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Tag: school reimagined

Education Re-imagined and School Reinvented- Part 2

The webinar is presented by Greg Bamford and Tara Jahn. I just downloaded Jeff’s posting on the Shifting Our Schools podcast of episode 124 entitled “Design for Resilience Framework for the Future of Schools.” Here is a blog post that goes with the webinar. The post offers helpful and clear points to consider as school leaders prepare for the coming school year.

VS – Calling All Consultants!

Where there is a need, there is opportunity. I am Captain Obvious with the idea that educational consultants, whether as individuals or as companies, have a worldwide market of schools who need their services to dial up their virtual school game. I can see a consultancy company offering a full continuum of differentiated “how to do virtual school programs” based on recent experiences and needs of international schools. I am guessing the consultancy would be done virtually, with the potential of in-person follow-up at some point down the road. Even schools like mine that nailed virtual school could benefit from designers coming in to help us go to the next level in our virtual offerings.

Following Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs approach adapted to virtual school, a school like mine is not that far from actualization. In contrast, lower-level schools might need essential foundational work on setting up systems from HOS communication to parent relations to teaching/learning platforms. I can see a consultant offering a range of offerings bringing in the distributed expertise of his/her team’s counselors, instructional technologists, curriculum designers, communications team, etc. As I have written, I would really push the need for wellness and the human touch (i.e., community building) into the consultancy offerings.

Photo by Austin Distel on Unsplash

Education Re-imagined and School Reinvented

Several leaders in education are coming together to “re” how we do school. Steve Hargadon continues to find ways to help us rethink how we do school. I wrote previously about his Learning Revolution website which now has a vodcast series on reinventing school with guests diving deep into various topics. The WISE platform will soon run its second conference on the topic of Education Disrupted, Education Re-imagined. Three heads of schools here in Vietnam recently were interviewed to share their insights about the future of education. I also need to note that obviously, folks have been forever trying to re-imagine schools. The silver lining of the current crisis is the disruption that is making so many wake up to how we need to change how we do school. 😉

I chatted with our instructional coaches over the past week to get their take on what our version of school will look like when we start up again in August. How re-imagined and reinvented we will be they do not know but they have some ideas peculating. What we do know is that our staff and administrators have really handled virtual school, the home lockdown, and the school reopening, and now are now doing their best to cope with the lockdown of not being able to leave Vietnam this summer. Looking to August.  we will come together under very different circumstances than in previous years (see VS – Coming Out the Other Side post).

My take on how to approach the coming school year is to put on our designer caps to first document what the needs of our stakeholders will be with the strong possibility that we might need to be very fluid in moving from regular to virtual and back to regular school. The social and emotional strains must be acknowledged. As we grow our lists of needs we can then begin to work backward to design the systems and protocols that can help us meet those needs.

I would add that this will be a time for limited “well that is the way we always did it!”- TTWWADI thinking. If there ever is a time to support your innovators and problem-solvers to come up with new approaches and pilot them, it will be in the coming school year. While I write that yes, we need systems and protocols to be efficient and productive, we also need to follow the School Retool approach of trying a variety of approaches to see which ones have the most traction.

We also need to be a bit careful to not engineer too much in how we approach a possible hybrid school offering. Too much trying to make things fit a system can take away from the energy that goes with being creative and collaborative. I can say that I saw a great deal of energy from our teachers during the first week of virtual school- especially from our creators and ideators. We then needed a couple reasons to streamline and automatize our delivery. Over time energy levels went down for a variety of reasons but one in my mind was that our teachers were too routinized and missing out on the normal adaptations and creation that come from running daily face-to-face lessons.

Thus we need to find other ways during virtual school to keep the creative juices flowing to keep our energy levels rising. 🙂

Photo by Max Felner on Unsplash

Virtual School – August Version

Which phase of virtual school are you in now?  2.0 3.0 4.0

How will your school prepare for the likelihood that either at the start or a month or two into the new school year you will need to go virtual again? What will your priorities be now that you have some experience with virtual school?

My school just completed three months of virtual school. Our students returned to school this week. Looking forward, we will need a lot of design time to be ready to up our game to potentially roll out virtual school during the coming school year. Our teachers and administrators did an incredible job delivering our curriculum virtually.  Yet, I think we can sharpen the saw of our pedagogy to do an even better job in helping our students reach the learning goals of our curriculum. We need to stick with the mission of our school and the learning outcomes of our normal curriculum. In the case of our elementary division, this means teachers designing learning experiences around concepts and HOTS often delivered through project creation. Thus we will need to put on our designer caps to replicate virtually what we normally do face to face. I hit on this topic a little in the VS – Coming Out the Other Side post.

As for a mechanism to do the planning, I would either work with my current VS Design Team idea to allocate time for August planning or possibly create another team of interested innovators to start the design process. As mentioned in previous posts, I would continually update the wellness section of the parent portal to provide families with strategies to help with their wellness.

My main drivers continue to be the wellness of all stakeholders as we try to humanize virtual schools as much as possible. This would include a mindset of finding even more ways to build community whether through collaborative Project-based Learning, ongoing class community meetings, or whatever activities that bring students together.

A second focus would be on finding ways to be as efficient and productive in delivering the learning experiences. Teachers cannot spend 8 hours a day responding to students through tech platforms that call on teachers to respond to every student’s post. The fatigue factor is just too much. Sustainability over many months of virtual school needs to drive our thinking. I would also look to find ways to bring innovation into the process to support these two focus areas. And I would continue to find ways to support the most creative teacher designers to pilot some new approaches.

A third ongoing focus is to continue to provide resources to support community members with their PERMAH. We often focus on the H with physical and mental activities that can be shared via the Parent Portal. But wellness as PERMAH demonstrates is much more than meditation, exercise, good sleep, and a healthy diet.

One of my favorite ways to help students with their thinking and connection-making is to use the visible thinking routines from Harvard’s Project Zero. The educators at Project Zero recently consolidated the thinking routines and other tools for learning into two new sections of their site. One section is for the thinking routines and the other is for strategies to use at home in support of the virtual school. I add in my Web Resources for Learning Thinking Routines section with technology supports as another toolbox where teachers can find practices that can be used for virtual school.

VS – Coming Out the Other Side

A Hybrid Approach

What will our world be like coming out the other side of the COVID-19 crisis? At every level from the planet as a whole to individual nations to communities to individuals, this is the question we are starting to ponder. At the moment we cannot really start to see the picture until we get some more data on the processes that nations might follow in trying to take the initial steps out of lockdown life. It looks like China will be our first model to learn from.

Looking specifically at education, what are the pathways forward first in reopening and then moving into sustainable delivery of services at the start of the next school year? An obvious adaptation is that schools must be prepared for a future of providing virtual schooling. This is something we bought into fully at HKIS when we reopened after SARS. Each year we would run a week of practice virtual school in which teachers moved their instructions and learning materials fully online.

Yet there is more to the picture than being either fully opened or virtual. There is an in-between hybrid approach that schools could be providing. Looking specifically at international schools in August, there is the possibility that some parents simply are not going to want the health of their children to be at risk by sending them to regular school if schools do in fact open normally. There is also the case of families and staff who cannot return due to visa and/or lockdown restrictions.

So what does this mean? It could be that some international schools adapt to this stakeholder group by offering ongoing virtual school. Without going too in-depth on this, we need to look at the possibility for elementary schools, for example, to have at least one teacher at each grade level who would be the virtual school teacher. In discussing this with a colleague we concluded that it is just too much to expect teachers to manage their regular classes all day to then facilitate the learning of virtual students.

The specialist teachers from PE to the arts to the librarian also would be providing instruction. But there are not enough of them in my school for example to designate some of them as full-time virtual teachers. This challenge will need some thought. Perhaps some international schools might share virtual specialists?

Another hybrid possibility is with the students who are flourishing during virtual school who really benefit from having more control over the place, pace, and path which many identify with personalized learning. These self-reliant and independent students are also sometimes the more quiet students who find a voice in blended and virtual learning environments. Perhaps schools might offer a pathway for these students that involves virtual learning of core subjects with their coming to campus for the arts and PE classes, life skills, and afterschool co-curricular learning opportunities.

Another angle on this hybrid model is that it allows schools to offer more flexibility and a broader offering of services, especially in the competitive world of international education. We are hearing stories of lower-tiered international schools that have been cutting wages of staff leading to low morale and/or dealing with parent groups unhappy with their virtual school offerings. Those schools in a capitalist market should see fewer applications for the coming school year. The stronger schools that provide quality virtual school learning should find more demand for enrollment with the understanding that across the board the lower economy might decrease the overall size of the applicant pool. It will become a reality that some of the local parents will need to move their students to public schools. And there is also the case to be made that some of the lesser schools with lower tuition still might pick up some transfer students from the more established and higher-cost competitors with cost being the primary driver for some parents.

Another possibility is that the schools that offer a dual-track approach offer parents a choice when the potential threat of COVID-19 cases growing occurs. The parents with students in school could move their children into the virtual school track as the school remains open if they are not forced to close by the government.

Lots to think about and there are probably many other permutations as international school leaders look at how they will adapt and compete for students in the coming school year.

The Humanity of Schools

I was talking to a teacher who is moving on to a new international school next year. It is a school that also interested me in reading about their approach to teaching and learning. They call their teachers “designers” which is the term that I have used over the years in describing teachers as architects designing and facilitating learning.

I explained that I will be interested to learn how her school which opens in August will prepare for virtual school. Will they focus on the tools? Will they see pedagogy coming first to be supported by the right tools for the task? But mainly, will they see virtual school preparation being about designing ways to support and connect the humanity that is at the center of our school learning communities? I am intrigued to learn how a community of designers forming a new and vibrant school will respond to the possibility of school closure just as they are opening up for the first time.

We will see.

Not a Normal Start

Getting back to the question of what will things look like for international schools coming out the other side of the pandemic, I am thinking a great many of the stakeholders in schools will not be where they usually are energy-wise at the start of the new school year. The social and emotional toll of going through the loss of normalcy in teachers’ personal and professional lives cannot be ignored. The students and their parents will have gone through the process of changing roles and the fatigue of home isolation and seemingly never-ending virtual school.  The emotional piggy banks for so many are low at this point with big questions of what summer travel will look like if it takes place at all.

A parallel storage area of sorts is our capacity to pump out adrenaline that so many have needed to call on, again and again, to work through the challenges of the moment during virtual school. I think of the medical practitioners who drained their energy banks and survived on the adrenaline and last vestiges of their hope and care for others. As we head into the fall and a new school year, our teachers and support staff will, I think, struggle to push through the weariness and fog of mental and emotional fatigue, if lockdowns continue and virtual school is in session.

With the possibility that summer travel could be curtailed due to travel bans, many might not be able to return to their home countries to be with their loved ones. They will also miss out on their normal summer recharging rituals (e.g. going to the beach cottage, attending baseball games, special summertime meals, etc.). The effect of so much loss will be deep.

This makes me feel that international school leaders need to take a very realistic look at their expectations for the start of the new school year. What comes to mind is the need for a huge focus on the normal class community building that occurs with the start of the school year. Emphasis needs to be placed on doing activities that are fun and energizing that help build bonds of connection between students and teachers. I can see the need for taking on fewer academic learning outcomes building in more time for students to work on tasks with depth that helps build their confidence and connection with others.

The reality is that the coronavirus might return in full strength in the fall. With this in mind, we need to be very intentional about recharging everyone’s batteries which will probably be lower than normal coming in. A focus on wellness will need to be front and center going forward which can be supported by having a wellness focus group come together to design both short and long term small initiatives to help design a “wellness toolkit” for individuals, teams and the community. A main tool of the wellness toolbox can be creating and implementing personal wellness plans. The plans can be based on engaging the character strengths within the PERMAH pillars. Staff members could find partners to coach each other in following their wellness plans. A full menu of self-care strategies should be put together with some designated for the individual to provide for him/herself and others provided by the school (e.g., gym memberships, on-campus yoga, and fitness providers, flexible virtual teaching from home or school, ongoing personal wellness PD, etc). And of course, there should be a focus on team wellness with support strategies in place.

An additional support effort can be offered by counselors in partnership with whoever manages the professional learning at one’s school. I can go on and on about “personalizing PD” away from the old sit and git one size fits all but I won’t as we covered it a few times in my old podcasts. The bottom line is wearing my instructional technology cap would be to design a user needs assessment mechanism as in surveys for the team meeting check-ins by admin and counselors to having wellness partners taking each other’s “well-being temperatures” especially around mental health. From this data and that of individuals’ knowledge of Positive Psychology, a menu of learning and self-care opportunities could be developed for face-to-face and online truly personalized for individuals’ needs.

This preparation and ongoing efforts hopefully can delay and offset to some degree the eventual fatigue that we have seen arise these past few months of virtual school. I can see the normal week of PD for returning and new staff focusing less on curriculum and logistics and more on making time to get people together to have fun and nurture our social connections. I also can definitely see a daily afternoon sporting event for interested players with cheering onlookers. Fun and light games like cornhole, bocce ball, and croquet along with beverages and food should become a mainstay way to end each day.

The need for frequent and transparent communication with parents and staff is more important than ever, especially with low batteries and potentially declining morale. Parent communication is a given these days with schools activating their crisis management plans. Our leadership has one voice and has very clearly communicated messages to parents. Just the simple numbering of the emails is a value-added protocol.

Staff will need to know where things stand with enrollment, travel restrictions, and other factors that can affect their contracts. My experience in Israel during the first Gulf War, in Saudi Arabia with a terrorist attack, and again in Hong Kong during SARS was that the administrative team worked diligently to create and communicate contingency plans so that staff knew where things stood with their contracts and options.

Admin and staff obviously need to be on the same page with a feeling of trust and a realistic understanding of expectations balanced by the individual needs of staff and their families. Flexibility and putting the humanity of the community first need to be the guiding mantra. The last thing a school community needs is a vacuum of information and rigidity which opens the door to rumors and an “us vs them” attitude. 🙁

Learning Support

I continue to be so impressed by the professionalism and dedication of the staff at my school. From the business office to the support staff to the teachers to the administration, I find myself constantly pausing and being thankful that I get to work at such a wonderful school.

The same goes for our students who accepted the challenge of virtual school. They have grown their character strengths around being independent, problem solvers, and hard working. Between the teachers and the students, a lot of wonderful teaching and learning has taken place. Our parents also have been incredible taking on new roles in their homes.

Yet we must face that our students are not learning as well as they would in face-to-face school. With many international schools having large EAL populations where English is not spoken at home, we must face the reality that at the start of the new school year many of the students will have lost ground not only in their language acquisition but probably in some of their subject areas as well as in their social development.

Coming out the other end of the pandemic, what will the start of the new school year look like regarding remediation to bring students up to where they would have been pre-pandemic? And how to balance these academic needs when I just wrote about the importance of SEL and community building? Thankfully I am not an administrator possibly trying to juggle these two outcomes… 🙂

A second factor to think about with international schools is that there will probably be a good amount of turnover of students changing schools. At least in my location, there have been schools that have excelled in providing virtual school while others have brought on the ire of their parents for supposedly not delivering the goods. Something tells me there will be some families trying to move up the hierarchy of schools especially knowing that virtual school could happen again in the coming year.

So how will stronger international schools keep their enrollment up and handle the possible influx of students coming from schools with lesser programs? In speaking to a colleague, one approach would be to possibly have summer school that offers language and other subject learning remediation for new students. This is predicated on the hope that summer school can be taught face to face. If not, we know that virtual schooling cannot match the learning in regular school so a virtual summer bridge program would be limited in its viability.

An additional approach would be to offer EAL standalone homerooms in the elementary division. Our current approach is to mainstream all students with one EAL teacher at each grade level for push-in and some pullout support. But if some schools are bringing in students at lower English levels than they might normally accept, they might need to adapt their program to provide intensive English learning provided by an EAL-trained homeroom teacher at each grade level possibly with the additional support of a dedicated EAL specialist.

As I know very little about the field of language learning, I am doing my usual throwing out a bunch of ideas to think about. 🙂 I would be very interested to hear from administrators and EAL staff as to how they would develop a hybrid program that continues their regular push in EAL support while also offering a pathway for students needing a more full-on English learning program.

Tying things together here, who knows what the new school year will bring. I know that the administrators at my school continue to be proactive as they are looking at multiple contingencies. I am not connected in any way to the managing of our virtual school or involved in planning for the future so please understand that these ideas are my own as I continue to look at challenges as opportunities for innovative and adaptive thinking.

 

Photo Credits:

Tunnel- Photo by Aaron Burden on Unsplash
Hands Up- Photo by Jaime Lopes on Unsplash
Car Charging- Photo by Andrew Roberts on Unsplash
Students- Photo by Rachel on Unsplash

Co-Curricular After School Programming

This post has been sitting in my blog editor since January. The coronavirus and the opening of virtual schools led me to shift my focus. So as my school is starting to look at programming for next year, I think it is time to publish my ideas around afterschool activities. Let me start by saying that as a coach and supporter of the arts I am a huge believer that our students learn a lot more about themselves and life in general through athletics, the performing arts, hands-on learning as in maker space, coding, etc. I believe that afterschool (ASA) programming offers a huge opportunity for international schools to further meet the learning needs of their students and parents learning objectives while supporting the mission of the school. My focus in this post is on elementary school afterschool programming.

So what ideas come to mind to design an effective afterschool program? Here is the short version followed by a few explanations.

  • Form a committee of interested staff representing a cross-section of the school and areas of expertise.
  • Research: Find out what the best practices are coming from the research and other schools.
  • Do an audit of current practices.
  • Do a needs as in whole child (PIES) assessment to guide the design of the program and individual class offerings.
  • Review the school mission, values, learning goals, and profile of a graduate to decide what to aim for with the program.
  • Develop a vision for the program.
  • Co-Curricular offerings offer the opportunity for lots of non-academic learning. However, academic support offerings should also be included in classes for students with specific and broader academic as well as gifted learning needs.
  • Expand the core committee to the second circle of interested students, staff, and parents to get their input.
  • Run a parallel approach of developing a strategic plan while also piloting some new approaches via the School Retool approach. Include a “sandbox” for innovative ideas to be discussed and piloted.
  • Gather data from the pilots to incorporate into the strategic planning process.
  • Be agile and nimble ready to offer a differentiated program to meet a variety of stakeholder needs. Look to throw the net wide to expand the possibilities of what might be feasible and supportive of the goals for the program. The winnowing down process connects ideas that support the mission, vision, and learning outcomes that can then take place.
  • Present the plan, gather feedback and implement it.
  • Build in formative and summative assessments for the courses being offered.
  • Review the data and adapt going forward.

The following are some thoughts going a bit deeper on the points above.

Find out what some other international schools are offering. Here is what I found for Hong Kong International School. I know that Taipei American School has a huge offering of courses and is incredibly well-run. My sons were fortunate to enjoy participating in several activities during our time there. Smaller international schools probably also offer some creative and innovative approaches as well. I bet some of the more green-oriented schools offer some very meaningful outdoor education experiential learning opportunities for example. My point is that we need to break away from the conventional thinking of afterschool classes being something extra that teachers and TAs are assigned to do to keep students busy. We fortunately now use the term “co-curricular” instead of extracurricular. As I stated, I believe giving our students choice to pursue their interests in performance and hands-on activities can really be the highlight of their learning day.

I see a huge opportunity to the bringing of fresh eyes and some unconventional thinking to view how international schools do afterschool activities. A couple starting points in rethinking afterschool programs would be to look at the needs and interests of the students and also the mission of the school. We then work backward as designers to come up with an overall plan while at the same time piloting some classes to gather data in developing our overall blueprint.

We also can look to the Middle and High schools that offer skill-based afterschool enrichment and mentoring for student-led clubs. I could see when developmentally applicable to offer “junior versions” of MS clubs as David Perkins says of activities that work for older students and can be redesigned for younger students. Here is a listing at the Shanghai American School offering 100+ clubs for their students. While probably a great many of those clubs are student-initiated and student-managed as they should be, I can see some form of student clubs being offered in the ES.

As for learning new skills, the term micro-credential learning has been around for a while now. Courses could be offered based on student interest in learning skill sets as the course progresses through the term. We already have classes in drawing, dance, etc. My thinking is that each week could be a different group of skills possibly taught via online tutorials to support face-to-face learning. Students could earn badges for each set of skills. Some of the courses could be organized around themes that the students work towards earning credentials. Over time they take several courses which add up to earning a certificate in a subject/theme area.

Here is an example of what I called The Digital Scholars Program which covers study skills, (digital) citizenship, and some digital literacy skills. Another example could be certification in wellness following the PERMAH model making sure to include the “H” for health and the Positive Education approach to strengths-based education.

One challenge for elementary schools is to ask teachers after long days of teaching to then offer afterschool classes. I am not sure where the big schools are in making teachers teach afterschool classes but I do remember seeing lots of outside contractors coming into the Upper Primary at the end of each day when I was at HKIS. I have a few ideas listed below that can take teaching afterschool classes off the plates of our teachers.

When I consulted a couple years ago with an educational services company (ESC) specializing in afterschool classes, we spoke about developing and documenting their curriculum so that new teachers could walk in and access the web-hosted lessons. This also meant that the ESC was not as dependent on the individual interests and talents of their teachers. Of course, this didn’t apply to specialized classes like instrumental music or upper-level painting but for most lighter content offerings it could work.

With the curriculum built and ready for new teachers, I can see international schools supporting their teaching assistants to teach the afterschool classes to earn some extra pay. Here is an example of a web-hosted class that I started that could be taught by someone other than myself.

One category of offerings could be classes to prepare student teams for international enrichment competitions such as Future Problem Solvers, Odyssey of the Mind, etc. One can offer standalone classes built around themes such as peace and reconciliation (i.e., The World Peace Game, speaking and presentation skills (i.e. perhaps a student version of Toastmasters that includes ICL presentation literacies, etc.), and of course all the possibilities that come with STEAM. There are also a lot of individual competitions that students could be mentored to compete in.

Another idea is that once the classes are created and taught face to face to then think about offering them first in a blended fashion and possibly later in virtual form for students outside one’s international school. This takes me back to a meeting a long time ago at HKIS when the instructional technologists were meeting and talking about possibilities. We had come off the successful running of virtual school during SARS. This led us to think about how the school might start offering online courses for students outside of HKIS. We noted that the HKIS brand was strong and worth expanding.

Afterschool programming doesn’t just have to be only for students.  One could work with one’s PTA and counseling staff to design and teach classes for parents. Helping busy parents expand their parenting toolkit already happens in many international schools with counselors teaching parenting workshops and PTAs bringing in guest speakers. The next step would be to do a needs assessment to then design a curriculum for the workshops. Whether they are offered during regular school hours and/or after school is fine but marketing them as adult ASAs is just another way to make a connection with parents and to further grow a sense of community. And just as for the students, it would be a bonus to offer them in a blended and virtual fashion for parents who cannot attend face-to-face classes.

Check out my blog post on creating a parent portal for more information on this topic. And who knows, maybe you bring in an educational services company (ESC) to offer more leisure-oriented classes such as cooking, fitness, foreign language, etc. Life coaching and wellness could be just a few of the themes of the adult ASA program offerings.

And then there are “academies”. Academies are where some overworked and over-managed international students go at the end of the school day to study languages, math, test prep, etc. Students start attending academies early in elementary school and continue through high school. I don’t know if this situation takes place in international schools around the world but it is prevalent in Asia.

I won’t get into the politics and parenting of sending students to academies but I am curious about what they would look like if offered on the campus of the international school. The optics might be bad, especially with schools that try to get families to let their children go home after school to play and rest before they do their homework. I wonder if school-based academies might offer school leaders opportunities to improve the content and delivery over independent providers while working with families to think about decreasing the time their children spend at the academy classes. One big theme for academies could be to offer life coaching around personal development. We hope that schools have fully integrated wellness programs in their regular curriculum but if not and/or if students want more support with their physical, intellectual, emotional, and social skill development then an on-site “wellness academy” can fill this need. Coaches at the academy could facilitate skill building in their students across several life categories including character strengths, wellness, self-regulation, and communication skills to name a few possibilities.

Photo by Rachel on Unsplash

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