Friday Flash
August 19, 2016
News to Note
IA schedules are on my "goal" list for this weekend. Just as a reminder, the resource IAs were loosely scheduled to support resource students this week. Other IAs are starting duties and proctoring for NWEA. I hope to get their schedules finished this weekend and distributed on Monday; however, please be flexible as two are not yet hired and the others are still proctoring NWEA testing next week. I'm hoping that by 8/29, we will have normalcy!
In case you need it again, here's the link to sign up for the NWEA Data Day sessions! Again, this is intended to be a protected time to dig into your data and plan how to use it. Little to no "presentation" will occur, but support will be there to answer questions and help as needed! https://docs.google.com/a/ccs.k12.in.us/document/d/1E-s0_aMGD7a99dMzdoqRlVi6PloEyWZNRYtOCyyIjl8/edit?usp=sharing
I'll be reviewing math data for movement into advanced math this weekend. I'll let you know by Monday if we are looking to move any students and give you the chance to say no if you feel strongly that a student is not capable. We will do math make-ups on Tuesday, time TBD.
Next week is MAP Reading! Thanks to everyone for making this week go smoothly. Please let me know if you have any questions or concerns going into week 2!
Visual of the Week
Feature! Feature!
Over the past two years, I have enjoyed including spotlights on staff members in each week's edition and getting to know more about each other. I'm going to finish up last year's feature, "My Favorite Things," this week, and appeal to you for our NEW FEATURE for the 2016-2017 school year!
As you know, this year's theme is THE POWER OF YET. As you think about your own life, we'd love to hear about someone who has inspired in you a growth mindset or a desire to become what you are/what you hope to be. Perhaps it's a quick story about a student, family member, or friend who inspires you to learn and grow. Perhaps it's a story from when you decided to become a teacher, run a marathon, or learn to sew. It can be anything! We are excited to share these anecdotes and all be inspired by each other's stories! Just email me your story and I'll include it in an upcoming issue!
Something to Grow On
Lighting the Wick of Learning
July 20, 2016 | Dr. Shonda Huery Hardman
Recently I have been spending much time reflecting on the connection between school culture and the jaw-dropping achievement gap that exists in our country. Within the last few weeks, the National Assessment of Education Progress (NAEP) released its 2015 report, which compares the performance of students across this nation. The startling realization is the fact that our technologically advanced nation, where iPhones and iPads are staples in most homes, cannot figure out how to ensure the academic success of every student in our country. As I look over the latest statistics, I am deeply saddened that we haven’t figured out how to give each child in our country a chance to excel. I worry about my own two daughters and the type of education they will receive, and I am thankful they are still in preschool, which will give me and our nation’s schools, districts, and states more time to figure this out. Yes, there is hope. The question is where does this hope rest? Is the hope in our constant pounding of an accountability system that pushes the sink-or-swim mentality? Is the hope in the thought of pouring more funding into schools? Is the hope in vamping and revamping—over and over again—teacher-evaluation systems? Is the hope in hiring, firing, and rehiring school leaders, all the while crossing our fingers that maybe this time we get the right one?
Let me propose that the little hope we have rests in the idea I have grown to love, which is this: EVERYONE HAS GENIUS! I am willing to place all of my money, eggs, fingers, and toes in a basket to bet on this fact. Most people in schools do not really believe this; therefore, we create a schoolwide culture that mimics the words only—yes, “I believe all children can learn!” BUT the actions that are lived through the school’s culture do not line up with this belief.
The greatness behind everyone having genius is this simple truth: every person possesses a learning “wick” inside of them. Our job as educators is to light that wick. Think about this. When we buy candles, they are simple objects sitting on a shelf or desk waiting, waiting, and waiting some more for something exciting to happen. The candle’s excitement is tied to one person taking a few seconds to light the candle’s wick. Our children are like candles, only waiting for that one person to ignite their flame. The glory in all of this is the fact that it doesn’t take a million people or a million dollars to do this. It just takes one willing person.
I am reminded of my first-grade teacher, Ms. Waters. She was scrawny, wrinkled, and at times very, very fussy. I can remember her white hands holding tight to my brown hands as she whisked me to the front of the line. “Shonda!” she would say, as I cuddled behind her legs, “I want you to stand up straight when you speak and look me in the eye. Stand up straight!” She would say this on more than one occasion. The timbre in her voice scared me and I knew she meant business. So, in an instant, I stood up straight and looked her in the eye. She went on to tell me and everyone in her class that no one would leave first grade without being the best readers in the school. Now, over thirty years later, I realize that what she exemplified was the idea that everyone in her class had genius.
I have worked in school districts across this country and I can say without a shadow of a doubt that what we are missing are the Ms. Waterses of the world. She did not care that I was a poor black girl who lived in the apartments across the street from the school. She did not care that at that time my mother was single and my father had been incarcerated. The only thing she cared about was making sure I learned how to read. At that time, there were no tests such as DIBELS, NWEA, STAAR, NAEP, etc. What she had was a set of flash cards—“ready, set, go!” We did have a weekly spelling test. How could I forget that! Her formula was simple. If I show my students what it means to work hard and demonstrate for them what it means to care, then they will succeed. This seems so simple now, yet so hard!
So how do we fill our classrooms with more Ms. Waterses? The complexity of today’s classrooms far outweigh a simple solution. I would only suggest that we start doing the following:
- Speak truth to children. The truth is this: life is not easy and survival comes only to those who have a plan (Habit 2/Habit 3).
- Find the genius in every human existing in schools. This suggestion is for both children and adults. Let’s all stop looking for someone to blame for the misfortune happening in schools and let’s all get better together (Habit 6).
- Engage in uncomfortable conversations about race and cultural differences. These conversations are necessary if we are going to survive as a nation (Habit 5).
Alexa Silvius
Being a new MOM!!
Traveling with family
Mexican food
Snuggling with our two cats, Phantom and Fiona
Cheering on the COLTS and BOILERMAKERS!!
Home projects
Spending quality time with my two adorable nieces, Sawyer and Spencer
Watching Bachelor/Bachelorette