Cooperstein, B. (2015). The Teacher Education Program at Northern California University, Oyster Bay. Solutions 6(5): 10–15. https://thesolutionsjournal.com/2015/5/the-teacher-education-program-at-northern-california-university-oyster-bay
Envisioning
The Teacher Education Program at Northern California University, Oyster Bay by Bruce Cooperstein and Arthur Pearl
This article is part of a regular section in Solutions in which the author is challenged to envision a future society in which all the right changes have been made.
T
he following is the first of an occasional series of pieces on educational transformation. This one examines the work of Dr. Drew Epstein, who is a Professor of Social Psychology and Utopian Thinking at North California University, Oyster Bay (NCUOB). He is also the founder and director of the Education for the Future Project, which is a partnership between NCUOB, Esperanza Community College, and the Oyster Bay Unified School District (OBUSD). During the last week of May 2025, we visited with Dr. Epstein to observe his novel approach to the preparation of teachers, as well as the ways in which curriculum and classroom practices have been radically reformed in several demonstration schools of the district. Before any of our observations, we had a long conversation with Dr. Epstein over a whole range of topics relating to education. He began with the assertion that in a democracy, consideration of fairness and justice requires that everyone have the opportunity to obtain a free education that would enable each student to continue as far as their potential will take them. He then declared that the most fundamental thing each student must learn as part of such an education is how to make the world a better place.
All of the curriculum and pedagogy of schools must be organized within this rubric. To make concrete the meaning of those words, he said, “When you look at a typical classroom, what you should see, whether it’s a first grade or a senior high school classroom, is kids working in groups on projects to make the world a better place. The learning occurs when students act on the world to change it, and then reflect on what they have been doing, interrogating their thinking and actions, and thus adding to the knowledge of the world.” He then said that equally fundamental to such a curriculum, is that students learn to be effective as citizens in a democracy.
been supposed.” He then demonstrated an impressive knowledge of science and technology by enumerating many of the advances of the past decade, starting with discoveries in material science, gene expression, protein folding, and the mapping of the brain, whence the development of vaccines for malaria and HIV, as well as other diseases which have plagued the bottom two billion of the world’s population, new treatments for brain diseases such as Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s, as well as for many different cancers and heart disease. Then, he went on to discuss the many significant improvements in the generation of solar and wind energy that mean the direst consequences of global climate change are likely to be prevented. “To be sure,” he said, “we need to graduate a cadre of scientists who will further our understanding of the physical and biological worlds,
The learning occurs when students act on the world to change it, and then reflect on what they have been doing, interrogating their thinking and actions, and thus adding to the knowledge of the world. I interrupted Dr. Epstein and skeptically challenged his last assertion with the declaration that the most important way to make the world a better place is to uncover new scientific truths and then translate these, through technological innovation, into new products and services. Dr. Epstein responded this way: “Science and technology certainly have a role to play in a project of improving the world, but only a partial role, and much less than has
10 | Solutions | September-October 2015 | www.thesolutionsjournal.org
which will then enable us to further reduce our footprint on the planet while at the same time improving the quality of life. But, as I hope to show you with our experimental schools, there is no inherent conflict between educating students to change the world through democratic action and new scientific discoveries. Rather, we will demonstrate that our approach results in far more student success in learning science. However, I do think the evidence is overwhelming that