03 March 2025
When the International School of Geneva (Ecolint) opened its doors in 1924, its initial enrollment was quite low, with only eight students, and it faced a budget deficit by the end of the first year. Some questioned the wisdom of continuing the experiment, citing its slow start and limited return on investment. However, one key reason for the school's continued operation was its commitment to honoring the teaching contract with a Deweyan PhD from the University of Chicago, who had traveled across the Atlantic specifically to contribute to the school's founding vision: an education for peace based on constructivist and inquiry-based pedagogy. Her name was Florence Fake.