Tough Week

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This was definitely one of the most challenging weeks of the year so far. Early in the week, there was a photograph posted online that depicted one of our students with a racial slur. This image quickly went viral with nearly every student in the school involved. http://baltimore.cbslocal.com/2017/03/02/protest-at-eastern-technical-hs-after-racist-picture-appears-on-social-media/

Word quickly spread amongst the students that they would protest the image, and what appeared to be a lack of consequence from the school administration. There had been a consequence, which was in accordance with the student behavior handbook, but the students did not believe that it was equal in severity to the incident. http://foxbaltimore.com/news/local/the-real-eastern-tech-rallies-against-racist-snapchat-photo

Beginning early before MOD 1, a group of students sat on the lobby floor. They texted, Snapped, Instagrammed, and Tweeted their location to most of the student body, and the local news. Soon, dozens of students joined them. When asked to return to class, they refused. For safety, they did agree to re-locate to the school cafeteria. They continued their peaceful protest for the remainder of the first period. The size of the crowd grew with the first change of classes. There were now over 100 students involved, with more arriving during the second period.

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The sit-in protest turned into a platform for expression of thoughts, feelings, and experiences. The student crowd was joined by a few teachers. They read aloud from letters and poems that captured the feelings of others when faced with such open racism. The news reporters were not allowed inside but remained in contact with our students through social media. http://www.wbaltv.com/article/eastern-tech-students-protest-racial-slur-on-baseball-field/9084532

The group was allowed to protest after lunch in the main gym. Now, 100’s of students were on site. The testimonials continued throughout the remainder of the day. Most of my students came to ask me if they could attend before doing so. A few chose to remain with me. I told them that they should “do what they need to do“.

In all my years of teaching, I have never been a part of such an event. I do not believe that this peaceful assembly could have happened at most other schools. There were no fights, no violence of any sort. The only members of the community that were angry were some of our parents. They were furious that this type of protest was allowed to happen. They wanted their children back in class. I would have to disagree. Our students needed the opportunity to voice their feelings. They did so in a way that should be an example to others.

Proud of them. Proud of our school.

 

Professional Development for Chairmen – The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly

Imagine sitting in professional development surrounded by your fellow chairmen.  What do you picture?  If your picture of PD is a good one, you imagine productive and thought-provoking conversations about content and instruction, engaging activities that you can share with your teachpd-300x225ers, resources and materials that can be taken back to be used in classrooms, and all the other things that would make you better than the bearer of bad news about grading, assessment, accountability, etc.

If your image of PD is bad,  you have probably lived through a series of PD that involved someone’s worn out, go-to activity for engaging you in learning that is far from relevant or useful to you or your teachers.  You’ve probably also sat through the development of norms about how you should play nice during the PD, all the while, thinking about how this will go over like a lead balloon with your department.  Or maybe the PD was everyone’s favorite, the ever so engaging PPT covering the latest required initiative that in no way assists you in carrying out the initiative effectively in the classroom.

Hopefully, you have experienced the “good” more often than the “bad”.  More importantly, I hope you have never experienced “The Ugly.”  Unfortunately, I have experienced “The Ugly” recently.  “The Ugly” occurs when looking around the room you with much sadness observe that everyone has given up.  What I mean by given up is that everyone has finally come to terms with the fact that we are on a consistent drip of “bad” PD that continues to get worse.  It isn’t that chairmen don’t want to learn or grow professionally.  They are yearning for resources and ideas to take back to their teachers. With repeated meetings lacking open discussion,  many, if not all of us, are just discouraged with the thought of returning home to our schools without any resources or ideas that will solve our problems or provide answers to our teachers questions and concerns.

I wonder if those in charge of PD recognize the signs of “The Ugly” or even the signs of bad PD?  When the entire room is openly checking email, grading papers, knitting, and surfing the web without any response to the presenter’s ongoing questions isn’t that a sign the PD is not going well?  Too often, the leaders of professional development view “The Ugly” as the fault of the participants.  Their excuse is that the participants are not following their beloved norms.  As observers, they would never write off a bad lesson lacking student engagement as the students’ fault.  They would ask the teacher why the students weren’t engaged.  Why don’t they do the same with professional development?

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