A school built around making things, not memorizing them.
Page opens in 1908 in Southern California with a radical premise for its era: children should learn by producing real work, not by reciting facts. The school's first decades coincide with the rise of progressive education in America, and Page positions itself firmly in that lineage from the start.
The early Page classroom is built around what later educators would call project-based learning, but the practice predates the language by decades. Students at Page in the 1910s and 1920s produce written work, performances, and physical models as a matter of course. The work itself is the curriculum.
The Founding chapter establishes the conviction that has held for the century since. Every chapter of Page that follows is a renewal of this premise in a new form.