella organization, which is by far the largest in the North Bay. There are also independent groups in Sonoma and Petaluma, the latter of which has eight clubs in Petaluma and three in Marin County. The Boys & Girls Club of Napa Valley has 11 clubs in Napa and American Canyon.

At Roseland Elementary, principal Dana Pedersen says the club serves about 200 of the school’s 650 students, 90 percent of whom are Hispanic. “And we always have a waiting list,” she says. “It gives students, especially second-language learners, access to important skills and language practice.”

Roseland’s was the first on-site club in the district, and its success spawned other clubs. Now it’s an essential part of the school. “It’s just an extension of who we are,” says Pedersen. “Our students would really suffer without them.”

The club takes great care to integrate the school’s curriculum with their own. “They have their own services, but they complement our services really well,” says Pedersen.

“For us, it effects the wholeness of a child, in a certain way,” says Weiss. “If they’re missing out on things that kids 30 years ago used to get in school that really completed their childhood, that’s something we try to pick up the slack on.”

The club’s funding comes mostly from government grants and private donations; 10 percent of its budget comes out of fees and dues charged to members. . The Boys & Girls Clubs of Central Sonoma County runs on an annual budget of just over $5 million and doesn’t have to worry about state budget crises. “The government funding we receive from the state of California is designated for after-school programs and would require a vote of the people to overturn,” says Weiss.

The investment has paid off. The group has the 12th largest daily attendance among 1,000 clubs around the country, and serves almost 3,500 after-school students each day at 28 sites, 20 of which are located at the schools themselves.

And they’re making the most of the centralized organization. The group received a recent grant for 50 iPads and created a mobile technology center that rotates between clubs, which gives all students access to the tools, instead of just those lucky enough to attend a certain school.

“They pride themselves on providing quality programming,” says Pedersen.

Gourmet Raised

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A restaurant’s kitchen is no place for kids. Typically, it’s an intense maelstrom of activity with battle-scarred hands intensely absorbed in the craft: they chop and measure, they mince and mix.

There are knives, flames and pots boiling water everywhere, and the din of voices is barely audible over the soundtrack of Metallica or Mozart (depending on the tastes of the chef).

While the atmosphere of organized chaos may not be the ideal setting for children, for some, it’s the only life they know.

“We had a crib in the restaurant,” says Karen Martin, chef and co-owner of K&L Bistro in Sebastopol.

Martin recollects the early days when she and her husband, Lucas, were starting out. The couple has two sons, Jack and Lucas Jr. “I worked the line with [Lucas] on my back,” says Martin. “We couldn’t afford to have a babysitter, so the boys were here every night. It’s been a long haul for them.”

But she said the experience was positive because they were always together.

In a culture that encourages instant gratification, particularly when it comes to food, kids of chefs have a kind of built-in gratitude that comes from being around all that good food and learning its source first-hand. For these kids, a suppertime special of soubise of duck is as commonplace as the reliably kid-friendly mac ‘n’ cheese. Martin says her boys, now age 10 and 13, eat junk food on occasion but they “both have an exquisite palate and will eat stuff that other kids won’t.”

Growing up gourmet has meant her sons understand “food in its rawest form,” says Martin, who beams with pride at her sons’ appreciation of that fact.

Louis Maldonado, executive chef at Spoonbar and a Top Chef finalist, says his five-year-old son, Benjamin, has been exposed to a variety of foods and ingredients not typically seen on the kids’ menu. His mother, who is Korean, introduced him to kimchi. The Korean staple is typically served with a nutritious accompaniment of rice and vegetables. “[He] doesn’t shy away from anything.” Maldonado says. “He is huge on raw food, [but] not really crazy about steak.”

Maldonado says his son also understands where everything comes from, which results in a deeper appreciation of the food put before him. When the family does go out for dinner, Maldonado says it’s mostly for Mexican or sushi. The family has a three-times-a-year policy when it comes to In-N-Out Burger or McDonald’s.

The cuisine at Santa Rosa’s Bistro 29 emphasizes regional French (Bretagne) food, but owner Brian Anderson mixes it up for his two teen children at home, where Thai noodles are a house fave. Anderson opened Bistro 29 with his wife, Francoise, in 2008—daughter Claire worked in the kitchen when she was 13—and wanted to expose Sonoma County residents to cuisine local to Brittany. (Buckwheat crêpes are a specialty)

In that time, Claire and her brother, Tom, have both developed sophisticated, adventurous palates. “They love oysters and tongue tacos,” Anderson says. “My son is a big meat eater—duck, steak,” while Claire is more likely to enjoy “salad and a charcuterie plate with some nice cheese.

“They are very expensive to take out,” he says.

Recipes for kids

Pasta sauce from Karen Martin of K & L Bistro:

“Here is the recipe for the pasta sauce that is such a hit with my kids. It is usually served with the long, telephone cord noodles, but those are expensive and hard to find so you could substitute fusilli.” Karen Martin.

1 lb. ground pork

1 yellow onion (diced)

1 TBSP garlic (minced)

1 TBSP salt

2 TBSP pepper

Cook these together until the meat turns color and the onion is translucent.

Add:

1 cup white wine

1 6-oz can tomato paste

1 cup whole milk

Let cook together for about 15-20 minutes on a low simmer. Toss with cooked noodles of your choice and top with lots of grated Parmesan. Karen likes more black pepper on top and adds chili flakes, but some people might find that too spicy.

Roast chicken, pickled golden raisins, chicories, and green garlic from
Louis Maldonado of Spoonbar Restaurant:

Serves 4

1 5-pound chicken, trussed

400g kosher salt

4 liters water

1 bunch thyme

1 head garlic

1 bunch tarragon

¼ pound butter

Mix the water and salt and whisk till fully incorporated, add the chicken and brine for 3 hours, remove and let dry for 36-48 hours.

In a large sauté pan or cast iron heat the pan till smoking hot, add 4 TBSP oil and start to sear the chicken, breast side first and then rotating to get all the sides golden. Add thyme, garlic, tarragon and butter and put into a 325 degree oven. Baste every 15 minutes for 2 hours, remove and let rest for 20 minutes before carving.

Pickled golden raisins

2 cups golden raisins

1 cup red wine vinegar

1 cup sugar

2 cups water

Bring everything to a boil and slowly reduce till the syrup is dry and glazes the raisins.

Chicories and green garlic

3 bunch mixed chicories, separated into leaves. Chard or kale works, too.

½ pound green garlic, cut into 1-inch slices

4 TBSP olive oil

Saute green garlic in olive oil till tender and then add the chicories. Lightly wilt and season with salt

To finish

Carve the breast of the chicken first and cut into 4 pieces, cut the chicken legs off and cut the legs in half. Serve a piece of breast and leg, garnish with the pickled raisins, green garlic and chicories.

Letters to the Editor: August 13, 2014

Bond—JC Bond

I’m writing to let readers know about the extensive public oversight of a potential Santa Rosa Junior College bond measure (Debriefer, July 30). If voters approve the SRJC bond this fall, there will be an independent citizen bond oversight committee whose meetings, minutes and annual reports will be public, and there will be annual independent, public audits (as required by state law). Members will be required to come from throughout the community.

All of the funds from this measure will stay local and will be spent to improve the JC—none of it can be taken by the state government, and Sacramento politicians will have no say in how the funds are used.

These bond revenues may be spent only for facilities and technology. They may not be used for any salaries or other college operating expenses.

Director of Communication & Marketing, Santa Rosa Junior College

Drakes Bay

I would like to respond to Mr. Gogola’s thoughts on our oyster industry (Open Mic, July 30). So you went down there and observed the oyster farm. Did you take a ride out on the oyster boats into their “fields”? I did. We went through the harbor seal rookery at 15 to 20 mph; every seal head was erect, a sign of alert. Several slipped into the water. This is harassment of an animal that exactly 100 years ago numbered 30 along the entire California coast. The highly alerted in harbor seals causes cortisol to run through them, which in large amounts can kill.

We were part of the study to find out if Drakes Bay Oyster Co. posed a threat to the bay or the ocean. We specialize in plastics. The plastic bags that the oysters are grown in are made of a heavy plastic mesh. For the first three months that this plastic sits in salt water, it releases petrochemicals. We find these bags and their remains from Sonoma to Monterey. We have personally picked up thousands. Albatrosses take parts of these killing machines back to Midway Island and feed them to their babies.

Drakes’ operation was not pristine. DDT was sprayed around the dairies. Plastic has PCBs as one of its components, and it has been proven that DDT combined with PCBs condensed in the flesh of aquatic animals consumed by marine mammals causes cancer, and we are marine mammals. To get a real awakening, Google “what is plastic made of” and then Google “affects on humans.” Pay special attention to phthalates. To Drakes Bay Oyster Co., it has been about jobs and money. To the hundreds of sanctuary volunteers that carried out the studies that found Drakes a threat to our environment, it’s about the ocean, always has been, always will be.

Sebastopol

Double Standards in Gaza

Yes, Norman Solomon, Israel should apologize to Hamas and the unfortunates of Gaza, but only when the British, Australian and American governments issue avowals of retrospective contrition for the carpet bombing of German and Japanese cities to “rid them of arms manufacture placed in civilian neighborhoods,” then go on to destroy rocket launch sites. (Letters, July 23). And we need to accept that more non-combatants than soldiers died on D-Day, Okinawa and many of the other battles that contributed to the defeat of fascism and our national identities.

On that note, let’s keep thinking about this implied double standard between now and when the commemorative ceremonies extolling the end of the Good War are unfurled later next year. More to the point, if Allied commanders had applied the same standards we’re now demanding of Israel, we’d all be speaking German or Japanese (while, undoubtedly, some of my family and, I suspect, yours would be in or near a Nazi gas oven). Ah, the unintended consequences of purity!

Richman is the former general manager of The Bohemian’s forerunner, The Paper

Brisbane, Australia

Live Vegan, Protect Water

Last weekend, the drinking water of 400,000 Toledo residents was fouled by animal waste. With unfettered growth of animal agriculture and ineffective discharge regulations, it will happen again in our own state.

The problem has become pervasive. Waste from chicken farms has rendered the ocean off the East Coast unfit for fishing. Waste from Midwest cattle ranches carried by the Mississippi River has created a permanent “dead zone” in the Gulf of Mexico larger than that of the infamous 2010 BP oil spill.

Animal agriculture dumps more pollution to our waterways than all other human activities combined. Manure and fertilizers promote growth of toxic algae that poison drinking water supplies.

Effective regulations to limit dumping of animal waste into water supplies have been blocked by the meat industry.

Fortunately, every one of us has the power to stop this outrage three times a day by saying no to polluting meat and dairy products. Our local supermarkets offer ample alternatives.

Santa Rosa

Write to us at le*****@******an.com.

New Discoveries

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Fifteen years ago, mother and Petaluma native Collette Michaud encountered the age-old question: “What to do with the kids?” There’s a lot of ways to kill some time, but Michaud wanted her two young sons to engage in meaningful activities.

That’s when she heard about Sausalito’s Bay Area Discovery Museum, a place that sparked imaginative thinking and highlighted the natural wonders of the bay. “I fell in love with the Discovery Museum,” says Michaud, who was immediately taken by the museum’s engaging exhibits.

Soon she started looking for ways to bring that same experience to Sonoma County. “There was something in me saying it’s going to happen [in Sonoma County], and if you don’t do it, someone will. So it might as well be you,” Michaud says. “But it has become so much bigger and better than I could imagine it would be.”

In 2005, she and a small staff started a mobile museum that became popular in schools and parks throughout Sonoma County. For Michaud, that was the first step in establishing a permanent space. Michaud’s vision finally found a home in 2010, when Jean Schulz gifted the Children’s Museum of Sonoma County a 30-year lease on the 4.2-acre property adjacent to the Schulz Museum in Santa Rosa.

As the lease was being negotiated, Michaud and her staff were also applying for a grant to make use of the outdoor space. After an impassioned presentation, the California Parks and Recreation Department awarded the museum $1.8 million for an outdoors exhibit.

“I wanted it to be a garden first, as opposed to an exhibit with outdoor features,” says Michaud. The garden’s theme revolves around the life cycle of the butterfly, and taking the Spanish name “Mariposa,” the space is called Mary’s Garden.

“I always wanted to have a creek with natural features that show what makes Sonoma County special,” explains Michaud. Today, a 60-foot-long recreation of the Russian River centers the garden.

Inside, the museum’s Ella Art Studio and Dow Events Center cater to children 10 and younger, though parents are able to enjoy and engage as well.

The museum went full-time last June, and is still raising money to finish the space, with an $8.3 million capital campaign nearing completion. Next month, the museum hosts its annual “Time to Wonder” luncheon on Sept. 18 to help raise funds for ongoing programming.

For now, Michaud is focused on completing the museum’s next phase, the indoor Science and Imagination Gallery set to open in 2015. The character and flavor of Sonoma County will be highlighted once more in a main street exhibit that offers kids and parents more ways to engage in meaningful fun.

The Children’s Museum of Sonoma County, 1835 West Steele Lane, Santa Rosa. Tuesday–Saturday, 9am–4pm; Sunday, noon–4pm. $7. 707.546.4069.

Brave Hearts

Reviewing the first Narnia movie, critic Anthony Lane mulled over the mixed metaphor of making Aslan the Lion a leonine Jesus. Conditioned like every ex-Catholic to tear up at the Passion, I still snickered when the Ice Queen Tilda Swinton ordered, “Let him be shaved!”

Elton John’s hit “Someone Shaved My Lion Last Night” came to mind, but Lane put the problem more coherently. Is it better to have a lion representing the Divine, persecuted by humanity? Would such a Christian critter be more like the abused, patient Balthazar the donkey in Robert Bresson’s 1966 classic Au Hasard Balthazar?

The Irish import Calvary restages Jesus’ last climb as a week on the Irish coast, with a baffled accidental martyr, played by the great Brendan Gleeson, much like poor Balthazar in gentleness, animal strength and, of course, shagginess. Gleeson’s Father James is a priest of County Sligo; as told here, the town he serves has pretty much given up on Catholicism as a bad joke.

James is informed by a parishioner (whose face he cannot see in the confessional booth) that he is to be shot next Sunday. James is an innocent who will die for the sins of the Church—punishment for all the pedophiliac rapes the bishops covered up. The Father has a week to figure out who his assassin might be.

Suspicions arise that director-writer John Michael McDonagh is doing what novelist Patrick McGinley does—that is, using a less-than-airtight murder mystery to serve as a study of rural Irish awfulness. Still, the suspects are anything but usual. They include Chris O’Dowd as a cuckold who runs a grisly butcher shop, and the ineffable Dylan Moran as a millionaire swine, boozing away the shame of having driven the Irish economy straight into the bog.

The final dirge by the Paraguayan folk band Los Chiriguanos fails to make this too sad to watch. Title aside, Calvary is tragic-comic. Like the old story from which it takes its title, it turns mysterious and brave.

‘Calvary’ is showing at the Century Regency, 280 Smith Ranch Road, San Rafael. 415.479.6496.

Supercenter Redux

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Four years ago, Rohnert Park–area citizens stopped Walmart’s plans for expanding its store into a Supercenter. But Walmart’s back at it, with the same proposal, and citizens must say no again.

The expansion plans are a bad idea for Rohnert Park and all of Sonoma County. Walmart workers make far less than a living wage for Sonoma County, and the company is in the midst of a California lawsuit over gender discrimination. Less than half of Walmart workers have employer-provided healthcare insurance and many rely on taxpayer-funded medical services. An expanded Walmart means more traffic, more greenhouse gas emissions and extra burdens on local law enforcement.

There’s even more reason to oppose Walmart this time around. The company is already building a neighborhood market in the Mountain Shadows Shopping Center. How many grocery stores does Rohnert Park need? We already have more than most communities our size.

There are those who claim Walmart will bring jobs to the community. They are wrong. Walmart will take jobs from other stores, and the principal effect will be to lower the quality of the jobs. Walmart’s practices drive low-end wages even lower. When it comes to promoting fairness, eco-sustainability and democracy, Walmart jobs are triple offenders: they are nonunion, poverty-wage positions that support a corporation with a climate footprint half the size of France and that undermines Main Street jobs all over the world.

Last time around, some residents supported Walmart because they wanted access to Walmart’s low prices. Rohnert Park already has its fair share of discount grocers: FoodMaxx, Grocery Outlet and Costco.

Consumer Reports surveyed 10 stores, including Walmart, Sears, Target, Kmart and Sam’s Club, and only Costco earned an outstanding grade for the quality and value of its merchandise.

The Rohnert Park planning commission will consider Walmart’s expansion application at a public hearing in the council chambers at city hall, Aug. 14 at 6 pm.

Show up and say no to the Supercenter!

Rick Luttmann is a Rohnert Park resident and retired mathematics professor at Sonoma State University.

RickOpen Mic is a weekly feature in the ‘Bohemian.’ We welcome your contribution. To have your topical essay of 350 words considered for publication, write op*****@******an.com.

Get Out of Town

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It’s not often we look to Lake County for events, but this weekend marks a weekend-long concert and event in a historic setting with a brand-new look.

Set in a beautiul mountain setting, Hoberg’s Resort & Spa has reopened under new ownership, and this weekend the proprietors are throwing a huge bash marking the 45th anniversary of the Woodstock festival.

On Saturday, Aug. 16, the Heroes of Woodstock concert celebration features classic rockers Canned Heat, Big Brother & the Holding Company and Tom Constanten from the Grateful Dead. The next night, the Summer of Love celebration continues when Elvin Bishop (pictured) headlines a day of music that also features Lydia Pense & Cold Blood and It’s a Beautiful Day.

The Heroes of Woodstock and Summer
of Love concerts take place Aug. 16–17 at Hoberg’s Resort & Spa, 15205 State Hwy. 175, Cobb. Doors open at noon. $35–$45. 1.877.277.8922.

The Digital Divide

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‘There was one student in the class who was media-free,” recalls veteran Waldorf educator Jamie Lloyd. “There was such a difference in attention span between him and the rest of the class.”

Lloyd, who taught for 14 years at Summerfield Waldorf School and Farm in Santa Rosa, says the fourth grader could hear a lesson once, remember and learn it, “and he could tune out any distracting behavior in the classroom. He was much more put together, and it appeared it was because he was living much more as a child, as a fourth grader,” says Lloyd.

That’s the dream Waldorf child: fully engaged, unmediated at home, and tuned in to the hands-on, gadgets-off—or completely gadget-free—education.

The North Bay is a mecca for Waldorf education, an experiential, humanistic pedagogy developed by the Austrian philosopher Rudolf Steiner early in the last century. There are seven Waldorf-inspired public charter schools in Napa, Sonoma and Marin counties and two private Waldorf schools. There’s even a Waldorf training academy near Sacramento, the Rudolf Steiner College. Outside of California, there are about 20 Waldorf charters spread around the country.

The popularity of Waldorf schools is unsurprising. The education can be a great and natural match for North Bay ethics of sustainability, self-reliance and respect for the natural world. The school traditionally delays exposure to technology until the eighth grade in favor of an unplugged education, and for many parents, that’s part of the appeal. They don’t want their kid reading
My Side of the Mountain on a Kindle, at least not yet. But that core tenet is being tested, as public Waldorf-inspired schools raise questions about the pros of technology in the classroom.

‘The parents who come into this are choosing a lifestyle,” says Lloyd, who is now in his first year as Summerfield’s lower-school coordinator. “They are keeping things much simpler, and keeping the media out.”

But Waldorf–inspired public charter schools in the North Bay brought the media in—or at least the laptops—under new state Common Core computer-testing mandates set to go live in 2015.

The Waldorf charter movement in the North Bay bridges a gap for parents who shy away from the private-school tuition that comes with the independent Waldorfs but who want their kids exposed to Waldorf values.

The added costs for those parents are compromises over technology, given the reality of the new mandates.

Common Core is a set of education standards developed by states and promoted by Obama’s education department. The standards de-emphasize failed “teach to the test” models that arose from George Bush’s No Child Left Behind Act.

“The public charters’ problem is computerized testing,” says Will Stapp, the new business administrator at the private Marin Waldorf School in San Rafael.

The state field-tested the standardized-test infrastructure this spring and summer in preparation for limited computerized testing for grades three and up.

“It’s been a real debate in the public Waldorfs,” says Stapp, who came to his post two months ago from the Waldorf-inspired Novato Charter School.

“More than anything, there was federal money pumped into the system,” he says, “to make sure they had the capacity online to do this.

As officials tested capacity, the Sebastopol Charter School, a Waldorf-inspired K–8 school, took the federally funded laptops that came with the Common Core mandate to expand computer studies for middle-schoolers.

The school will also offer a class on social-media ethics, its first, starting this fall.

Common Core “triggered an in-depth conversation,” says the school’s executive director Chris Topham. “Maybe it’s time to embrace this and figure out how we are going to teach computer skills. Let’s go even beyond that: sixth graders can learn about media ethics,” says Topham, who until a year ago was in the Summerfield post now held by Jamie Lloyd.

For one Waldorf student, the arrival of laptops and computerized tests this spring was cause of great consternation.

“My son burst into tears about this,” says Loretta Mijares, who has two children in the Sebastopol charter.

“He said, ‘It’s not a real Waldorf school!’ He was not happy—he wanted to be transferred to Summerfield.”

But her fifth grader got used to the idea, she says, and when the computers and tests were field-tested, “he was intrigued and interested.”

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Mijares says many of her media and technology worries are aimed at smartphones and parents. “My biggest concern is what the kids are going to be handed by their own parents,” she says.

The Waldorf approach to technology in school, and at home, says Mijares, is “no media or technology through the eighth grade—but that’s a guideline, not a policy. Very few families abide by it 100 percent, and there’s a range of views among families about what’s appropriate and at what age.”

Topham says he took pains at Summerfield to tell parents to teach their kids word processing and other basic computer skills, with an emphasis on supervision. “Because it wasn’t forced upon us, we really did not take it on,” he says.

Topham says he now takes equal pains with the younger students at the public charter. “The middle-school-age kids had already been exposed to computers at home, but it was much trickier for the third and fourth graders,” he says.

“We taught them some very basic computer skills in order to do the tests. We did it in a slow, sensitive way, like the way we teach writing, so that they had the basic skills to do the test without feeling traumatized.”

“I felt that they did it very sensitively,” says Mijares.

But the Common Core mandate was for Topham “a blessing in disguise,” given the difficulties parents face with at-home computer supervision.

“It gets very hard for a parent to restrict it, because of all the entertainment,” Topham says.

Stephen Mucher, director of Bard College’s master of arts in teaching program in Los Angeles, says that Common Core has helped to blur the lines between a child’s at-home life and what goes on during the school day.

The addition of technology in schools complicates a traditional dynamic, Mucher says, where kids were basically left to their own devices at home, whereas school is “the one place you are forced to react and adjust to other people and their interests and desires.

“What happens in the classroom,” Mucher adds, “should be unique to what’s going on in the rest of society. The world within your home life is where you could be self-absorbed and take whatever path you wanted to choose.”

In recent years, school districts across the country have leaned on technological teacher proxies to deal with monstrous layoffs and cutbacks plaguing the U.S. education system.

Mucher supports technology in the classroom when it “makes students learn in a more public, transparent way.” Otherwise, he says, “it appeals to our narcissistic side and limits the very social possibilities of schooling: the exchange of ideas between students and the adults.”

The beauty of Waldorf, says Mucher, is the school’s traditional investment in teachers over “teacher facilitators” whose role is essentially to direct students toward short-cut technological solutions.

“You’ll never meet a more committed or busy teacher,” he says. “That’s true of all teachers, but you can’t do it on the cheap.”

Parental tech-angst is not limited to the Waldorf School.

Donations from the private Healdsburg School’s fundraiser over the last couple of years have been used to buy computers and, this year, iPads, for third graders and up.

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The school’s pro-technology posture raised red flags among some parents.

“Moms and parents were upset at the push for the iPads in K-5,” says Elizabeth Hawkins, who has a seventh grader in the independent, non-Waldorf school.

“In these primary years, it’s really best-suited for the kids to not be using so much technology,” she says.

Hawkins and her husband, a tech-sector worker in the Bay Area, are concerned about overexposure to technology at an early age.

“We bicker. Our debate is on how much technology, and when,” says Hawkins, who chose the Healdsburg School when the couple moved here from Palo Alto.

Incoming head of school Nicholas Egan says the emphasis at Healdsburg is on creation, not consumption, when it comes to the school’s dance with technology. As a private school, Healdsburg is providing iPads to students without any of the overhanging Common Core mandates.

And, in contrast to the public Waldorf school’s limited engagement with technology and media, this year the Healdsburg School will offer an “integrated technology program” for fourth through eight graders.

Translation: Students will create applications for mobile devices.

“It’s project-based learning that centers on the iPads, and looks at content creation on multiple levels,” says Egan. “It’s not about technology per se. When I am in the classroom, I tell this to students, and I tell it to parents: ‘If all the technology went away, this school would still exist.'”

Hawkins believes that kids get into the habit of “going so easily to the iPad to look for the answers, and not looking deeper or making mistakes. Having an iPad and a Smart Board doesn’t make you a technical school,” she says, “but everyone is in this race to be on the cutting edge.”

Egan says he’s tuned in to dangers of an excessive fealty to technology. “If it’s not used right, it can be a distraction,” he says. “There’s nothing magical about technology, but any time that it increases collaboration, critical thinking and creativity is a good time to use it. The thing about technology is that it’s so enticing with the wizardry, and it’s very easy to get blinded by that.”

Egan adds that the Waldorf model has a lot going for it but may suffer for its slow-roll on technology education.

“I like it, I like it as a pedagogy, the emphasis on the experiential model, but, like anything, if you’re too rigid or you overdo it, it can be dogmatic,” he says.

Children share common traits in critical thinking, adaptability and resilience, says Egan, and the Healdsburg School emphasizes lessons that develop those skills.

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Whatever the pedagogical model, he says, “it really does come down to teaching those other skills and then applying it to the technology, the experiential, or the pencil and paper.”

Egan says Healdsburg parents that he’s heard from aren’t so much concerned “about earlier or later adoption—it’s about usage, and they want to be reassured that we are using technology for its highest and best potential.”

Caroline Otto enrolled her fifth grader in the Healdsburg School this year. Her daughter spent her first years at the Cali Calmecac Spanish-immersion school in Windsor, “which was very different from the Healdsburg School,” says Otto.

“The technology problem there was there was no technology,” says Otto.

Otto is still weighing the iPad issue. “I haven’t been sold on the concept that iPads are going to really improve things,” she says. “But I do think that now that my daughter is in the fifth grade, that access is important. Otherwise, she’ll be left behind.”

Otto notes, with a laugh, that her volunteer job is hands-on and dirty. “I’m the garden coordinator at the school, so I am at the low-tech end of it,” she says. “But you have to have both. You need to get your hands dirty, yes, as long as there are enough other people pushing the technology.”

At the Waldorf-inspired Sebastopol public charter, Topham is pushing the technology, even as, he says, he was loathe to introduce computers to third and fourth graders.

For him, the Common Core mandate was an opportunity for Waldorf educators to engage with the 21st century. One of the classic knocks on Waldorf is that it provides a great education—for a 19th-century child.

“Maybe in the North Bay we are in the forefront,” says Topham.

The new social-media class, he says, “involves conversations with teens about so-called social media and the trappings of Facebook, and what it means to put up a picture or you or yourself that is up there permanently.”

All of this, says Topham, was “triggered by the requirement. Before last year, we did not have a single computer in the school for student use, K–8. We never felt that we were lacking by not having computers for student use, and we know that our students have been doing well in high school and college.

“The Common Core lines up with Waldorf very nicely as a concept,” Topham adds, given its emphasis on nurturing problem solvers and on an educational model that teaches “how to address a problem from multiple directions.”

But Mijares believes Topham went one new direction too many when he planned for a class in social-media ethics.

“I know that when the computers came in as part of the standardized testing, he spoke about introducing a computer curriculum,” says Mijares. “My sense of it was that it was very moderate and not a doorway for kids to be on computers at home.”

The proposed social-media ethics course, says Mijares, is “more than I’m aware of, and that’s one that I’d have issues with, frankly.”

But Mijares appreciates Topham’s effort to manage the mandate. “He is dealing with reality,” she says. “I think the school is doing its very best to come up with a moderate curriculum given the state mandates. It’s unfortunate that as a charter school we don’t have the choice to opt-out.”

Mucher says the social-media course at the Waldorf charter is probably a good idea. “In a world where social media looms large,” he says, “there is something productive to be gained in problematizing it. You don’t need to have technology to have a class on technology ethics, and that could be usefully weaved into the curriculum. It can be a humanities-type course.”

Summerfield administrator Lloyd credits Topham for having “weathered the transition” at the Sebastopol public charter. “There’s always been some sort of standardization that charters need to address, and technology is one of them,” he says.

Lloyd notes that “the very first Waldorf in Germany had to make compromises in the administration of its curriculum in the teens and ’20s, and that was part of getting along with the rest of the world.”

Lloyd is a Waldorf traditionalist who sees the value in an expanded presence in the charter school movement. “I believe in this education,” he says. “Both of my kids have gone through K-12 at Waldorf; I like what I see in them, and the kids I see who go through it. And I appreciate that Waldorf can get to the average parent—it’s not a private school.”

Stapp at the Marin Waldorf is less convinced about compromises made in the service of the Common Core—and, as a parent, he’s skeptical of quickie tech solutions over critical thinking and problem solving.

“Education has gotten overexcited about technology as a tool,” he says. “I call it the ‘search generation,’ and I notice it with my daughter. She pushes the internal button, the ‘Ask Dad’ button before she gives the question a fundamental thought,” he says.

“Technology is superficially social,” Stapp adds. “In my experience with it, it allows people to isolate.”

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