“…Rather, in Dewey’s work, we saw a kindred spirit of inquiry, centred on the educational context of children’s life experiences. According to Hickman’s (2005) accounts of Dewey’s private correspondence, the school was “primarily a school of methods, only secondarily a school of practice—That is, its primary intention is to attempt a systematic organization of the school curriculum, testing & developing methods” (Fallace & Fantozzi, 2017, p. 5, citing from Hickman, 2005). Of course, that is not to say that Dewey did not prioritize the learning experiences of students who attended his Laboratory School; rather, he saw the school as a site for ongoing, iterative development of the learning context based on connecting the educational experience as effectively as possible with children’s natural selves.…”