On Saturday, November 3rd, I attended the
Promising Practices Conference. To be
honest, I was not thrilled about going.
As the day went on I ended up having a great time and I learned a lot
more than I thought I would. Dr. Dana
Fusco gave her Keynote Address to the audience, which was primarily about youth
development. Youth development is
maturation (biological) and learning (behavioral). Youth and child programs can provide a
healthy ecology for thriving and so can classrooms. Another thing I learned during her speech was
that sometimes school is not enough.
Children need to have relationships, hands on activities, and culminating
events that celebrate accomplishments.
After school activities are great for children. These programs help students to unwind after
school; the children benefit from this because they form relationships with
their peers and teachers. There needs to
be SPARK, theory of flow and engagement.
Teachers can celebrate the student’s accomplishments. By doing this, the students will know that
their teachers care about their academics and want them to succeed. It also makes the children happy because they
feel good about themselves. Everyone
wants to hear a little encouragement now and then, it is extremely important in
youth development. I found the
correlation between youth development and equity interesting. This had to do with the yin-yang visual. One half represents youth development,
“things that matter to children personally”, while the other half represents
equity, “things that matter to me in the world.” Agency divides them, but also brings them
together. Youth agency means supporting
young people to be active in their own lives, but also active in the
world. Students are highly engaged when
a professor “invokes dialog to get a solution.”
Workshop #1
·
Every student learns differently
·
More hands on
·
Teacher focus on success
·
Testimonies (talk with students…still successful
and passionate about whatever they do)
·
Focus groups
·
Focus on academic achievement
·
Go to Mayor or governor for help
- Board of Trusties, Superintendent, or Board of Education
- Students and parents
- Rhode Island Ready Program
·
College readiness
·
Do not let one test make the kid
·
If the kid is ready or not
·
Go to groups for help
This workshop taught me that I can make a difference in my
school or community. Anyone can “plant
the seeds of change.” However, not a lot
people do it because they often believe that they do not have a voice and that
no one will listen or take them seriously.
This is not true at all, we can all make a difference in the world; it
just takes hard work, determination, and dedication. I am glad I attended this workshop, it was
helpful and fun. Here is a website that shows one how to start a community action project.
Workshop #2

After the two workshops, we went back to the Donovan Dining Center, had our lunch, and the “Unconference”. Dr. Bogad and her A.L.L.I.E.D. group gave their presentation during the “Unconference” on Youth Development. They discussed Cultural Competency, which is the ability to recognize and work comfortably with cultural and identity markers outside of your own. Each student that presented had an experience that they shared that was based on cultural competency. I am glad they shared their thoughts because it is something that people do not see as important until it is addressed. I especially loved hearing the poem, “For the white person who wants to be my friend”, by Pat Parker. The members each read one line from the poem and I found it to be a great way to end their presentation. You cannot judge people based on their race or social class. We all deserve to be valued as our own person. Everyone is different and it does not mean that all white people or all African American people are the same or do the same things. People look at me and automatically assume that I am white, but I am also Portuguese and Hispanic. No one would guess that I am Hispanic or Portuguese because I do not fit the stereotype. We need to stop automatically labeling each other; instead everyone should be open minded. Overall, I had a terrific time at Promising Practices and I intend on going again next year. I am looking forward to it!
Connections
- Workshop #2 connects with the article, “Cinderella Ate My Daughter” by Peggy Orenstein. I believe that they both connect because in the article Orenstein explains that girls are meant to play with girly items such as makeup and wear pink all the time. While boys are meant to play with trucks and tools in order for them to be masculine. “If you make a pink baseball bat, parents will buy one for their daughter,” she explained. Then, if they subsequently have a son, they’ll have to buy a second bat in a different color. I wonder what all that pinkness—the color, the dominance of the play pattern it signals—is teaching girls about who they are, what they should value, what it means to be female?” (Orenstein 43).
- Workshop #2 also connects with GLSEN. Although, in the workshop we discussed the “T” (transgender) because it is often excluded. They both talk about ways to help elementary educators to help students feel safe and school. Both agree that we need to start with young children through anti-bias and anti-bullying activities. They want to focus on name-calling, bullying, and bias. It is easier to teach this to young children instead of high school students because it is harder to build respect. Bullying needs to come to an end. I learned a few statistics in my second workshop about transgender children and how they bullied at a young age. Take a look at this article that I found on the GLSEN website, “Playgrounds and Prejudice:Elementary School Climate in the United States.” This article has more statistics in it.
- At the end of the conference, Dr. Bogad and her A.L.L.I.E.D. group discussed cultural competency. I believe this relates to Tim Wise and his book, “Between Barack and a Hard Place”. Wise says that we do recognize race in the world, but he argues that just because we have an African American president, does not mean that racism is over. Racism still exists today, in all parts of the world. Dr. Bogad and her A.L.L.I.E.D. group are saying that we cannot judge people based on race or social class. We cannot assume that racism is over because that would mean we are ignorant to the world. People should be more open minded instead of just assuming.
Just by reading your blog, I can really see mow much you have learned from the conference! I think it is really cool that you learned that any person can make a change happen, and that is something that I honestly wouldn't think about doing before reading your blog. It is so true, that every voice matters, which is why everyone of age should vote in the elections. There are so many people who think that their voice is not heard, and I think it is important to teach people that they can make a difference!
ReplyDeleteI liked your reasons for not supporting standardized testing. I know there are alot of different learners out there and standardized tests are an unfair way to judge everyone. Reminds me of Howard Gardener and the different types of intelligences.
ReplyDeleteGreat post, Ashley!!
ReplyDelete