Archive for the ‘Featured Article’ Category

Building Positive School Climate: Needed Today More Than Ever

Posted on: December 14th, 2017 by Eileen Kugler No Comments

Are you seeing increased tensions among students? Do you hear name calling and see bullying more this year than ever before?

These are challenging times, where students hear hurtful comments in the media, or maybe at home as well. Since schools reflect our broader society, it makes sense that we are experiencing more hurtful interactions at school.

Creating positive school climate, where all students feel welcome and respected, takes intentionality. It’s more than a friendly hello as students arrive and welcoming signs around the building.

Of course, the first thing that must happen is to deal with any hurtful interaction on the spot. Christine Butson with Catholic Charities of West Tennessee advises teachers to talk with students as soon as they hear “things that aren’t right.” In her workshops for teachers, she says, “When you get punched, you say ‘ouch.’ That creates a pause and then you can talk about it.” She urges teachers to do the same when they see children emotionally in pain – take a moment and then begin a conversation.” *

But dealing with incidents is only a stop-gap. The underpinning of positive school climate is an understanding that the student body is made up of individuals with different ideas, perspectives and beliefs – and that’s a good thing.  We need to do more than emphasize how we are alike, which can be easy and comfortable. Sometimes, we need to get a little uncomfortable – helping students see that their perspective may not be the only “right” one, learning to value difference and moving away from disrespect, blame or pity.

We need to teach students to not only accept difference, but actually seek it out so they can learn from others. We need to teach them how to engage in dialogue where their goal is not to convince someone else that they are right, but to listen and learn from someone with a different perspective. That’s how students develop critical thinking skills. That’s how students learn to collaborate.

Are we all the same – or do our differences matter?

One of my least favorite classroom demonstrations – often coming up during Black History Month – is what I call the “egg activity.” A teacher cracks open a white egg and a brown egg, showing students that the inside of the eggs are the same. But is that the lesson we want to teach? I think that simplistic lesson focuses on the wrong message. We need to be willing to look for how we are different, and see that as an opportunity to learn from each other. More in my short video 

Even at an early age, students can learn to think beyond stereotypes and myths that permeate our society. Intentionally choosing books with anti-bias content is important. As Louise Derman-Sparks writes in her article on selecting anti-bias children’s books for Teaching for Change, children’s books “reflect the attitudes in our society about diversity, power relationships among different groups of people, and various social identities (e.g., racial, ethnic, gender, economic class, sexual orientation, and disability). The visual and verbal messages young children absorb from books (and other media) heavily influence their ideas about themselves and others.”

Rather than steering away from classroom discussions on topics that may be controversial, it is essential for our schools to create an environment where students learn to exchange diverse views that are based in facts. For example, far too few students learn about the complexities of immigration today, often leaving school with little more than a limited view based on stories of Ellis Island. Share My Lesson has excellent free resources on immigration for students at all levels, including a range of lessons from Teach Immigration. These can lead to rich and thoughtful classroom discussions.

Tolerance.org provides many resources, including a searchable library of diverse short texts, including informational and literary nonfiction texts, literature, photographs, political cartoons, interviews, infographics and more. Selections range from an excerpt from a book by Virginia Woolf, to speeches by Martin Luther King, Jr., to an article about Kennedy Nganga from Kenya who paints from a wheelchair. https://www.tolerance.org/classroom-resources/texts

Positive school culture is not an aside to academics, it is at the foundation of students’ ability to feel welcome and connected to school, and to their learning. In these days, it is even more important to help all students feel they are valued members of the school community who treat other members of that community with respect.

* More from Christine and other experts in my article in Educational Leadership, Supporting Families in a Time of Fear”

Eileen Kugler is a global speaker, trainer and award-winning author on diversity and equity in education. 

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Supporting Our Immigrant Families in a Time of Fear

Posted on: June 26th, 2017 by Eileen Kugler No Comments

The work of schools is to teach children. Yet schools do not operate in a vacuum. They reflect what is happening around them. And in many communities, immigrant families are living in fear, not knowing whether they will be able to remain in the country from day-to-day.

Teachers and counselors reported students weepy or disengaged. In some communities, student attendance dropped off with parents afraid to even bring their children to school.

In my work with diverse schools around the country, I’ve seen an impact that extends far beyond the students who may not have documentation. Even if a student was born in the United States, one or both parents might not have documentation. Even if both parents are legal residents, a close relative or friend is often concerned about immigration status. Even families with legal documentation are fearful of visiting family outside the United States, concerned that reentry requirements are in flux. And in our multicultural communities, even a student whose family dates back generations likely has friends with immigration concerns.

Schools can have an impact on students and their families today by taking intentional action:

Six Things Educators Can Do

* Make school a place where families feel safe, welcome and valued. Principal coffees, parent resource centers, and family-friendly school events send the message that the family has an important place at school. Provide opportunities for safe dialogue.

* Classrooms should be a place of stability and security for students. No matter what else is happening beyond school, students and families should know that teachers, staff and administrators are there every day to teach and nurture every child.

*Provide a nonjudgmental listening ear for families struggling with immigration concerns. Educators can help families sort through challenging issues and prepare documents, such as a Family Plan in case a parent is detained or deported.

*Be a resource, providing families with information about their legal rights and connecting them to social services and professional legal advisors.(Materials of family and school rights can be found on the AFT website.)

*Teach nonpartisan fact-based lessons on immigration, like those found on Share My Lesson.

Eileen discusses these issues in depth in Supporting Families in a Time of Fear in Educational Leadership.

Eileen Kugler is a global speaker, trainer and award-winning author on diversity and equity in education.

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Building Partnerships with Immigrant Families

Posted on: October 24th, 2016 by Eileen Kugler No Comments

EDUCATIONAL LEADERSHIP, Vol.64, No. 6

Because half of its parent population was born outside the United States, Annandale High School created a parent outreach program that transcends traditional approaches. Andrea Sobel and Eileen Gale Kugler Sylvia, a parent in Annandale High School’s Immigrant Parent Leadership class, presented to the class a problem she had encountered: “One of my stepdaughter’s teachers thought someone else did her homework. But the reason she is doing so well is that I am working with her at home.” Sylvia emigrated from Guatemala as a child and attended U.S. schools from 4th grade on. She speaks English well and is committed to helping her stepdaughter, who recently arrived from Guatemala.

“Call the teacher,” the leader of the class advised. “This is clearly a misunderstanding, and the teacher would want to know what is actually happening.” Sylvia was amazed: “You mean I can talk to the teacher? I felt I would be insulting her if I did.”

This snapshot illuminates one of the lessons that administrators, faculty, and parent leaders at Annandale High School in Virginia have learned through our Immigrant Parent Leadership Initiative, a focused effort to engage immigrant parents and nurture two-way partnerships with them. Even when immigrant parents are fluent in English or have attended U.S. schools, cultural barriers to involvement often remain.

Annandale High is a diverse school of 2,400 students in the suburbs of Washington, D.C. The school opened in 1954 when Fairfax County schools were still segregated, and its population remained largely middle-class and white until the 1980s, when immigrants flocked to the region. Today, students come from 84 countries and speak 50 native languages; more than 40 percent qualify for free or reduced-price lunch. Nearly half of the students’ parents were born outside of the United States.

Tensions in the school among different ethnic groups ran high in the early 1990s. The principal and faculty, with support from the district superintendent and school board, committed to making Annandale High a model diverse school. One of the fundamental goals of this effort has been to actively promote the involvement of parents from all cultures.

Education leaders in locales with expanding immigrant populations face a common challenge in engaging parents. When immigrant parents don’t respond to traditional parent engagement strategies, administrators and teachers often assume that these parents don’t care. In reality, most immigrant parents care intensely, but many misunderstand what is expected of parents in U.S. schools or do not know how to become more involved. In most countries outside the United States, the unspoken norm is that it’s the teacher’s job to educate a student and that participation from the parents shows disrespect for the teacher’s expertise.
Launching an Initiative
In an immigrant-rich environment, parent engagement strategies clearly must move beyond business as usual. From the inception of the Parent Leadership Initiative in 2004, school leaders at Annandale High, including established parent leaders, looked for new ways to connect with immigrant parents. The effort began with the recognition that new strategies to target the needs of the diverse immigrant community were called for. Simply translating flyers for current programs into Spanish and other languages would not be sufficient, nor could we use jargon like “Back to School Night” without explanation.

The school’s effort was significantly enhanced in 2004 with a $25,000 grant for an Immigrant Parent Leadership Initiative from theWashington Area Partnership for Immigrants (which was later extended for another two years on the basis of the successful permanent leadership structures Annandale developed). With support from its nonprofit partner, the Mid-Atlantic Equity Center, Annandale High began a comprehensive program to foster immigrant parent leadership, including:

Holding parent leadership classes—in English and Spanish—to empower parents to become leaders in their own families, schools, and communities.

Offering programs for parents from specific ethnic groups, held in Spanish, Korean, and Vietnamese.

Guiding teachers in action research to increase their understanding of parents from other cultures and their skill at developing partnerships with parents.

Opening a parent resource center. Annandale’s approach has been to develop meaningful partnerships with immigrant parents rather than to merely provide information or assistance. Teacher researchers conducted surveys and personal interviews with parents concurrently with the school’s launching of parent leadership seminars and outreach programs. Through these efforts, the school is learning as much from parents as parents are learning from participating more closely in school leadership.

Mutual Lessons Learned

Parents Need Support and Information Many immigrant parents expect their children to graduate and pursue postsecondary education, but they have limited knowledge of how to help their children reach those goals. Parents appreciate information from the school on student achievement, but they pay particular attention if the information relates directly to their child. “I get so much mail that sometimes I don’t pay attention to an envelope, even with a label from the school,” said one parent. “But if it is personally sent to me by my child’s teacher, I always read it.”

The Complexities of English Remain a Barrier

Many parents with knowledge of English still lack understanding of its nuances or the academic language used in schools. Students are often unreliable translators for parents and may screen information. Annandale’s immigrant parent leadership classes were taught in two languages: The school’s Hispanic parent liaison taught a class in Spanish and a longtime parent leader taught a class in English. Although a number of parents in our Spanish-speaking parent leadership class communicated well in English, they chose to attend the class taught in Spanish so that they could more fully understand the issues discussed.

As a result, Annandale came to realize the importance of the school’s five part-time parent liaisons, who collectively speak Spanish, Korean, Vietnamese, French, Hindi, Urdu, and Punjabi. The school began providing professional simultaneous interpretation at parent meetings and increased its emphasis on parent peer networks.

Cultural Differences Can Deter Involvement
At the first session of the parent leadership class in English, the parents—born in eight different countries from all parts of the world—described the school systems of their native countries. Not one of these systems encouraged parents to become actively engaged in the school. Even programs designed for parents can be uncomfortable for immigrants who don’t know the unspoken codes—from agendas run by Robert’s Rules to other parents’ shorthand speech that assumes knowledge of past events. But in leadership seminars crafted specifically for immigrants, parents expressed a new ownership of their school. “I have four children at Annandale High, but I was afraid to come into the school,” said a Vietnamese mother. “Now it is like a second home.”

Some Parents Are Eager to Take Leadership

In many communities, Annandale among them, the immigrant community itself has great diversity in language, culture, and socioeconomic status. Some immigrant parents are overwhelmed by adapting to the new culture and don’t have the means or extra time to participate in school partnerships; others are able and eager to become leaders in their children’s school, once they have a sense of how they could best contribute. Parents in the leadership class in English pointed out that typical school programs for immigrant parents offer basic information and are geared toward lower-level knowledge and skills. Many parents who might act as leaders avoid such programs. In contrast, parents in our classes were honored to be part of a leadership development program, and many took the responsibility seriously. Some now regularly attend our parent-teacher-student association board meetings. Others work with Annandale’s parent liaisons to plan parent programs or in the Parent Resource Center. A father from El Salvador now collaborates with the teachersponsor of Annandale’s Hispanic Youth Leadership Club.

Graduates of the leadership program expressed an interest in more advanced training. This led us to offer an additional level of training in the third year of the grant. Through this training, parents are taking on leadership projects of their own design, such as establishing immigrant parent groups within the school and community and improving recruitment for the school’s mentor program.

Because the leadership classes were school based, they provided parents with information and contacts that were immediately relevant to supporting their child in school. Presentations focused on such topics as motivating your child, planning for the future, selecting courses, and choosing a college. Parents talked with teachers, counselors, and parent leaders, and visited the library and career center.

A parent from Bolivia was proud that what she’d learned in the leadership class had enabled her to help her child. “My son told me he was given time to visit the Career Center, but he didn’t go,” she explained. “I told him he had to go the next day so he could find out about college and jobs.” Before attending the parent leadership classes, this parent did not know the Career Center existed.

Outreach Must Be Culture Specific

In addition to the leadership classes, the school targeted programming to the varying needs of its immigrant community. For example, the Korean parent liaison led a discussion on college admissions, which Korean families had expressed interest in. Programs in Spanish shared details on school resources, including materials available to both students and parents in the library and scholarship information in the Career Center.

As with all aspects of this initiative, traditional methods of publicizing these programs were not sufficient. The school found that fliers must be coupled with telephone contact and e-mail, if available. Immigrant parents appreciate the school’s automated telephone service, which sends out messages about school events in each of seven home languages. Participants in the parent leadership class helped us realize the effectiveness of posting notices in local foreign-language newspapers and distributing fliers at ethnic restaurants, markets, or other community venues. During the first year of the leadership program, Annandale advertised parent leadership classes through one flier translated into several languages; this strategy produced little response. The school’s Korean parent liaison completely revised the flier in Korean, included some information of interest to her community, secured Korean refreshments, publicized the event through fliers and the local Korean newspaper, and followed up with phone calls. More than 30 Korean parents attended the session.

Personal Relationships Are Key
The parent leadership classes were originally designed for approximately 25 parents, yet the actual class size of 10–15 turned out to be an advantage. Parents felt more comfortable in a smaller class and formed close bonds with peers from other countries. A Bolivian parent said she had felt isolated from the school, “like I was looking at things from a distance. Now I see that as parents we all share the same concerns and objectives.” When a mother from El Salvador discussed the insulting way a police officer had talked to a family member, a father in the class—a county police officer who emigrated from the Philippines—gave her his card. “If you ever experience anything like that again, call me right away,” he urged. “That’s the reason I became a police officer.”

For a diversity-rich school to effectively build long-term partnerships with parent leaders, those parents must experience personal contact beyond one or two interactions with a faculty member. These contacts need not be limited to school personnel; phone calls from other parents, particularly from the same culture, are probably even more effective. Members of the first class of immigrant parent leaders recognized this need for connection and helped organize phone trees within their communities.

Creating a Parent Resource Center Requires Outreach

Both Annandale faculty members and the new parent leaders expressed an interest in establishing a center for parents within the school that would provide information and welcome new parents. In October 2005, Annandale High opened a comprehensive Parent Resource Center that provides materials about the school, community services in several languages, and access to the Internet.

Because parents tend to casually stop by a parent center less often in high schools than they do in elementary schools, the school worked to increase the parent center’s visibility. Parent liaison offices were relocated to the center, and staff members hosted parent meetings there. This school year, Vida Sanchez, who had been the lead parent liaison, took on the new position of school-community liaison, coordinating programs for the school’s immigrant families and collaborating with community leaders.

As the first comprehensive parent center in Fairfax County’s 28 high schools, the Annandale High center has drawn a great deal of outside attention. The county government saw an opportunity to provide additional services to parents and other members of the community by collaborating with the school system. In 2007, a neighborhood center, coordinated by a community nonprofit agency, will open on the grounds of Annandale High School, working in conjunction with the parent center.

Emerging Changes

Immigrant parents are increasingly taking leadership roles in the school. Two of the five current elected parent-student-teacher association officials were born outside the United States. Graduates of the immigrant parent leadership classes are helping plan and lead a series of targeted parent programs, chosen on the basis of needs identified through phone surveys conducted by the school’s parent liaisons. Offerings include a basic computer class for Hispanic parents and a support group for parents who speak Hindi, Punjabi, or Urdu. School programs regularly provide simultaneous translation in several languages.

One of the goals of the initiative was to improve how teachers instruct immigrant students. Many faculty researchers involved with the initiative reported improvement in the academic achievement of their students as teachers became more skilled at connecting with immigrant parents. A group of teacher researchers is now working with the principal to weave the lessons learned into the fabric of the school. For example, at department meetings, faculty members have refined strategies for creating parent partnerships, for example, the best way to use interpreters when working with parents. Faculty members will also conduct a “welcoming walkthrough”—a procedure and accompanying checklist Fairfax County developed to evaluate how welcoming a school is to parents of all backgrounds.

As with any project that addresses the school culture as a whole, the support of the principal and administration has been essential. The school remains committed to partnering with immigrant parents, strengthened by its newly developed county and community partnerships. Continued progress will require introspection, evaluation, and change by all parts of the school community.
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Authors: Eileen Gale Kugler and Andrea Sobel
Eileen Gale Kugler (EKugler@EmbraceDiverseSchools.com), a speaker and consultant, led Annandale’s immigrant parent leadership class in English. She is the author of Debunking the Middle-Class Myth: Why Diverse Schools Are Good for All Kids (Rowman & Littlefield, 2002) and Executive Editor of Innovative Voices in Education: Engaging Diverse Communities (Rowman & Littlefield, 2012) Andrea Sobel (AndreaSobel1@gmail.com) is an education consultant. She was coordinator of the Annandale Parent Leadership Initiative and facilitated the advanced immigrant parent leadership class. Copyright © 2007 by Andrea Sobel and Eileen Gale Kugler All Rights Reserved
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Diversity Benefits Everyone on Campus

Posted on: April 7th, 2016 by Eileen Kugler No Comments

The Supreme Court is currently considering the issue of race and ethnicity in college admissions. While headlines are calling this an Affirmative Action case, it is that and much more. It will impact every student on campus.

It’s hard to dispute the research that shows that a diverse campus is better both academically and socially for all the students. In classrooms, students learn to think deeper, question more, and move beyond simplistic assumptions when they are challenged by peers with different life experiences and different perspectives. New research confirms that everyone who is a part of a diverse group is more creative and makes better decisions.  It only makes sense – if you are surrounded by people who aren’t limited by a common frame of reference, you see multiple ways to solve problems. There isn’t just one right answer to a complex problem.

On a social level, students aren’t just learning how to “celebrate” diversity on a superficial level of clothes and food. They learn to dialogue about critical issues, seeing nuances, not just polarizing extremes. They know what it takes to collaborate with people who act different, who think different than they do. They learn to be comfortable not just with those who are like them; but they develop a comfort with difference because they recognize that is when they are most vibrant.

Do colleges look beyond grades as they decide on who to admit? Of course they do. Does the band need some clarinets? Lucky Amelia for playing clarinet in the State Band. Are there lots of applicants from New Jersey, but few from South Dakota? For a college that touts having students from all over the country, the qualified applicant from South Dakota looks real good. Of course there are the spots for the legacy students, even if their grades aren’t up to dad’s or mom’s. And let’s not even go into preferences shown for someone with a great free throw or a record-breaking catch on the football field.

So where are the high-profile court cases about the student who didn’t get accepted because the spot was filled by an athlete? That’s just something we accept because there is a holistic view of what benefits the entire university. College athlete = winning teams = alumni donations and more applicants. Don’t whine if you don’t get in on grades alone because “everybody wins” when the team wins.

So why should race and ethnicity be out of the picture for a college that understands the value of a diverse campus? Why should colleges have to defend themselves from creating a diverse environment that benefits every student every day?

As the Supreme Court again looks at the value of admissions policies that consider race, the stakes are even higher than earlier reviews. I’ve been hearing from college officials for years who tell me something like this:  “We just had a racial incident on campus, something we’ve never seen before at this level. We’re not sure what to do.” In most cases, they did very little. Today, we are seeing the pot boiling over on campuses across the U.S. where students of color are no longer willing to feel unwelcome and unvalued on their own campus.

Professor Liliana M. Garces of Pennsylvania State University notes that a decision by the Court that limits universities’ ability to increase diversity on campus can increase the concerns that students of color are raising today.

“…declines in racial student body diversity can isolate and stigmatize students of color who are admitted and make it more difficult for institutions to create a welcoming campus environment for students of color.

It is not in the interest of our nation to force colleges to take a step backward and deprive their students of the lessons that can only be learned in a diverse setting. Without the benefit of diversity in their educational environment, students will be ill-prepared for the diverse workplaces that await them, particularly as our economy increases in global interconnections. Most important, do we want to deprive them the lessons of appreciation, respecting, and learning from a broad spectrum of fellow students? Let’s hope the justices can see this is an issue impacting every student, and our nation as a whole.

Eileen Kugler is a speaker, trainer and author strengthening diverse schools and communities.  An earlier version of this blogpost appeared in February 2013.