In this Issue ►

Private and Parochial Schools Newsletter March 2016

In this Issue

Performance is Good, but We Need Learners (What the World Series Can Teach Us About the Classroom)

Dr. David Dockterman, Chief Architect, Learning Sciences, HMH

Originally published on The Spark

I suspect we all agree that the world is changing. How fast? You can see a live view of Internet churn here, which highlights stats and figures related to social media and download activity. Take a look—it’s staggering.

The digital revolution has sparked a knowledge economy with new companies and business models constantly blossoming (and wilting) in a swirl of innovation. Take a moment to reflect on how much your own personal and work lives have changed over the last decade. How many new ways of communicating, paying, watching, teaching, and listening have you learned… or resisted learning? The one constant in today’s world is change. How do we prepare our students, our children and the next generation, for this kind of moving target?

To flourish in this dynamic landscape, we (educators, families, community members) and our students, need to be adaptable, curious, willing to take risks, and open to innovation. We need to be learners.

Sadly, our educational system isn’t always aligned with that goal. Sometimes we focus too much on performance, passing the test, showing mastery of objectives, and covering the curriculum. We forget how difficult—and— rewarding—learning something new can and should be. We can also get caught up trying to protect our students’ self-esteem. We don’t want our children to feel defeated, so we sometimes go overboard protecting them from failure. Well-meaning parents and teachers step in at the first sign of struggle to gently guide their charges along the path to success. We want achievement and high performance to come effortlessly.

When it does come effortlessly, students feel smart. “Look what I did, and I barely even tried. I must be really smart at this.” And when achievement doesn’t come easily, students can feel dumb. “Other students got it so quickly, but I didn’t. I must be dumb at this.” Students all along the performance spectrum can develop what Carol Dweck calls a “fixed mindset” about their ability to learn in certain domains. Performance becomes everything, shutting down the effort that learning demands and creating a roadblock to eventual success.

Ned Yost, manager of the 2015 World Series Champions, the Kansas City Royals, illustrates this tension between performance and learning with his unique approach to coaching his players. Yost often receives criticism for not being a data-driven manager. Early in the season he’ll put an untested pitcher on the mound in a tough situation or leave a player in to hit even though the numbers suggest a different option would be better. Commentators chastise Yost for these bad decisions, but the manager has a different goal.

“I wanted to put those young players in a position to gain experience, so that when we could compete for a championship, they’d know how,’’ Yost says. ‘‘You can’t do that when you’re pinch-hitting for young guys. You can’t do it when you quick-hook starting pitchers. They’ll never learn to work themselves out of trouble. People would say, ‘What’s he doing?’ They didn’t understand. I’d rather lose a game on my watch so they could win later.’’ (New York Times)

Yost wants his players to be learners in order for them to be performers. He doesn’t want them stuck in a mindset of only being good at what they already do well. And his approach has paid off.

We need to strike a similar balance in the way we educate our children at home and in school. The future, while exciting, is uncertain. What skills will be valuable in the next decade might not be the skills children learn today. Our kids, like Yost’s young players, need to be ready and willing to take on new challenges. They need the experience of effortful learning and working their way through something difficult. If we can successfully turn our students into learners, we’ll get the performance we want in school and beyond.


David Dockterman, Ed.D., is Chief Architect, Learning Sciences, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Adjunct Lecturer on Education, Harvard Graduate School of Education.

Student Engagement Tip from a Parochial Educator

Submitted by Anna S. from Xavier High School in Cedar Rapids, IA

Anna writes: "Sneaky Math"—I try to have one day per week where we do something out of routine, like having students create coloring pages using transformations (Algebra 2) or properties of triangles (Geometry). Sometimes we pull already created designs and students use colors to show the mathematical patterns and properties that we learn about. Another fun activity is to pull up one of the Desmos Teacher activities, such as Polygraph, and have students play a game.

Grants & Funding Quiz

*To access the Qzzr, please do not use Firefox

Categorizing with Photographs

Professional Learning Corner
From The Teacher Tip, a free app from Heinemann

Sometimes students have difficulty extracting and naming the main idea of a text, because they struggle to group sentences and paragraphs from a text into categories. Try making this analytical process more visual by using photographs. Cut pictures out of a magazine and ask kids, “How could you sort these items into categories, into buckets?” Can the children generate the “box”—the main idea—for the items? Pictures of a bear and a tiger can go into the “wild animals” category, while a shirt and a dress go into the “clothes” category.

Then add pictures of perfume and barrettes into the mix, and encourage students to categorize using as few categories as possible. The “clothes” category now becomes “things you wear.” The revision work required by categorizing involves going up and down the ladder of abstraction. By categorizing and synthesizing smaller bits of information into broader, more abstract ideas, readers take in and hold onto new information.

Learn more about the Units of Study for Teaching Reading

School Grants & Funding-Investing in the Future

Applying for a school grant or funding opportunity doesn’t have to be exhausting, especially when Houghton Mifflin Harcourt’s Grants and Funding team is here to help! Let us work with you to find and secure the school funding necessary to improve your community and better prepare your school’s students for the future.

Learn more at hmhco.com

 

Financial Resources to Help Your School Excel

Featured Grant: Frances R. Dewing Foundation

The foundation gives grants only to programs that deal directly with early childhood education. Within that context, support is given for the fine and performing arts and other cultural programs, social services, conservation and environmental protection, pre-school, elementary, and other education. Programs must serve children under 12. Giving limited to the U.S., with emphasis on the New England states in the Northeast.

Average Amount: $5,000–$20,000
Deadline to Apply: April 1 and October 1
Apply Here

Find more grants with the free HMH Grant Database.

Upcoming Events

Visit HMH at these upcoming events:

3/18: Cisco/HMH Tech Event–Birmingham
3/30: Cisco/HMH Tech Event–Jacksonville, FL
3/29–31: National Catholic Educators Association 2016 Convention & Expo (NCEA)—San Diego, CA

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Learn more about our commitment to Private and Parochial Schools at hmhco.com/privateschools.

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