Check out the next episode of Real & Raw with Roshaunda where I discuss where I am currently in my education journey and where I’d like to go. Please comment below to share your education journey.
Category: community transformation
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Educators and Coaches Need Support to Achieve Their Own Dreams
Last week I wrote about how I’m envisioning the US education system differently, and I said I would come back to some of the ideas and flesh them out. So here goes.
I wrote the following last week: “In what I’m envisioning, librarians, resource center directors, community liaisons, school psychologists/coaches, and teachers would be the rock stars.” And I meant it. In my view, educators and coaches are rock stars who do the very important work of transforming lives by helping people discover their own potential and helping them navigate how they will impact the world. These rock stars need support, however, and that is part of why God placed LELA House in my spirit.
Educators and coaches exhaust themselves pouring into people, but who pours into them? Additionally, educators and coaches have a wealth of experience to share, but who helps them share it?
So I have an idea, and I’d love to hear what you think about it.
I’m thinking about offering a 4-month program to help educators and coaches turn their experiences into nonfiction books and learn to practice self-care habits that serve their call to write, such as reading and journaling. I’ve created what I call a Writing Mindset, and in the program I will teach the components of a writing mindset, offer lessons on specific aspects of writing, and provide 1:1 and group life & writing coaching. Plus, participants will join small writing groups where they will share their work and give and receive feedback on their writing. By the end of the 4-month program, participants will have learned how to adopt a writing mindset; worked through the LELA House themes of Learn Your Unique Design, Become Critically Engaged, and Transform Community, and completed a first draft of their nonfiction book.
Educators and coaches need support to achieve their own dreams, just as they support others to reach their dreams. Caring for educators and coaches, providing them with time and opportunity to discover new ways they can impact the community, and supporting them as they do so are all part of my vision for US education. If we take good care of our educators and coaches, they will be able to take good care of our students, and everyone thrives. My 4-month program is a starting point. What do you think? Are you interested? Type YES in the comments to let me know!
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That Time I Was Sent to the Principal’s Office for Assaulting a Teacher
Check out the next episode of Real & Raw with Roshaunda where I discuss racism and equality in my high school experience. Please comment below to share your school struggles with this topic.
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A Different Vision for US Education
I spend a lot of time thinking about the US educational system. I’ve been mulling over some ideas since this summer and never could come up with the right way and the best time to present them to you. So what I decided is to just put out the grand scope of what I’m thinking, (wholly unrefined) and then suss through pieces of it in later posts. And know what follows is the grand scope; it’s not where I want to begin. It also doesn’t entail plans I’m working on. I’m a little afraid to put this out there, but here goes – Real and Raw with Roshaunda at its most basic level.
Currently school is a lot of things, but students basically only get to experience it as one thing. School is traditional, Montessori, Charlotte Mason, home school, charter school, online, etc., but why can’t it be all of those things? People should have the opportunity to pick a la carte style what works best for their children and families. In my vision, families can choose to stick with any currently existing school in its current form, but they will also have the ability to select options from various schools and community organizations that best meet the needs of the children and families.
For example, a family with guardians who work traditional 9-5 hours might decide to send their children to one school that lasts all day. A different family with guardians who work less traditional hours might decide to send their children to one school in the morning and avail themselves of other options in the afternoon.
Private schools will remain privately funded and operate however they want (but, of course, they’ll want to join the tide). But public schools (traditional, charter, etc.), home schools, community organizations, libraries, etc. would team up to be able to offer options. These would all be publicly funded. Since we’re basically exploding the idea of neighborhood schools with this concept, however, the tax monies levied for education would be allocated to regions, rather than to individual school districts. Then every student in the region would have access to the same educational opportunities, but they would be able to choose which opportunities work best for them. Private schools could offer to families, for a prorated fee, some of their experiences. For example, if a family wants their children to have religious education as part of their children’s experience, they could have their children attend weekly chapel services for a fee. I’m actually fine with private schools participating in this grand scheme. I think they should be mostly funded privately, but if they employ nationally certified faculty (more on that later) who avail their courses to the public system, they can get some funding for that. The funding might be based on the number of nationally certified courses they offer. In this way, if a public education student’s family wanted them to take a Christian-based science class, for example, but otherwise attend the public school experiences, they could do so. And this would be the case for all private schools, faith-based (regardless of faith) or not. There might be a private school, for example, that offers a class in circus skills, and a students wants to take that one course but still follow the public school experience. Students would have to be limited to one private school course per year or session or something. I don’t want to gouge the private schools by having families use a public school back door to get their students to attend private school. Expenses like uniforms, etc. would be the family’s responsibility.
Some experiences, like athletics and music, for example, would have to be centrally coordinated, since you need a lot of students to play on a team or in a band. I would like to see something like the following. Athletics offered early in the morning to mid morning, before academic offerings. Teens literally don’t have the brain power for academic work in the morning. Starting schools late would just lead to everything in everyone’s lives getting pushed back later, so I advocate instead for physical activity to be the first part of students’ days. It will actually help them be more prepared for academic work later in the day. Right now many students who are athletes and musicians and theater people have to choose, since all of these activities happen after school. Putting sports in the morning and arts in the afternoons will help students be able to pursue both sides of themselves. Students will still have choices to make, of course. Maybe you can’t be on the football team, in the band, and on the drama team. These communal activities could be offered by schools or community agencies as appropriate for each region.
In what I’m envisioning, librarians, resource center directors, community liaisons, school psychologists/coaches, and teachers would be the rock stars. School will rely heavily on educators who understand how to manage and disseminate appropriate information in the appropriate way to the appropriate audiences at the appropriate times. And the whole school experience would be managed by an app.
Each family would get a team to work with them. There would be 3 coaches/school counselors/advisors assigned to each family. These 3 advisors will stay with the same family as each of the children in that family grow up. One would have expertise in pre-K through middle; one would have expertise in middle through high school; and one would have expertise in high school through graduate/professional school. Families often have multiple children who are at multiple stages in their school journeys, so having this team of 3 will allow for continuity throughout all of the children’s journey. All of the counselors will get to know the family and the children well and will have great insight into their values and areas of giftedness and challenge. These counselors will meet annually with each family to discuss what options will be right for each student. They can also meet more frequently, if necessary, to course correct throughout the year. This set-up also allows for summer activities, such as camp or summer school, to be designed to enhance the learning experience.
Community liaisons will work with each family team as well, but they do not need to have permanent family assignments. The community liaisons will be experts in what sorts of schooling are available in which subjects in which locations, so they can direct students and families to the desired type of educational opportunities. This will allow for individualized education plans that fit each student’s needs and wishes. This will work for all students of all abilities. Because families have this level of choice, they won’t be bound by what must happen in x or y grade level. Students will progress at their own pace. Some years they may bound ahead quickly, while other years they may slow down. For students who currently have IEPs, etc., the advisor team will already know and will be able to give input to the community liaisons. Community liaisons work with the family and the advisors to create what will work best.
Every different student would have a different plan. Some students thrive in the traditional education model, so they can do that all the way. Some students don’t. And some students don’t know what would work best for them, because they have never had the opportunity to try out something different. Some students have parents who speak multiple languages and run businesses and are willing to teach these to their children. Some parents cannot or do not want to take on this responsibility. That’s fine. This is about doing what is best for the students and the families. Some parents would be comfortable teaching their elementary school students, while others would be comfortable teaching their high school students. These are reasons for the annual planning meetings. In this new system, how students receive their education experience can vary widely year to year. Students change dramatically from PK through undergraduate, so why shouldn’t the education they experience be flexible to accommodate those changes? This type of education, however, will require immense coordination. Enter the app.
This would be a super robust app, because it would be the one-stop shop for everything needed for school. It would have school schedules and offerings in real-time, so the family teams could determine which experiences to sign up for. Students could access online learning there. Sports schedules, etc would be housed there. Each user could customize the app to only show what is relevant to them, but all of the other stuff will be running in the background if they ever need to check. The app would also be the place for certification requirements and ongoing professional development for educators.
And I’m talking about regional education. While it’s certainly conceivable that a student in St. Louis could take courses with students in California, using technology, the idea here is to build up communities and use what is in your community and add what you can to your communities. So in the St. Louis region, all students would have access to all public school teachers and activities.
The goal of offering school in this way is to help students learn their unique designs, become critically engaged, and transform their communities. Those just happen to be the themes of LELA House. Look what God did just there! This is an education system that prepares students for life, not just the next exam.
Teacher education programs would have to change as well, but maybe not as drastically as it might seem. We will still need great classroom teachers who know their content and have creative ways of engaging students. They will need to learn, however, ways to deploy that online and remotely. Ideally, however, class sizes will decrease, so they won’t have to spend all of their time managing behaviors rather than teaching their passions. We will need more people trained as coaches/psychologists/advisors and as community liaisons. We will also need more librarians and resource specialists.
Following an IB model of assessment will help US students be better prepared for overseas study, if that is their interest. Also, I didn’t explicitly state that technical education is included in this. Some people were born for culinary school or to be artisans and craftspeople. Let’s encourage that. We need plumbers and chefs and woodworkers just as much as we need every other profession. This system of education removes the stigma from attending technical schools and allows students who attend them to still participate in other experiences with other students. This way everyone will know someone who attends a technical school and a traditional school and is homeschooled and everyone will be able to find common ground and talk to each other, instead of the divide we have now.
This type of system will also decrease many of the educational challenges faced by people in under represented groups. They will, at least in theory, have the same access to high quality education. We will still have to work on ways to counteract the technology gaps caused by lack of access and transportation difficulties, for example. Even with these challenges, they won’t, for example, be only relegated to the poor neighborhood schools in their poor neighborhoods. And they will have more funding flowing into their educational experiences since money will be for the entire region, not just the district. This particular idea aligns with the idea of joining St. Louis City and St. Louis County.
We’ll also need to be careful of the family teams assigning students to education experiences based on their preconceived notions of who that student is based on where they live, how they look, or how they talk.
When students are ready for college, the system would continue but a little differently. Private colleges and universities could opt out, but state university systems and community colleges would be opted in. Most students will choose to attend one college and focus on whatever is good for them, instead of the a la carte plan. Students wouldn’t have to go to colleges in their regions, if they choose not to. We would just have to make sure there were clear articulation agreements. Also, the counselor/advisor/coach would stay with students for their first year in college but would gradually wean students off of them and onto counselors/advisors/coaches with expertise in their specific college. Students could begin college courses whenever they are ready to do so, in whatever discipline. So say Donte, for example, is ready to take college calculus, but he’s still working his way through high school level English, he can absolutely do both at the same time. If we keep the current college credit system, Donte would earn college credit before he receives his IB-style diploma that will count toward fulfilling his college graduation requirements, whenever he begins college proper.
With this system, I’m not trying to dismantle the personality or characteristics of any types of communities or schools. HBCUs can still be places that pride themselves on educating African Americans. What this will do, hopefully, is give them more funding than they currently have and a broader base of faculty and students. If a region of a state is largely populated by indigenous people, for example, this system would just provide more funding and resources for them; it would not eradicate their uniqueness. It might actually help others understand their cultures better. If non-indigenous students from the region find themselves in classes with indigenous students and teachers, they will learn. Oh they will learn. And in Donte’s example, if one school session he wants to learn more about indigenous people, his Montessori history teacher can hook him up with a class that teaches just that by people who are passionate about it. It’s all American history, so everyone should have a chance to be exposed to it.
I would recommend against each state being a region. Some states are so large or so populous while other states may have smaller populations (even if they are large), we wouldn’t get the equitable distribution of resources that I’m envisioning. Maybe we take the 2020 census results and determine region sizing based on population (and ability to travel to in-person education experiences). Some regions might span over multiple states while some regions might be a metropolitan area (that may or may not span multiple states – thinking of St. Louis and Kansas City in particular).
Oh, I forgot to mention that in addition to the annual family meetings, the counselors/coaches/advisors will hold regular meetings with the students to learn more about them and what makes them tick. In essence, the students will benefit from regular coaching that will help them discover their unique design and stay motivated to become critically engaged. The coaching will also help them discover how they can transform their community. As the students age up, the coaches will have created a plan to transition them to the next coach with expertise in the new age group. Coaching for pre-k students will look like whatever that looks like for kids that age. Playing? I don’t know. Parents will be in the coaching sessions with younger children, of course, but coaches will ask permission to meet with the students individually when they reach middle school or high school. Students can request this or not. Some students may not be comfortable fully engaging with their coaches with their parents around, but we certainly will follow all parental wishes. They are minors, after all.
Educators will require a lot of professional development and time for self-care. This style of education goes in a lot deeper with students and their families than we do currently.
Students would still have social activities like dances and prom and football games. They would just happen within regions. Sporting events will have to be coordinated to know which teams play which other teams and when. But students could find on the app the team’s they most closely align with (if they don’t already play for one) and get their schedule to root them on. There could even be some friendly rivalries between teams within regions. As far as dances or game nights, etc. go, I could see two ways of planning them.
The first is that a region hold all of its proms, for example, on the same night. Students could choose which prom to attend, and they could even go prom hopping later in the evening to catch up with their various friends. This would mean that all guardians would know that everyone is doing prom on the same schedule, and it might make it easier to plan accordingly. Plus I think this could be fun for the students. It would be much easier in the app. Just plug in which prom location and get all of the details for it. Neither students nor guardians would have any confusion about when prom was.
The second is that a region space out all of its proms, for example. It might be difficult on industry (depending on the region’s size and its access to vendors) to provide enough dresses, tuxes, drivers, restaurants, DJs, venues, etc. to host multiple proms in one evening.
Many education decisions will be handled at the regional level (with input from students, parents, faculty, administrators, etc.), but it will be a national system. IB mastery training will be completed at the national level, so assessors will all assess on a similar standard. That way, when students move across regions, it will be easier to understand where they are and get them moving on a path that’s right for them. Some teacher training would be national also. Zoning regions would come from national information (the census, for example) about regional demographics. Teachers, coaches, etc. could earn national certification, and then whenever they move across regions, their certification would remain valid. We should also have a national benefit and retirement program for teachers, so that some regions don’t attract better teachers than others. Public education (PK through undergraduate) would be free, but graduate school and professional school would probably have costs. So there would still be federal loan agencies to manage. Plus, private education would still have costs associated with it. So yes, we will still need the US Department of Education. App management would have to have a national component as well. People (advisors, parents, students, anybody, really) will have reasons to discover things happening on a national scale. A cross-country move is one of them.
Smaller class sizes, along with more distance learning, will, most likely, lower the ability to spread infection and decrease the number of school shootings.
The St. Louis question “Where did you go to high school?” really wouldn’t exist any more. Some people will still attend traditional schools in the traditional ways. Some people will do that PK through undergraduate and some people will only do that for a few grade levels here and there. How fantastic to have a system that allows for that much individualized flexibility in a national schooling system.
Speaking of national system, even students who attend traditional school will still have to complete IB-style papers or projects. It’s a national system, after all, intended for all of the nation’s learners. Private schools will have to tend to their own accrediting bodies, but it would behoove them to look at accreditation that aligns with the national system, at least in some ways. Similarly, students who are entirely homeschooled (although with this system, it seems like most people wouldn’t choose to not avail themselves of any of the public education experiences) would have the opportunity to pass an IB-style assessment. It could be a paper or project, or it could be oral and/or written exams. They wouldn’t be mandated to do so, but it would probably help them gain entrance into college or trade schools. Plus, home schooled children often advance very quickly. I would think homeschool families would gravitate toward being able to access college classes as students become ready for them.
Every region would need a great public transit system that people could access at low cost.
So here’s an example student, Donte, who is ready for geometry. The community liaisons will know if there is a geometry class that meets on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays at 10am, and if that class accepts in person students, virtual students, or both. There might be a student, for example, who goes to the neighborhood school for football practice in the morning then comes home. He’ll be ready for geometry at 10a. There is a class at a school not local to him, but he can join the class virtually, so he does.
After that, he works with a writing coach. He loves to read, but writing is a struggle for him. To feed his love of reading, he’s working with a librarian who finds novels for him, but also helps him research for his other courses. The librarian and writing coach collaborate to create assignments that he’ll be interested in and that help him hone his literacy skills. Once a month he meets with a book club run by an English teacher to deconstruct the work all of the students have been doing.
Then maybe his mom is a bakery owner who also speaks Spanish, so he spends the afternoon working in the bakery learning baking, business, Spanish, customer service, sanitation, etc. Maybe on Tuesdays and Thursdays he studies history and science. He’s super interested in American history, so he works with a Montessori teacher who helps shape his inquiry and research. Nearby is a science center that offers students different club experiences. One session is gardening; one is weather; one is fossils. This way student get hands-on exposure. Two times per week, in the late afternoon, he participates in the drama club.
So in any given week, Donte, gets a lot of in-person interaction with a variety of other students. Some of them will be his age, and some of them won’t. He gets physical activity in his sport, in his bakery work, and in his science clubs. Plus he also gets activity from walking or biking to the locations that are close. He’s able to pursue his passions with individualized instruction. He gets individualized support in his areas of challenge. He gets to interact with a variety of adults who are invested in his well-being (which has a host of benefits beyond education). He increases his technology skills by attending school virtually. He learns to navigate public transportation on his bus ride to and from the physical school everyday, which also helps him learn about navigation/streets/directions as well as social interactions in public spaces. He has arts education through drama club. He’s bonding with his family and strengthening community ties by working in the family business. Donte’s learning a variety of subjects in ways that make sense and are practical. Also, Donte isn’t bound by grade. He can study what he needs to study when he is ready to study it.
Yes, assessment points will need to exist along the way, but let’s take a page out of the IB diploma curriculum. Students write papers or create projects that demonstrate their mastery. In this form of schooling, a paper or project could encompass many areas of learning. Donte could, for example, do a project of the flora and fauna in the Revolutionary period. The project could be a film with an original score and Spanish subtitles. He could play the film at a film opening event that he designs and caters, creating unique displays for the food and decorations. The film could be played live but also simulcast to a virtual audience. So in this project, Donte uses geometry and building techniques (display design, set design), English (script-writing), science (flora and fauna), history (Revolutionary era), technology (filmmaking, simulcast), art (filmmaking, set design, display design), Spanish (subtitles), music (original score), business/catering (event planning). Plus he’s creating an experience for his friends and family to learn and enjoy, so he had to take into account ideas such as audience and rhetoric (English) as well as display empathy and connection (planning the event in a way that’s accessible to multiple audiences).
A team of assessors (most likely his teachers and guides + some outside people) will evaluate the project to determine if Donte has demonstrated mastery of the skills (which of course he has, because throughout the entire year he has been engaged in meaningful learning). The assessors will give him feedback on his project. If Donte by some weird fluke doesn’t demonstrate mastery, he has the opportunity to review the feedback that details his challenges, meet with resource specialists in those areas, and have another opportunity to demonstrate mastery in a more traditional form such as an oral or written exam for each separate subject that needed it. Additionally, Donte doesn’t pull off this whole thing without any help, so he has learned how to figure out where his own knowledge gaps are and how to seek out mentors and ask them to help him.
And that’s what I’ve got for right now. Some of my thinking has evolved since writing this, but it’s a good start. What do you think?
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Parental Choice
Check out the next episode of Real & Raw with Roshaunda where I discuss parents choosing the best school options for their families. Please comment below to share your pandemic school struggles.
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Being First
I’ve literally been the last person on a plane. I’ve heard, “Paging Passenger Roshaunda Cade” as I ran all the way through DFW to reach my gate and breathlessly begged to be let on the plane just as the attendant began shutting the door to the tarmac. I panted my way onto the plane, threw my backpack into the one remaining middle seat, and convinced the flight attendant to let me use the bathroom before we pulled out from the terminal, because my delayed connecting flight left me with no time to go beforehand. There was no way I was going to wait until the captain turned off the fasten seatbelt light once we reached cruising altitude and weren’t expecting any air disturbances (am I the only one who wonders why they have stopped saying turbulence?). I was last, but I still got to my destination at the same time as the people who were first.
What’s so important about being first? Is it a sense of entitlement? A desire to be better than others? To engage in conspicuous consumption (Thank you, Thorstein Veblen)? What drives Americans to be first?
Whatever the reason, this desire to be first informs US education just as it does air travel.
Some people can afford elite, private education for their children. And like private air travel, I can’t even wrap my mind around what that must look like and what advantages it affords.
Some people can pay for their children to be first. Maybe they can afford a home in a nice neighborhood with good schools. Maybe they can afford a second tier private education for their children.
Some people are like me — they send their children to public schools but have the privilege of money and time to participate fully in their children’s education and to allow their children to take advantage of co-curricular activities.
Some people are struggling in ground conveyance, barely making it to their destinations, if at all.
Making it to the destination is where air travel and the US education system diverge. Even though I was last on the plane at DFW, I still reached my destination at the same time as all the other passengers — the ones who were first, and the ones who spanned the space somewhere between middle and sweating from exertion to board. Some children never reach the destination of a good education; some reach it so long after everyone else that they have missed windows of opportunity to capitalize on their education.
Initiatives like “No Child Left Behind” and “Race to the Top” rely on this very American notion of being first, even in their names. As a system, US education errs not in wanting the best for children, but in conceiving of best as a single destination to be achieved as quickly as possible. And that is an impossible task.
Rather than conceive of education as a common journey with a singular destination, let’s consider education an exploration that terminates only if and when the learner decides to conclude the quest. While I’m not saying that children should be allowed to quit school, I am saying that all learners deserve a voice in their education, its direction, its content, and its conclusion. Education doesn’t have to be the same for every child from pre-K through 12th grade, nor does school have to look like same-age children in grade-level classrooms. Cookie cutter education does not serve us well, not only because everyone doesn’t share the same interests and goals, but also because society doesn’t need everyone to be the same.
This bill of goods, that there is one thing that a good education looks like, is what we’ve been selling ourselves for nearly two centuries. And the way we’ve determined to differentiate ourselves in that system (because we don’t all share the same interests and goals and society doesn’t need all of us to be the same) is by being first and gaining the advantages of being first for our children.
This flaw, that a good education is a singular destination, permeates and perpetuates our collective thought and action in the educational system and causes us to make the same mistakes and enact the same disparities repeatedly. In attacking the symptoms of the problem, rather than the flaw itself, many people do much wonderful work, only achieving, however, small-scale, short-term solutions.
We can do better.
We invest in practices that will help some be first, but not in practices that will help everyone be their best. Instead of choosing to perpetuate a system that consigns everyone to a single destination that only those with the privilege of money and time can reach, let’s create a system where everyone can explore and fly.
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Teachers are Professionals
Teachers go to work every day, not school.
Teachers are content specialists, like most people in their jobs. Whatever their subject areas are, teachers know them well enough not only to teach them, but to make split-second adjustments as they go.
Teachers are also managers, dealing with hundreds of humans in various contexts in the course of a day. Managers assign tasks and help workers accomplish those tasks, and teachers do that all day every day. Managers must be content experts and facile at working with people to accomplish goals. In the business world, people get paid more for wearing these multiple hats.
Teachers are learning specialists. Just because you understand content doesn’t mean you know how to relay it to others, but teachers do this.
Teachers are differentiation experts. They learn how each of their students learn and need to be challenged and supported and make thousands of adjustments daily to guide students to their best selves.
Teachers are decision makers. In the course of a 45 minute class, teachers make 180 educational decisions.
And those are just educational decisions. Teachers decide whether to address or ignore the 20+ behaviors being exhibited by each student every second in every class. For the students who think we don’t see you and what you’re doing, we do. We just can’t address your benign pencil flipping while someone else is attempting to film a hair tutorial and while someone else is discovering the temperature at which paper catches fire.
Teachers are creative visionaries. Daily, teachers plan how to deliver lessons that engage and inspire and challenge and encourage their young charges. Then they do it again the next day.
Teachers are assessors. Teachers determine how much material students should know; then create a tool to determine what material students actually know; then deliver that tool to the students; then grade the tool; log the results; make decisions and adjustments based on those results; field questions from students, parents, and administrators about those results; all while continuing to plan, prepare, and teach every single day.
Teachers are CEOs. The buck stops with them in their classrooms. Period.
Teaching is a job, and professionals fill their roles every day. So no, teachers aren’t going to school during the dark, early hours of the morning (even though many if not most teachers are in graduate programs to learn more about how to be even better teachers); teachers go to work. And they do the work of professionals. Working with children and young adults doesn’t belittle teachers’ status. That should elevate their status, because they are preparing the next generation of leaders.
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Mini Manifesto
I desperately believe that every child deserves to have the chance to attend a high quality, free, public neighborhood school. And I believe I’m called to help that be a reality for more children than currently enjoy that right. Having access to such an education is a right, not a privilege. Whether families send their children to those schools is their choice, but the schools need to be available. To everyone. Everywhere. Not just in the swanky suburbs.
My parents went out of their way to live in places that afforded me just the education I tout. I am grateful. I am so grateful that I want everyone to have the same education available to them.
Why can’t every neighborhood have a great school? Why can’t every school be accessible in myriad ways? Why can’t kids walk or bike to school every day? Why can’t kids of all kinds of socio-economic statuses expect to receive a phenomenal education without worrying about how much it costs? Why can’t kids have all the recess their little bodies need so their big minds can work better? Why can’t art and music and social studies be part of every curriculum?
Why don’t we demand more?
As much as I’ve ranted, my goal isn’t to complain, because, to be perfectly honest, I’ve not done my best to be part of the solution.
So I’ve got to stop being part of the problem. This mini manifesto was step one. Share your step one in the chat.
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Reimagining Education
I spend a lot of time reimagining education. I love education and have been blessed with an amazing one, but as a system, education can be better. By better, I don’t mean test scores and numbers (although those have their place). By better, I mean education can better serve its learners, educators, and communities.
I lay no blame (at least I try not to, but I find the highest level of US education leadership aggravating). From what I see, everyone is doing their best, and especially now during the pandemic, doing your best is a herculean task. Even amid everyone’s best, I still see room for reimagining education. So I do.
I’m certainly not an education outsider. I’ve worked professionally in K-12 (English teachers – woot woot) and in post-secondary in the following areas: residence life, student support, student success, academic support, diversity and inclusion, faculty development, academic integrity, and writing. Plus, I’m a mom of two kids who attend a public magnet school. My kids have also attended traditional public, transfer public, charter public, and private religious schools. Despite spending my entire life in education, I often feel my ideas of reimagining education fall way outside of the norm.
But I also feel like I can’t be alone in my reimagining. I feel others, like me, have all kinds of education ideas. And I believe education reimagining shouldn’t only concern educators and policymakers. Artists, ministers, scientists, mathematicians, entrepreneurs, nonprofits – everyone in our communities – should play a role in how we reimagine education. Some of our ideas will resonate, and some will clash. But I’d love to open a conversation about all the ways we are already reimagining education.
I will post weekly about some of my reimagining, and I’d love to hear about yours.
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New Habit Accountability and City Hall
Our first house wasn’t in the nicest neighborhood. We had frequent gang activity, with the main gang hangout just a few doors up the street. Most residents rented their homes, and most homes (including ours) suffered from delayed maintenance. We loved our neighborhood, though, and did what we could to help it thrive.
One day I came home from work to find the patch of grass between the street and sidewalk pulled up from in front of each house up and down the entire street. Perplexed, I called City Hall to inquire into what was going on. They told me they were replanting grass for our entire street. I thanked them for the beautification effort, but I told them they should inform residents before embarking on any work. They told me they informed all the owners, and since I was a renter, I should talk with my landlord. I responded that I was an owner and was not informed, and I further said that the people who live in the houses should be notified of upcoming work, even if they don’t own their homes.
The work eventually ended. But you know those little sidewalks that go from the street to the path leading to your front door? (I learned they’re called carriage walkways.) No one had replaced those. Everyone on the street had had theirs removed for the grass project, and not a single one was replaced. So I called City Hall. I was told that carriage walkways are personal property and that it’s the owners’ responsibility to replace them. I asked why it was my responsibility to replace something that was removed without my consent, something that was, in essence, stolen from me. I was met with silence, quickly followed by vehemence. I was told the city had the right to remove the carriage walkways, but I persisted. How did the city have the right to remove my property without my consent? Either it wasn’t my property and the city could do with it as it pleased, or it was my property and the city needed to answer for its removal. I also pointed out that no one would consider carriage walkways as their property, especially if the city absconded with them. This conversation lasted for at least 2 weeks. Eventually they asked what I wanted to happen. I told them I wanted all the carriage walkways replaced on the entire street. And they did.
Sometimes government entities need people to hold them responsible for their actions. They need accountability. Regular people trying to create a habit of reading and journaling need accountability, too.
When you begin a new habit, tell people who care about you. They will be excited for you, and they will check in on you. Loved ones are great accountability partners.
Another avenue of accountability is participating in groups. Join a book club. Get together with friends for an hour of dedicated reading time. Join a writing group. Get together with friends for an hour of dedicated writing time.
What other ideas do you have? How have you held yourself accountable in the past? How did that work for you? Please share in the comments!
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Roshaunda D. Cade, Ph.D. is an educator, writer, and creator. She lives in St. Louis, MO with her husband and teenage children and enjoys reading, writing, dancing, and pushing her creative boundaries. Jumpstart your self care journaling habit with one of her free downloadable journal pages.
