TeachingTolerance Magazine was first published in 1993, making it one of the earliest publications in the field of multicultural education. The award-winning publication provides timely articles to make educators think deeply about the issues that impact K-12 schooling.
Jeff was the Senior Curriculum Specialist and Writer for Teaching Tolerance Magazine for 7 years, from 2004 to 2010. During these years the magazine won numerous awards, including Periodical of the Year from the Association of Educational Publishers. The Teaching Tolerance films that Jeff consulted on and wrote curriculum guides for have won Academy Awards and Emmy Awards. Rigor + Support = Success is one of many feature articles Jeff wrote for Teaching Tolerance.
Rigor + Support = Success
Teaching Tolerance Magazine, Issue 29, Spring 2006 | One-sixth of American children live in poverty. Experienced teachers offer a formula for change.
By Jeff Sapp | Curriculum Specialist/Writer, Teaching Tolerance Magazine
West Powellhurst Elementary School * Portland, Ore.
A young girl washes her hair at the water fountain, grooming in the hallway as if it were her bathroom at home. West Powellhurst Elementary is in the lowest socio-economic sector of the Portland metropolitan area. About 80 percent of the 500 students get free or reduced breakfast and lunch. More than 50 percent of kindergarteners and 1st-graders - recent immigrants from Russia, Ukraine, Romania and Bosnia - are learning English for the first time. “We’re in a changing community,” says West Powellhurst 5th-grade teacher Lisa Oglesby. “Our school is now surrounded by meth houses that could blow up during school hours. This is where our students live.”
Toussaint Academy of the Arts and Sciences * San Diego, Calif.
As Jeff Heil left his home in downtown San Diego every day, he noticed a group of teenagers hanging out at a warehouse-like building across the street. He saw an intimidating guard at the door and always wondered, “What did those kids do to get locked up in there?” One day his curiosty got the best of him, and he asked. It was a school for homeless teenagers. The Toussaint Academy of the Arts and Sciences opened its doors in 1992 to provide housing to homeless teenagers ages 14 to 17. TAAS provides an on-site-high school, dormitories and supportive services to assist homeless teens on their journey to independence and success. Hell now has taught at the school for the past eight years. “My goal is for the students here to love education, to love school without knowing they love it,” says Heil. “The school has 45 homeless students. Well, truth is, this is their home as well as their school.”
Orange Glen High School * Escondido, Calif.
“Escondido used to be about 65 percent white and 35 percent Latino,” says veteran teacher Katherine Dooley. “Now it’s 100% poor.” Dooley has been teaching at Orange Glen High School in Escondido, Calif., for 25 years. She has seen the school population shift to 80 percent Latino, 3 percent Black and 17 percent white. The common demographic, though, is this one: Orange Glen students come from low-income families where parents’ education often ended in grade school. Many are from single-parent, single-income homes. When asked if Orange Glen students typically become the first generation to attend college in their families, Dooley quietly responds, “They are first-generation everything.”
According to the Children’s Defense Fund, 17.6
percent of this nation’s children live in poverty - about
one of every six children. The numbers are rising, and,
alarmingly, the number of children living in extreme
poverty - families with incomes at or below 50
percent of the poverty line - is rising even more
dramatically. They live in cities, towns and rural
areas. More than 30 rural counties in 11 states,
for example, have poverty rates higher than the
poorest big cities. Other factors also come into
play, including race and ethnicity, class and
immigration status. Fifty-eight percent of
children of immigrant families, for example, live
in low-income families, compared with 35 percent
of children of native-born families.
Teaching In Poverty
Some teachers find themselves teaching impoverished
children by happenstance. Others have been recruited, with
various incentives, specifically to work in high-poverty areas.
But are they equipped to teach children in poverty? And what might help them succeed? Teaching Tolerance visited three schools that succesfully work with children from impoverished backgrounds. Educators in each school offer a glimpse of what works.
Some have created their own programs. Others draw from established programs. In the end, their words echo each other, focusing on the motto of Advancement Via Individual Determination, or AVID, a school-based academic support program for grades 5 through 12: Rigor plus support equals success.
Rigor.
Support.
Success.
Not the words usually uttered when people speak of children in poverty. And maybe that’s part of the problem.
A Rigorous Road
Consider rigor, the first factor in the AVID equation. Students from impoverished backgrounds need structure, routine, challenging work and rigorous demands.
“We’re blunt in AVID,” says Katherine Dooley of Orange Glen High School in Escondido. “Education is a way out of poverty. The goal is that you’re going to get into a four-year university, and that is going to change your life.”
Repetition, too, plays a vital role. It took Dooley some time to learn that lesson, feeling frustrated on the third and fourth times she’d repeat instructions and a student still wasn’t getting it.
“Finally I just began repeating it four, five, six and even seven times until they did,” she says.
Another sign of rigor: Dooley links AVID students with gifted and talented students in the same courses. “AVID students need socialization. Left alone, they use a very informal discourse with me like, ‘Yeah.’ I tell them they need to say, ‘Yes.’ I want to build their cultural capital. I owe them that as much as knowing the derivative of something.”
Of the eleven AVID teachers at Orange Glen, six are Advanced Placement teachers, including Dooley, who teaches AP calculus. This, Dooley feels, is another important tenet of working with children in poverty.
“You don’t lie to them,” she says. “You tell them it is very hard work.”
Rigor, too, is at the core of TAAS’s success. At the school for homeless teens in San Diego, curriculum is not limited to math, science and the arts; an array of social rules and behavioral expectations complements the more conventional academic challenges. Student success in abiding by school rules is rewarded with points they can use to purchase items in the school store.
“The rules and structures are important because typically people who are homeless live in a world void of structure,” says Scott Gross, who facilitates trainings on poverty for The Village Training Institute of San Diego. “To be successful in society, people need to be able to operate in structured environments. TAAS gives students an opportunity to practice that structure.”
The Structure Of Support
On any given day at West Powellhurst Elementary in Oregon, 10 parents speaking three different languages can be found reading to kids in the library. This is Raisa Balashov’s English Language Learner Parent Read Aloud Program, now in its sixty year. The program encourages parent partnerships with the school, involving families in their children’s educations. “Relationships are paramount,” Balashov says.
The reading program is just one of the supports the school offers. Others help impoverished students learn skills and rules they’ll encounter in the professional world. In Jason Adam’s 1st-grade classroom, a stuffed
dinosaur serves as a “talking stick.” Only the student holding the dinosaur is allowed to speak, helping children develop more formal social skills. In Annie Falconer’s 2nd-grade class, students use an appointment book to pair up for group work. guided encouragement also helps students improve social behaviors. When Sina is bothering her neighbor, for exam;le, Falconer calmly says, “Sina, can you make a better decision right now?” Teachers never raise their voices to students at West Powellhurst, another model of respect. In Meghan McLaughlin’s 4th-grade classroom, students make presentations about what they have learned over the course of the school year. In response, classmates fill out slips of paper giving them kind, specific feedback. Feedback sentences begin with such phrases as, “Perhaps maybe next time you could…” or “It was helpful to me when you…”
For Dooley, at Orange Glen in Escondido, Calif., support starts before the first bell rings and doesn’t end when the final bell rings.
“I keep my room open late because they can do their homework in here with me,” she says. “This space is important for that reason. Also, I teach them to work in groups so that they can help and tutor each other. And that’s just what happens in the late afternoons in here. Students are in cooperative groups, naturally tutoring each other. They only come to me if they’ve exhausted all other resources.”
In reiterating AVID’s higher-education goal, teachers talk bluntly with students about what obstacles stand in their way. Dooley asks students, “What’s our biggest obstacle now? And what are solutions to get past it?” Dooley constantly helps students understand they are in charge of their lives.
As Dooley speaks about overcoming obstacles, a student named Jesus bursts into the classroom. A senior, he’s there to tell Mrs. Dooley that he just received another scholarship, bringing his total to $20,000. He is off to Berkeley in the fall.
Earlier, a former students of Dooley’s dropped by for a visit. He had just finished his second year at Chico State. He and Dooley gave each other a big hug. “Are you getting smarter?” she asked. “Yes,” he replied. “I told you that you would!” she exclaimed.
At TAAS in San Diego, Jeff Heil is frustrated when he sees adults lover academic expectations for his students because they are homeless.
“Our students need safety, respect and high expectations,” Heil says. “They don’t need charity, but opportunity.”
Celebrating Success
Given such opportunity, TAAS students excel.
The school is gaining a reputation as a hotbed of aspiring filmmakers. Two years ago, a TAAS student-produced film, Runaway, ran away with the grand prize at the San Diego County Innovative Video in Education competition. The film went on to garner a nomination in the 2003 Syracuse International Film Festival. This spring, another film, Shadow, written and produced by a TAAS student, received the IVIE award in the Social Issues category.
Bolstered by success in a competition that draws
entries from wealthy school districts, TAAS students
learn that drive and intelligence are not tied to
socio-economic class.
That’s true at West Powellhurst, too, where students’
reading test scores are off the charts. In April 2005, the
school won a Celebrating Student Success Award as one
of 12 schools in Oregon that over-achieve. Ninety-five
percent of the children in the school - including ESL
students - passed the state 3rd-grade test. Typical scores
of other schools in the Portland run in the low 80s.
In the end, the underpinnings of teaching students in
poverty are the hallmark of any good educator; create an
emotionally safe environment where students have a sense that the classroom is a family, and offer academically rigorous school work with the structure that supports success. For educators working with children in poverty, these cornerstones need to be firmly and deliberately laid.
Dooley sent 56 seniors off to a new future last year. She hopes the ripple will be felt by the world. “I always urge them to get out and vote,” she says. “Be political! And remember when the revolution comes, I was on your side.”
A poster quoting Cesar Chavez in Heil’s room supports the concept of revoltion as well:
“Once social change begins, it cannot be reversed. You cannot un-educate the person who has learned to read. You cannot humiliate the person who feels pride. You cannot oppress the people who are not afraid anymore.”
Illustrations by James Steinberg
Illustrations by James Steinberg
Illustrations by James Steinberg
AVID Supporters Help Students Find Success
Advancement Via Individual Determination, or AVID, prepares students for college eligibility and success. It seeks to level the playing field for low-income and other students who will become the first in their families to attend college.
When Orange Glen High School’s demographics shifted from middle-class to poor, Katherine Dooley and a handful of her colleagues in Escondido, Calif., teamed with AVID, a local program that has now gone global.
One of AVID’s most impressive indicators of success is the rate at which it sends students to four-year colleges. More than 70 percent of AVID students were accepted into four-year colleges last year.
How is it possible that AVID succeeds so dramatically?
“Constant connection,” Dooley says.
AVID teachers don’t just see students for an hour and a half a couple times a week. AVID students are with Dooley every single day for four years.
“This long-term connection with kids is an integral part of helping them succeed,” she says. Dooley sees students supporting each other emotionally, tutoring each other academically and spending considerable time in her classroom.
This safe space is vital for student success. “They live in here,” she says.
Learn more at www.avidonline.org.
Resources
Literacy with an Attitude: Educating Working-Class Children in Their Own Self-Interest ($23.95), by Patrick J. Finn, is for the educator concerned about critical literacy. Finn’s work follows Brazilian educator Paulo Freire’s work in teaching for liberation.
ISBN# 0-7914-4285-3
State University of New York Press
(518) 472-5000
www.sunypress.edu
Where We Stand: Class Matters ($16.95), by bell hooks, succinctly explores the myth of why poverty in America has a black face when most of the poor in America are white.
ISBN# 0-415-92913-X
Routledge
(800) 634-7064
www.routledge-ny.com
Other People’s Children: Cultural Conflict in the Classroom ($16.95), by Lisa Delpit, explores the cultural and communication clashes between the way white teachers educate and the way children of color learn.
ISBN# 1-56584-179-4
The New Press
(800) 233-4830
www.thenewpress.com
Learn more about The Toussaint Academy of the Arts and Sciences, part of St. Vincent de Paul Village in San Diego, Calif. St. Vincent is one of America’s most highly respected, creative, innovative and responsive providers of opportunities and services to the homeless.
www.fatherjoesvillages.org
www.toussaintacademy.org
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