Page 43 - Considering College
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Cotton  Center,  one  of  the  smallest  independent  school  districts  in  the  Texas  Panhandle  or  the
        South Plains, has a total enrollment from pre-k through grade 12 of 100 students. By comparison to

        the  largest  6A  and  5A  schools  in  West  Texas,  some  might  consider  these  1A  schools  “widows’
        mites,” learning environments that make a small contribution to the greater cause.


        I think not.


        As an architect, I value the quality of facilities for their positive impact on learning. I also know
        that passionate purpose and a commitment to young people in the charge of the school board,

        superintendent, principal, teachers and staff will overpower almost any perceived lack of quality in
        physical learning environments. Care and concern make education work, not embellished edifices

        or excessive enrollments.


        The auditorium in which I spoke at Cotton Center ISD had textured plywood (T1-11) on the walls. It
        looked fresh, but unfinished and unpainted. Yet, as that “baker’s dozen” of juniors and seniors

        entered, every one of them shook my hand, looked me in the eye, and said, for instance, “Hi, my
        name is John. Thank you for coming to visit.” Every single student. I have talked to juniors and
        seniors at the largest schools in West Texas, and that powerful presence of self in relation to others

        is unfortunately rare.


              The auditorium in which I spoke at Cotton Center ISD had textured


                plywood (T1-11) on the walls. It looked fresh, but unfinished and
          unpainted. Yet, as that “baker’s dozen” of juniors and seniors entered,

            every one of them shook my hand, looked me in the eye, and said, for
                 instance, “Hi, my name is John. Thank you for coming to visit.”



        These  young  people  in  seemingly  meager  little  schools  stewed  in  cauldrons  of  American

        republicanism  are  the  centers  of  innumerable  universes.  Amherst,  Olton,  Dawson,  Sands,  and
        Klondike are just a few other examples like Cotton Center. Many play six-man football and every
        able-bodied high school student is on the team. (Some can’t field a team.) They may not win, but

        they  play;  they  belong  to  something  larger  than  themselves.  They  submit  themselves  to  the
        authority  of  the  coach  for  the  purpose  of  engaging  another  squad  from  another  place.  Cotton

        Center has won one game in four years. But, according to the principal and superintendent Ryan
        Bobo, they are improving. Mr. Bobo cares about the students more than a win-loss record. He is

        respectful and respected. Commands to students and their responses would be the envy of any
        school  leader  in  any  setting—the  epitome  of  purposeful  education  in  a  free  society.  Students

        appear to appreciate freedom and accept responsibility.
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