From global village to global schoolhouse, in talk June 5

SALISBURY —  Members of the community at large will have a chance to hear Hotchkiss School Headmaster Malcolm McKenzie speak, in his school’s auditorium on June 5 at 7:30 p.m. as part of the Salisbury Forum talks.

While students at the school hear the headmaster speak often, and perhaps take it for granted, this is a special and rare treat for members of the general community to hear a speaker who is dynamic, charismatic and compassionate.

His topic is education —more specifically, a comparison of American and international modes of preparing young people for the modern world. A native of South Africa, McKenzie has worked in education on three continents (Africa, Europe  and the United States) and a theme of his work has been the breaking down of racial and national divisions.

Hotchkiss School is his first educational berth in America. He came to the Lakeville independent boarding school in 2006, as its 12th headmaster since the school’s founding in 1891. Most recently he was in Wales, where he was principal of the United World College of the Atlantic, the first of the 12 United World Colleges (Nelson Mandela is the honorary president of this schools system, which strives to bring together young people of all races and financial backgrounds).

Several of the Salisbury Forum talks have been held in the Hotchkiss auditorium, and McKenzie said he looks forward to the chance to offer a talk of his own. Salisbury Forum audiences “are very engaged,� he said. He will be able to speak in a more casual format, presenting ideas gleaned from his travels and his years in education, rather than “presenting a paper.�

“I’ll be talking about education in the broader sense of wanting what our kids learn to help them make an impact in the world,� he said. “We’ll look at globalism and service work and the environment. I think this is a very exciting time to be a human being, and alive. There’s so much going on, so much is changing. And there is so much adversity. It’s a challenging time and for many millions of people it’s very obviously a time of hardship. The inequities in the world between rich and poor or advantaged and disadvantaged are greater than ever.�

Sarah Wardell, program committee chair for the Salisbury Forum,  said, “We asked Malcolm to do this talk because we feel education is such a critical issue to this country at this time. It’s an important topic to bring before the public.â€�

In an essay at The Hotchkiss School Web page, McKenzie writes that, “Education is a dangerous business. That’s a strange thing to say, isn’t it? Not dangerous in that it threatens life. But dangerous because it challenges us, it makes us wish to take on new ventures and try unknown experiences.�

“We are attentive to the great needs of our times,� he wrote. “Environmental responsibility and global citizenship are clarion calls that we hear clearly. Prep for college is vital, but prep for the planet is a more compelling matter, a matter of survival.�

McKenzie studied at the universities of Cape Town, Oxford and Lancaster  and has degrees in literature, philosophy and applied linguistics. His time at Oxford and Lancaster was as a Rhodes Scholar.  

He served for seven years on the board and executive committee of the Round Square association of schools worldwide (Hotchkiss is a member of this association).  He was a co-founder of the Global Connections Foundation and is the de facto president of this association of schools.

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