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Showing posts with label Administration Approaches. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Administration Approaches. Show all posts

Thursday, January 20, 2022

Back to Blogging- After 5 years in Administration, Surviving a Pandemic (its not over by the way) and Falling out of love.

This year my daughter's turned 5 and 18! (Thank you).  I know you were reading... and thinking congratulations!

I have been in the throws of raising them and still maintaining an eye, voice and passion in the Education field. I have been blessed to be an Administrator for about 4 years (in a couple districts now... feel free to check out the Linked in QR code on that......).



 Now I just transitioned to a County Office of Ed. role while going to Law school (1L at the moment).

Either I'm bored, noncommittal or just plain crazy. Maybe all or maybe none... Spoken like a true noncommittal.

Here's what I know- as of today this blog has had over 60,000 hits. And even though I took a break from blogging- actually blogging took a break from me. I'm excited that 2022,  I'm officially back to it.

Why, you ask? Well I realize that my leadership started with me feeling silenced in education and I wanted to try to and have some kind of platform for Social Justice so I started this blog.  Great leadership calling me before I even knew it.  I will say that the line of navigating politics in Educational Leadership as well as being a human being is not easy (and sharing my stories of  and about Administration was very challenging). Public learning is shamed in certain circles.

Now, past all the energy of the last years I am so excited for this moment in time where I find some of my early heroes being cited in new works such as these books named: Street Data, Ratchademic, and Leading While Female, Cultivating Genius and Joy. The idea of vulnerability is "a thing" now backed by Brene Brown research. (little did she know I was having an exercise in vulnerability many years ago by starting this website).

However the trials and tribulations of education, love and life and the pains of a pandemic are calling me back to writing and publishing with an eye on the law and its implications for me in Educational leadership. In fact, I'm so excited that I just ordered a new book today (yes, I'm sorry I don't shop at bookstores anymore, even though I wish I did) called The Color of Law.

I hope and plan to create more resources for parents and educators now that I find myself in a research mode of employment (I feel completely blessed). I am committing to not shy away from the hard conversations we all find ourselves in daily: Teachers, Policymakers, Educational Leaders, Law professionals (well actually not sure I'm on their team yet... I'll let you know).

When I started this blog my oldest daughter was the age you see on the cover of the website and now look at her! 

She was accepted to an awesome UC school and I thank all the teachers she had at all the schools and districts she was in... wish I could say she was in one district like "a proper parent" but we moved around a lot (I blame teacher salaries on that one)....

Well, I thank you for taking your valuable time to read this blog and I hope you come back throughout the year of 2022 for more posts. I plan to share my latest academic research often, tech tips, law tips  (*Not  legal advice ), "teacher moves" and ways to manage the chaos of pedagogy.

Feel free to keep in touch:  @SunnyShiner3






Saturday, January 28, 2017

Trump Syllabus K12: Lesson Plans for Teaching During this New Age of Resistance (#TrumpSyllabusK12)

Teaching in this New Age of Resistance

Trump Syllabus K12: Lesson Plans for Teaching During this New Age of Resistance (#TrumpSyllabusK12)

DECEMBER 12, 2016

created & compiled by Karsonya Wise Whitehead, Ph.D.

with Alicia Moore, Ph.D. & Regina Lewis, Ph.D.

make_america_white_again

Lesson Plans for Teaching During this New Age of Resistance (#TrumpSyllabusK12)

#TrumpSyllabusK12 is a compilation of lesson plans written by and for K-12th grade teachers (and college educators) for teaching about the 2016 presidential campaign; about resistance and revolution; about white privilege and white supremacy; about state-sanctioned violence and sanctuary classrooms; about fake news and Facebook; and, about freedom and justice. It is designed to transform our classrooms into liberated nonsexist nonmisogynistic anti-racist anti-classist spaces without any boundaries or borders. It is meant to liberate and free our students by providing them with lesson plans to challenge them to become global critical thinkers. We invite you to join with us as we actively work to push back against the establishment of this New World Order and we draw our line in the sand and work to liberate and change the world, one student at a time.
Each lesson plan is presented in its entirety and includes Warm Up and Group Activities, Essential Questions and Objectives, Resources, an Essay or an Overview, and they connect directly to the Common Core Standards for Math, History, or Language Arts; and, to the National Council of Social Studies Standards.
Please note that lesson plans are still being accepted at griotonthego@gmail.com and are being added daily. 
(ES=Elementary School; MS=Middle School; HS=High School)

######

TABLE OF CONTENTS

1. Opinion Editorial: America is a Divided Nation

-Karsonya Wise Whitehead, Ph.D.

2. Tips for Facilitating Classroom Discussions on Sensitive Topics

-Alicia Moore, Ph.D., and Molly Deshaies

SECTION ONE: EXAMINING CAMPAIGN 2016

3. The Electoral College vs The Popular Vote: Who Should Choose OUR President? (HS)

-Jocelyn Thomas

4. Exploring the (New) Political Climate (MS)

-Nadiera Young

5. Exploring the Reasons Why Trump Won (MS/HS)

-Gloria Ladson-Billings, Ph.D.

6. Exploring the Fake News Cycle (MS)

-Baba Ayinde Olumiji

7. Using Photographs to Explore Differing Political Perspectives (ES)

-Alicia Moore, Ph.D., and Angela Davis Johnson

8. Trump and Gender Bias, By the Numbers (HS)

-Kelly Cross Ph.D.

ADDITIONAL RESOURCES (POETRY):

9. Oya for President (to be read OutLoud)

-Alexis Pauline Gumbs

10. Mourning in America: A Black Woman’s Blues Song

-Karsonya Wise Whitehead, Ph.D.

SECTION TWO: POLITICS IN THE “POST-TRUMP” NARRATIVE

11. Harassment and Intimidation in the Aftermath of the Trump Election: What Do We Do Now? (MS/HS)

-Sarah Militz-Frielink and Isabel Nunez, Ph.D.

12. From “I Have A Dream” to “I Dream of a World”: Steps to Creating a Sanctuary Classroom (All Grades)

-Karsonya Wise Whitehead, Ph.D.

13. Hope, Action, & Freedom in the Times of Uncertainty (HS)

-Conra D. Gist,Ph.D., Angela Davis Johnson, & Tyson E.J. Marsh, Ph.D.

14. Writing White Privilege, Race, and Citizenship: Reading Angela Davis, Toni Morrison, Claudia Rankine, and Walt Whitman (HS)

-Ileana Jiménez

15. A Pedagogy of Resistance in the Struggle Against White Supremacist State-Sanctioned Violence* (MS/HS)

-Tyson E.J. Marsh, Ph.D.

16. Lessons in Black Feminist Criminology: Disrupting State and Sexualized Violence Against Women and Girls #GrabtheEmpowerment (HS)

-Nishaun T. Battle, Ph.D.

17. Giving Voice & Making Space: Dismantling the Education Industrial Complex in an Effort to Free Our Black Girls* (MS/HS)

-Aja Reynolds & Stephanie Hicks

18. Exploring the “Crisis” in Black Education from a Post-White Orientation* (MS/HS)

-Marcus Croom

19. The African American Saga: From Enslavement to Life in a Color-Blind Society (Or Racism Without Race)*(HS)

-Yolanda Abel, Ed.D., and LeRoy Johnson

20. #Evolution or Revolution: Exploring Social Media through Revelations of Familiarity* (HS)

-Kimberly Edwards-Underwood, Ph.D.

21. Replace Fear with Curiosity: Using Photographs and Poetry to Process Election 2016 (ES)

-Tracy Kent-Gload

22. #WeGotNext: Black Youth Activism and the Rise of #BlackLivesMatter* (HS/MS) **NEW**

-Sekou Franklin

ADDITIONAL RESOURCES:

23. Steps to Combating Anti-Muslim Bullying in Schools

-Mariam Durani, Ph.D.

24. #ClintonSyllabus 1.0

-Karsonya Wise Whitehead, Ph.D., Alicia Moore, Ph.D., Regina Lewis, Ph.D.

25. Book: Black Lives Matter (Special Reports)

Sue Bradford Edwards and Duchess Harris
*The following lesson plans were originally published in the Association for the Study of African American Life & History’s Black History Bulletin and are reprinted here by permission of the authors.

Pedagogy Matters: Administrator's reflection of culturally relevant approaches for a Middle School in Deep East Oakland

Pedagogy Matters
By Sunny Dawn
1/27/17
EDA 611A

“Organizations that only employ "people of their kind" in leadership and high visibility positions will not be tolerated by people of other cultures,”  (Short, 2002). This statement made in 2002 seems dated and obvious but I start my paper with it because of the current political climate we are all witnessing at the moment.   I  agree that not tolerating the ignorance of high visibility  positions is actually an understatement in regards to our students and educators reactions to our current  racist Trump leadership.  This paper will highlight who I work with daily in “Deep East Oakland” including the educators who advocate for them.  Issues around race and class will be a major focus for how I discuss our pedagogy and approach with major highlights of why when our current president was elected, the very next day we had over 80% of our students walk out and leave campus in a protest with other students from nearby campuses.
Our school is 63% Latino (or what we term “Raza”), 31% African American and 6% other or Pacific Islander/Asian.  98% of our students are low income and suffer from extreme poverty and violence.  We pride ourselves, at Elmhurst Community Prep, in our ability  to engage in hard issues  and conversations around race; data and teaching  with an equitable lens; and what it means to be a student of color in today’s America.  As educators, we  also dive in deep on discussions related to race and discipline. We just had a professional development this past week, where we had profound discussions around referrals and race (see slide 1 below).  We noted that we need to engage why our referral rate for African Americans, although dropped, is still disproportionate to our overall ECP population.

Proportionality in Referrals By Ethnicity,  2016-2017 (Betlach Presentation 1/25/17)
Professional Developments of the day that followed looking at this data included workshops (delivered by our Coaches/Admin.)
Social Emotional Learning
Teaching and the Brain
Trauma Informed Practice
Book Dive- For White Folks Who Teach in The Hood

We have many strategies in place to teach to this distinct population of Oakland whose graduation rate statistics show 50.6% for African American boys (SFGate 4/12/13).  We attempt to have teachers who represent the racial makeup of our school and take on mentoring roles.  As a staff,  we are engaging in work and year long inquiry with Zaretta Hammond’s text, Culturally Relevant Teaching Practices. Besides the mindset shift in approach to teaching, staff are also engaged in (including myself) “taking on” a focal student to dive in deep with and get to know beyond the day to day. This looks like not only being an advocate but  having a personal connection as to the inner workings of that student’s struggle and how it can inform our school’s  practice and that educator’s pedagogy or approach to learning.
Furthermore, our academic schedule attempts to have 2 levels of safety nets built into the daily schedule and curriculum. This is in the form of a targeted Study Skills class which meets students at their level at a given subject they are struggling in with a specialized instructor to meet their academic needs.
For example, even I have been inspired to be a part of this schedule. ( “All hands are on deck” at 5th period, no teachers have a prep period at this school wide intervention hour).  Since early literacy is in my wheelhouse as a past elementary teacher, I take a small group of 8th graders reading at 3rd grade level and work with them in a reading intervention group 4 times a week for 40 minutes.
Additionally, ECP  has a big focus on our advisory program and find that we use a lot of academic outreach strategies there. Including grouping advisories by gender, race, and grade level.  For example we have 2 Advisory groups for African American boys, 2 for Latina Girls, 1 for Latino boys, and even our Principal is invested in teaching an advisory course.
To meet the needs of our English Language learners we just recently added a new class that has an alternate schedule for 6th and 7th grade students who are not proficient in English, as determined by CELDT scores.  They are pulled from their history class and do the period in ELD instead.  We are hoping this changes the course we see of students with low SRI scores for ELL students as well as the overall harder time these students have  in all courses due to language acquisition issues.  
There are multiple ways we engage our families with ECP.  We are completely transparent in our mission and core values with  social justice as a main tenant we believe in.  When students are at risk for failure or are in hard times we are reaching out to families consistently to engage with interventions, updates and next steps.  Some families need counseling themselves for the trauma they experience in the neighborhood of 98th Ave. and so we have multiple counseling agencies as well student advocacy groups that work with us. There are so many organizations and programs trying to assist it takes entire full time position to manage all these people, our Community Programs Manager, who herself is Latina (and also teaches an advisory).  This week she also recently created a family event, called “Data Night”. This night was to educate parents on what it means for students to have a low SRI score, what SBAC means, what are cognitive rubric tasks.  This initial education will then be followed up by 1 on 1 appointments with myself on how we can target students where they are struggling and supports parents can do at home.
We all have heard the term it takes a village however when the village is assaulted by daily physical violence, environmental racism, and federal threats of deportation creating trust with students and families is the hardest thing to do at our school in our village.  
As I reflect in this paper on our school and the question of race and culture I most note It is hard to be the place that is a government institution and yet is also so supposed to be the safest place in the neighborhood.  Currently, I would say our students are in a state of fear especially our immigrant population who hear the rhetoric of our new President and can’t make sense of what it means for the families.  Now, is the most important time for us at our school site to be aware of who are students are (racially and culturally) and what we can do for them as the students too will  “not tolerate” this current racist regime.

It is this investment in the future of these students that drives me daily. It is this investment in educators who also do not tolerate the current trend of war on low income people that I come to work for daily. It is in this small story I share of a school not giving up on an educational system not set up to care for students who have daily trauma that I know Pedagogy matters.

Monday, December 21, 2015

Elmhusrt Community Prep Website: (Where I AP at)

http://elmhurstcommunityprep.org/

Culturally Responsive Teaching by Z.Hammond my Reflections on Chapter 1 & 2

Culturally Responsive Teaching Reflection on Hammond Chapter 1

After reading the first Chapter, I was inspired as an A.Principal of Middle School to reach out to My literacy coach and tackle Chapter 1. I hope we can have meaningful dialogue around the framework as well as the importance of diving in.

Framework from Ch. 1 here:

http://ready4rigor.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/08/READY-FOR-RIGOR_Final1.pdf

Quote from Chapter 2:

P.31
"Over time, because of structural racialization in education, we have seen a new type of intellectual apartheid happening in schools, creating dependent learners who cannot access the curriculum and independent learners who have had the opportunity to build the cognitive skills to deep learning on their own. Rather than stepping back, looking at the ways we structure inequity in education, and interrupting these practices, we simply focus on creating short-term solutions to get dependent students of color to score high on each year's standardized tests. We don't focus on building their intellective capacity so they they can begin to fill their own language gaps with proper scaffolding."

- I find this quote resonated deeply with me.  I feel like the individualist values I've place in education in my own daughter in order to succeed has been huge.  She is definitely a part of this intellectual apartheid by the nature of me as an educator knowing how to play the game of education so it benefits her in the long run. As I see what this means for me as an Educational leader, I grapple with the deficit model thinking I encounter among educators and how the reinforce this thinking when teaching becomes ultra-challenging in their classroom. Blaming the student or family vs. having to rethink their own practices.



Sunday, December 20, 2015

Writing Truth as Fiction: Administrators Think About Their Work Through a Different Lens

As I'm jumping from Teacher to Administration. I have been journaling but I'm finding that limiting in reflection at time.

My old professor from Mills, Dr. Kettele's approach to processing as fictional character will be explored.
Writing Truth as Fiction: Administrators Think About Their Work Through a Different Lens

I want to take it one step further and put into a comic book form.


We'll see how that goes....


Wednesday, December 2, 2015

Opting Out of SBAC letter to school

Dear  Admin./7th Grade Team:
I would like to opt my daughter/son, xxx, out of all standardized testing this year. This includes the entire Interim Assessment Blocks (IABs) as well as the end of the year Smarter Balance tests (SBAC). I understand the first computerized IAB might have already been given. If so, I’d like to request that the scores for the tests she has already taken not be reported to the District.
I am fine with any formative assessments which inform your instruction, as well as any diagnostic or summative assessments that are directly tied to the curriculum you are teaching.
If there is a form I should fill out or sign please let me know. Otherwise I will assume this email is sufficient to opt xxx out of all District and State mandated standardized testing.
I hope that my request does not cause you any extra work; If there is not a plan in place for students who are opted out of testing, I hope my child can read, write or do another independent activity during that time.
Please let me know if you have any questions. And thank you for your attention, as always!
Respectfully,
Guardian

Tuesday, January 28, 2014

The Trouble with the Common Core BY THE EDITORS OF RETHINKING SCHOOLS

The Trouble with the Common Core

BY THE EDITORS OF RETHINKING SCHOOLSAdd to Cart button PURCHASE A PDF OF THIS ARTICLE
The Trouble with the Common Core
Ethan Heitner
It isn't easy to find common ground on the Common Core. Already hailed as the “next big thing” in education reform, the Common Core State Standards are being rushed into classrooms in nearly every district in the country. Although these “world-class” standards raise substantive questions about curriculum choices and instructional practices, such educational concerns are likely to prove less significant than the role the Common Core is playing in the larger landscape of our polarized education reform politics.
We know there have been many positive claims made for the Common Core:
  • That it represents a tighter set of smarter standards focused on developing critical learning skills instead of mastering fragmented bits of knowledge.
  • That it requires more progressive, student-centered teaching with strong elements of collaborative and reflective learning.
  • That it equalizes the playing field by raising expectations for all children, especially those suffering the worst effects of the “drill and kill” test prep norms of the recent past.
We also know that many creative, heroic teachers are seeking ways to use this latest reform wave to serve their students well. Especially in the current interim between the rollout of the standards and the arrival of the tests, some teachers have embraced the Common Core as an alternative to the scripted commercial formulas of recent experience, and are trying to use the space opened up by the Common Core transition to do positive things in their classrooms.
We'd like to believe these claims and efforts can trump the more political uses of the Common Core project. But we can't.
For starters, the misnamed “Common Core State Standards” are not state standards. They're national standards, created by Gates-funded consultants for the National Governors Association (NGA). They were designed, in part, to circumvent federal restrictions on the adoption of a national curriculum, hence the insertion of the word “state” in the brand name. States were coerced into adopting the Common Core by requirements attached to the federal Race to the Top grants and, later, the No Child Left Behind waivers. (This is one reason many conservative groups opposed to any federal role in education policy oppose the Common Core.)
Written mostly by academics and assessment experts—many with ties to testing companies—the Common Core standards have never been fully implemented and tested in real schools anywhere. Of the 135 members on the official Common Core review panels convened by Achieve Inc., the consulting firm that has directed the Common Core project for the NGA, few were classroom teachers or current administrators. Parents were entirely missing. K–12 educators were mostly brought in after the fact to tweak and endorse the standards—and lend legitimacy to the results.
The standards are tied to assessments that are still in development and that must be given on computers many schools don't have. So far, there is no research or experience to justify the extravagant claims being made for the ability of these standards to ensure that every child will graduate from high school “college and career ready.” By all accounts, the new Common Core tests will be considerably harder than current state assessments, leading to sharp drops in scores and proficiency rates.
We have seen this show before. The entire country just finished a decade-long experiment in standards-based, test-driven school reform called No Child Left Behind. NCLB required states to adopt “rigorous” curriculum standards and test students annually to gauge progress towards reaching them. Under threat of losing federal funds, all 50 states adopted or revised their standards and began testing every student, every year in every grade from 3–8 and again in high school. (Before NCLB, only 19 states tested all kids every year, after NCLB all 50 did.)
By any measure, NCLB was a dismal failure in both raising academic performance and narrowing gaps in opportunity and outcomes. But by very publicly measuring the test results against benchmarks no real schools have ever met, NCLB did succeed in creating a narrative of failure that shaped a decade of attempts to “fix” schools while blaming those who work in them. By the time the first decade of NCLB was over, more than half the schools in the nation were on the lists of “failing schools” and the rest were poised to follow.
In reality, NCLB's test scores reflected the inequality that exists all around our schools. The disaggregated scores put the spotlight on longstanding gaps in outcomes and opportunity among student subgroups. But NCLB used these gaps to label schools as failures without providing the resources or support needed to eliminate them.
The tests showed that millions of students were not meeting existing standards. Yet the conclusion drawn by sponsors of the Common Core was that the solution was “more challenging” ones. This conclusion is simply wrong. NCLB proved that the test and punish approach to education reform doesn't work, not that we need a new, tougher version of it. Instead of targeting the inequalities of race, class, and educational opportunity reflected in the test scores, the Common Core project threatens to reproduce the narrative of public school failure that has led to a decade of bad policy in the name of reform.
The engine for this potential disaster, as it was for NCLB, will be the tests, in this case the “next generation” Common Core tests being developed by two federally funded, multi-state consortia at a cost of hundreds of millions of dollars. Although reasonable people, including many thoughtful educators we respect, have found things of value in the Common Core standards, there is no credible defense to be made of the high-stakes uses planned for these new tests.
The same heavy-handed, top-down policies that forced adoption of the standards require use of the Common Core tests to evaluate educators. This inaccurate and unreliable practice will distort the assessments before they're even in place and make Common Core implementation part of the assault on the teaching profession instead of a renewal of it. The costs of the tests, which have multiple pieces throughout the year plus the computer platforms needed to administer and score them, will be enormous and will come at the expense of more important things. The plunging scores will be used as an excuse to close more public schools and open more privatized charters and voucher schools, especially in poor communities of color. If, as proposed, the Common Core's “college and career ready” performance level becomes the standard for high school graduation, it will push more kids out of high school than it will prepare for college.
This is not just cynical speculation. It is a reasonable projection based on the history of the NCLB decade, the dismantling of public education in the nation's urban centers, and the appalling growth of the inequality and concentrated poverty that remains the central problem in public education.
Nor are we exaggerating the potential for disaster. Consider this description from Charlotte Danielson, a highly regarded mainstream authority on teacher evaluation and a strong supporter of the Common Core:
I do worry somewhat about the assessments—I'm concerned that we may be headed for a train wreck there. The test items I've seen that have been released so far are extremely challenging. If I had to take a test that was entirely comprised of items like that, I'm not sure that I would pass it—and I've got a bunch of degrees. So I do worry that in some schools we'll have 80 percent or some large number of students failing. That's what I mean by train wreck.
Reports from the first wave of Common Core testing are already confirming these fears. This spring students, parents, and teachers in New York schools responded to administration of new Common Core tests developed by Pearson Inc. with a general outcry against their length, difficulty, and inappropriate content. Pearson included corporate logos and promotional material in reading passages. Students reported feeling overstressed and underprepared—meeting the tests with shock, anger, tears, and anxiety. Administrators requested guidelines for handling tests students had vomited on. Teachers and principals complained about the disruptive nature of the testing process and many parents encouraged their children to opt out.
Common Core has become part of the corporate reform project now stalking our schools. Unless we dismantle and defeat this larger effort, Common Core implementation will become another stage in the demise of public education. As schools struggle with these new mandates, we should defend our students, our schools, our communities, and ourselves by telling the truth about the Common Core. This means pushing back against implementation timelines and plans that set schools up to fail, resisting the stakes and priority attached to the tests, and exposing the truth about the commercial and political interests shaping and benefiting from this false panacea for the problems our schools face.
Rethinking Schools has always been skeptical of standards imposed from above. Too many standards projects have been efforts to move decisions about teaching and learning away from classrooms, educators, and school communities, only to put them in the hands of distant bureaucracies. Standards have often codified sanitized versions of history, politics, and culture that reinforce official myths while leaving out the voices, concerns, and realities of our students and communities. Whatever positive role standards might play in truly collaborative conversations about what our schools should teach and children should learn has been repeatedly undermined by bad process, suspect political agendas, and commercial interests.
Unfortunately there's been too little honest conversation and too little democracy in the development of the Common Core. We see consultants and corporate entrepreneurs where there should be parents and teachers, and more high-stakes testing where there should be none. Until that changes, it will be hard to distinguish the “next big thing” from the last one.