I'm currently reading a powerful book, Authentic Happiness (M.E.P. Seligman, 2003). Dr. Seligman is a Ph.D. in Psychology, and in this book he focuses on the positive and proactive side of psychology, rather than on the back end issues of pathology and treatment. It's a very intriguing read, and, in particular, he makes some interesting observations about raising children (which is, as you know, our "business" as educators).
A quote of Dr. Seligman's regarding the raising of his own children:
"Raising children, I knew now, was far more than just fixing what was wrong with them. It was about identifying and amplifying their strengths and virtues, and helping them find the niche where they can live these positive traits to the fullest."
We are responsible (morally obligated, I believe) for teaching our students a body of knowledge and skills that go FAR beyond the academic curricula. At Guthrie CSD we have captured many of those elements in the development of our Guthrie Graduate Profile (linked here: http://www.guthriejags.com/profile.html). How rare the number of communities and schools that have actually taken the time to carefully articulate (as have we) some of the beyond-the-academic elements that stand every bit as much of a chance of affecting meaningful, happy, and productive lives for our children as do the academic contents. That work has meaning ONLY if we keep our own attention, and that of our children, centered on those elements.
As we enter the craziness of the "testing season" in Texas public schools, I believe there are some important things for us educators to reflect upon:
> our work along the non-academic lines is just as important as the work in the academic dimensions
> the surest way to affect learning in students is for them to be in the charge of caring and nurturing adults
> the fruit of our "work" may not be realized for years or even decades (and certainly will not be captured in the results of a multiple choice test taken on one particular day).
My lovely bride, Moe, wrote a song several years ago with a very powerful chorus in it:
A Builder's eyes can always see such great things that there might be
Hands are strong and arms will hold
A child's faith to shape and mold
Building hearts and building joys
Building girls and building boys
I remember the hands
I remember the heart
I remember the love...of a Builder
As educators, we are those loving Builders for our students (in some cases the only ones they have).
About Me
- nelsonwcoulter
- Welcome to nc’s blog. Read, comment, interact, engage. Let’s learn together - recursively.
Tuesday, January 15, 2013
Friday, December 14, 2012
Students and Faculty, Learning/Growing Together
The Guthrie CSD faculty and
student body engaged in team learning on Tuesday, December 11, 2012,
as has been our practice for the last four years. Faculty gathered in groups to have dialogue
on how they have attempted to address the Guthrie Graduate Profile (GGP)
dimensions in their classrooms over the last four months. As well, discussions were had by the
educators about how we might create learning tasks that address the academic
curricula while at the same time aligning with the GGP.
While faculty were learning and thinking
together, students were assembled by age groups to engage in learning
activities centered on one specific dimension of the GGP: Effective
Communications. The students were
guided in those activities by communications consultant Stephanie Stanley-Allen
of Lubbock, Texas, who did a marvelous job of providing students with sound and practical strategies for effectively communicating.
The GGP consists of five dimensions, which
the Guthrie community has deemed powerful components for living, learning, and
earning in a 21st century global environment. Those five dimensions are:
· > Learners/Problem
Solvers/Critical Thinkers
· > Effective
Communicators
· > Persons of Strong
Character
· > Productive and
Valuable Team Members
· > Compassionate and
Responsible Citizens
The professional educators of Guthrie have made
a serious commitment to creating the best possible futures for our students, by focusing our efforts and resources in an
intentional way on the whole child, not just the academic curricula. In the process, we recognize that the
individual growth of the faculty/staff along those GPP dimensions is an
important and critical piece in accomplishing that goal.
Saturday, November 24, 2012
Guthrie CSD’s Graduate Profile (Part 5)
By Nelson Coulter
The BUSINESS of school is LEARNING! Schools are built and exist for that very purpose. Unfortunately, it often seems that many
interests and agendas other than learning drive what goes on at school. Thus, it takes a very focused and deliberate
team of professionals to keep their eyes, their energy, and their effort
centered on LEARNING!
The community and educational
professionals of Guthrie CSD have made a purposeful commitment with regard to
what that learning should look like for students by creating the Guthrie
Graduate Profile. This is the last of a
five part series of articles intended to clarify the Profile. Below are the five pillars (dimensions) of
the Guthrie
Graduate Profile:
v Learners/Problem Solvers/Critical Thinkers
v Effective Communicators
v Persons of Strong Character
v Productive and Valuable Team Members
v Compassionate and Responsible Citizens
The
focus of this article is on the Profile dimension aimed at causing our students
to be
Compassionate and
Responsible Citizens which are:
• Socially
responsible
• Knowledgeable
participants in the democratic process
• Grateful/thankful/humble
• Courteous
and respectful toward others/differences
• Contributors
of their energy/time/talent in service to others and their community
Certainly, having the skills
and knowledge to provide for one’s self and loved ones is an extremely
important concept. However, the Guthrie
Graduate Profile addresses student learning beyond motives that are purely
self-serving. The Compassionate and Responsible Citizens dimension moves us,
generally, to the concept of service.
Guthrie CSD stakeholders are convinced that some of the richest blessings in
life are those realized when we invest our time, resources, and energy to the
service of others. Consequently, we have
concluded that a disposition for service to others is a concept important
enough to teach to our children.
Encompassed in that concept
is the idea that our children learn about and engage in the democratic process
with integrity and fidelity. Certainly,
being knowledgeable voters is part of that process, but being participants
willing to contribute in even more meaningful ways is a powerful life
enhancement. Those additional kinds of
service might include volunteering at the church or community level, running
for public office, serving on the local school board, helping organize disaster
relief efforts, serving as a volunteer fire fighter, mowing the yard of an
elderly neighbor, etc. In essence, it
means taking the time and effort to SERVE
others, with no expectation of reward or recognition.
Highly aligned to these
service components is an underlying mindset of thankfulness for the many
blessings that most of us experience on a daily basis. A disposition of respectfulness toward others
is preeminent. The Guthrie school
community has concluded that the lives of our children will be enriched if they
learn to treat all others respectfully and courteously. Underlying that way of thinking is the innate
understanding that there are many perspectives, faiths, philosophies of life that
may differ from our own. Our differing
perspectives on life and living need not (and should not) prompt the
discourteous or disrespectful treatment of others.
Our intention at Guthrie CSD
is to graduate students fully prepared to prosper in the world of work and
school and life. Moreover, we have made
the conscious decision to teach our children ways of wholesome living with
respect to their view and treatment of others.
Through teaching our children the ways of compassion and responsibility,
we believe that not only will their lives be enriched, but the world will be a
better place. One could argue that there
might not be a more important learning component in the education of our
students.
Friday, November 9, 2012
On nc’s Learning (and Maybe Yours, Too)
By Nelson Coulter
Funny how I’ve gotten much
more attentive to research on the aging process in the last few years. As part of that heightened interest I have
become familiar with a good bit of information on the nature and capabilities
of the human brain. One thing that is
abundantly clear is that our brains (even those that have some age on them,
like mine) have a tremendous capacity to LEARN new things.
For a long time, neurological
and cognitive researchers believed that the brain’s plasticity and malleability
would peek and reach a plateau between the ages of 20 and 30; from there it would
coast into a slow and steady decline for the rest of one’s life. However, our most current understanding of
the brain has debunked that view. We now
know that the brain can continue to learn, to build new connections, and to
remain very energetic throughout one’s life.
Similar to other dimensions of our lives (e.g., physical, spiritual,
emotional), we have significant ability to impact the vitality of our brains
through some conscious choices we make.
That new understanding has
caused me to engage in some careful reflection on how best to keep my brain
growing, stretching, and learning even into the golden years. Let me share some of the choices I have made
for my brain, to that end.
Be curious. Learning to be inquisitive and at the same
time trying to suspend any previously held conceptions or assumptions is an
exercise in mental acrobatics. I have
tried to learn to ask many and better questions of those who know things of
interest to me. As well, the Internet
has provided us all with handy access to the sum of all human knowledge, which
most of us now carry around in our pockets. I have been re-training myself to
go beyond just wondering about things (like how a windmill works, or how peanut
butter is made, or how to change the oil filter on a 1953 John Deere tractor,
etc.) and to actively seek the
answers to those interesting questions.
You probably have a lot of the same kinds of questions. Amazingly, those answers are now readily
available to ALL of us, almost instantly.
Wow!
READ! I have committed myself to a persistent
regimen of reading. Reading a wide range
of literature is part of that decision. I have found that mixing genres and
reading fiction and non-fiction at the same time has caused my brain to engage
in something similar to what is known as fartlek training in the physical
fitness world (look it up!). This
exercise has caused my brain to make a lot of connections I would not have
considered previously. Reading is simply
the most efficient method of learning known to mankind.
Write. Through my many years as an educator, I have
become convinced that there is not more cognitively challenging task we ask of
students than to learn to communicate well through the writing process. (No, I
am not an English teacher). The task of
organizing what we know and believe inside our own minds and presenting that
information in a coherent, sensible, and crystal clear way in written form to
others is a most challenging exercise. (Engaged in that activity right now).
Embrace novelty. The brain naturally enjoys new stimuli, of all kinds. Consequently, I have determined to expose my
brain to new environments and situations.
(Choosing to read in a variety of genres is an example of this strategy). Going to new places, meeting new people,
tasting new foods, listening to new kinds of music have all provided me with
some interesting “energy” as I become aware of my brain working to make sense
of these new and interesting stimuli.
The brain constantly engages in a process of trying to categorize,
compare, and contrast the new information with what it has previously
experienced. In effect, sense making.
Engage with many people (the smarter the better). This concept is closely
related to the one above. Humans are
clearly one of God’s most interesting “inventions.” We come in a million variations of size,
shape, and color. Similarly, our brains
are just as diverse as our external qualities.
Making myself engage with more people has proven to be a very useful and
healthy exercise for my brain. This
choice has been one of the more difficult for me, because engaging others
(especially strangers) forces me well outside my comfort zone. Think of it as “vegetables” for your brain.
Get better, on purpose. Being on a
journey of continuous personal and professional improvement has been an
evolutionary process for me.
Interestingly, it naturally flows from engaging in the purposeful
activities I’ve already shared with you.
In a strange sort of way, the more I have exposed myself to in the way of
brain stimuli, the more aware I have become of my need to grow, stretch, engage
– to LEARN! I have learned that,
contrary to commonly held beliefs, I do not have to be simply “the way I am”
(to quote from a Merle Haggard standard).
I have the power to be who I choose
to be, if I am willing to challenge my brain (and my body and my spirit) in
purposeful efforts at growth. The
goal? I can be a better husband, dad, granddad, son, friend,
superintendent, professor, rancher, etc., IF
I choose to be.
My vocation and my avocation
is that of being an educator, a person whose fundamental mission is to aid and
abet learning in others. (Cool job,
huh?). Consequently, this stuff about
how my brain works is pretty important.
It’s just an added benefit that my learning in that regard has such
interesting connections and impact on my life as a whole.
Perhaps you can find connections
for yourself in my experiences and rambling.
Wednesday, October 31, 2012
Guthrie CSD’s Graduate Profile (Part 4)
By Nelson Coulter
The BUSINESS of school is LEARNING! You may be getting weary of hearing this
mantra, but it is worth remembering (and reminding others of) daily. We often get busy and distracted in schools,
doing a gazillion things that are not really focused on LEARNING. At Guthrie CSD we have made some serious decisions
about what that learning should actually look like for our students. We have attempted to define the learning of
our students to be something that goes far beyond knowledge and skills (both of
which are voluminously articulated in the state curriculum). The stakeholders of Guthrie CSD have agreed
that perhaps the most powerful learning for our students exists in ways of thinking and ways of behaving. Thus, our focus has moved toward educating our
students in a more holistic and meaningful way.
This is the fourth of a five
part series of articles intended to clarify the Guthrie Graduate Profile, which
has emerged from community- and school-based conversations that have been
ongoing in Guthrie for the last year.
Below are the five pillars (dimensions) of the Guthrie Graduate Profile:
v Learners/Problem Solvers/Critical Thinkers
v Effective Communicators
v Persons of Strong Character
v Productive and Valuable Team Members
v Compassionate and Responsible Citizens
The dimension that will be
discussed here is that of our students becoming:
Productive and Valuable
Team Members
They are/can/have:
•
Good leaders
•
Self-aware and
self-managing
•
Work
collaboratively with persons of different beliefs, interests, backgrounds, and
cultures
•
Engaged and
accountable
•
Authentic and
transparent
•
Effectively use
tools and technology for collaboration
Guthrie CSD stakeholders have
a clear understanding that our students (unless they become hermits) will work
in teams for the rest of their lives.
Those teams might be families, churches, workplaces, communities, etc.,
and they will assuredly be populated with others who may look, think, and act
differently than themselves. Thus, at
Guthrie CSD we have deemed it immensely important that our students develop a
strong degree of emotional and social intelligence. They must understand themselves and their own
beliefs in a profound way. As well, they
must learn to “read” and listen to other people carefully, developing an
understanding of the perspectives, thinking, and behavioral motivations of
others. Associated with these deep understandings
is the idea of acceptance of and tolerance for diversity – diversity of
thought, diversity of interests, diversity of backgrounds, of culture, of beliefs.
Beyond these understandings
and bases of interaction, we aspire for our Guthrie CSD students to learn the
value and power of being fully engaged in endeavors bigger than
themselves. Embedded in that idea is the
belief that to work/live/play effectively with others implies a personal
responsibility for being fair, transparent, honest, and authentic in those
interactions.
And finally, we believe at
Guthrie that our students can only be responsible and valuable team members if
they have well-developed skills in the use of the “tools of the trade,”
whatever that trade or collective endeavor may be. Being able to learn (and unlearn, if
necessary) how to use a wide range of communications and job-specific tools
will be critical to the success of our students, no matter where they end up
working and living.
Guthrie CSD is deliberately educating
our students to be successful, happy, and productive in the global marketplace
or in any setting in which they choose to live and compete. Choosing MORE
for our students is proving to be a very interesting and energizing endeavor. However, we have decided that if we want the
best for the futures of our students, we must invest our best efforts/thinking
in the present.
Tuesday, October 16, 2012
Guthrie CSD’s Graduate Profile (Part 3)
By Nelson Coulter
The BUSINESS of school is LEARNING! At Guthrie CSD we have chosen to be proactive
and intentional about the kind of education we deliver to our students and the
kind of powerful learning they experience.
This is the third of a five
part series of articles that will provide some clarity about the Guthrie
Graduate Profile, which has emerged from community- and school-based
conversations that have been ongoing in Guthrie for the last year. Below are the five pillars (dimensions) of
the Guthrie
Graduate Profile:
v Learners/Problem Solvers/Critical Thinkers
v Effective Communicators
v Persons of Strong Character
v Productive and Valuable Team Members
v Compassionate and Responsible Citizens
Part 3 of this series we will
focus on the Graduate Profile dimension of:
Persons of Strong
Character
We intend that our students
are/can/have:
• Healthy habits and lifestyles
• Persevering toward achieving personal goals
• Honest and trustworthy
• Assertive and competitive
We have determined that in
order for our students to achieve their/our highest aspirations for them, they
must understand how to live healthily.
This means that they must understand that personal nutrition and fitness
has several dimensions: physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual. We intend to guide our students to an understanding
that their personal health and happiness are their own responsibility (not that
of others, or their government) and that each of us makes informed (or
uninformed) decisions on a daily basis that contribute in some way to that
health and well-being.
At Guthrie CSD we also plan
to design learning tasks that teach our students how to persevere, how to be
resilient, and how to be relentless in their own learning and growth. This means that we must teach them how to
take risks, yet not to fear failure.
Powerful learning often comes from trying very hard, yet failing, then
trying again, until you get it right.
The world’s greatest musicians, athletes, and business people know this reality
by heart (and hard experience).
Guthrie CSD is also
committing our resources and professional efforts toward facilitating within
our students a deep respect for honesty and trustworthiness. We intend for our students to learn that with
those two character traits comes a personal responsibility to “own” one’s
decisions and behavior, to say what you mean and mean what you say, to make
promises frugally and honor them unerringly.
In short, our intention is to create within our students an
understanding that a person is only as good as their word, but those that are
as good as their word are worth their weight in gold.
Finally, we intend for
Guthrie CSD students to learn how to “play hard” at whatever task/endeavor they
deem worthy of their time, effort, and energy.
We intend for them to learn how to win with modesty, to lose with dignity,
and to understand that all people experience both winning and losing in life. Competing honorably and fairly make for a
substantive life experience (and ill-gotten gains are, in fact, cause for
disdain rather than celebration). As
well, we plan to teach our students how to understand at a deep level what they
believe in and value, and to be willing and able to articulate those values
assertively (yet without offensiveness or disrespect).
Some would say that we are dreamers
to believe that there is enough time in the school day or years in a child’s
life to make these kinds of learnings a reality. At Guthrie CSD, we have chosen to emphasize
these kinds of learnings as it is our intention to graduate students fully
armed and prepared to compete in the world marketplace of work and school and
life in a way that will make them the gold standard in any setting in which
they choose to live and serve.
At Guthrie CSD have chosen
MORE for our students (not less), without apology. Does this educational approach require
heightened effort and investment on the part of the adults? You bet.
However, we deem it worth every ounce of that extra effort and
investment.
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