Sunday, November 24, 2013

On standardized testing, being "gifted" and the challenge of being teacher as parent...

            I was not a good athlete growing up.  No team ever won because of my participation.  Never did I feel the joy of crossing the finish line first.  In fact, one year in gym as I huffed and puffed through my third of four laps to complete the mile fitness test the gym teacher yelled, “alright, head back to the gym, Danielle is done.”  I guess he assumed I had to be on my fourth lap if the rest of class had finished so much sooner.  In seventh grade I played on the D volleyball team.  Did you know they field D teams in schools?  I used to beg that the ball would not be hit to me during softball.  I once won the game ball only because I agreed to go back in the game, reluctantly, after someone got hurt. So, like I said, I was not an athlete…  but I could rock any standardized test they threw my way.  I loved testing week at Bartlett Elementary.  Illinois was a big fan of the Iowa Basic which required losing morning instruction for a week straight as we read random isolated passages about how cameras worked or the history of movie theaters in America.  I knew I could expect hours of quiet challenge in which I would arise victor, not only because I would fall in the 96th percentile or above on all sections, but also because I would finish most sections with time to spare so I could sit back with my arms crossed as I watched my peers struggle to bubble in guesses for the last ten questions as the timer ticked closer to zero.  When I was in third grade I had to miss a Girl Scouting Christmas event to take qualifying tests to be considered for a transfer to a gifted school with full time advanced programming.  (FYI – My decision to not attend this school was entirely based on the fact that they were dissecting cow eye balls on the site visit day.)  When my friends bragged about the GS event and what I missed, I retorted with, “Well… at least I’m smarter than you.”  This attitude may have contributed more  to my limited social circle than my lack of athletic prowess, but I needed that identity.  I was smart.  I was good.  The test said so.
Having this odd emotional attachment to testing and test scores makes my dissertation topic fairly ironic.  I am studying the tests used to place students in reading intervention.  I argue that the tests often put the wrong kids in my class  - mistaking those with behavior issues or those with experiences outside the mainstream with those who have genuine reading disabilities.  I am finding that the act of testing and measuring takes a mental toll on teachers and students alike.  These scores become reasons for those outside to judge schools as failures, or even worse, for those who have little knowledge about the science and art of teaching to meddle where they don’t belong with policies and practices that will “SAVE OUR FAILING SCHOOLS”.  While at NCTE these past few days I sought out sessions that would fill me with knowledge and resources to support my literature review as I begin finally putting pen to paper for this final step in the PhD process.  Among the best of these resources was a speech by Alfie Kohn.  He has some pretty eccentric/controversial though refreshing ideas about public schooling and homework and grading.  Many would take issues with the suggestions he makes for American schools.  However, the statements he made about testing seem inarguably true to me.  He said that there is absolutely no reason to have a standardized test that ranks unless it was important to you that there be winners and losers.  And as long as we use percentile ranks to determine proficiency, someone will always fail.  That’s a simple truth.  It is necessary to forming a bell curve.  So really, everyone could be FINE and we would still have failing schools and failing students. 
To help you consider this truth, let me paint an analogy using the NFL.  Every NFL team is made up of individuals who were one of if not THE best players on their high school and college teams.  However, every season there are losers that are ridiculed by their inability to bring home wins.  Does this change the talent that brought them to the field?  No…  it is simply the result of competition.  Now I like a good football game, so I am not bashing competition for the right time and place, I just question it in the classroom.  What does it do to my kids who are forced out of engaging career-like electives to take yet another year of reading intervention?  What does it do to them to see another “below basic” on a piece of paper they are supposed to carry home to share with their parents?  I always wonder what happens to the kid who  learns about how percentile ranks work and then looks down to see the word one next to his name.  “You are the WORST reader who took this test…”  Many of the people watching Alfie Kohn alongside me were fired up and significantly more political than I am.  They wanted us to do something about these scores and the negative consequences they have on kids and schools.  Others pointed out that we are a society that loves quantitative numbers.  I pointed out that despite my research interests I take a strange satisfaction in knowing I did well on those tests and anxiously await my daughter’s scores despite claiming I won’t put much stock in them.
As the session with Alfie Kohn ended, I checked my email.  In one of the more serendipitous moments of my life, I opened it to find a letter from the gifted coordinator for my district.  It’s subject line said, “EEE students”.  I almost deleted it knowing that none of my students in reading intervention are “gifted” so I didn’t expect the information to pertain to me.  However, I clicked on it to stay in the Oakland loop and quickly figured out Avery had qualified for gifted services and has the opportunity to leave her regular classroom once a week to attend the gifted center where kids engage in multi-disciplinary units - very hands on experiences, that excite and engage.  I was immediately struck by the internal conflict of my pride and my resistance to participate in a system that perpetuates some of the things I hate about education.   Aren’t all kids gifted?  How can we explain to her why she gets to go?  How to we keep her in the mindset of valuing learning rather than the score?  How can I make sure she doesn't brag at school events about how much smarter she is than her friends?
I can’t say we didn’t know this was coming.  Despite my secret desire to give birth to a future athlete, it is probably not going to happen.  Look at their parents’ talents/interests… Avery spends her recesses writing and directing plays complete with scripts and costume/set designs.  Tessa cries and screams at the slightest discomfort.  (Though Maggie does love head butting peers and yells out ball anytime she sees a football!)  I have spent many moments thinking about what I would do when the news came that my children tested “gifted,” but in the end I didn’t think long.  We will send Avery.  She wants to go.  She has asked to go.  Sephus wants her to go.  If I am honest, I want her to go too.    I once asked a progressive professor what she would do if she had a child qualify for gifted programming.  She yelled at me like I was stupid, “I would send them!  And you should too!”  She went on to explain that what we ultimately want is the best educational experience for every child, and that included my own children.  I guess that’s my concern.  Why can’t all kids get EEE experiences every day?  Why can’t all kids get a high number attached to their biggest talents?

So now is the part where I normally end with some sum it up in a sentence advice for living.  I guess my continued belief that I have wisdom or that anyone would actually take it is the fruit of the confidence I got from scoring so high on all those tests all those years...  But I really have no advice - just questions.  If only I knew how to reset my mind and reform a system that I ultimately benefited from.  They don’t ask about that on the Iowa Test of Basic Skills… 

Tuesday, August 13, 2013

On change, loss, gain, and the here and now..

            Three years ago our district Language Arts Coordinator, Janet Tilley, sat us down at a back to school meeting to tell us she would be retiring at the end of the year.  As she finished up the announcement she shared, “All change involves loss.”  I wrote it down in a tiny notebook I was carrying around to get organized that year, and I have repeatedly stumbled across it since that day.  Each time I do I let it roll around my brain again.  When she said it, our district’s secondary reorganization which would eliminate junior highs and move us to the more standard configuration of  6th-8th middle schools followed by  9th-12th high schools was a distant reality.  Now, the official start is a mere 12 hours away.  Tomorrow I report to Oakland Middle School while over 25 of my respected colleagues will sit together as Battle Spartans for their first official back to school meeting, and I cannot get Janet’s words out of my mind. 
            I remember being in a psychology class during my sophomore year in college and reading that one of the wonderfully fascinating and frustrating things about being human is you can hold two completely contradictory thoughts in your head at once and vehemently agree with both of them.  I knew that there was a flipside to Janet’s words the first time I heard them.  If change involves loss, it must also involve gain.  And I am gaining so much this year.  I am insanely excited about what lies ahead.  We have amassed a dedicated OMS staff full of people who genuinely care about kids.  I am about to start my dream position.  I am department chair, which means I get to spend district money on books and cool pens while getting to be bossy in a sanctioned fashion J.  I am part of piloting the position of reading specialist which means that in addition to working with young readers, I get to serve as an instructional coach across all content areas in my building.  Repeatedly throughout my graduate program I have been asked what I want to do when I “grow up” and I always respond that I want to find a way to work simultaneously with students and adults learners, and this position creates the perfect opportunity for me to do so.  I am finally teaching a methods course at MU where I get to help future teachers discover how to best incorporate media literacy and talking to learn in the classroom – two of my favorite topics.  I was able to attend an OMS social tonight and see that though many friends moved on, many stayed behind, and we shared some hearty laughs today.  Plus, I can see the potential for so many new friendships and professionally fulfilling relationships. 
            See… so much to be so excited about… and yet as I drove home tonight, I could literally feel the choke in my throat that meant tears were threatening to spill.  It snuck up on me.  I was sad enough to cry before I even realized I was sad.  I drove home contemplating the truth in Janet’s words once again.  There was such a beautiful honesty in her willingness to lay the hard part of change out there for all of us to consider.  Being a teacher, you never get over the pang of the loss of summer and the changes it brings that we felt so prominently in childhood.  This summer it is hitting me especially hard as I am being inundated with change.  I am sending three ever-growing girls off to new schools/grades and day cares after long summer days together.  I am folding up tiny summer dresses for the last time.  I am months away from giving away all of our bottles.  And even though each age has brought more joy than the one before, a part of me will always long for those chubby thighs and toothy grins of an infant turning toddler. If all goes well, I am embarking on my last year as a PhD student.  I am figuring out how to work in a building without many of the people who gave me a reason to go to work each day.  All around me friends are experiencing new babies, new marriages, new jobs, new living situations and these big changes remind me we are on a fast train that doesn’t like to make exceptions for those of us who happen to drag our feet and pout whenever life threatens to become unrecognizable. 
These thoughts all ran through my head as I drove home with Tessa after our OMS back to school party.  She is four years old right now and is a perfect example of someone who embraces the joy (and perceived pain J) of life.  As we neared my neighborhood Right Here Right Now by Jesus Jones came on the radio.  She and I decided to turn off the air and roll down all the windows while we sang as loud as we could.  She asked if I would take the long way home so we could have a little more time together tonight.  I drove all through the streets of Vanderveen with little direction in mind.  I lived in the moment – “right here… right now.. there is no other place I’d rather be…”
All change does involve loss… and gain… it is our job to find ways to roll down the windows during that change and enjoy the here and now for all its scariness and glory.  I hope I can live that this year.  I hope I can grow while still respecting the past.  I hope I can watch my friends do the same. 

And to all my CPS friends who have played a large role in my ability to say I am happier now that I ever have been in my life – Happy first day tomorrow.  May we always find ways to enrich each other’s lives no matter where we are. 

Friday, June 21, 2013

On being married ten years...

                  “You take two bodies and you twirl them into one.  Their hearts and their bones.  And they won't come undone.”  Paul Simon, Hearts and Bones 
Sometime this past year, one of my good friends texted me and asked me why I never get mad at Sephus.  Never?  I responded.  I wanted to kill him twice yesterday and once since we woke up this morning.  (Okay – I was exaggerating, but marriage is HARD!  Wonderful… but hard.)  When I told her that, she wondered why I never complain or talk about it.  I guess I figured that getting frustrated was such a normal part of trying to navigate life as two that it hardly warranted mentioning. As I complete my tenth year of wonderfully hard commitment, I feel nostalgic and reflective. 
Sephus and I got engaged 11 short months after falling in love.  We were still in that goo goo, ga ga, stars in our eyes, drunk on love stage of our relationship.  We wanted to spend every minute together. We fell in that early version of love so fast; I think we mentioned marriage for the first time just two months in.  It was made of equal parts of these:
1)    Genuine connection through shared interests and values
2)    Overwhelming relief that someone had finally picked us (we were both known for being that good opposite-sex friend who would make someone so happy someday because we were so wonderful, blah blah blah so we were always crushing on someone who would not requite)
3)     Being hopeless romantics in love with being in love. 
 It felt amazing, but it was unrealistic.  You can’t maintain that for long.  Sometimes I miss it, or try to live vicariously through a friend on the cusp of it as she prepares for a first or second date, but I’m enough of a realist to know you can’t go back to that.  I have happily traded it in for something much more comfortable and boring.  Sometimes I tell people we were dumb to not wait it out a little longer, and really get to know each other, but really I think we were smart to jump in both feet first.  If you spend too much time getting to know someone, you will see the faults while you can still back out. I think the beauty of marriage is being forced to work through that hard stuff.  Running away is not a choice anymore. You can’t balk to avoid that hard conversation.  Despite the song, breaking up can actually be easy to do when you are dating.  I loved that marriage took away my permission to leave whenever a fight flared up. My mom once told me that you haven’t been married if you have never thought about divorce.  Growing up, one of my biggest fears was my parents splitting.  Mind you, I had no real reason to fear that, but I did.  So hearing her advice made me a little concerned.  Now I can relate to being so mad you take a moment to think what would life be like single.  Luckily, the daydream lasts about one second as I realize how absolutely crappy it would be! 
Life got hard after we got engaged.  We lost both of our grandmas in the months/days before our wedding.  His mom was first diagnosed with cancer the February before our wedding. In our first 18 months of marriage we lost his mother quickly and painfully.  Money was tight as Sephus completed his Master’s Degree during his first year of teaching. We survived an unplanned but much celebrated pregnancy that ended in miscarriage at 12 weeks.  Both of us lost relatives that we cared about. (I kept thinking we would attend a lot less funerals if we didn’t know each other.)   And just when we thought we were about maxed out on pain, we watched on as my little brother fought to heal from a house fire which resulted in a 45 plus day stay in the hospital.  Our personal emotional needs during these tough times took a toll on us.  I tried to repeat these sayings in my head “Marriage doubles your joys and divides your sorrows” and “We don’t know what we will face, but we know we will face it together.”  However, saying these greeting card clichés is easy, but truly forgiving and accepting each other’s inadequacies when we needed each other most was much harder. 
I have always loved the Paul Simon quote about marriage.  It sounds so romantic, especially sung by his soulful voice.  And I agree with the can’t be undone part, but the more I think about is as I celebrate ten years of togetherness, I think the first part of the quote speaks to the struggles many marriages face.  You can’t take two bodies and twirl them into one.  If you do, you will ultimately see yourself at the core of that one and assume the other one is being assimilated into your being.  When we get married, we are seeking another player in OUR lives.  Sometimes it is hard to remember that we are marrying someone who also has a life  - separate from ours…  with separate dreams and needs and preferences.  We need to appreciate each other’s separateness and work to bridge the understanding between our two minds, hearts and bodies.  That takes listening, and bending, and respecting, and loving. 
To me, marriage is about just making it work and agreeing to struggle through life together.  (Now I write all this with the caveat that some people are in truly damaging relationships.  And when they stop and ponder the divorce question they cannot say they are better off together.  I respect the courage it takes to admit that and do not write this as condemnation.)  The rewards are bountiless once you make that commitment.  It means having a co-coach to game plan your life with.  It means crawling into bed with someone each night so you can process your day in the quiet dark.  It means having a face to go with the pang in your heart brought on by every cheesy movie or love song.  It means sharing the load based on your strengths (read not having to pick lice out of hair because you don’t have the patience.)  It means someone to call you out.  It means surprise laughter as you get ready in the morning.  It means faith that someone else chose you once and would choose you over and over again given the choice. 
I think a more realistic quote on marriage is the Bible passage we had read at our wedding.  It appreciates the separate lives that join in one marriage in an attempt to make the journey of life more joyful and ultimately less challenging. 
Ecclesiastes 4:9
Two are better than one,
because they have a good return for their labor:
If either of them falls down,
one can help the other up.
But pity anyone who falls
and has no one to help them up.
Also, if two lie down together, they will keep warm.
But how can one keep warm alone?
How can one stay warm alone…

So Happy Anniversary Sephus! Here is to ten years of sharing labor, picking each other up and staying warm. 

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

On Mom Fails


Today I had a heart to heart with a good friend.  She and I lead relatively parallel lives and both take on way too much.  As a result, we often feel like we are doing much but little of it is done well.  I told her I sometimes feel like I am failing in every area of my life.  When I step back, I realize this isn’t true.  However, it made me realize we all fail on a regular basis.  Perhaps if we can commiserate together about these shortcomings and poke fun at our own faults, we can learn to live with them.  Hence, the top ten ways I routinely fail as a mom. 

1)    Sending Thank You Notes

Avery came home from school today with a Thank You card from a party she went to nine days ago.  Oh Crap, I thought – major fail.  I suck.  We didn’t even pretend we were going to write thank you notes this year.  Since I still have the blank Tiana cards from Avery’s Princess and the Frog birthday party (the year she turned four!), I decided to avoid the month of feeling guilty before too much time passed to make them relevant and decided to never even place them on my to do list.  When we got a thank you card from a girl who came to Avery’s party earlier this year I worried that we look ungrateful.  We aren’t – I promise!  We just decided to skip the formality.  I mean how sincere are thank you cards anyway.  Have you ever received one that said, “thanks for the PJs but my daughter actually has all the 24 months clothes she could use” or “I wish you would pick out toys that didn’t have so many little parts that get lost and/or become choking hazards for the baby.”  No – all thank you notes will assure you that your presence and gift were totally appreciated, so let’s all cut each other some slack and agree to skip this nicety – except for graduations, showers and weddings.  I’m not ready to let those go quite yet.   

2)    Breastfeeding

It happened again just this week…  While going over surgery instructions for Maggie’s tubes I had to publicly state that she is a formula fed baby.  “Does she nurse or take a bottle?”  FAIL!  It was an innocent question asked by a kind nurse, but I suddenly was filled with all the guilt and shame I have felt three babies in a row.  I feel this same shame when I shake up a bottle at the play place or the pediatrician’s waiting room.  I want to confess details that are nobody’s business to all moms in eyesight.  “Hi – you don’t know me, but I saw you eyeing my daughter’s formula.  Yes…  I know she is very young and this must look incredibly lazy to you.  It can actually be a lot of work - washing bottles, running to the store each week, comforting a baby when you forget her food source, apologizing constantly…  I actually wanted to breastfeed.  My daughters and I could never make it work.  My oldest lost 14% of her body weight because I refused to give her the rat poison known as formula.  She was eventually admitted to the pediatric unit for monitoring after I was convinced to feed her Enfamil from a finger feeder.  I still kept at it even after this.  One time a lactation consultant, my husband, and I all wrestled Avery for an hour and got her to take half an ounce.  And I STILL tried for the next two girls.  I pumped for 2.5 hours a day just to get 12 ounces.  Oh wait… you aren’t interested in this crazy rant from a stranger…”  I have the utmost respect for the sacrifice it takes to breastfeed, I just hope people try to understand why some of us can’t. 

3)    Recording Memories

I mean what is there to say here really.  This failure is pretty cliché.  I filled out the first 6 months of Avery’s five-year memory book.  I also wrote a weekly update in a journal about her.   This helps me remember her first steps, etc. I wrote in the first five pages of Tessa’s book and composed one weekly update.  I don’t even remember her first word.  I have not even opened Maggie’s book.  Today I realized she has been sitting really well for over a week now.  I suddenly wished I knew what day she mastered it so I could write in her book for the first time.  Then I realized that no one gives a crap about these things.  Barring physical disabilities, all babies learn to sit eventually.  Is anyone less fulfilled as an adult because they can’t tell you the exact date of this milestone?  Picture wise, I DO take them but never print them or pass them out.  Sometimes I feel bad about this.  Other times, I give myself a break.  Because of me, no one will have to deal with these printed pictures in days or years to come.  We have all experienced the moral dilemma that comes with recycling a birth announcement.  How can you put those little faces in the trash?  At the same time, what will you do with them years from now?  People will have no idea how this little darling is connected to our family.  Even pictures of your own family might overwhelm descendants.  For us, finding a picture of a great grandparent is such a rare joy and treat.  What will our future generations do with our abundant photos?  Sometimes we take ten pictures before we even leave for school!!! 


4)    Understanding PTA Politics

Oops!  I forgot the number one rule of being new to a group.  Lay low.  Figure out how it all works.  Learn the group dynamic.  Then you can infiltrate in year two.  I came on a little too strong with the PTA as of late and now I am seen by some as a complainer/griper/unwilling to help.  My suggestions came across as judgment.  That was never my intention.  Those of you who know me know this is not me.  Wish I could take this fail back! 

5)    Keeping up with Friday Folders/Homework

Last month, for three weeks in a row, I had to have Avery read her homework books to me on the way to school on Monday.  This is the ONLY homework she gets all week, and she gets in on Friday.  Therefore, we have ALL weekend to do it.  In the frantic morning rush I had to sign the homework sheet in the car and throw the books back at Avery in the car seat in hopes that the text was short enough to complete during the ten minute drive to day care.  I am a teacher (a READING teacher), so I don’t want to talk much more about this fail as it is pretty embarrassing.  God help us all in middle school. 



6)    Doing Recital Week Well

If you do not have girls, skip this section all together.  Thank your lucky stars that you can look like hell and still be a star on the baseball field, football field,  etc.  Some of the girls’ activities require massive amounts of primping before showing off your athletic prowess.  I grew up with brothers and quickly learned the power of being able to get ready in ten minutes.  It means you get to sleep more, read more, write more, etc.  I pity my friends who flat iron their hair for 30 minutes plus each morning.  Due to genetics, and a general unwillingness to care, I can walk out the door with wet hair and at least not look unkempt by the time school starts.  My daughters have the misfortune of being born into this general distaste for hair fixing.  As I watched all the pics show up on my facebook feed of perfectly curled hair for DRESS REHEARSAL!!!! I realized I was a failure once again.  I can master a ponytail IF the girls have wet hair, but that’s about it.  How am I now in charge of two heads of hair?  (Maggie is still bald thank goodness.) Please wish me luck in the weeks ahead for dance picture day AND dance recital day.  And if you really love me, maybe show up with a brush. 

7)             Keeping Track of Key Cards and the Like
Something I have been keenly aware of as of late is how incredibly physical parenting is.  In addition to being physically exhausting from lack of sleep, it also wears you out in the knees as you bend down to give baths, in your arms as you rock a baby who screams for three hours at a time, in our neck/back as you try not to move b/c said baby has finally stopped crying.  Another part of parenting that is physical/tangible is all the stuff that comes with it.  Being on my last baby, my eyes light up every time Maggie outgrows an outfit or device as I imagine these items leaving my home.  I can’t keep of my own stuff let alone all their stuff.  Just this past week we lost a tap shoe (note above fail and do the math), most of our hairbands and a library book.  This kind of losing is common in my cluttered life, but this issue has taken on a new urgency in the form of THE DAYCARE KEYCARD.  (Imagine dramatic sound effect in the background.)  After a year of promising, they finally installed the key system at daycare.  I should be glad for this safety measure.  Instead I am made to feel like an ass on a regular basis.  As I pull up to the building most mornings I am suddenly my high school self on the day I forgot my homework…  “How can I get around it this time?” I think.  I duck in my car until someone I know pulls in or rush out leaving the kids behind to offer to hold the door for someone with full hands.  They remind me that they aren’t supposed to let me in, but they will.  I suddenly feel like a mother begging for food in shame.  I am powerless to this possessor of the key.  This fail sucks because it is so public. 

8)    Laughing at the Wrong Times

My kids are funny.  They have these crazy personalities and are masters at language.  At least once a day I laugh when I should discipline.  Other times, I laugh when I should show sympathy.  Avery will be throwing her clothes around her room yelling that I just don’t understand her and I bust up.  I wish I had some really good gems to share, but my brain is starting to get fried and I imagine I have lost a few readers somewhere around page two anyway…

9)     Letting Children Chew on Things they Shouldn’t
Somehow I missed the mommy class telling me to live in constant fear for my child’s safety.  I am pretty hands off in this department.  I mean, we use car seats and all, but we don’t stay home from a party because a distant cousin of the host might have the stomach flu.  We let the kids explore outside with some freedom.  And…  when our babies are really fussy we let them chew on things near us.  Sometime this is the end of a bottle of lotion or our dirty fingers and one time, it was a chicken wing bone…         
            My worst mom fail ever probably came when Tessa was nine moths old.  Both Jon and my grandpa were in the ICU on New Year’s Day and the cousins decided to get away from it all for a bit and grab dinner.  Tessa was eagerly eyeing a chicken wing bone.  Avery used to love to chew on rib bones so it seemed harmless.  All of a sudden the bone was missing.  Tessa looked a little red in the face, and I lost it.  I screamed (apparently quite loudly) “she is choking on a chicken bone.”  If you are unaware of the multitude of sounds in a restaurant, you will realize them if you ever cause an entire establishment to go silent.  The clinking of glasses, dinging of silverware, scratching on an order pad and general conversation buzz all disappeared and were replaced by wide gaped mouths and fearful stares.  I threw Tessa to my friend Treena who is a doctor.  She tried to explain to me that Tessa was now crying which meant she could breathe, but I could not hear her through my terror and very public hysterics.   Luckily, I soon found the bone in the sleeve or her sweater and was able to announce to the entire room that she was okay, and they could get back to business.  At least we can laugh now… 

10)                        Evaluating Myself on a Regular Basis

And my number one fail (Drumroll please) is caring for more than two seconds about any of the items above.  I am going to excuse myself for all that listed and more.   I hope you will do the same and share some of your best fails with me!