Super Teacher's Job is Never Done!

Super Teacher's Job is Never Done!
Photo courtesy of DiscoveryEducation.com

Teaching is the profession that teaches all the other professions. ~ Author Unknown

My goal is to reveal one teacher's humble journey of self-reflection, critical analysis, and endless questioning about my craft of teaching and learning alongside my middle school students.

"The dream begins with a teacher who believes in you, who tugs and pushes and leads you to the next plateau, sometimes poking you with a sharp stick called 'truth'." ~ Dan Rather



Tuesday, June 26, 2012

The Debate Abut Co-Ed vs. Single Sex Schooling...

.....lives on!


There is a fantastic book called Pink Brain, Blue Brain by Dr Lise Eliot.  There is a section in which she examines many claims about single sex vs. co-ed schooling.

Well worth the read, as she is a credible neuroscientist!

http://www.amazon.com/Pink-Brain-Blue-Differences-Troublesome/dp/0547394594

Saturday, June 23, 2012

Getting Students More Connected to Reading

Teacher Justin Minkel says a project he launched to get more books into the homes of his students has had a profound effect on their academic progress and connection to reading. What can YOU do to promote lifelong literacy and a love of learning in your students?

The Home Library Effect: Transforming At-Risk Readers


By Justin Minkel
Melinda started 2nd grade with everything against her. She lives in poverty, her mom is not literate in English or Spanish, and she was severely abused at the age of 6. At the beginning of the year, she owned only one book.
Despite these barriers, Melinda made extraordinary academic progress. She moved from a kindergarten level (a four on the Developmental Reading Assessment) to a 4th grade level (a 40) in the two years she was in my class. Her demeanor changed: She began smiling and laughing more often, and she became a confident scholar.
Part of the reason for Melinda's growth is elusive—that combination of resiliency, strength, and utter grit that awes those of us lucky enough to teach these remarkable children. But another reason for her success is simple—instead of one book at home, Melinda now has a home library of 40 books.
The Project

We called our classroom adventure "The 1,000 Books Project." Each of the 25 children in my class received 40 books over the course of 2nd and 3rd grade, for a total of 1,000 new books in their homes.
The project was simple to launch. Scholastic donated 20 books per child, and I purchased the other 20 through a combination of my own funds, support from individuals and local organizations, and bonus points. The kids received three types of books each month: copies of class read-alouds, guided reading books, and individual choices selected from Scholastic’s website.
Working with family members, each child chose a space to become a home library, ranging from a cardboard box decorated with stickers to a wooden bookcase. Through class discussions and our class blog, the students talked about everything from how they organized their libraries to their favorite reading buddy at home.
The total cost for each student's home library was less than $50 each year, a small investment to move a struggling reader from frustration to confidence.
Growing Readers

These 25 students made more progress in their reading than I have experienced with any other class. By the end of the project's second year, they had exceeded the district expectation for growth by an average of nine levels on the DRA and five points on the computerized Measures of Academic Progress reading test. And they made this growth despite formidable obstacles to academic success—20 of the 25 are English language learners, and all but one live in poverty.
The shift in the students' home libraries reflects their growth as readers—the first book every child received was the picture book Where The Wild Things Are, and the 40th book was the novel The Lightning Thief, which is geared toward 5th and 6th graders.
While the numerical data on my students' achievement is encouraging, it is their stories that will stick with me. The exhilaration that blazed through the room each time another massive box from Scholastic arrived. The rainy day of indoor recess when the kids made up "The Fantastic Mr. Fox Game" based on our read-aloud and ran around shrieking gleefully, the baby foxes fleeing the vile hunters. The kind of question a teacher loves to hear: "Can we take the poetry books out to recess today?"
I watched child after child become a different kind of writer, thinker, and human being because of his or her growth as a reader.
Closing the Book Gap

Jonathan Kozol has called it "the shame of the nation": the educational gap between children born poor and children born into affluence. To close that gap, we need to look beyond the hours students spend in class to the hours they spend at home. A 2001 study by Susan Neuman and Donna Celano found that the ratio of books to children in middle-income neighborhoods is 13 books to one child, while in low-income neighborhoods the ratio is one book to 300 children.
This "book gap" is easier to erase than the more complex barriers involved in poverty. Richard Allington found that giving children 12 books to take home over the summer resulted in gains equal to summer school for lower-income children, and had twice the impact of summer school for the poorest of those children.

All this without worksheets, extrinsic rewards, or sitting in a stifling classroom in the middle of July.
Home reading surveys showed that at the beginning of 2nd grade, my students had access to an average of three books at home. Increasing this number to 40 or more books had far-reaching effects. Students' fluency improved because the children could engage in repeated readings of favorite "just right" books, and parents reported increased time spent reading at home during weekends, holidays, and summer break.
The only incentive for this increase in reading time was intrinsic: the pleasure each child felt in reading his or her own book, beloved as a favorite stuffed animal.
Family Literacy

The home libraries have also had a tremendous impact on each child's love of reading, which has ignited that same love of books in their parents, siblings, cousins, and friends. Several students told me their parents, brothers, and sisters have now placed their own books and magazines in what has become the family's home library. Ava said to me on a field trip during the last week of school, "Mr. Minkel, I just finished reading The B.F.G. to Esperanza [who is 4], and she liked it! I even think Yesica [who is 2] understood it, because she was laughing at the part about whizz-poppers!"
When I expressed surprise at how much progress Melinda had made since the last time I'd done the DRA with her, she said, "Well, you know those books you gave me? Now when my mom and my little sister are watching TV, they say, 'Melinda, read to us!' So we turn off the T.V., and I do." This courageous 7-year-old girl has become the one literate person in her family, and her ability to read has changed the fabric of her family's evenings.
A Simple Truth

The world of the classroom is incredibly complex. But for those of us fortunate enough to teach, we have discovered certain simple truths. Build a relationship with each child through one-on-one moments, whether it's a conversation while taking a running record or a hug goodbye at the end of the day. Listen carefully to what our students say, and pay close attention to what they do and create. Laugh a lot.
This is my newest addition to that list of simple truths: To help kids develop a love of reading, put great books in their hands. Then watch in amazement as their worlds change.
Justin Minkel teaches 2nd and 3rd grade at Jones Elementary in northwest Arkansas. He is the 2007 Arkansas Teacher of the Year, a 2011 National Board-certified teacher, and a member of the Teacher Leaders Network. He is currently writing a book for teachers on Common Core-aligned instruction at the elementary level.



Friday, June 22, 2012

What about pregnant students?

I found this article particularly interesting, as I have taught several teen moms who are unaware of what options exist for them educationally. Title IX is most often associated with school sports, but the gender-equity law applies to many aspects of schooling.

FOCUS ON: GENDER EQUALITY



Title IX Promise Unmet for Pregnant Students
Alyssia Perez, 17, and her 5-month-old, Alyza Garcia, cuddle at the Healy-Murphy Child Development Center, in San Antonio, an independent school for pregnant and parenting teenagers. Title IX requires schools to ensure that such students get an equal chance.

—Lisa Krantz for Education WeekLaw's applications often unrecognized

By Nirvi Shah

When Amelia Erickson learned she was pregnant at age 14, she was determined to keep working toward her high school diploma. But it wasn't easy. After her son was born and she returned to school in Meridian, Idaho, she asked to step out a few times a day to breast-feed him at a nearby day care.

The school said no.

So for a year, Ms. Erickson tried working at home on her own, taking courses online, struggling, and nearly quitting her studies. Her son, now almost 2, "would be perfectly fine. Then as soon as I would turn around to do my homework, he would start crying," she recalled.

That wasn't how Title IX was supposed to work. Passed 40 years ago to ensure all students have equal educational opportunities, the law is most often associated with student athletics. But it was intended to apply to many aspects of students' schooling by strengthening the legal rights of pregnant teenagers, victims of sexual harassment, and others who may not get a fair shot at an education because of their gender.

While access to schooling for pregnant and parenting teenagers has improved since the law's passage, data from 2006 show that only half of women who gave birth as teenagers get a high school diploma by age 22, compared with 89 percent of those who didn't.

Eighteen-year-old Kristen Garcia relaxes at home with her boyfriend, Johnny Vasquez, 16. The soon-to-be parents attend the Healy-Murphy Center, an independent school in San Antonio, Texas, for pregnant and parenting teenagers, both male and female, who find it too difficult to continue their studies at their home schools.

—Lisa Krantz for Education WeekOne reason: Too often, pregnant and parenting teenagers such as Ms. Erickson are deprived of equal opportunities, in part because of ignorance about Title IX's application to this group of students, experts say.

"The lack of knowledge surrounding pregnant students means that in many cases the promise of the law is not being fulfilled," said Erin Prangley, the associate director for government relations of the American Association of University Women, in Washington.

Likewise, recent statistics from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention show that about one in 10 high school students said they had been hit or otherwise hurt on purpose by a boyfriend or girlfriend; about 7 percent said they had been forced to have sex.

And, as recently as 2011, Michigan had a law banning pregnant students from getting the same at-home educational services as students who might be unable to attend school for any other medical condition. The National Women's Law Center in Washington worked on undoing that ban and one in Georgia in 2009.

Call for Data

To get a better handle on how extensive such disparities are, Ms. Prangley's group and others are pushing for the U.S. Department of Education's office for civil rights to collect data about pregnant and parenting teenagers and how schools serve them.

"Ask the schools point blank: Does your school provide child care, transportation, or tutoring? Does your school track data on girls who become pregnant?" she said.

Similar recommendations are in a report out this week, "Title IX at 40" from the National Coalition of Women & Girls in Education, which includes the AAUW.

In January, Secretary of Education Arne Duncan said the OCR this year would issue guidance about pregnant students' rights, a point Russlynn H. Ali, the department's assistant secretary for civil rights, repeated in an interview with Education Week.

"We've heard from lots of advocacy groups that say there's a real concern," Ms. Ali said. "How do we ensure that young mothers get the education they're entitled to?"

Meanwhile, other federal policy makers are proposing measures to bolster support services for pregnant teenagers in schools. A bill introduced last August by U.S. Rep. Jared Polis, D-Colo., the Pregnant and Parenting Students Access to Education Act, would require school districts to provide academic support services for pregnant and parenting students and require the collection and reporting of data on pregnant and parenting students.

In class, Ms. Garcia listens as her English 3 teacher discusses a sermon. School leaders say 85 percent of the students they enroll manage to earn their high school diploma.

—Lisa Krantz for Education WeekEventually, Ms. Erickson found the Marian Pritchett School in Boise. A partnership between the Salvation Army and the Boise school district, it provides on-site day care, housing for women 18 and older, a social worker, and pregnancy and parenting classes. Students can miss school when necessary far more than at a typical high school, said head teacher Deborah Hedden-Nicelyr.

Ms. Erickson said she's on track to graduate next year.

"The whole school is a huge support system," she said of Marian Pritchett. "It's all girls, so there's drama. ...But if you're having a bad day and crying in the cafeteria like I was, everyone will come up to you and rub your back ... Even if you hate the girl.

"It's the mother in us," Ms. Erickson said.

Violence and Harassment

The OCR has been more active in cases of sexual harassment and violence. The agency has launched a number of investigations into how colleges and districts have handled some of these cases. They include the 2010 sexual assault of a student at a District of Columbia high school and the brutal rape of a student waiting for a ride after the prom by multiple men in Contra Costa, Calif., in 2009. That episode went on for about two hours before anyone watching called police.

Both cases are still open, Ms. Ali said, because they have evolved from looking at a single school to the entire district.

The guidance noted, for example, that schools don't have to wait for the conclusion of a criminal investigation before beginning a Title IX probe. And while that inquiry is in progress, schools can take steps, including making sure a victim and suspected aggressor aren't in the same classes and providing medical and counseling services.

Even if an incident occurs off campus, a school isn't absolved of responsibility because the incident could create a hostile environment for the victim on campus.

That guidance and another 2010 document about schools' responsibilities in cases of bullying and harassment "were really welcome," said Lara S. Kaufmann, the senior counsel for the National Women's Law Center, although the guidance has raised concern among school district advocates.

Drawing attention to these issues and their ties to civil rights laws and Title IX has triggered changes in school policies across the country. Still, there is work to be done, Ms. Kaufmann said.

Ms. Prangley cited the 2009 suicide of Hope Witsell. Ms. Witsell was an 8th grader at Beth Shields Middle School in Ruskin, Fla., who was punished after sending a topless photo of herself to a boy she liked, a photo that quickly went viral at her school and another nearby. She was suspended for a week and forbidden to run for a spot as the Future Farmers of America student adviser for her school the next school year. But when she was at school, as one newspaper account describes it, her friends escorted her "down hallways like human shields, fending off insults such as 'whore' and 'slut.' " Ms. Witsell eventually hanged herself.

"Nobody provided the protection she'd need [from what] we see as sexual harassment," Ms. Prangley said, noting that the 197,000-student Hillsborough County district that includes Ms. Witsell's school was among 14 of the 20 largest districts her organization cited for reporting zero incidents of bullying and harassment in the 2009-10 school year.

"We're not saying the districts are horrible people for not reporting data," she said. "What we don't expect is districts to turn a blind eye to these harassment issues and pretend like they don't exist."



Thursday, June 21, 2012

New CommCorp Position Available!

Please find attached the job description for a position that CommCorp is hiring for – Senior Program Manager for Education Quality Assurance for the Department of Youth Service’s Comprehensive Education Partnership initiative (info attached).  This is a great position for a leader who is interested in supporting educational excellence in juvenile justice settings.  We are looking for someone with a teaching or educational administrative background, a personal philosophy on positive youth development, and a commitment to catalyzing our Comprehensive Education Partnership’s resources to support continuous improvement of the Department of Youth Services educational programs.  I’d be happy to answer questions from any interested candidates (my contact information is below).  Please circulate this email widely – Best Janet Janet DaisleyDirectorDYS Comprehensive Education Partnership InitiativeCommonwealth Corporation4 Bay Road, Suite 100, Building AHadley, MA  01035(413)584-3627, ext. 107(413-537-1561 (cell)
More info.:

Youth Pathways Division



Commonwealth Corporation






Reports To: Director, DYS Initiative, Youth Pathways


Position Title: Senior Program Manager – DYS Education Quality Assurance and Improvement


Position Status Full-time Employment


Position Description


Overview: Commonwealth Corporation Department of Youth Services Education Initiative


In partnership with the Massachusetts Department of Youth Services (DYS) and the Collaborative for Educational Services (CES), Commonwealth Corporation helps manage and deliver education and workforce services for youth involved in the state’s juvenile justice system. The goal of this partnership (referred to as the Comprehensive Education Partnership or “CEP” or “Partnership”) is to provide DYS clients with access and opportunity to a continuum of options and opportunities-- high-quality education and training, vocational and employability programs, mentoring and other services. Commcorp’s Youth Pathway’s division is committed to developing partnerships and implementing programming that reflects a positive youth development approach and furthers the values of social justice and equity.


Position Description – Purpose: The primary responsibility of the senior program manager is to manage the Education Quality Assurance (EQA) and Improvement Initiative, a statewide effort to identify, promote and assess the quality of educational programming in DYS settings in addition to coordinating technical assistance to support underperforming educational programs.


Key Responsibilities:


1. Convene Working Group. Convene a working group of advisors to regularly provide input, review products, and give guidance to the Partnership and DYS in managing and refining an education program assessment and improvement process.


2. Promote EQA Standards and Indicators. Maintain and continually refine a set of education quality standards for DYS education that are aligned with the DYS Teaching and Learning Standards, the Massachusetts Department of Elementary and Secondary Education Teacher Evaluation Standards as well as other national standards that support quality teaching and learning.


3. Communicate EQA Standards. In collaboration with DYS Central Office education services staff, the senior program manager will regularly communicate education standards, criteria and success indicators to all education providers in the DYS system and, along with DYS staff, articulate to the field the role of education program improvement as an element of program accountability, evaluation, and improvement.


4. Development and Refinement of EQA Tools and Protocols: Develop, refine and make recommendations on a set of tools and protocols to support the collection of data for the on-site EQA visits.


5. Implement EQA Process in DYS Educational Settings. Lead, organize and deploy staff to carry out a program assessment (using a set of observation tools and protocols), analyze self-reported data, and assign an overall quality rating to each program receiving an EQA visit.


6. Technical Assistance for Program Improvement. Provide technical assistance to education program sites that are in need of a plan for program improvement. Coordinate the delivery of technical assistance from CEP staff, education providers, and professional consultants to help programs in “non” or “partial compliance” improve their educational services to support effective student performance.


7. Training and Facilitation to support CEP Professional Development to Teachers and Educational Staff: Provide trainings related to the EQA and DYS Teaching and Learning Standards to support CEP’s professional development services to teachers.


8. Supervision of Staff: Supervise staff and consultants as needed.


9. Other responsibilities are required.


In addition to managing the education assessment and program improvement process, the senior program manager will be a member of CommCorp’s DYS project team and the Youth Pathways team.


Knowledge, Skills and Abilities


• Knowledge of new teacher development and current research and practice on teacher evaluation systems.


• Expertise with teaching pedagogy, instructional delivery and special education instruction.


• Experience coaching and mentoring new and veteran teachers.


• Ability to provide consistent, objective feedback and engage in conversations related to non-performing educational programs.


• Knowledge and training of multi-cultural education, culturally responsive practices and positive youth development instructional approaches.


• General understanding of youth development policy and practice that reflect an ‘asset-based’ approach to planning and delivery of youth services.


• Able to facilitate internal and external groups to achieve consensus.


• Excellent communication skills, including writing and public speaking. Ability to develop written analytical reports, and materials.


• General knowledge of program evaluation and strategies for continuous quality improvement of education programs.


Minimum Qualifications:


• A Masters degree in Education is required and Ph.D. in education, research methodology or another related area is preferred.


• At least three years teaching experience, preferably in an urban school setting.


• Education administrative experience preferable.


• Excellent communication and writing skills are required.


• Supervisory experience necessary.


• Must be motivated to work in juvenile justice facilities and settings.


• Current and valid driver’s license and car are required.


• Fluency in standard office computer applications is required, and knowledge of Excel is a strong plus.


To Apply:


• This position is posted as a full time position although CommCorp will consider applicants interested in part-time employment. Position is located in Hadley, MA.


• If you have questions regarding the position, please contact Janet Daisley, Director, CommCorp at 413-584-3627, ext. 107 or jdaisley@commcorp.org


• Applicants should submit a cover letter and resume to hrapplicant@commcorp.org.




Helpful Additional Info. & Links:

Massachusetts Department of Youth Services



Comprehensive Education Partnership Initiative




In partnership with the Massachusetts Department of Youth Services (DYS), Commonwealth Corporation (CommCorp) and the Collaborative for Educational Services (CES) are designing, managing and implementing a far-reaching comprehensive education and workforce development system for all young people that are placed in DYS custody by the juvenile courts. The goal of this partnership is to create a continuum of options and opportunities--high-quality education and training, vocational and employability programs, and other services--that will give DYS clients the knowledge, skills, and confidence they need to build a better future.




DYS Background Statistics: http://www.mass.gov/?pageID=eohhs2agencylanding&L=4&L0=Home&L1=Government&L2=Departments+and+Divisions&L3=Department+of+Youth+Services&sid=Eeohhs2


 1,300 youth at 56 residential facilities (run by a variety of vendors)


 Facilities include detention sites (pre-commitment of youth); assessment sites (determination of placement); short and long term secure treatment programs; revocation and community reentry through district offices.


 Profile: 34% white, 30% African American, 28% Latino, 3% Asian and 5% other.


 The average age of youth is 17 and most youth are released by age 18; youth can be committed until 21 years of age (depending on offense).


 Youth have wide ranging literacy, educational and workforce development needs.


Some of the key areas of services delivery for this initiative include:


Effective Workforce Development Strategies for Youth (CommCorp):


• Bridging the Opportunity Gap (BOG) Initiative: Implementation of vocational and employability programming that provide career readiness, work-based learning opportunities and connections to employment http://www.commcorp.org/areas/program.cfm?ID=173&p=48


 2010 BOG Report: http://64.78.33.48/publications/detail.cfm?ID=866


• Empower Your Future Career readiness quality curriculum http://www.commcorp.org/resources/detail.cfm?ID=682


• Community Reentry Initiative: Improved transition efforts for students returning to their home communities, including vocational and educational (alternative education, GED and adult basic education services) services http://www.commcorp.org/areas/program.cfm?ID=174&p=49


• Mentoring initiatives that connect youth with caring adults with the ability to expose youth to education and employment options


 2010 CommCorp Walk in My Shoes Mentoring Report http://64.78.33.48/publications/detail.cfm?ID=868


• Technical assistance and fiscal monitoring of vocational and employability programs that identify positive outcomes for DYS youth


• Multiple Pathways for youth that provide a variety of education, workforce and training options for DYS clients.


• 2010 CommCorp DYS Report of Initiatives http://64.78.33.48/publications/detail.cfm?ID=867


---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Positive Youth Development Approach to Programming and Reform Framework (CommCorp/CES):


• Promotion of research and “best practices” that support an asset-based approach to working with youth


• Professional development, workshops and training on culturally responsive teaching and learning strategies


• Collaboration with community partners who are motivated and engaged about working with youth from a range of cultural, ethnic, racial and socio-economic backgrounds


 DYS CEP Positive Youth Development Framework http://www.commcorp.org/resources/detail.cfm?ID=705


 DYS PYD and Culturally Responsive Practice “Roadmap” http://www.commcorp.org/resources/detail.cfm?ID=870


 Culturally Responsive Practice in DYS Education Settings


http://64.78.33.48/resources/detail.cfm?ID=704


Program Assessment and Improvement of DYS Programs and Infrastructure (CommCorp):


• Initiation and implementation of a comprehensive education program assessment and improvement process to assess the quality of educational programming (Education Quality Assurance Initiative). http://www.commcorp.org/areas/program.cfm?ID=176&p=51


• . 2010 EQA Statewide Report http://64.78.33.48/publications/detail.cfm?ID=869


Quality Curriculum and Instruction for DYS Youth (CES):


• Creation and continuous improvement of an infrastructure to support the delivery of educational services to youth in care http://www.collaborative.org/state-partnerships/dys-program-mainmenu-40


• Direct educational services (including Title 1) provided by quality teachers with Massachusetts teaching certifications


• Standardized delivery of academic content in residential programs


• Substantial increases of education resources in classrooms, including text books, materials, technology, and content manuals (English Language Arts, Math, Social Studies and Science).


 English Language Arts http://www.commcorp.org/resources/documents/Instruction%20Guide%20for%20DYS%20Schools%20-%20English%20Language%20Arts.pdf


 Mathematics


 US History I http://www.commcorp.org/resources/documents/Instruction%20Guide%20for%20DYS%20Schools%20-%20US%20History%201.pdf


 Science: http://www.commcorp.org/resources/documents/Instruction%20Guide%20for%20DYS%20Schools%20-%20Science.pdf


• Development of a universal transcript for students returning to public schools to leverage credit recovery


• Provision of consistent and quality professional development – built on a research based education foundion, for teachers, including seven professional development days and the deployment of instructional coaching by qualified staff


• Development and implementation of a student progress monitoring systems


• Development and implementation of a teacher evaluation and development system


• Competitive salaries for teachers working in residential programs


For more information on the DYS CEP Initiative contact:




Christine Kenney


Director of Educational Services


Massachusetts Department of Youth Services


27 Wormwood Street


Boston, MA


(617)960-3324


Christine.kenney@state.ma.us


Janet Daisley


Senior Program Manager. CEP Initiative


Commonwealth Corporation


4 Bay Road, Suite 100, Building A


Hadley, MA 01035


(413)584-3627, ext. 107


jdaisley@commcorp.org


 
 

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

Using Language to Change Lives....




The language you use in the classroom can change students' lives. In Opening Minds Peter Johnston (author of the groundbreaking Choice Words) shows how words can shape students' learning, their sense of self, and their social, emotional, and moral development. Preview the entire book online!

More info.:

Using Language to Change Lives
Peter H. Johnston
Sometimes a single word changes everything. In his groundbreaking book, Choice Words, Peter Johnston demonstrated how the things teachers say (and don't say) have surprising consequences for the literate lives of students. Now, in Opening Minds: Using Language to Change Lives, Peter shows how the words teachers choose affect the worlds students inhabit in the classroom, and ultimately their futures.
Peter Johnston talks about Opening Minds

To order:

http://www.stenhouse.com/shop/pc/viewprd.asp?idProduct=9547&r=eu12223&pos=sponstop1&adv=knovation

Tuesday, June 19, 2012

How finite is learning?

Discovering the brain's power to change may be neuroscience's biggest—and most promising—contribution to education. I am fascinated by this research! This could support a lot of the effort-based achievement we preach to our students.



Scientists Find Learning Is Not 'Hard-Wired'


Ten-year-old Miles Murdough sits in front of brain scans in Dublin, Calif. They show the activity in his brain as he plays the piano.
—Manny Crisostomo for Education Week
Premium article access courtesy of Edweek.org.
Neuroscience exploded into the education conversation more than 20 years ago, in step with the evolution of personal computers and the rise of the Internet, and policymakers hoped medical discoveries could likewise help doctors and teachers understand the "hard wiring" of the brain.
That conception of how the brain works, exacerbated by the difficulty in translating research from lab to classroom, spawned a generation of neuro-myths and snake-oil pitches—from programs to improve cross-hemisphere brain communicationto teaching practices aimed at "auditory" or "visual" learners.
Today, as educational neuroscience has started to find its niche within interdisciplinary "mind-brain-education" study, the field's most powerful findings show how little about learning is hard-wired, after all.
"What we find is people really do change their brain functions in response to experience," said Kurt W. Fischer, the director of Harvard University's Mind, Brain, and Education Program. "It's just amazing how flexible the brain is. That plasticity has been a huge surprise to a whole lot of people."
In contrast to the popular conception of the brain as a computer hard-wired with programs that run different types of tasks, said Dr. Jay N. Giedd, a neuroscientist at the National Institute of Mental Health, brain activity has turned out to operate more like a languageRequires Adobe Acrobat Reader.
Interactive Game
Different parts of the brain act like the letters of the alphabet, he said, and by the time a child is 8 months old, the letters are there—the basic connections have formed in the hippocampus or the prefrontal cortex, say—but then through experience, those neural letters activate in patterns to form words, sentences, and paragraphs of thought.
That analogy offers a whole different idea of how the brain develops, both normally and abnormally.
"When I first started, we made the mistake of talking about, 'Oh, the hippocampus is memory; the prefrontal does decisionmaking, impulse control'—and it's sort of a half-truth,'" Dr. Giedd said at a recent Learning and the Brain Society talk.
"I was looking for letters—a hole in this part of the brain, damage in that part of the brain," he said. Researchers do find predictable problems, he said, "but it's not because of everything that lies in that spot; it's because it's part of a word or sentence or paragraph that uses that letter a lot. … The cells that fire together are wired together—and grow together."
Moreover, Mr. Fischer and other mind-brain-education researchers said, helping teachers and students understand how the brain changes in response to experience may be the best way to link neuroscience findings to classroom experience.

Rocky Start

Education watchers have had great hopes for dramatic, instruction-changing findings since the early days of educational neuroscience. President George H.W. Bush declaredthe 1990s "the decade of the brain," but by the end of it, the promise of the research—most of it done with animals—had not translated into clear guidelines for instructional practice.

Miles Murdough plays the piano while wired to a brain-scanning device at the Society for Psychology in the Performing Arts in Dublin, Calif. The scans show how his brain reacts to music.
—Manny Crisostomo for Education Week
In 1997, the cognitive scientist and philosopher John T. Bruer of the James S. McDonnell Foundation, in St. Louis, declared in a landmark essayRequires Adobe Acrobat Reader in the American Educational Research Association's journalEducational Researcher that directly connecting neuroscience to classroom instruction was "a bridge too far." He urged collaboration among cognitive psychologists, neuroscientists, and educators.
"All of our outcome measures, the things we are hoping to see, are not neurological changes; they are behavioral changes," explained Daniel T. Willingham, a psychology professor at the University of Virginia, in Charlottesville. "We don't measure how are your dendritic connections, we measure how well you can read.
"Trying to leverage behavioral science [for education] is complicated enough," he said. "For neuroscience to get into the mix, we have translation problems. The more distant you get from the level of the classroom, the less likely [the research] is to make a difference in the classroom."
Dr. Kenneth S. Kosik, a neuroscience professor at the University of California, Santa Barbara, and co-director of the Neuroscience Research Institute, helped found the Needham, Mass-based Learning and the Brain Society in 1999 to bring together experts from those different fields. But he acknowledged that, 15 years after Mr. Bruer's critique, "we still have a paucity of real, concrete findings in neuroscience that we can say will change what goes on in the classroom."
Interdisciplinary turf wars are partly to blame for slowing the development of mind-brain-education science, said Dr. Janet N. Zadina, a former high school teacher turned adjunct assistant professor in neurology at Tulane University, in New Orleans, and the winner of the Society for Neuroscience's 2011 science educator award.
"At first, it was defensiveness; cognitive psychology wanted to claim it, neuroscience wanted to claim it, educators wanted to claim it, and because the fields have been separate, they were all reinventing the wheel," she recalled.

Bridging the Disciplines

In the absence of cohesive collaboration among the disciplines, Dr. Zadina said, teachers, policymakers, and education companies were often left to draw their own conclusions from the research, and they often came to overly simplistic or outright wrong conclusions.
One 2011 Arizona State University study asked 267 preservice and active teachers to review one of three versions of a fake journal article reporting inaccurate information: One version contained only text, the second contained a graph, and the third had a picture of a brain scan. Teachers were more likely to consider the article containing the brain scan credible, even though it was unrelated to the text.
"There's a reductionism [in which] finding a difference [on a brain scan] is equated with explaining the difference," said Carol A. Tavris, a psychologist and the author of the 2010 Prentice Hall book Psychobabble and Biobunk: Using Psychological Science to Think Critically About Popular Psychology. "It is easy for the public to infer that a snapshot out of context is not a snapshot, but a timeless, unchanging blueprint."
Because most members of the public, including many teachers and researchers, don't understand how brain-imaging equipment works, they often develop "technomyopia—the sense that the technology knows more than I do," Ms. Tavris said in a keynote address to the Association for Psychological Science last month.
Yet technology used in brain imaging, including functional magnetic-resonance imaging, or fMRI, and magnetoencephalography, can be thrown off by movement, she said, and readings are easily misinterpreted.
Toolbox
Researchers use a variety of new technologies to take measurements on the brain, including:
• Electroencephalography (EEG) measures changes in electrical voltage in neurons by using sensors placed on the scalp. The technology is helpful in measuring rapid changes in the brain in response to stimuli, and is often used to diagnose epilepsy. It can be particularly useful for research involving children, because it does not require the child to remain as still as other measures do. However, EEG readings are most accurate when measuring neuron activation close to the skull, and may be less helpful for examining activity deeper within the brain, in areas such as the hippocampus.
• Magnetoencephalography (MEG), uses arrays of highly sensitive magnetometers to measure the electrical currents produced by brain activity. It is often used to map the areas of the brain associated with different cognitive tasks, or to identify electrical signatures associated with conditions such as autism. It is sensitive to movement, however, and there is only one meg in the country, at the Institute for Learning and Brain Sciences at the University of Washington in Seattle, that is sized for research on infants and toddlers.
• Functional magnetic-resonance imaging (FMRI) measures changes in blood flow during brain activity. It can measure changes in all areas of the brain with a clearer pinpointing of location than through EEG or MEG, but it requires longer brain activity. It is often paired with EEG or meg to provide a more coherent map of activity. The technology can be difficult to use with children because it requires a subject to lie still in a closed tube.
"Neuroscientists love their brain scans," Dr. Kosik agreed. "They can be interpreted in all kinds of ways, as though they're Tarot cards, when you are talking to a teacher, … then you go home and say, 'That was a beautiful picture with lots of brain stuff, but, OK, what does it mean, what do I do next?' "
For example, early brain-imaging studies on dyslexia pointed to differences between dyslexic and typical readers in the back left of the brain—a region associated with sound processing. That led some educators to consider dyslexia a hard-wired physical problem in the brain and therefore harder to treat with educational interventions. Yet emerging research on language development shows that a person processes both letter sounds and the direct meanings of words, and uses different neural connections to comprehend a language like English, in which the same letters can have multiple sounds, than for Finnish, which has more stable phonemes, the sounds that make up spoken words. Later studies have shown various subtypes of dyslexia respond differently to interventions, and in some cases, those with the disorder can have an edge in types of pattern recognition like the kind astronomers use.
"We got very excited about that" finding, Mr. Fischer said, "because it shows we need to stop thinking about simple disabilities; we need to think about patterns of understanding, patterns of processing. Different kids learn differently."
Ms. Tavris told Education Week she sees little potential in the near future for neuroscience to do more than reinforce findings from psychology and behavioral sciences.
Yet Mr. Fischer argued that methods for measuring brain growth and activity have all been developed in the past 10 to 15 years, and "it takes a while when you have a new tool to figure out how to use it effectively."
Moreover, he added, laboratory-based psychological studies can be just as difficult to translate into classroom practice.
"In cognitive science," he said, "you flash a word on the screen for a 10th of a second—that's not what happens in a classroom."
Dr. Kosik, Mr. Fischer, and others in mind-brain-education research agree that the neuroscience evidence in their field has been sketchy so far, but they argue that criticizing the field for replicating educational findings from psychology misses the point of mind, brain, and education.
"What we're trying to do is cover the discipline [of learning] more broadly," Mr. Fischer said. "We need to figure out how to do more practical research. We need to have research in school settings and learning environments to become a norm."
"We do it in medicine for just about everything," he said. "We need to do it in education."
Mind-brain-education experts have also called for the creation of more laboratory schools, similar to teaching hospitals in medicine, in which teachers can test the implications of emerging research. Doing so could take translations of mind-brain-education research beyond "just a talk on the brain," Dr. Zadina said, to "an overhaul of practice, the basis of what we do."
Broad changes in perspective will be more important to shifting teacher practice than fMRI results of a particular intervention, according to Marc Schwartz, the director of the Southwest Center for Mind, Brain, and Education at the University of Texas at Arlington. "I tell [teachers] right from the beginning that silver bullets don't exist," Mr. Schwartz said, but argued that doesn't mean neuroscience findings, such as those on brain plasticity, can't be relevant to education.
"Variability is often overlooked as a gift rather than a nemesis; teachers think, 'these students are so different, they can't adapt to what I'm teaching,' " he said. "Mind-brain-education [study] has given us a more flexible view of children, and to the extent teachers accept that, they become more powerful teachers."
The 300-student Jacob Shapiro Brain Based Instruction Laboratory School in Oshkosh, Wis., does not look promising from the outside: A hulking, windowless concrete throwback to the 1970s open-concept school design, it has virtually no interior classroom walls.
Yet for the past six years, the charter school—with a 2011-12 enrollment in which 45 percent of students are living in poverty and 30 percent require special education services—has been building just the sort of teaching environment that could help translate brain research into classroom practice throughout the district.

Learning Laboratory

The 50-odd teachers are on monthly listservs for new research and discuss the findings during regular lunch discussions. "If it's been studied, we'll probably talk about it: neuroscience, cognitive psychology, behaviorism," Principal B. Lynn Brown said.
"A student's brain physically changes every day, and the way we teach either enhances or impairs it," she said, noting that she and her teachers hold summer seminars for other district staff on the brain's flexibility and response to instruction. "We have to ask ourselves as educators, what does our practice say about what we believe? We are explicitly teaching thinking skills."
As a laboratory school, the Jacob Shapiro school regularly provides training seminars for teachers and administrators from other schools and districts and plays host to observing researchers; the children have learned to ignore visitors moving in and out of the classrooms.
During one such visit last fall, the 2nd grade science class was learning about butterflies. The students took a lot of breaks, all of them active; students started out with wild wriggles and moved to smaller and slower movements, quieting. Students with difficulty regulating their emotions learn about executive function in the prefrontal cortex of the brain, and how, like lifting weights to build a muscle, they can practice self-control and attention, according to Kristine Hutchinson, the school's music teacher, who also helps implement Jacob Shapiro's discipline program.
Students who became stressed or frustrated during class could seek one of the school's many "safe spots," quiet nooks with soft seating and pictures reminding them of those lessons in calming themselves down, such as taking deep breaths, squeezing a compression ball, or writing out their anxieties. "It's not a time-out spot; it's a place kids voluntarily go," said Ms. Hutchinson. "We check in with them, but we're teaching them to self-regulate."
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Three times a week, students also take a 30-minute class in metacognitive skills, learning about how their brains work and how to think about their own learning and problem-solving.
In one session, thinking-skills teacher Shirley Rose set out a spatial-logic problem for the 3rd graders to teach directions. She drew out the image of a man standing in the center of a group of objects, and the children talked through ways to figure out which direction the man was facing and which objects he could see at any one time.
"When I first started this, sometimes you are driven to just finish this sheet and make sure all the answers are correct, and really that's not the point," said Ms. Rose. "The point is to get them to understand their own thinking and strategies."
Even young children can understand the basic concepts of brain plasticity—for example, that their brains are malleable and will change as they practice something—and she said "it becomes a very powerful thing for them, that just because they have an error, it's not this terrible, dreadful thing."

Monday, June 18, 2012

Eat Your Math!

Like the importance of maintaining a healthy diet, math instruction requires a balanced and measured approach, writes Robert Kaplinsky.



Eat Your Math

Premium article access courtesy of Edweek.org.
The philosophies behind healthy eating and math instruction share interesting similarities that provide useful insight into the direction educational policymakers should take. Healthy eating means consuming the right amount from each of the food groups. It is systemically more beneficial when the food is as close to its natural state as possible, as opposed to having been heavily processed in a factory and removed from its original source. Eating unprocessed food gives us important dietary components, such as vitamins, minerals, fiber, and protein, that are essential for staying healthy.
While we know we need these dietary components to stay healthy, it isn't the same to take them separately as supplements. For example, you wouldn't have a lunch of vitamin A supplements, a snack of fiber, and a plate of zinc for dinner. Instead, we must strive for balance and eat a variety of foods that combine such dietary components to form healthy meals.
With healthy eating, it seems obvious which option provides the best result. For math educators, however, the choice is not so clear. Many classrooms take the path equivalent to eating meals of supplements. Robust math problems are broken down into individual standards so that the lessons no longer have context, and skills are swallowed, in isolation, like vitamins. On the one hand, this makes it easy to ensure that students have consumed all the required skills. On the other hand, these math problems no longer resemble their original form; instead, they become a collection of disconnected skills.

—iStockphoto/Debbi Smirnoff
Some classrooms do teach math by keeping their complex contextual problems intact. These problems are not heavily processed in a textbook factory, and they require that students incorporate a variety of skills necessary to solve them. Lessons taught in this context are rarely recipients of the dreaded when-will-we-ever-use-this question. The truth is that preparing healthy meals takes time and energy, and we are surrounded by options that are easier, though not as healthy in the long run. Additionally, without a checklist of healthful components, it is possible to shortchange one's diet.
My belief is that the answer to this problem lies somewhere in the middle of both extremes. We don't want, or need, to consume every nutrient at every meal. Nor should we consistently focus on a single nutrient when we sit down to eat. The best option is to have a diet rich in variety to ensure the highest level of nutrition within a given period of time. I can see how achieving that balance is difficult. What if I don't like broccoli? Even though I eat a fairly balanced diet, I would still avoid broccoli. As a result, vitamin K would be missing from my diet. To compensate and attempt to still stay healthy, I could maintain my broccoli-less diet by supplementing it with vitamin K. This would be pretty convenient, and I might soon realize that I could avoid more foods that I don't like. This might lead me down a path where I continue replacing healthy foods with dietary supplements, and as a result, I would no longer be eating a healthy, balanced diet.
"My recommendation for healthy eating and math educational policy is the same: everything in moderation."
Similarly, if we teach using robust mathematical problems, we have to be careful to make sure that by the end of the school year, students have had adequate exposure to each of the standards within a larger framework. Otherwise, we may lose balance and end up with a long list of skills, taught in isolation, for which students have no context. This eventually brings us back to an extreme: taking lots of dietary supplements, instead of maintaining a healthy, varied diet.
Educational policy has been skewed toward teaching each standard in isolation. It is difficult to do it differently when textbooks, pacing guides, and standardized tests don't allow for incorporating the robust meals of multiple integrated standards. The Common Core State Standards have the potential to shift policy to a much more balanced approach, depending on how they are ultimately implemented and assessed.
My recommendation for healthy eating and math educational policy is the same: everything in moderation. In general, try to eat balanced meals and teach complex problems in context. Every once in a while, it is OK to rely on a dietary supplement or a lesson on a specific standard. The problems come when that is the only choice you are making.