1 / 21

ASES - Middle School MONTHLY PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT OCTOBER 3RD, 2012

ASES - Middle School MONTHLY PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT OCTOBER 3RD, 2012. PD AGREEMENTS. Start and End on Time Put Phones on Vibrate No Sidebar Conversations Agree to disagree Be prepared Be Present ( Mentally and Physically ) Be Respectful. AGENDA. Welcome –Ice Breaker

ami
Download Presentation

ASES - Middle School MONTHLY PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT OCTOBER 3RD, 2012

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. ASES -Middle School MONTHLY PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENTOCTOBER 3RD, 2012

  2. PD AGREEMENTS Start and End on Time Put Phones on Vibrate No Sidebar Conversations Agree to disagree Be prepared Be Present (Mentally and Physically) Be Respectful

  3. AGENDA Welcome –Ice Breaker Announcements SJYD: spotlight on Making Identity Central Shared Practice Supplemental providers Closing You can find all resources and links presented here on the website at: www.scusdafterschool.org

  4. WELCOME ACTIVITY Who were YOU in Middle School? 1. Draw a picture (age 12-14) 2. List out brief description 3. Share out

  5. ANNOUNCEMENTS Prevention Week October 18th-31st Lead Glennie Pacheco Glennielyn-Pacheco@scusd.edu

  6. ANNOUNCEMENTS Lights on After School October 18th, 2012 Lead JaNay Brown JaNay-Brown@scusd.edu

  7. AREA OF FOCUS Social Justice Youth Development Making Identity Central The Youth Engagement Services (YES) Unit uses a Social Justice Youth Development Based Framework to inform the development and implementation of programming.

  8. SJYD PRINCIPLES • Understand and Shift Decision-Making Power (Analyze power in social relationships) • Strengthen Self-Identify & Cross Cultural Awareness (Make identity central) • Impact Positive Change (Promote systemic change) • Collaborate For a Common Good (Encourage collective action) • Promote & Strengthen Active Youth Engagement (Embrace youth culture)

  9. MAKING IDENTITY CENTRAL Our goal is to promote… • Pride in one’s identity • Awareness of influences on identity • Being a part of something meaningful/productive • Building solidarity

  10. SHARED PRACTICE Making Identity Central Let’s start by having everyone join a group of 3-4 people. On the large post-it, draw an image that represents your students in the center. Give your student a name.

  11. …CONTINUED… Making Identity Central Using the post-its, everyone take 2-minutes to come up with as many factors or elements that impact your students sense of identity

  12. …CONTINUED… Making Identity Central Have everyone place their post-its around your student. Take 2 minutes to organize everyone’s post-its into categories

  13. …CONTINUED… Making Identity Central Next, pair up with someone from your group. Using the top of your handout, select a category that you do address really well in your program and write it down.

  14. …CONTINUED… Making Identity Central Looking back at the group categories, select one that you know you can improve on. Use the “Going Deeper” table to list out some options for you to improve on this category.

  15. MAKING IDENTITY CENTRAL The purpose is to help students better understand: • Who they are • How outside forces influence how they identify • The impact of identity in their life • That they can define their own identity • That they are capable of GREAT things • Creating solidarity around common goals/needs

  16. MAKING IDENTITY CENTRAL Some intentional practices that we can use include: • Activities, games, and lessons to encourage positive self identity • Activities to help students identify the influences that impact how they see themselves • Setting rules and agreements for students and staff that demystifies stereotypes or negative behavior towards different identities • Student identities are CELEBRATED

  17. MAKING IDENTITY CENTRAL …practices continued… • Program provides ample & varied opportunities for self- expression • Reading materials are carefully selected to reflect the languages, cultures and identities of youth in program • Decor, posters, signs, artwork, etc. celebrate the identities , languages, cultures and age of students in program • Students and families are connected with community organizations and resources

  18. MAKING IDENTITY CENTRAL By helping students build a positive self-identity, we hope to help them: • Develop pride and connectedness regarding their identity • Increase awareness of how societal, political, community forces & peer relationships influence their own identities • Feel they are a part of something meaningful and productive • Identify and build solidarity with others who share common struggles and have common interests

  19. Supplemental Providers Let’s say your program = your Fantasy Football Team • Draft with intention • Consider what you need, think of your entire team • Stay on top of what’s happening! • Know the line up (scheduling!) • Plan ahead

  20. Supplemental Providers Just like your fantasy squad… • Recognize supplementals as part of your team • Be intentional- How do you know what you need? • Stay informed! Attendance, trends, activities • Schedule thoughtfully • Plan out your year. What are you offering? Be invested in their success. Their win is crucial to your program’s win!!

More Related