Build Bridges, Not Walls

People talk about building walls quite a bit lately. Mostly these people want to build a wall between the US and Mexico. Oddly enough many of the people against such an idea build walls and may not know it.  Every day people build walls of one kind or another between between themselves and other people. Individuals and groups construct barriers between those who think like they do and those who think differently. These walls are not visible. People block, unfollow, exit out, and move away from those whose social, political, or intellectual views differ from their own. From gated communities to social media, people separate themselves from people they disagree with or don’t want to deal with at all.  By building these walls, however, are we losing opportunities to learn, teach, and grow together into better people and a better community?

When groups or individuals who disagree do come together, the interactions often dissolve into aggressive verbal interactions or physical violence. Classrooms run this risk as well. Teachers can either view difference in their classroom as an opportunity or nuisance. In my class this year we had many tense moments around the election, sexism, homophobia, racism, as well as power and privilege. These are tough but powerful moments. As a teacher I’m not immune to frustration or annoyance and I have to work quite hard to help each student learn something from these interactions. Otherwise students rely on what they know - retreating to the safety of their ‘wall.’ From these defensive positions they can blurt out extreme opinions and ultimatums. If you watch the news you’ve been privy to the loud if not violent see-saw of conflicting ideals. Bouncing from one extreme to another will not solve anything - unless of course you are trying to eliminate those that oppose you. Banishing or eliminating those with differing ideas or backgrounds not only fails to engage difference, but turns our world into a zero sum game of oppression. In hopes of creating a safe space,  a risk exists that instead an authoritarian society without difference in voice or choice for the citizenry would be created. As teachers we can do more to support students earlier on in their lives so they can better negotiate differences and build supportive relationships with people even if they do not agree with them.

Not long ago I led a series of professional development workshops around diversity at a school.  The workshops were to focus on diversity amongst the teachers and staff. Interestingly, many people felt that this community did a wonderful job celebrating diversity and providing an inclusive workplace. In some ways this was true. In other ways, not so much. Some folks felt there was a radical element that forced ideas into the curriculum unnecessarily (these ideas were primarily around gender, sexuality, and family dynamics). Other people were appalled by some faculty members expressing that they didn’t want to teach or interact with same-sex parents, or students who didn’t fit traditional gender roles. And still others only wanted to celebrate diversity but not make anyone uncomfortable or dismantle the status quo. And there was also a group of people who felt they were in the know about infusing diversity into the workplace, but really just came across more like the self-righteous diversity police. In a seemingly inclusive workplace, the sins of omission and commission were present but different. Not everyone felt included or equal. As a facilitator this posed an interesting problem. My solution was to emphasize two concepts - that there is room for everyone at ‘the table’ and we would all benefit from building bridges, not walls.

Before I go further let me say this - everyone is entitled to their opinion, but that opinion may be wrong. It is ok to be upset and angry. However, as I tell students - you don’t have to like your classmate, but you do have to work them. I also happen to believe that if you act like an ass you will be asked to leave. Some ideas, behaviors, and opinions are problematic and wrong. If you preach hate or act like an ass, we do not have to make room for or feed you from ‘our table.’ I guess, given these feelings of mine, another questions comes to mind. How do we (or should we) approach or absorb extremists into the dialogue?

In the first workshop my first goal was twofold. I wanted people to reflect on their practice in relation to diversity and power and ease these colleagues beyond the notion of diversity. For some people a bumper sticker advertising a celebration of diversity is enough.  These folks like the idea of diversity, but don’t fully comprehend what a diverse community entails. My hope was to end the first session with people understanding that differences can be viewed as resources, not obstacles. My second goal was for individuals to recognize that whether they realized it or not, walls had been constructed to support those whose views held power.  My third goal was to deconstruct the notion of equality as sameness, so that it was understood that often pushing equality really just reinforces the status quo of the dominant structures in play within a community.  My long term goal for these sessions was to replace diversity and equality with equity and justice in the minds and actions of the participants ( I like this discussion of this idea - https://www.insidehighered.com/views/2017/03/30/colleges-need-language-shift-not-one-you-think-essay). People (those within the dominant groups) often become comfortable with the idea of diversity (it is safe and feels good). Others embrace the difficult work of engaging differences. Fewer folks embark on the tenuous journey to transform their community so that equity and justice exist for each member of the community. Moving from goal to goal like this represents a commitment by a professional community and each individual within that community to reflect, examine, and reshape their ideas and interactions around myriad constructs of race, gender, sexuality, and politics. As teachers, we have to help our students do the same.

Students wrestle with these same issues. In many cases they want to work through these ideas and might be better able to do so than the grown-ups in their schools. As mightily as adults struggle with these issues, students struggle twice as much.  On the one hand despite their openness to understanding these issues, they might be less equipped at first to process and understand the complexities involved. On the other hand, students are technological natives, especially with social media, so they are conditioned to block, unfollow, and build walls against intrusions to their understanding by difference and others. Teachers and schools have a responsibility to support and facilitate the deconstruction of these walls within our classrooms and communities. Sure, there’s only so much time in the school day. However, if we do not make the time for this work, we will see more events like Charlottesville in the future.

As teachers we can help students and our colleagues create a place for everyone at our ‘table’ and build bridges across our differences. A seat at the table for all community members differs substantially from the usual  main table and a series of satellite tables. Usually those in power get the good seats at the table and ‘others’ sit at the various adjacent tables or worse - the ‘kid’ table.  I’m reminded of the first time I was invited to sit at the grown-up table at a family gathering. It sucked. I felt separate and compelled to be someone I wasn’t. Yet schools do this (and worse) to those outside the mainstream daily (Subtractive Schooling or Made In America).  I’m reminded of my favorite quote from You Can’t Say You Can’t Play that reminds us it is the responsibility of the group, not the individual, to change so that those who are new, different, or have less power have a equitable place in the community. Change means reflecting on our behavior, building relationships, and recognizing different experiences. That is how we begin building our bridges and tearing down walls.

Creating a place that matters for everyone at the table is a good first step. Providing access to all the nourishment at the table is the next step. I’d say we must go one step further - make sure our table nourishes everyone - that each person gets what they want or need to be their best self. If we don’t make a meaningful space for everyone in our community, extremists will continue to hurl hatred and self-righteous cultural terrorism from the top of the walls. When that happens the rest of us will be left with the choice to seek safety behind their walls or to find shelter somewhere in the middle ground. If we don’t build bridges, many of us will have to choose from hiding behind the walls, or remaining stuck between the walls and becoming collateral damage.

American Dream: Dead or Dying?

In my classroom this year we had several interesting unplanned and spontaneous conversations. One of these talks started with a question while we discussed The Grapes of Wrath. In the midst of the discussion a student asked me, “Does the American Dream even exist anymore?” And we were off… what is the American Dream, does hard work really pay off? Isn’t it more of a myth? Who has access to this dream? Unfortunately, we had to cut our conversation a bit short, but the discussion has stuck with me into summer vacation. Has the American Dream died? Is it just a myth? How does the disintegration or transformation of the American Dream impact teaching and learning? And what about the large percentage of students who don’t have access to the dream?

The American Dream has evolved somewhat since the Joads talked about it on the journey to California during the Dust Bowl. Yet while the white picket fence may not be a critical element of the dream, the idea that an individual could work hard to make something of themselves in order to move up socially and economically and acquire a sense of long term security has featured in the American dream, as I understand it.

I have to admit that I’m skeptical that the dream still exists. Really though, it doesn’t matter what I think. What matters is that students understand and believe in some semblance of the dream. Otherwise, school is even less meaningful than it already is for most students. If how well or how hard you work won’t matter, than schoolwork really doesn’t matter. There are times as a teacher where I found myself trying to convince students that the dream still exists, much like a parent working hard to convince their kid that Santa Claus still exists after the kid found presents in the closet.  This seems like a silly analogy, but the ramifications of coming to terms with this knowledge and lost ideal are significant to an individual’s learning and development.

It does seem that this phenomena or realization that the dream is dying is news to some of our country’s youth. A large segment of our population already considers the dream more of a myth or fairy tale. Many of us have worked to provide youth with skills and knowledge to improve their access to the American Dream (even if at times it may have felt like we were just creating false hope). For centuries People of Color had little access to the American Dream. In class this is usually when someone says that poor White families had it bad too. And while this may be true on some levels, my answer was usually along the lines of - ‘Yes but poor White folks still usually have it better than poor Black families.’  Occasionally someone will bring up affirmative action - to which I point to research that shows that often the primary beneficiaries of affirmative action were suburban middle class White women. So for those on the margins, has anything gotten better? I want to say - in some cases it has, in other cases it hasn’t and perhaps, the margins have actually widened as the ranks of the disadvantaged have increased.

More recently my students have made me aware that this skepticism in the American Dream exists not just among the disadvantaged and marginalized, but has also seeped into the consciousness of the well-to-do independent school types. More and more, they say students in privileged school environments walk into class thinking that no matter how well they do, how hard they work, how many times they do the right thing - it probably won’t matter. Someone with better connections will land the good job or they’ll be stuck in a job with little economic benefit and little control over their well-being. No one wants to feel like all their hard work could still leave them watching the dream pass them by.

As our nation finds itself in turmoil due to a conflagration of social, cultural, economic, and political transformation, perhaps not only is the dream changing, but access to the dream is also shifting. This is a root cause of much of the turmoil in our country. Many people who had choice access to the American Dream now have to share access, and are upset that they aren’t the clear favorites in the dreamscape. Many people who had counted on the American Dream are upset that the economic landscape has shifted and left them behind. These folks are now looking to blame someone. I sympathize. Scapegoating, however, does more harm than good.

I saw a headline recently that stated that corporate America  is killing the American Dream. This rang true for me to some extent. The ever increasing schism between those in the fancy offices with the amazing salaries and those downstairs in the cubicles certainly doesn’t do the dream much good. And like in The Grapes of Wrath, those with economic power can use power and competition to dehumanize their employees, just because people are desperate and they can. No one ever wants to feel ‘less than.’ If you are working 60+ hours a week to barely make ends meet, you don’t have much time to dream.  If you have many sleepless nights trying to figure out how to make things work, you won’t dream much. All of this is bad enough for adults, but for youth the impact is exponentially greater. Changes to the dream, the American Fairy Tale, or the myth of making it are not lost on youth. Students pick up on more than adults give them credit for, and yet are less equipped to process and negotiate this information. As youth work to make sense of these ideas it impacts their schoolwork, their behavior, and their engagement with learning. Within schools - especially middle and high schools - motivation for students is already scarce. Here the existence or death of the American Dream takes on even greater significance.

Listen, I’m old and a bit jaded. As an old-school Gen X-er I have been skeptical of the system for some time. Yet as a teacher I want students to understand the power of hope, and hope they understand how powerful they can be in the future. I don’t know if teaching hope and power represents the greatest or most dangerous subject matter. I do know that every student deserves to have hope, power, and opportunity. Until hope, power, and opportunity are dead, the American Dream lives on. Hopefully, the old American Dream has evolved into a new, 21st century dream. I may never know what it looks like, but hey - a boy can dream.

 

Branding Teachers

Not long ago I sat through a long meeting in which consultants laid out our school’s new branding. There was talk of appropriate fonts, swirls versus swishes, and inspirational phrasing. I don’t remember many details from that day’s meeting, but I do recall telling myself that I should brand myself.

Branding has come to bombard our daily lives whether or not we realize it. Companies spend chunks of their budget to create iconic logos, materials, etc. to represent their ‘brand.’ My graphic designer friends work hard to craft letters and images that best enhance the message of a company to attract customers. Schools are no different. Especially within the independent school community, branding can sometimes overshadow curriculum.  

Why can’t teachers brand themselves? Yet, we already do, but have yet to enhance the messaging around our individual brands. I am an educational brand. A student once told me that I was a destination educator. Recently an administrator at my school said that I was a rite of passage for students. While this is flattering and my ego certainly enjoys this idea, this notion reinforces my idea that I am a brand.  How I teach; what I teach; and my interaction styles are unique to me. All of this goes beyond the individual personalities of teacher. Schools often assert that what teachers create are the school’s intellectual property. So… once I unfurl my ideas and projects in class they belong to the school.  This idea cracks me up. I have used different versions of dozens of projects at several schools - whoops. I’d love to see one school sue another school over a violation of intellectual properties,

So beyond this idea of intellectual property, teacher as brands brings up several great questions. First, what does a teacher’s brand consist of and how can a teacher market their brand? Second, how can teachers leverage their brands to enhance their professional status within their school and community? Yet, another issue has caught my attention. This issue centers on the relationship between a school’s reputation and a teacher’s brand.  When a school has a strong, positive reputation that enhances teachers’ brands. However, if a school has a poor reputation, that can have a negative impact on teachers’ brands.   Teachers can benefit or suffer from the reputation of their school and this impacts their brand. In real estate it might be beneficial to invest in the ugliest house on a nice street, I don’t think it works out so well for teachers at schools with poor reputations.  If you are a great teacher but the local education community does not think highly of your school – your brand suffers. If you try to change jobs, you often struggle to gain respect.  My aunt once told me that she wouldn’t hire chefs from restaurants with bad reputations. I’m guessing schools are often similar. Being the best teacher at an iffy school (much like a good chef and a bad eatery) hurts your brand and limits your leverage within the educational community.

Moving forward,  how can teachers assert their power by establishing or solidifying their brands? What are the key pieces of a teacher’s brand?  And, how can teachers protect themselves and their brand from being damaged by a school’s reputation?

 

 

 

 

Leaving Teaching

So I’ve been thinking more and more about getting out of teaching. I love teaching and most days, I’m pretty good at it.  Teaching represents a huge piece of my professional and personal identity. Yet for various reasons I am willing to leave a profession I love and wrestle with an identity crises (the likes of which I haven’t dealt with since the late 80s). What is going on? Lots of people don’t like their job or feel meaningless within their company – I get that. I am grateful to be working.  Here’s the thing. Normally I tell people “I’m going to school.”  More and more, I find myself saying, “ I’m going to work.”  Teaching never used to feel like a job. Sure it is hard work, but the adventure was always worth it. What’s going on?

For various reasons I am not going to discuss my reasons with you. After looking at why teachers leave the profession, I am not unique in this dilemma.  In years past, public school teachers fed up with working conditions left public education for private schools.  Now it seems that independent schools may no longer provide professional sanctuary. After teaching for so long what could I possibly offer a company?

There are occasional reports of new teachers leaving the profession in their first years. According to The Washington Post the number of teachers leaving the profession in the first five years of their career may not be as high as first thought (Brown, 2015). The validity of these numbers and the underlying reasons behind this revelation are up for discussion. Other articles suggest that these numbers may differ in certain areas of the country (Thompson, 2015, Huicochea & Jung, 2015). As with other jobs and with regional economic trends, teachers staying or leaving the profession may differ due to regional economic trends around this country. It should be noted that in other countries this data vary (Weale, 2015).

Other, less recent articles point to the lack of respect for teachers, an unrealistic workload, poor work conditions, and inept leadership as primary reasons behind the staggering attrition rates. In an NEA Today Kopkowski (2008) discusses the dismantling of professionalism by educational leaders and the financial cost of constantly recruiting and hiring for teachers schools could not retain. For those who aren’t convinced about the educational cost this problem has on students, the $7 billion yearly cost should grab their attention.

Riggs (2013) describes in The Atlantic the lack of respect and the impact of constantly shuffling new teachers into classrooms has on student learning. Teachers get little respect and have little power over their profession. Administrators and leaders (many of whom have little experience in the field outside of having once gone to school) call the shots and shape the policies that impact teachers and students everyday. On paper, teaching isn’t a bad gig. In actuality, the physical, emotional, and professional burden is not for many not sustainable in the long (or short) run.

Whether you agree with the NEA or The Atlantic, good teachers leave the profession at an alarming rate. Maybe the percentage of teachers leaving doesn’t concern you, but few can argue the impact that good teachers have on students. Think about this. How many people would even think about walking into a surgery and telling the doctor how to do his job? Or, who walks into court and tell the judge and lawyers what they could and couldn’t do? Yet these types of actions occur in school all the time.  Sure there are bad teachers, but there are poor employees in every profession.

We live in a country in which the UPS driver is more respected and better compensated than teachers.  Don’t get me wrong – UPS drivers work hard (peek into their truck between Thanksgiving and New Years sometime). It is a company in which every person starts in the warehouse. The starting salary for a driver far exceeds the starting salary for a teacher. For that matter, drivers starting salary exceed the salary of a teacher with a doctorate and years of experience. Folks are usually pretty excited when the UPS driver comes towards them with packages. Parents are pretty excited to drop their kids off on the first day of school, but not many people get excited to see a teacher walking their way.  What does this say about our priorities as a nation?

Investing in education periodically captures local or national attention, but rarely do people seriously discuss investing in teachers. The lack of respect for teachers as professionals is perhaps most evident in salary and responsibilities. Nobody gets in to teaching for money, but almost everyday wants to be respected in their field. And yet, administrators, etc. have gradually stripped teaching of its professionalism and stripped teachers of responsibilities or control over how schools meet the needs of students and communities. If you want better schools and better teachers invest in teachers – pay them a professional wage and expect them to be professionals in their fields.  A recent op-ed piece (Startz & Goldhaber, 2015) outlined their case for investing (and respecting) in teachers as professionals. While this idea is not cheap, it is a more effective long-term economic and educational solution.  The school the authors focus on (The Equity Project (TEP)charter middle school in New York) pays teachers a respectable starting salary ($125,000) and hands over various administrative responsibilities to the teachers. Sounds great and it seems to be working for the teachers, students, and for TEP.  The teachers I know already work hard and would relish the opportunity to have a hand in how their classrooms and schools function. I’m not sure about you, but I think I would respond well to being paid and treated like a professional. A boy can dream I guess.

Who knows what I will do moving forward. What is certain is that the various data and the reasons for why teachers leave suggest that something is wrong.  What company or profession would ignore this problem. Something isn’t working. Will anything change? For starters, until inept leadership decreases and professional respect increases – I doubt it. I guess we will see.

So what keeps you going? What made you leave? Are teachers respected enough? What does the future hold for teachers and the profession?

References (in order of appearance)

Brown, (2015). http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/local/wp/2015/04/30/study-new-teacher-attrition-is-lower-than-previously-thought/

Weale, (2015).http://www.theguardian.com/education/2015/mar/31/four-in-10-new-teachers-quit-within-a-year

Thompson, (2015). http://scholasticadministrator.typepad.com/thisweekineducation/2015/04/thompson-why-teachers-leave-the-profession.html#.Vcl7daZZ9l8

Huicochea & Jung, (2015). http://tucson.com/news/local/education/shortage-puts-uncertified-teachers-in-arizona-classrooms/article_b0344334-7730-5356-89d7-bdbc9eb461a7.html

Kopkowski, (2008). http://www.nea.org/home/12630.htm

Riggs, (2013). http://www.theatlantic.com/education/archive/2013/10/why-do-teachers-quit/280699/

Startz & Goldhaber, (2015). http://www.latimes.com/opinion/op-ed/la-oe-0309-startz-goldhaber-pay-teachers-more-20150309-story.html

Learn By Doing?

Learn by doing represents an interesting phrase yet widely overused in education.  Dating back to the dawn of progressive education, Dewey first positioned experience and reflection as important conduits for learning  in the early 20th century. Unfortunately somewhere along the way the reflective components were minimized if not lost and experience now gets squeezed in as possible much of the time. As someone who uses experience and reflection as the foundation of classroom life this loss bothers me.

Appearing in mission statements and as subheadings for book chapters, learn by doing evolved into a cliché by the mid 20th century.  Curriculum theorist Hilda Taba voiced concern in 1962 when describing the misappropriation of experience by educators.  Really, what does one learn by action alone?

The problem, highlighted by Taba and other educators, is that teachers provide learning experiences (stand alone activities, field trips, etc.) but often they do not provide opportunities for students to reflect on what occurred in those activities in order to build connections between those experiences and their future activities. Without opportunities to reflect and connect much of the learning from activities is lost.

Sixty plus years later this problem persists in schools. Often the problem persists not because of teacher negligence but because of a lack of time or the demands of district compliance objectives and school-based administrative pressures.  This blog is titled Do.Think.Learn in an effort to encourage educators to move beyond cliché and more thoroughly facilitate the possible benefits of learning from experience.      

Do.Think.Learn... While some groups and individuals may position these actions differently (e.g. http://www.learnthinkdo.us), my current pedagogical frame is for students to Do first; Think about what happened after the doing; and Learn from a combination of action and reflection (praxis). This scenario does not preclude front loading activities (thinking before starting).  At this time the conversation focuses on the period after a specific experience.

Unfortunately many professionals make assumptions around learn by doing and the educative power of experiences. While experiential learning represents powerful opportunities to grow, that power has limitations. Just doing it, as the folks at Nike might say, doesn't often do a lot in terms of learning. Assuming students are learning is not a strong position for a teacher. Praxis helps teachers bridge experience and learning. Of course the teacher can't force students to cross that bridge, but by building that bridge a teacher has done his or her due diligence.

Take time to have students examine their actions. Reflection represents one key to learning and is an important life skill. Sure looking back at our actions or the actions of our group isn't always exciting. Don't beat it to death. Get the process started. Encourage students to incorporate reflection into their lives. Without reflection, how much students learn shrinks exponentially.

Keeping in mind the constraints and limitations placed upon educators, how can we move beyond clichés and missions statements? Perhaps others feel differently about the order Do.Think.Learn. Is praxis possible given the realities of schooling these days?  Is "Just Do It" all we have time for now? Or maybe, you might use other words altogether.