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Elephants in the Room: Confronting Barriers to True Education

Elephants in the Room: Confronting Barriers to True Education. Anthony Muhammad, PhD. Call to Arms. “When a school or district functions as a PLC, educators within the organization embrace high levels of learning for ALL students

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Elephants in the Room: Confronting Barriers to True Education

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  1. Elephants in the Room:Confronting Barriers to True Education Anthony Muhammad, PhD

  2. Call to Arms “When a school or district functions as a PLC, educators within the organization embrace high levels of learning for ALL students as both the reason the organization exists and the fundamental responsibility of those who work within it.” —DuFour, DuFour, Eaker, & Many, Learning by Doing: A Handbook for Professional Learning Communities at Work (2010)

  3. A Major Shift in Paradigm

  4. What Has History Taught Us? All students have not benefited equally from access to educational institutions?

  5. The Achievement Gap Achievement gap refers to the observed and persistent disparity on a number of educational measures between the performance of groups of students, especially groups defined by gender, race/ethnicity, language, disability, and socioeconomic status.The achievementgap can be observed on a variety of measures, including standardized test scores, grade point average, dropout rates, and college enrollment and completion rates. (The Achievement Gap Initiative at Harvard University, http://www.agi.harvard.edu/projects/thegap.php)

  6. Income Level Gaps—By the Numbers2011 Eighth Grade NAEP Average Scale Scores www.nationsreportcard.gov (www.nationsreportcard.com)

  7. Disability Gaps—By the Numbers2011 Eighth Grade NAEP Average Scale Scores (www.nationsreportcard.com)

  8. ELL Gaps—By the Numbers2011 Eighth Grade NAEP Average Scale Scores (www.nationsreportcard.com)

  9. Racial Gaps—By the Numbers2011 Eighth Grade NAEP Scale Scores (www.nationsreportcard.com)

  10. Four-Year Gap (www.nationspreportcard.com)

  11. Pathway to Excellence for ALL “We assert that despite these statistics, student ethnicity and social class are not barriers to learning; rather, schools that do not properly respond to the needs of these students are the barriers.” —Muhammad & Hollie, The Will to Lead, The Skill to Teach: Transforming Schools at Every Level (2011), p. 2

  12. Two Forms of Change • Technical–structural (skill) • Cultural (will)

  13. Will and Skill

  14. Don’t Underestimate Culture “The health of an organization provides the context for strategy, finance, marketing, and everything else that happens within it, which is why it is the single greatest factor determining an organization’s success. More than talent. More than knowledge. More than innovation.” —Lencioni, The Advantage: Why Organizational Health Trumps Everything Else in Business (2012), p. 2

  15. Choosing Being “Smart” Over Being “Healthy” Smart Healthy Build a cohesive team. Create clarity. Over-communicate clarity. Reinforce clarity. • The “sophistication bias” • The “adrenaline bias” • The “quantification bias” —Lencioni, The Advantage: Why OrganizationalHealth Trumps Everything Else in Business (2012)

  16. Avoiding Culture “Most leaders prefer to look for answers where the light is better, where they are more comfortable. And the light is certainly better in the measurable, objective, and data-driven world of organizational intelligence (the smart side of the equation) than in the messier, more unpredictable world of organizational health.” —Lencioni, The Advantage: Why Organizational Health Trumps Everything Else in Business (2012), p. 7

  17. Healthy School CultureConnection of Two Great Concepts

  18. Are You Willing to Confront the Elephants in the Room?

  19. Predeterminations • Perceptual • Intrinsic • Institutional

  20. Perceptual Predetermination “Perceptual predetermination involves an educator’s own socialization and the impact of that socialization on his or her practice in the classroom, including expectations for student performance.” —Muhammad, Transforming School Culture: How to Overcome Staff Division (2009), p. 21

  21. Stereotypes “To help simplify a complex world, people develop mental models called schemas. Problems arise when people start to oversimplify schemas. Oversimplified schemas are known as stereotypes. Stereotypes are fixed impressions and exaggerated and preconceived ideas and descriptions about a certain type of person, group, or society.” —Langlois, Kalakanis, Rubenstein, Larson, Hallam, & Smoot, “Maxims or Myths of Beauty? A Meta-Analytic and Theoretical Review,” Psychological Bulletin (2000), p. 390

  22. Challenging Beliefs “Teacher expectations of student performance is a thorny issue in American education because of the inevitable overlay of accusations that low expectations for some groups of students reflects racial, ethnic, or class-biased prejudice.” —Jackson & Davis, Turning Points 2000: Educating Adolescents in the 21st Century (2000), p. 13

  23. American Attitudes Toward Immigrants “Eighty-two percent of Americans view educated immigrants in high-status jobs favorably, while they view those who lack plans to work (77%), entered without authorization (71%), come from Iraq (90%), or do not speak English (73%) unfavorably.” —Hainmueller & Hopkins, “The Hidden American Immigration Consensus: A Conjoint Analysis of Attitudes Toward Immigrants,” MIT Political Science Department Research Paper No. 2012–22. (2012)

  24. American Views on Class “A Pew Research Poll reveals, in the public’s evaluations of divisions within American society, conflicts between rich and poor now rank ahead of three other potential sources of group tension—between immigrants and the native born; between blacks and whites; and between young and old.” —CNN.com, http://www.cnn.com/2012/01/11/us/rich-poor-conflict/index.html

  25. AP Poll on Attitudes Toward African-Americans (2012) “In all, 51% of Americans now express explicit anti-black attitudes, compared with 48% in a similar 2008 survey. When measured by an implicit racial attitudes test, the number of Americans with anti-black sentiments jumped to 56%, up from 49% during the last presidential election. In both tests, the share of Americans expressing pro-black attitudes fell.”

  26. Dangerous Synonyms • “Changing demographics” • “High minority” • “High poverty” • “Special ed kids” • “ELL students”

  27. Corrective Lenses“The Optometrist” Combat false/incomplete information with better information. Try: • Enlightenment • Encouragement • Experimentation

  28. Intrinsic Predetermination “Intrinsic predetermination is the student’s perception of his or her probability of success in school. The messages that students receive from their environment—the home, community, and school—can either build their confidence or work to destroy it.” —Muhammad, Transforming School Culture: How to Overcome Staff Division (2009), p. 23

  29. When Cultures Collide

  30. Assimilation or Education Assimilation Education Liberation Development Creativity Empowerment • Control • Manipulation • Standardization • Docile

  31. Gifted and Talented Education “Gifted and talented education works for two reasons: the student believes that he is gifted and the teacher believes that he is gifted. Based on this agreement, the teacher and student create the right learning environment and they utilize rigorous learning activities. All human beings possess a gift; the key is to identify and capitalize on it.” —Renzulli, “What Makes Giftedness? Reexamining a Definition,” Phi Beta Kappan(1978)

  32. Acting “White” “Minority students are subject to pressures not assigned to white students, and that pressure is being accused of acting ‘white.’ In the informal social groups of minority students, high-achieving minority students fear losing their friendships with minority peers if they get good grades, speak clearly, and follow rules. It is the unfair conflict that many black and Latino students face that white students do not.” —Ogbu, “Collective Identity and the Burden of Acting White in Black History, Community, and Education,” The Urban Review (2004)

  33. Validating and Affirming All Students • Do you respect all of your students and their cultures? • Does your school validate the cultures of all of your students, or do you seek to make all students assimilate to the dominant culture? • Do your practices build on student strengths or focus on their weaknesses?

  34. Culturally Responsive Teaching and Learning • Instruction strategies are built around the students’ cultural norms. • School policies are created with a respect for student home culture. • Respect and affirmation lead to achievement.

  35. Pedagogy of Confidence • Identify and activate student strengths. • Elicit high intellectual performance. • Provide enrichment. • Integrate prerequisites.

  36. The Maestro Blending the best in students with the best in the institution to create beautiful music

  37. Institutional Predetermination “I contend that we have institutional barriers in place that make the job of educating every student very difficult.” —Muhammad, Transforming School Culture: How to Overcome Staff Division (2009), p. 25

  38. Grading Policies • Feedback • Accuracy • Fairness • Timeliness • Specificity

  39. Other Policy Elephants • Student placement in advanced coursework • Zoning policies around ethnicity and economic class • Discipline/expulsion policies • Graduation standards/policies

  40. Rosa Parks Moment

  41. Purpose “The best case for public education has always been that it is a common good. Everyone ultimately has a stake in the caliber of schools, and education is everyone’s business.” —Fullan, The Moral Imperative of School Leadership (2003)

  42. Website: www.newfrontier21.com Email: amuhammad@newfrontier21.com Twitter: @newfrontier21 Facebook: Dr. Anthony Muhammad Contact Information

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