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Welcome Day Two

Welcome Day Two. Principals Institute LA. Today. Explore a variety of resources and practices informed by current best thinking from neuroscience on poverty and the impacts for schools.

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Welcome Day Two

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  1. Welcome Day Two Principals Institute LA

  2. Today Explore a variety of resources and practices informed by current best thinking from neuroscience on poverty and the impacts for schools. Reflect on current beliefs held by leaders, teachers and students that if examined closely may be influenced by this information. Use the collective wisdom in the room to design the next improvements to the model.

  3. Norms Have Fun Honor our Time Fully Participate Vegas Rules

  4. Sustaining our gains

  5. When last we met……

  6. Using DN to Meet Our Educational Challenges • Two Drivers of Student Success • Quality of Coursework-Shapes Mind (in part can be measured by grades) • Quality of supportive and effective adult relationships-Shapes Will (in part can be measured by student surveys)

  7. How Many Students Experience Quality Coursework and Have Quality Adult Relationships Drives School Success • Each is impacted at whole school, classroom, and individual level-the three tiers DN and the four pillars of TD are designed to support

  8. 4 Diagnostic Questions About Students DN Tools Question • Are they regularly attending school? If not, why not? • Are they able to focus on schoolwork in school? • Are they productively persistent i.e. trying in an effective manner? • Do they connect school effort to life success? • STF, Teacher Teams + CY + CIS • STF, Success Highways Assessment, CIS • Mastering Middle Grades, Freshmen Seminar + CY • CY Near Peer Relationship, Career Academies, CIS

  9. 4 Diagnostic Questions About Classroom Instruction DN Tools Questions • Which students are missing what knowledge and skills assumed by grade level content? • Are good lessons being consistently delivered and are students being asked to do quality coursework? • How often do students end the day confused? • Are students completing their class assignments? Are their effective second-chance opportunities for students to avoid failure? • Instructional coaches, PLC’s, TD extra-help labs and catch-up materials • Instructional coaches PLC’s • CY Corps members working with classroom teachers • Teacher Teams, Instructional coaches, CY and CIS

  10. Poverty is the hungry bear who keeps eating our lunch

  11. We Are Learning How Poverty Impacts Academic and Social Behaviors Exposure to Violence Residential In-Stability Hunger and Poor Family Health Students as Caregivers Kids who grow up in stressful environments find it harder to concentrate, follow directions, rebound from disappointment. This has a direct effect on their school performance.

  12. The stress and trauma of poverty impact children’s brain development, learning, and behavior. 67 % of pediatric subjects in a low income community experienced one or more ACEs, 12 % experienced four or more. (Burke et al.,2011) Prolonged, repeated stress and anxiety increases levels of cortisol and diverts brain functioning towards reactive, impulsive areas of the brain (Hackman et al, 2010; Burke et al, 2009)

  13. Research shows a dramatic link between adverse childhood experiences and subsequent learning and behavior problems. Over the course of children’s brain development, this results in an underutilized cortez and underdeveloped executive functioning, including attention, self-regulation, working memory, and other capacities critical for learning (Raver et al, 2013, DePrince et al, 2009, DeBellis et al, 2009, 51 % of subjects with four or more ACEs had learning /behavior problems compaired to 3 % with no ACEs.

  14. What’s your ace score? Felitti, V.J., and Anda, R.F., (2009) The adverse childhood experiences (ACE) study: Bridging the gap between childhood trauma and negative consequences later in life. Retrieved April 11, 2009 from http://www. acestudy.org/.

  15. ADVERSE CHILDHOOD EXPERIENCE DRAFT BRAIN DEVELOPMENT PATTERNS Adapted from the research of Martin Teicher, MD, Ph.D • INDIVIDUAL • Edgy • Hot temper • Impulsive • Hyper vigilant • “Brawn over brains” OUTCOME Individual & species survive the worst conditions. BRAIN Hormones, chemicals & cellular systems prepare for a tough life in an evil world Dissonance between biological expectations & social reality fuels psychiatric/health disorders TRAUMATIC STRESS NEUTRAL START • INDIVIDUAL • Laid back • Relationship-oriented • Thinks things through • “Process over power” OUTCOME Individual & species live peacefully in good times; vulnerable in poor conditions BRAIN Hormones, chemicals & cellular systems prepare for life in a benevolent world

  16. Case Study: Executive Function Problem or Lazy Kid

  17. In your experience, how do our education systems respond to young people with underdeveloped executive functions? • How do these systems’ responses work for children and families?

  18. http://resiliencetrumpsaces.org/popups/5minutes.html

  19. Stations

  20. Time for a Break

  21. Restorative Practices

  22. Lunch

  23. Assumption for our session Within this network of school leaders is the collective wisdom to generate what is necessary to take the next steps in model development ( maybe we say next steps in implementation?)

  24. Understanding scientific Discoveries Sometimes Requires Unlearning What We Once Believed to be True

  25. On the surface we are able to see what people say and do just as with the iceberg. Under the surface are the meanings we construct influenced by our values, assumptions, beliefs and identity, some of which are held consciously and others without conscious awareness .

  26. Adaptive Solutions Technical Challenges Learning a skill set, process or routine to meet a challenge Adaptive Challenges Can only be met by changing our mindset Require us to interact with our environment and change our behavior in response to that environment

  27. We all have an inner map we use to interpret the world We have different levels of capacity to be aware of our own inner map and how we create our experience of life through it We each have our own inner commitments to our own person priorities aligned to this map The inner commitments will override any counter intentions that conflict with them The hidden commitments are linked to our inner “hidden” perception of our own physical, psychological, social or emotional well being. This hidden commitment is nearly always outside our conscious awareness. The conflict between our hidden commitment and our stated commitments evidences as “resistance” to change.

  28. Kegan and Lahey Immunity to Change List a commitment to change we are unable to keep List behaviors what are we doing we doing and what are we not doing to support the commitment Identify the hidden commitment that has greater priority Identify the “Big Assumption” that underpins the competing commitment

  29. Table Group Examples Follow the four steps for the example provided at your table

  30. In what ways does the finding that trauma is woven into our bodies and cells challenge our mental models about biology? Behavior? Psychology? • Collectively, what beliefs may we have educators need to examine in light of this new science?

  31. Column One – Identify Commitment What is the most important thing we need to get better at or change to progress toward our goal of ______________. We are committed to the importance of______________. It should “feel” genuine and important. It should not yet be fully realized…area for growth. It should be clear how this commitment gets us closer to our goal.

  32. Column Two – Identify Behaviors What are we doing or not doing that is keeping our commitment from being more fully realized? List specific behaviors skip rationale for behaviors. The behaviors should be only those behaviors that work against the commitment. Behaviors may be for anyone in the group…not necessarily the whole group.

  33. Column Three – Identify the Competing Commitment(s) If we did the opposite of the behaviors, we fear that…… Draw a line after the fears and write what you believe the competing commitment may be. We are also committed to…… This commitment will make us uncomfortable and will be clear how it is self protecting. It illuminates why the countering behaviors “make sense”.

  34. Column Four – Identify the Big Assumption The “big assumption” is a rule or prediction about what will happen if we act in certain ways. Take your competing commitment, reverse it and replace it with the words we are committed to..and replace we are committed to …to we assume that….. We assume that if …… then ______________. The big assumption shows why the 3rd column commitment feels necessary.

  35. Column One – Identify Commitment What is the most important thing we need to get better at or change to progress toward our goal of ______________. We are committed to the importance of______________. It should “feel” genuine and important. It should not yet be fully realized…area for growth. It should be clear how this commitment gets us closer to our goal.

  36. Then what????? Observe the big assumption in action. Challenge our big assumpiton.

  37. http://www.ted.com/talks/shawn_achor_the_happy_secret_to_better_work.htmlhttp://www.ted.com/talks/shawn_achor_the_happy_secret_to_better_work.html The Happiness Advantage

  38. Thank you for ALL you do and safe travels!

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