Monday, October 29, 2012

Birds, Bees, & Benchmarks: National Sexuality Education Standards - Annual Conference Preview


By Kurt Conklin, MPH, MCHES (SIECUS) and Nora Gelperin, M.Ed (Answer)

While the nation was busy enduring months of election-year primary campaign stumping and two major party conventions throughout 2012, a small announcement in Education Week this past January quietly shifted America’s sexuality education landscape.

For the first time ever, curriculum planners, teachers, local and state school board members, and parents have a set of uniform, national sexuality education standards to measure the content of their schools’ programs: The National Sexuality Education Standards. The goal of the Standards is “to provide clear, consistent, and straightforward guidance on the essential minimum, core content for sexuality education that is age-appropriate for students in grades K-12.”

The Standards are the result of a two-year effort spearheaded by five national organizations: The American Association of Health Education, The American School Health Association, The National Education Association Health Information Network, The Society of State Leaders of Health and Physical Education and The Future of Sex Education (FoSE) Initiative. (FoSE includes three national sexuality education organizations, including two of our own: Answer, SIECUS, and Advocates for Youth.)

The National Sexuality Education Standards join a growing body of national standards for other academic subjects, such as math, reading and health, which only benefit our national education system. The Standards are based on research-driven evidence and developmental- and age-appropriate norms. Yet we’ve heard some school stakeholders express concern that the Standards could generate controversy.

We’ve heard some educators, parents, and politicians argue that school sexuality education programs should teach only abstinence until marriage, and remain silent about topics such as contraception, sexual orientation, and relationships outside of marriage. In their view, the sole purpose of school-based sexuality education is marriage promotion, not intellectual growth or skills development.
As a mom (Nora) and an uncle (Kurt), we respectfully disagree. The education and health professionals who helped to develop the Standards took a comprehensive view based on their real-life experiences with parents, students, and school personnel from myriad walks of life in diverse communities around the U.S. Given the median age of first marriage as 26.9 for U.S. females and 28.9 for U.S. males, and the fact that 63% of U.S. 12th-graders have already had sexual intercourse, school-age youth need more information than ever to make informed decisions about healthy relationships that have the potential to involve sexual activity. Sound sexuality education includes information on why (and how) young people can benefit from postponing sexual involvement until they are mature and ready, and the Standards account for this—without neglecting many other skills that parents say their children want and need.

The new National Sexuality Education Standards can help you respond to students’ informational needs with age- and developmentally-appropriate instruction that is relevant to young people’s lives. The Standards are voluntary and no school district should be expected to swallow them whole. You can make the most of them by inviting your school stakeholders to explore them and discuss them in community meetings where parents, teachers, curriculum planners, and the students themselves can ask hard questions and seek common ground to make the Standards work for everyone. Implementation can begin with elements that find the widest buy-in. The more difficult and potentially controversial topics can be placed on the sidelines for further study and adopted at a later date.

The Standards are a major step forward in standardizing, normalizing, and improving sexuality education throughout the nation. If widely implemented, our youths’ well-being, health and academic achievement can dramatically improve. Programs modeled after the Standards could lower the nation’s unacceptably high rate of teen pregnancy and sexually transmitted infections (especially in states hostile to sexuality education, where those rates are highest). Emphasis, of course, is on the “if”—improvement is achievable if curriculum planners, staff development specialists, teachers, parents and school board members make the most of this new resource.

In an election year when the course of history may well be changed at the polls, we hope the course of history in your local school districts will change for the better when you take the National Sexuality Education Standards and make them yours. Are you ready?


Attend this session at the Learning Forward 2012 Annual Conference in Boston
G15 – Birds, Bees, & Benchmarks: National Sexuality Education Standards
Tuesday December 14, 9am-12pm.

Saturday, October 20, 2012

Facilitation Skills to Maximize Group Effectiveness - Annual Conference Preview


This year the Learning Forward Conference in Boston will feature a session entitled “Facilitation Skills for Group Effectiveness,” co-presented by Carolyn McKanders from Houston, Texas, and Michael Dolcemascolo from Skaneateles, New York. Carolyn and Michael have been invited back to Learning Forward after their presentation in Anaheim, CA last year, and they’ve been invited to next year’s 2013 Learning Forward conference  in Texas as well. Michael and Carolyn’s work is based in the Adaptive Schools Seminars, described below.

Session PC 102 Saturday, December 1, 2012

Robert Garmston and Bruce Wellman are the co-developers of the Adaptive Schools Seminars, based in their text The Adpative School: Developing Collaborative Groups, 2009.

Adaptive Schools consulting, coaching and seminars provide skills development in dialogue, discussion, exceptional meeting management, advocacy, inquiry and other skills sets of collaboration. The seminars provide concepts, models and research for building capacities for organizational development, professional development, conflict resolution, data-based decision making, and working with intractable or wicked problems. Of four distributed leadership hats (facilitating, presenting, coaching and consulting) the Adaptive Schools seminars' primary focus is on the hat or function of facilitating group work.  Learn more about seminars on Adaptive Schools models for improving schools by visiting our website, www.adaptiveschools.com.

Four Hats of Shared Leadership

In an adaptive organization, leadership is shared; all the players wear all the hats. All participants have the knowledge and skills to manage themselves and manage and lead others. Leadership is distributed in meetings, in examining student work, in staff development activities, in action research and in projects. Recognizing the hats and knowing when and how to change them is shared knowledge within the organization, because when values, roles and work relationships are clear, decisions about appropriate behavior are easy.
The Four Hats are:
·      Facilitating
·      Presenting
·      Coaching (Adaptive Schools uses the Cognitive CoachingSM  model developed by Arthur Costa  and Robert Garmston)
  ·      Consulting

Saturday, October 6, 2012

How Do We Know They’re Getting Better? - Annual Conference Preview


The Chicago teachers’ strike is over, but we hear questions about teacher evaluation across the country.

For example, how can we effectively assess teachers’ performance? The thought of having one’s teaching weighted so heavily on students’ one-time snap-shot evaluation using high-stakes, or Scantron-type tests for which they were not designed is unsatisfactory.

Secretary of Education Arne Duncan urges that we craft “multiple measures” for teacher assessment and these should include how we currently assess students’ performances in any subject:

Teacher observations, students’ journals and postings on paper and in the cloud--Google Docs, Groups, Plus, wikis, Twitter--project reports, performance tests, self-reflections and the like.

These direct, long-term, reliable measures become more important when we consider not only the subjects we teach, but our school mission statements as well:

“We hold high academic standards for all students and expect each will become a responsible citizen of our American democracy. We want all students to dream, achieve and contribute to a global society.”

One school district (Greenwich, CT)  paints a portrait of the graduate that calls for her to be able, assuming content knowledge, “to pose and pursue substantive questions” and then engage in the problem solving, critical thinking and ethical, collaborative behaviors required.

To become responsible, active contributors to our society we need students to become good inquirers who pose problems and think critically and creatively.  It is not sufficient to understand Newton’s Three Laws of Motion and determine theme in Charlotte’s Web.  We need students to be able to ask good questions, identify/solve problems and analyze information critically.  Process is content.

But how do we assess these all important intellectual processes?  How Do We Know They’re Getting Better? reflects recent research on assessment of 21st century skills, K-8.

John Barell
Learning Forward Session Tuesday 12/4 @ 3-5, I26

Wednesday, August 17, 2011

Supporting Adult Development: Advancing School and System Practices by Ellie Drago-Severson

Note: This is a overview of the presentation by Ellie Drago-Severson at Learning Forward Annual Conference in Anaheim 
Session number: G02
Tuesday, 12/6/11, from 9 to 12noon and 2:30 to 4:00pm


Supporting adult learning and development is important for building adults’ internal capacity and also because it is directly linked to increasing children’s academic achievement. Implementing practices that support adult growth can also build school and system-wide capacity. In this day-long session you will: explore adult-developmental theory and how it supports adult growth and capacity building; learn about and apply four key developmentally-oriented pillar practices for sustaining adults’ development: teaming, inviting adults to take leadership roles, engaging in collegial inquiry, and mentoring (developmental coaching); understand developmental principles informing this new learning-oriented model, why they are essential to personal and professional development and how to build growth-enhancing school and district learning communities.

This interactive workshop provides principals, AP’s, teachers, professional developers, curriculum developers, coaches, district leaders, policymakers and all educators with an opportunity to develop a deeper understanding of how to support other adults’ growth and one’s own by learning about and applying adult developmental theory and a new learning-oriented model of school leadership that centers on supporting adult growth and offers promising practices for that can be implemented in your school or system. You will learn about:

  • Adult-developmental theory (Kegan, 1982, 1994, 2000) and apply it to supporting development, building internal capacity, and improving practice (through mini-lecture, writing, and applying understanding to case exercises);
  • A new learning-oriented model of school leadership (Drago-Severson, 2009, 2011, 2012) that centers on supporting adult development; and promising pillar practices for that can be implemented in your school, district and coaching practice to build growth-enhancing communities that attend to adults’ developmental diversity and improve student achievement. More specifically, through mini-lecture, private reflection, writing, dialogue, case discussion, action planning for your school/system/coaching, you will learn about and apply: (1) a new learning-oriented model of school leadership and apply it to your particular context and individuals; (2) four pillar-practices-for sustaining adult growth, comprising this model; (3) engage in applying ideas and practices (action planning), and (4) understand adult learning principles that inform this model, and why they are essential to effective personal and professional development.
  • Enhancing capacity for shaping school and district communities that sustain continuous adult learning and positively impact student achievement; and
  • How developmental theory and pillar practices can enhance leadership, teaching and improve practice.

Monday, May 16, 2011

Making the Most “Sit and Git”, Richard Jones, Executive Director


We all have been there! I am referring to those large group presentation workshops that are all presenter talk to a passive audience. There are very few presenters who are so highly engaging that we enjoy listening to them for a long period of time. Our mind drifts; we think about other things and suffer through the presentation. Another weaknesses of large-scale workshops is that it assumes that everyone in the audience has exactly the same needs for information. When confronted with these situations, today we have the convenience of smart phones that we can browse the Internet, text our colleagues and friends, or even play games.

But large-scale workshops persist, not because they're effective but because they are efficient as a form of professional learning. We can serve large numbers of people and everyone gets the same message. This is important for establishing a common language around an initiative or communicating to an entire group personally in building a common vision. When confronted by a large-scale workshop, whether as a participant or more importantly as a presenter, here are some tips for making the most out of this “sit and git” session.
  • Create a Back Channel Conversation. Instead of having everyone use their smart phones for personal use, create a Twitter list or threaded discussion where participants can actively engage in feedback and share comments right during a presentation.
  • Smart Phone Polling. If you want to see how the audience is reacting or learning, set up a online poll that participants can respond to via smart phone with “real time” display of results.
  • Provide Frequent Movement. We all need to move. Our mind begins to drift when our body fails to move. If the session is long, be sure to put in movement breaks every 20 to 30 min., giving participants an opportunity to stand, move their hands stretch and stimulate their brains.
  • Turning to a Shoulder Partner. Avoid overloading people with too much information. After a concept or important piece of information is presented, ask participants to turn to a person next to them and restate in their own words what they've learned or the reactions to that new piece of information. When turning an audience loose to talk, be sure to have a specific chime or mechanism to bring people back together and end their conversations.
  • Share Materials. There are always more expensive materials around a particular workshop topic; share these materials in advance. But, don't expect everyone to read them in advance. Also share the materials afterwards so people can follow up and read more information. This may allow having a shorter presentation in providing information in written form.
  • Use Card Reflections. When people write, it reinforces their ideas. Give people cards on which to write their reflections. Actually collect these cards as an “exit ticket” to ensure that everyone has written down some information. Cards can also be used for participants to write down questions for the presenter and these can be collected, screened and answered as part of the presentation. Writing and reflecting are important learning tools that can be done within a large-scale workshop.
  • Follow-up Discussions. Whenever possible try to create an opportunity for audience members to move from a large-scale presentation to small-scale discussions. Train facilitators around the topic, so that they may lead small groups to discuss and reflect on a topic from the large-scale presentation.
  • Reflect and Write via Technology. It's important for individuals to have the opportunity to reflect. We often do this by writing on the handout and taking notes. However this can be extended into other forms of writing by using the technology. Create a wiki or threaded discussion that everyone has access to and continue to share thoughts around a particular topic.

Following some of these suggestions can enable us to have a better quality learning experiences both as a presenter and participant in “sit and git” sessions. Sometimes we can’t avoid a large-scale workshop is professional development activity. However, we can make it effective by having less sitting and more getting.