Sunday, September 8, 2013

Overcoming Barriers Together


What is Consensus?

             Many years ago, for our district’s convocation we received a surprise.  Each teacher and staff member was given $200 in Susan B. Anthony coins.  They literally had wheel barrels full of plastic bags of coins at convocation.  Many of you may remember that convocation.  It was AWESOME!

            At least, I thought that it was awesome?  I was walking out of the coliseum with my bag of loot and I ran into a teacher who was not too happy.  “What is the matter?” I asked.  The teacher replied, “Why did they have to give us the money in coins?  I would have rather them give it to us in our next check.  Now I have to carry around this bag of coins.”

            As I look back on this event, I think to myself there will never be a unanimous vote.  If we cannot unanimously agree that receiving $200 in any shape of form is a good thing, then what can we unanimously agree on?  I would have taken $200 in pennies.

            There will always be delta’s.  The shear fact that as leaders we make decisions causes a delta.  Having a bell schedule for meet the teacher night can be a good thing.  Not having a bell schedule for meet the teacher night can be a good thing.  I truly would have been happy either way providing that we had consensus. 

            Rick Dufour defines consensus as: “Do not move forward until all voices are heard and the will of the staff is clearly evident to all, even to those who most oppose it.”  This is the definition that we will adhere to on this campus. 

            Does consensus mean we have a majority vote? No, it doesn’t.  For example, in your classroom you do a plus/delta on home work. Not surprisingly, many of your students see delta’s with home work:  my hand hurts, it is hard, I like to play or watch Sponge Bob when I get home, I get confused when I take the work home or I have to watch my brother and sister. You know that homework is the best way to address your academic goal for the majority of your students. This is a teachable moment for you and your students.  Sponge Bob is not a legitimate barrier.  Not understanding when you get home is very legitimate.  How can you overcome this barrier together?  Maybe tutorials  after school could help with this?  Maybe it is a class where students need to pay more attention in class and this is an opportunity to have this discussion? 

             What is the barrier for the solution?  Learn, work on, and address the legitimate issues or barriers for the good of your students and then you move forward towards your goal.  Your students were heard and you addressed their concerns.  It is really about having all voices heard, so do not put it up for a vote unless you are willing to go either way.  No matter how awesome your class is, they will probably vote against homework.

            It was clearly evident that as a campus, we agree on the need to address and encourage good behavior and that we see the Power Strip as a means to this end.  Many of our high achieving students do not get the positive reinforcement at home for their achievements at school.  The Power Strip provides the “carrot and the stick” to teach our students desired behavior.

In our meeting we discussed the concern that some students might never be able to attain the Power Strip because of the 90 grade average.  This could be a barrier.  It may limit access to the program for some students. 

I am not convinced that everyone needs the “power.”   The purpose of this endeavor should be clarified.  This program is a reward for students who are demonstrating scholarly and responsible behavior.  Many of the rewards associated with this program will require our students to be extremely responsible.  It is important that they demonstrate this responsibility prior to receiving the privilege associated with it. 

I feel that there would not be harm in providing an alternate route or avenue for students to apply for the program.  It is not about the 90% combined average, as much as it is our students demonstrating the scholarly and responsible behavior.  For example, a student who has an 89% combined grade average, turns in all their work (NO ZEROS), obtains recommendations from all their teachers, has impeccable conduct, and applies to a faculty panel for entrance into the program should be a consideration.  This example student may be the person who needs the program more than the student with a 99% combined average and is able to navigate through school easily. 

I am excited about this!  The campus that used this program has similarities to us demographically and it made a big impact.  I believe that it will at HMS too. Confronting the barriers is helpful.  It does no good to pretend that they are not there. 

           

This Week @ HMS

Monday, September 9-

7th Grade Volleyball @ North Ridge

8th Grade Volleyball @ HMS

7th Grade Football @ HMS

Tuesday, September 10

Happy Birthday Cari Myers!

8th Grade Football vs. North Ridge @ The Black Hole

Wednesday, September 11

Department Chair Meeting 4:00 @ The Conference Room

Thursday, September 12

AP ILT (Meza out in the AM, Bailey out in the PM)

Friday, September 13

Saturday, September 14

Theater Field Trip to HHS 8:15-12:30

Tiger Thumbs Up

Libby Elrod-Great job with the mission statements

Anthony Lopez-Love the plus/delta on the cabinet.

*Lindsey Courtney and Melanie Hayes-Love the Data Wall and Mission Statement with student signatures

Betina Rhine-Love the Mission Statement and student signatures

*Saw many spaces for Data Walls; look forward to seeing the data

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